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Post by toni on Jan 24, 2010 12:22:37 GMT -5
Hi Karen/Chaos, I'm happy to see you here too. I am sorry to hear what all has been diagnosed. To my understanding, (not completely sure though) is it that your body, and possibly ours too - is producing so many cells to try and protect itself, thus forming tumors, then those abundance of cells that have "clumped" are what are being proliferated and become cancerous at that point? Then the extra production of mucin because of the body trying to basically "sluff" off the over abundance of cells?
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Post by chaosonline on Jan 24, 2010 16:34:10 GMT -5
I did have an issue with lesions early on. Not more than a dozen and I was able to get them to heal. My lesions were long before I had a microscope but they produced fibers and specks and were intensely painful (like sharp glass shards) until I could dig a certain odd shaped object out from within the lesion. This object resembled a sea horse with a boxy snout and it hardened with air contact.
I also had innumerable fibers (blue, blank, red) rising from the pores of my knees and the back of my knees. Soon after this started I had the hexagons begin to arise from my upper thigh on my right leg. Metals occasionally surfaced from the upper left leg.
Before I knew a thing about Morgellons, but had realized I had Lyme, I attempted to self treat using a expired bottle of Flagyl. The very first one I took began to melt as soon as I put it on my tongue. Within just a few minutes I began to have the feeling of a hair being on my tongue. You all know what that feels like. Well I spit and spit but couldn't get it out. I stuck my tongue out to have a look in the bathroom mirror and to my horror there was a deep split in the top of my tongue. Something began to sting the very tip of my tongue I retrieved a teensy whitish object and the stinging stopped. This object was soft and triangular shaped with flagella extending from 2 of the edges. I removed about a dozen of these until the stinging stopped and placed them on tissue. They hardened within seconds. I placed my thumb nail on one and applied pressure and it broke into several little pieces. The texture reminded me of a sea shell.
Also did pass a liver fluke about 3+ years ago. Typical sheep liver fluke. Large, at least an inch and a half, velvety bright red.
Karen
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Post by skytroll on Jan 24, 2010 17:19:56 GMT -5
P38 mitogen. U937 phorbol ester www.pnas.org/content/94/6/2327/F1.expansion.htmlcomputer model, going after the ingredients. am on this big time, going for facts, has to do with signalling, tears the mucin off the intestinal walls, and other organs walls. agrobacterium like fungus, with mucin adhesive FAK focal adhesive kinase. skytroll
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Post by skytroll on Jan 24, 2010 17:30:35 GMT -5
Heat shock protein 25:
HSP25
supermolecule?
skytroll
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Post by lilsissy on Jan 24, 2010 17:55:19 GMT -5
Good information here kammy, I am having a hard time keeping up with all the angles and research but I would really like to know why they did not give Karen a pathology report with details like they gave Glen. I am working on that then maybe will research the Pals stuff.
Skytrool that sounds very much like a bingo to me, connective tissue tears maybe. That is where they told me ,I have a disease in my connective tissue, the myofascular . They said it gets small tears by normal daily activities that do not heal because I do not hit a stage 4 rem sleep when this disease is active. Unrefreshing sleep they call it, part of Fibromyalagia. Maybe they get tears from the manner you suggested also . Agro hey? BRANCHING OUT , I can imagine this and it sounds like the description Karen gave me of the branching vein network in her pancreas. She said it is similar to what you see in a leaf!
Jen
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