**broken link removed**
Just to show 2 deaths with testing revealing last dose wasn't high given the numbers in the blood. I'm done talking about this
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I'm really glad you posted this, as it proves me point perfectly. I looked up the article online because I wanted to read the full article, as I wanted to get the details. I am glad I did, as much relevant information was omitted from your post (only the 1st page was posted).
The article talks about 2 people who died using DNP--one young women and one man. Although the article doesn't specify the year in which these deaths occurred, based on the information presented, we can conclude they were fairly recent.
The young girl who died, which is the first case presented, was the
FIRST EVER reported case of a non-bodybuilder to die from DNP poisoning. Being that bodybuilders didn't start using DNP until the later 90's, we can logically conclude this girl's death took pace less than 20 years ago, and possibly much more recently than that.
This fact alone tell mountains. Literally 100,000's of people over a 70 year period (almost all of whom had no medical supervision and were unaware of the potential risks) had to use DNP before a single non-bodybuilder died. The timeframe doesn't change much for the first bodybuilder either.
This information presented in the article, which mirrors what I said in my previous posts, demonstrates the DNP is quite safe when used in lower dosages. Sure, there is always the possibility that somebody could react in an unpredicted fashion and die when using a lower dose, but it is clear that the likelihood of this occurring is so exceedingly low that it is a non-issue.
In addition, while you say that the blood levels reported in this women (36 mg/ml) indicate that low dosages were used (250 mg or less), the article provides no information regarding what dose might be required in order to obtain this blood level.
Although this entire point is irrelevant given the fact she was the first ever non-bodybuilder to have died from DNP (despite being in use for 70 years), the article states that the lethal dose is between 1-3 grams for an adult. If this girl had died from a much lower dose, why did they list the lethal adult dose as being much higher? Evem with extended use, in which build-up in blood levels could occur, they listed the lethal dose as much higher than 250 mg/day. Lastly, this girl had likely been using DNP for weeks, considering the number of remaining pills they found in her bedroom after her death. But like I said, it's irrelevant.