my clO2 which passed enough studies and tests
Those studies that you refer to are likely actually indicators for testing the toxicity levels and safety levels on ClO2 as an industrial cleaner. i.e. at what levels does it cause eye irritations, throat and lung irritation and skin irritation.
@jasonbu please start informing yourself before telling people what to do!
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0079157
That study is literally talking about ClO2 as an antiseptic not for ingestion!
Putting something on the skin for a while is something completely different from swallowing it and having it in your body for hours.
Just read it.... if you get past the first three paragraphs you will find that this paper discusses the methodology on the determination of the ClO2 diffusion coefficient. That is, how fast it passes through organic membranes to figure out how much and how long an application would be needed in a antiseptic application on a surface, like human skin or a wound. It suggests that an aqueous solution has a large therapeutic window as a surface disinfectant in local antiseptic applications.
There is nothing in there to suggest ingesting a solution of an organic compound, like ClO2 is safe or therapeutic. There is zero therapeutic evidence that I can find for ingesting it.