Chlorine Dioxide CDS Treatment India: Complete Guide
Key Takeaways
- Chlorine Dioxide Solution (CDS) is a stabilised gas dissolved in water — distinct from bleach and distinct from MMS, which is the precursor mixture before activation
- CDS works by oxidising pathogens, breaking down biofilm, and reducing systemic inflammation — three of the four root causes of chronic disease
- Home preparation is possible but requires precise dilution — errors cause nausea, vomiting, and mucosal irritation
- No large-scale clinical trial has yet confirmed CDS as a standalone cure for any chronic disease; current evidence is mostly case-report and in-vitro level
- In a root-cause framework like the Scalar Self-Health Secret Number Protocols, CDS is one tool among 90 numbered protocols — not a magic bullet used alone
- Indian availability of ingredients is restricted; the legal status of selling activated chlorine dioxide for internal use is ambiguous under FSSAI guidelines
What Is Chlorine Dioxide (CDS) Therapy and How Does It Work?
Chlorine Dioxide (ClO2) is a yellow-green gas with a molecular weight of 67.45 g/mol. When dissolved in cold, distilled water and kept sealed, it forms what practitioners call CDS — Chlorine Dioxide Solution — at concentrations typically between 3,000 and 3,600 parts per million (ppm) in stock form, diluted further before any internal use.
The mechanism is selective oxidation. ClO2 reacts aggressively with pathogens, parasites, and anaerobic bacteria whose cell walls carry low ionisation potential electrons. Human cells, by contrast, have a higher ionisation potential and are largely unaffected at low concentrations. This selectivity is the core argument for its therapeutic use. (Source: US Environmental Protection Agency, Chlorine Dioxide Fact Sheet, EPA 816-F-01-020)
Chronic disease — at its root — involves acidity, inflammation, toxicity, and parasitic or microbial load. These are the four root causes I have been teaching for over ten years through daily evening classes. CDS addresses at least three of these four directly through its oxidative action. That is why it appears in the broader landscape of drug-free protocols, though it is not something I recommend as a standalone first step for most people.
Published in-vitro studies confirm that ClO2 at sub-ppm concentrations inactivates bacteria including E. coli and Salmonella, as well as viruses including norovirus. (Source: Journal of Hospital Infection, Volume 71, Issue 4, 2009) The clinical translation to human internal use at therapeutic doses remains under-studied in peer-reviewed trials.
How Can You Make CDS Chlorine Dioxide Solution Safely at Home?
CDS is made by reacting sodium chlorite (NaClO2) with an acid — typically hydrochloric acid (HCl) at 4% concentration — inside a sealed container. The gas produced is captured in a second container of chilled distilled water. This two-vessel method is called the gas-capture method and produces a cleaner, more stable solution than the older MMS activation method.
The standard stock concentration target is 3,000 ppm ClO2 in distilled water. From this stock, therapeutic protocols use dilutions starting as low as 1 ml of stock per litre of water, consumed in small sips over the day. The Andreas Kalcker Protocol C, widely referenced in the CDS community, follows this structure. (Source: Kalcker, A.L., "Forbidden Health," 2018 — note: this is an independent researcher publication, not a peer-reviewed journal)
Safety during preparation is non-negotiable. ClO2 gas is toxic at concentrations above 0.1 ppm in air — that is the US OSHA permissible exposure limit. (Source: OSHA Chemical Hazard Information, Chlorine Dioxide, 29 CFR 1910.1000) Work in a well-ventilated outdoor space or under a running exhaust fan. Use glass containers only. Do not inhale the gas directly. If you smell a sharp chlorine-like odour and feel throat irritation, move away immediately.
I have a background in graphene research and materials chemistry from IIT Delhi. I say this not to impress but to clarify: I understand oxidative chemistry. The errors people make at home are almost always concentration errors — using too much stock solution, not using distilled water, or using the wrong acid strength. These errors convert a potentially useful oxidant into a mucosal irritant.
Which CDS Protocols Are Used for Chronic Disease Treatment in India?
The most referenced protocol framework comes from Andreas Kalcker's work, which numbers protocols alphabetically — Protocol A (basic), Protocol C (continuous sipping), Protocol F (bath), Protocol I (inhalation at extremely low concentration), and others. Each is matched to a condition or symptom cluster.
For chronic conditions like type 2 diabetes, the approach typically involves Protocol C — 1 ml of 3,000 ppm stock dissolved in 1 litre of water, consumed in 8 sips across the day. The rationale is sustained low-level oxidative pressure on microbial and inflammatory load without spiking ClO2 concentration in the gut. No Indian regulatory body has issued guidance approving this protocol.
Within my own Secret Number Protocol system, CDS-adjacent oxidative approaches appear within the 90 numbered protocols. The system addresses the four root causes of every chronic disease — acidity, inflammation, toxicity, and parasites — using numbered, sequenced interventions. CDS fits within the anti-parasitic and anti-toxicity protocol cluster for specific individuals, identified through the intake process. It is never protocol number one, and it is never used without foundational hydration and alkalinity work completed first.
