35% or 3.5%? The pharmacy has 3.5%.
Anyhow, new news in.
QUOTE
The oxygen molecules pop of, absorb into the system, and become free radicals.
Not necessarily true. At least, not in the absolutist sense.
My father, a doctor in practice for quite a number of years, answered a question of mine regarding oxidation of blood, and oxidation by free radicals. I tied the two together and he said, "Son, you are getting mixed up. One is by means of a gas, the other by an enzyme." I asked, "Then how does oxidation affect free radical absorbtion?" He said, "It's fat; Free radicals are enzymes that interact by the oxidation of fat within the body."
This made sense, being that Diet and exercise tie in to well being. From this piece of additional info, this picture can be painted: Person exercises, and burns fat. (IMG:
style_emoticons/default/dumbells.gif) Fat still oxidizes during process, but because of overdriven metabolic functions for exercise, the free radicals are flushed out of the system quicker.
I'm not the doctor here, my dad is; I didn't want to inquire further to tie in H2O2 possibilities, because he sticks to what he knows. Despite this, based on this information, I would say that an ingested H2O2 solution would be best when one has a lower fat count in their BMI (Body Mass Index).