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Post by sammy on Mar 25, 2010 20:13:11 GMT -5
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Post by ruth on Mar 25, 2010 22:10:28 GMT -5
"Scott described three stages in the life cycle of his parasite: rod forms, spore or coccus-like forms, and large spore-sacs resembling a fungus.6,7 He treated cancer patients with an effective antiserum against these microbes, and spent the rest of his life trying to alert his colleagues to the infectious cause of cancer. But the antagonism of the medical profession to Scott's cancer parasites and his antiserum was overwhelming, and he died a forgotten man."
i wonder if the effective antiserum is an antifungal? does this article say? i have a hard time reading so i speed read.
i vote to replace doctors and judges with computers that you feed your info and blood into......... it assesses you thru your sweat as to crediblity and spits out protocols and results.
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Post by kammy on Mar 26, 2010 4:03:45 GMT -5
"The two women found a special stain (the acid-fast stain) that allowed the microbe to be recognised in culture and within the cancer tumour."
I might want to get some acid-fast stain?
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Post by kammy on Mar 26, 2010 4:15:23 GMT -5
Progenitor cryptocides THE RUSSELL BODY: THE FORGOTTEN CLUE TO THE BACTERIAL CAUSE OF CANCER www.joimr.org/phorum/read.php?f=2&i=50&t=50"There are many different kinds of bacteria but only one type that has been consistently observed and studied in cancer for over a century. The cancer microbe has many forms, some of which appear as ordinary staphylococci or larger yeast-like forms that further enlarge to the size of Russell bodies. As mentioned, some Russell bodies enlarge to truly gigantic proportions, one hundred times the diameter of small cocci. One can liken this growth potential to an empty balloon that is then blown up to full-size. In addition, the microbe has exceedingly small filterable submicroscopic forms approaching the size of viruses, visible only by use of the electron microscope. The mystery of these “yeast-like” bodies deep in his skin was solved years later when I first learned about the existence of “large body” forms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. When this patient died, Mycobacterium fortuitum, an “atypical” form of mycobacteria was cultured from his scleroderma tissue. In 1981 King and Eisenberg’s article on “Russell’s fuchsin body: ‘The characteristic organism of cancer’ ” appeared in the American Journal of Dermatopathology. They reconfirmed that “Russell bodies have now been shown to be immunoglobulins.” They remarked that Russell was not the first to describe them; and that similar bodies were reported by Cornil and Alvarez in rhinoscleroma five years earlier in a French journal in 1885."
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Post by ruth on Mar 27, 2010 11:38:52 GMT -5
kammy, i've been seeing these in my dish. they are larger..........do they look the same to you? 60x bottom lite
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