Community members in my 10,000-member group who have used CDS as part of the wider protocol sequence report it is most effective when the body is already alkaline and detoxifying. Using CDS in an acidic, constipated body tends to produce nausea and no lasting benefit. Sequence matters.
Is It Safe to Drink Chlorine Dioxide CDS Solution?
At concentrations used in municipal water treatment — typically 0.8 mg/L or below — chlorine dioxide is considered safe for drinking water by the WHO and approved for this purpose globally. (Source: WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality, 4th Edition, 2011) The controversy arises when concentrations are increased for therapeutic intent.
The US FDA issued warnings in 2019 and 2023 specifically against consuming MMS and CDS products marketed as cures, citing reports of severe vomiting, diarrhoea, dangerous drops in blood pressure, and acute respiratory failure at higher doses. (Source: US FDA Consumer Update, "Danger: Don't Drink Miracle Mineral Solution or Similar Products," 2023) These warnings are about high-dose misuse, not about the chemistry at low concentrations.
The honest answer for an Indian chronic disease patient: at Protocol C concentrations — roughly 3 ppm in the final drink — the oxidative load is low and most healthy adults tolerate it without acute side effects. People with G6PD deficiency, kidney disease with low GFR, or active peptic ulcers should not use CDS without medical supervision. These are real contraindications, not theoretical ones.
I always tell my evening class members — anything that kills pathogens can harm you if you get the dose wrong. The question is never "is it safe?" in the abstract. The question is "safe at what dose, for which person, at which stage of their healing?"
What Is the Difference Between CDS and MMS Chlorine Dioxide?
MMS stands for Miracle Mineral Solution — a term coined by Jim Humble. MMS is the activated mixture itself: sodium chlorite mixed with acid (originally citric acid), which immediately begins generating ClO2 gas in solution. You drink this mixture directly, along with the unreacted sodium chlorite and acid.
CDS is different. The gas is captured separately in chilled water and the original reactants are discarded. What you drink is only dissolved ClO2 — no sodium chlorite residue, no acid. This makes CDS significantly easier on the gastrointestinal tract. The nausea associated with MMS is largely attributed to the residual sodium chlorite and acid, not the ClO2 itself.
From a chemistry standpoint, CDS is the cleaner, more controlled preparation. If someone in India is going to explore chlorine dioxide at all, CDS is the more defensible approach compared to drinking activated MMS directly. That said, the active molecule — ClO2 — is identical in both cases. The delivery mechanism differs, not the therapeutic agent.
Where Can You Buy Chlorine Dioxide or CDS Ingredients in India?
Sodium chlorite (NaClO2) at 25–31% concentration is an industrial chemical used in paper manufacturing and water treatment. It is available from chemical suppliers in industrial quantities — minimum order quantities typically start at 25 kg, making it impractical for individual home use. Industrial-grade sourcing also introduces purity variability that matters enormously for internal use.
Hydrochloric acid at 4% concentration is pharmacy-grade and available, but purchasing food-grade or lab-grade sodium chlorite in small quantities in India is difficult. As of 2025, no product sold legally in India is labelled for internal chlorine dioxide use — FSSAI has not approved any such category. (Source: FSSAI Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 — schedule of permitted food additives)
Some vendors in Delhi, Mumbai, and Bengaluru sell sodium chlorite solutions marketed vaguely as "water purification drops." Purity and concentration are unverified in most cases. Importing pre-made CDS from abroad is possible but sits in a regulatory grey zone under DGFT import guidelines for chemicals.
The practical reality for most Indians: sourcing reliable, food-grade ingredients for home CDS preparation is genuinely difficult. This is one reason why, within the broader Scalar Self-Health protocol framework, we focus on accessible, high-evidence interventions first — structured water, alkalisation, anti-parasitic nutrition protocols — before more complex oxidative approaches.
Next Steps
Chlorine dioxide CDS treatment in India sits at the intersection of real oxidative chemistry, genuine patient desperation, regulatory ambiguity, and significant misuse risk. The molecule is not a fraud and it is not a miracle. At the right concentration, for the right root cause, in a sequenced protocol, it has a legitimate place in drug-free self-health. If you want to explore whether it belongs in your protocol — and which of the 90 numbered approaches fits your specific condition — join the free evening class tonight at 9:45 PM on WhatsApp +91 70879 43430, or register here. Bring your reports, bring your questions, and let us work through it with the rigour it deserves.
For more information, contact Rajnish Sharma — rajnish@rajnishrds.com | +91 70879 43430
Rajnish Sharma is an IIT Delhi M.Tech engineer and MSME turnaround consultant with 35 years of Indian manufacturing experience. He is the founder of RDS Scalar Revolution — a drug-free self-health education platform — and a practitioner of Vedic astrology and CosmoAstro methodology. Based in Hoshiarpur, Punjab.
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