It is reasonable to believe that in some cases people might have an adverse reaction to c60-oo. It is commonly known that olive oil has a cleansing effect on the kidneys so it is reasonable to believe people who are bleeding are actually passing a kidney stone. This is a well documented effect. So, it is more likely that bleeding in the urine has more to do with the olive oil and not the presence of fullerenes. High blood pressure can be a reasonable explanation for the burst blood vessel in the eye. Some have already reported a rise in blood pressure when on c60-oo.
It's certainly reasonable to think that a person might have a genuine adverse reaction to any substance. The belief that olive oil aids in passing kidney stones is said by kidney stone experts
to be a myth. The problem here is that the only person claiming to be "pissing blood" is psychotic. He sees things that aren't there. So far, I am not convinced that there has been a subconjunctival hemorrhage. Andre's case sounds to me like the condition commonly known as "bloodshot eyes". Rx = Visine. I have a very strong suspicion that any blood pressure rise discussed here has not actually been measured. Blood pressure usually can't be "felt". Some people may be excited or nervous because they are taking an exotic new substance that they've heard amazing things about, along with some scary stories on the internet. This might result in an increased bp, as might an allergic or atypical toxic reaction, which might be Andre's case.
If you take it and have undesirable side effects we all would like to know and we certainly don't want to downplay anyone's experience. We should keep track of negative effects people report and not just the desirable ones we wish to see. A person can be looney and still be reporting factual experiences.
I've been keeping track of negative effects of c60-oo for a long time now, and have spent a lot of time chasing down reports that turned out to be nothing. I'm going to have to disagree with you about reports from people who are psychotic. Seven years ago I had Legionnaire's disease, a usually lethal pneumonia which in my case was further complicated by a cytokine storm. A large percentage of people who spend a week in the ICU develop a condition known as ICU Psychosis, caused by disruption in sleep cycles and other things. I was in the ICU for a month, and toward the end I was batshit crazy. I was seeing and hearing things that simply weren't real, but they sure seemed real to me at the time. They were profoundly weird things, yet they were within the bounds of things that "could" happen. They didn't violate any laws of physics. Trust me, psychotic people are not reliable reporters. In my case, the day I got into a regular room that was quiet and didn't have the lights on 24 hours a day, my psychosis evaporated. I was, however, left with a new understanding of what it's like to be schizophrenic.
Yes that is exactly it. The first time it was a dot and the second time I tried C60 it was a very prominent thick blood vessel. That was after only one double dosage (3mg of C60) and then went to sleep because I was feeling dizzy.
Woke up 2 hrs later and I felt burning in the eyes elevated heart beat/blood pressure...in general I was feeling sick. Went infront of the mirror saw the blood vessel on the same eye that had the haemorrhage a week ago. (both eyes were red as if I smoked pot)
Also the "kidney" pain is really something new to me which I can only link either with the antibiotics I was prescribed for 5 days or C60.
How big was the dot, and how long did it last? A subconjunctival hemorrhage supposedly takes 10-14 days to clear. Is there anything there now that you could take a picture of? The second case really sounds like an allergic reaction. That's not to be dismissed, because allergic reactions can be very serious; I'd just like to get an accurate diagnosis. Antibiotics can mess up your gut and cause weird pains in your abdomen. In fact I just went through that myself a while back. Sounds like you had Zithromax, if it was a 5 day course. This has a very long half life, so it was actually in your system for closer to two weeks.
I wonder if C60 in evoo could change if exposed to sunlight or humidity and become "toxic". Because once I got it I forgot to put it in a dark cupboard for a few hours.
I really doubt this is a problem. For one thing, c60-oo is shipped in UV-resistant brown glass bottles. For another, the UV flux indoors is very low to begin with. Finally, a few hours is nothing, given the rest of it.
Just how long does it take c60 to leave the human body. I read somewhere it was quoted 10 days. I read the Baati rat study and the longest it mentions is 97 hours ~ 4 days... Where did this 10 day figure come from?
As Howard mentioned, there is a number for "leaving" the blood, where leaving means that the concentration has dropped below the limit of detection of the method they used, and then there is the question of how long it is resident in the membranes. One of the ways in which it leaves the blood is by partitioning into lipid membranes. It's active at very low concentrations, so unless sophisticated instrumentation is used, it might not even be detected despite still being above a minimally active membrane concentration.