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Old 06-09-2012, 11:35 AM
reluctant@thetable reluctant@thetable is offline
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Join Date: May 2012
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 144
10 yr Member
reluctant@thetable reluctant@thetable is offline
Member
 
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 144
10 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hampster63 View Post
It is in a spray can from a pharmacy I think. I use a Rite Aid pharmacy. I bought it awhile ago to have on hand if I needed it to clean a wound for my grandson. So when this came along I found it handy to keep with the tDCS unit so if I needed to add more liquid I had it without having to get up to get water. I don't know if I'm doing anything wrong by mixing water and the saline. I never heard there was any reason not to use saline. I find doing treatment in the evening so much easier. It's the best time to do it when the day is done and there's no pressure to get something else done. Just turn off the rest of the day and sit and relax. I do it when there's a program on tv I like to watch. Sitting and relaxing for your daughter is probably why she falls asleep. If she's not watching tv and she's meditating she's got to be doing the best possible plan for the tDCS to do it's job. Lots of luck to her and your family.
Hampster, you brought up an interesting topic that I've been concerned with. Since tdcs is also used to deliver medicines in the same manner we are using it, I read the label on all of the over-the-counter types of saline solutions. The spray saline, the eye drop saline, and the nasal saline all have a number of other ingredients in them including various preservatives. I did not buy any of them because I didn't want any of the other ingredients passing into my body.

I spoke with the pharmacist about this. He told me that in order to get pure saline- the kind used for wound irrigation or the kind used in IVs- I would have to get a prescription. I protested about this knowing that normal saline is just water and salt. He said that was state law. I asked if he, as a pharmacist, could prescribe it for me. He said in the state I live in, pharmacists aren't allowed to prescribe anything. In other states, pharmacists can prescribe. (I'm getting used to frustration.)

So my dear husband, quite on his own, found unadulterated saline (the kind I would have needed a prescription for at the pharmacy) on Amazon. I ordered it up without any difficulties.

I don't know if all of the preservatives should be a concern but I assume that is one of the reasons the medical field uses the saline that does not have the additional ingredients on patient's open wounds.

Don't know if I'm making unreasonable assumptions but I figure if it's my brain I'm working with, I'd better be extra careful. That's also why I don't use my tap water because it comes from the well and I'm not sure what's in it (our area is known for high levels of arsenic).

Perhaps I'm being overly cautious...
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Joydee (06-09-2012)