Nope it's not
. H2O2 I mean
.
I ran it under a mass spectrometer during my undergrad and detected the presence of H202.
I then titrated it to determine how much H202 and found that it is a solution of hydrogen peroxide at 2.9% with an error variance of + or - 0.02%
Lastly I did a biuret test to detect peptide bonds. Peptide bonds form when two amino acids chain together. All enzymes have peptide bonds. I did not detect any peptide bonds hence no enzymes. So my conclusion for hygrozyme is that it is a solution of approximately 3% H202, with no active enzymes, and a few other trace molecules to alter its color, viscosity, and smell.
A couple mundane ways you could detect it as H202 is by mixing it with some of its known reactants like bleach, potash, or even some fresh blood. You'll be looking for bubbles which is water vapor and oxygen evaporating. Though that will just detect the presence of H202 and not the concentration. But a local university with a chemistry department would probably test it for you. They love it when people bring them stuff as long as you have a good story as to why you are curious. Tell them its for your kids science project, come up with something and they will do it. And ask questions, make them feel important.
I guess feel free to believe what you want about it. At the very least figure it out for yourself first hand, I obviously don't need to tell you "don't take my word for it."