Hi Rudolf, welcome to the forum!
For a definition of your condition I found this:
Panaritium
(also dactylitis), an acute purulent inflammation of a digit, most often a finger. The principal cause is infection of a microtrauma, such as a hangnail, puncture, or abrasion. Panaritium may be superficial, affecting cutaneous or subcutaneous tissue or tissue beneath the nail, or deep, affecting tendon, bone, or joint. A special form of panaritium is paronychia— inflammation of the tissue folds surrounding the nail. Inflammation of all the tissues of the digit is called pandactylitis. The symptoms of panaritium are severe, pulsating, twitching pain that deprives the patient of sleep; swelling; redness; and soreness of the suppurative focus. Treatment is surgical. In the early stages of superficial panaritium, conservative measures, such as compresses, baths, and physiotherapy, are helpful. In other cases, immediate surgery is advisable.
Question 1. It sounds like an infection and we don't know if it is viral or not. This is relevant for your first question. With viruses it is more important to have hourly doses because the MMS does not directly kill them the way it does with other microbes. Instead with viruses MMS being constantly in the blood with hourly doses prevents them from forming proteins they need for reproduction. Jim learned this from a great deal of experience fighting HIV in Africa with MMS1.
So, to answer your first question, we don't know if it is okay, maybe strict hourly dosing would help you.
Question 2. Jim's advice is generally to keep taking protocol 1000 till well, so you do not have to stop if you are not well. The scalp itching and drying could be detox effects from the MMS. These are actually easier to deal with than nausea-diarrhea-vomiting I would think. Since you haven't mentioned there is any clear improvement, you may want to move toward Protocol 2000 (
jimhumble.biz/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=34&Itemid=61) and increase the number of drops and/or add in MMS2. That is what I would do if I was in your shoes.
Question 3. Your procedure for mixing and acitivation and addition of water and juice is correct. The big problem with store bought juice is whether they have accurately labeled any addition of vit. C (ascorbic acid). I think you meant to say "carbonic acid" was added, which is soda water. As far as I know, carbonic acid should not neutralize the MMS1. I have only heard that Vitamin C and orange juice must never be used with a dose.
Best wishes for your healing Rudolf,
Michael