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Post by ginna898 on Jan 8, 2013 11:29:24 GMT -5
www.dovepress.com/characterization-and-evolution-of-dermal-filaments-from-patients-with--peer-reviewed-article-CCIDAuthors: Middelveen MJ, Mayne PJ, Kahn DG, Stricker RB Video abstract presented by Raphael B Stricker Views: 15 Published Date January 2013 Volume 2013:6 Pages 1 - 21 DOI: dx.doi.org/10.2147/CCID.S39017Received: 10 October 2012 Accepted: 28 November 2012 Published: 08 January 2013 Marianne J Middelveen,1 Peter J Mayne,1 Douglas G Kahn,2 Raphael B Stricker1 1International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society, Bethesda, MD, USA; 2Department of Pathology, Olive View–UCLA Medical Center, Sylmar, CA, USA Abstract: Morgellons disease is an emerging skin disease characterized by formation of dermal filaments associated with multisystemic symptoms and tick-borne illness. Some clinicians hypothesize that these often colorful dermal filaments are textile fibers, either self-implanted by patients or accidentally adhering to lesions, and conclude that patients with this disease have delusions of infestation. We present histological observations and electron microscopic imaging from representative Morgellons disease samples revealing that dermal filaments in these cases are keratin and collagen in composition and result from proliferation and activation of keratinocytes and fibroblasts in the epidermis. Spirochetes were detected in the dermatological specimens from our study patients, providing evidence that Morgellons disease is associated with an infectious process. Full PDF of the report on the Link www.dovepress.com/characterization-and-evolution-of-dermal-filaments-from-patients-with--peer-reviewed-article-CCID
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Post by ginna898 on Jan 8, 2013 11:31:20 GMT -5
Hmmmmm I see the article is keeping count of how many people went to the abstract.
So far, it has been seen by 15 people.
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Post by ginna898 on Jan 8, 2013 12:14:59 GMT -5
Middleton and Stricker has this organization listed on the article: International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society, Bethesda, MD, USA; 2Department of Pathology, Olive View–UCLA Medical Center, Sylmar, CA, USA "associated diseases" Morgellons Disease Tree Number C17.800.518 Scope Note An unexplained illness which is characterized by skin manifestations including non-healing lesions, itching, and the appearance of fibers. There appears to be a strong association with LYME DISEASE. NIH Code: www.nlm.nih.gov/cgi/mesh/2012/MB_cgi?mode=&term=Morgellons+Disease&field=entrySo I am beginning to think the government has KNOWN ALL ALONG that a spirochette was STRONGLY Associated.
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Post by Baraka Obam on Jan 8, 2013 13:11:27 GMT -5
When in Asia antibiotic use was over the top, they used antibiotics probably 250,000 times, on a small amount of GIs and a small population of women in the village. There would be no doubt that when treating one pathogen they also treated all pathogens acquired by man. There are just a few of these pathogens that are considered SPIROCHETE, yes, two that would be very possible in this situation is syphilis and Lyme. The soldiers would have LYME because they layed out in nature quite often, this was a given, they would have syphilis because they layed down with prostitutes even more often. The fact of the matter is, many if not 98% of the women that were prostitutes were actually FARM GIRLS, many would sleep in grass huts and such and were always all their lives out in nature. The fact of the matter is this, while treating and mutating every disease known to mankind with antibiotics in these people from the third world and many from our ghetto's they could have mutated these spirochete disease to actually change, to become one sort of a disease and not two, both seen as the same disease, a SUPER STRAIN. The fact of the matter is this and I have thought it all along, the so called LYME tests will also positively react to SYPHILIS. Don't believe me, read www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3298452
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Post by Lynn on Jan 8, 2013 16:04:17 GMT -5
Hi Gina
I liked the link and I posted it to Facebook. I continually sneak in two or three time a year an article or two to folks to try and open some eyes.
In Light Lynn/TorpedoLynn
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Post by ginna898 on Jan 8, 2013 16:55:31 GMT -5
Hi Lynn and everyone. This is what I think it will turn out to be: Leptospira of some sort It is as Lyme is to Syphillis. I feel morgellons is 'like' lyme, but worse. I first read about it several years back and most notably in a book titled: "God Science" and it explained many new emerging diseases and how genetic engineering is causing havoc on the world. There was an article on this new infection published in 2003 titled: EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, but sorry that I can't find the article today and it did also mention the Leptospira. www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0041566Dynamic interplay between the survival mechanisms of pathogen and host determines the outcome of an infection. Pathogenic microbes have many means to enter hosts, colonize tissue, and further transmit disease. Hosts in turn have powerful cellular and humoral defense mechanisms that can repel or mitigate infections. The zoonotic disease, leptospirosis, is transmitted from reservoir hosts, such as the rat, via the exposure of accidental hosts, such as humans, livestock, and dogs, to freshwater and soil contaminated with Leptospira spirochetes shed in rodent urine [1], [2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8]. The common routes of infection through skin abrasions and mucous membranes introduce leptospires to conditions of the host venue, such as physiological osmolarity. Studies of the pathogen in culture have shown that the increase in osmolarity modulates gene expression, including the strong induction of the lig genes for the adhesins, LigA and LigB, which mediate adherence to the host via extracellular matrix proteins and the plasma protein, fibrinogen [9], [10], [11], [12], [13], [14]. Moreover, the binding of LigB to proteins involved in the repair of injured skin, such as fibroblast fibronectin and collagen type III, along with the inhibitory effect of LigB-fibrinogen binding on blood clotting [15], [16], suggest important roles for LigB early during infection. The successful entry into the circulation for dissemination to distal tissue also exposes the pathogen to the surveillance of host innate immunity, particularly the alternative pathway of complement activation early in an infection. Before Suebee passed away, she said that her doctor believed that -- *morgellons will end up being a disease attributed to a rat/rodent*
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Post by ginna898 on Jan 8, 2013 17:13:44 GMT -5
A very good article about Lyme (notice CDC acknowledging and the spirochette found in the dermis of the mouse in the study after treatment with antibiotics) This is an interesting article with a video of the spirochettes found in the dermis. According to the CDC, 10-20% of Lyme disease patients who have completed antibiotic therapy continue to suffer from symptoms such as joint, muscle, and neurological pain. The following hypotheses are often presented as possible reasons for the lingering symptoms: autoimmunity triggered by the infection, tissue damage inflicted by the spirochetes, and (depending on whom you ask) failure of antibiotics to kill all the spirochetes. A new paper from Linda Bockenstedt's group at Yale proposes that antibiotic treatment of disseminated Borrelia burgdorferi infection leaves behind inflammatory pieces of dead spirochetes that are responsible for the persisting symptoms. Video at this Link: spirochetesunwound.blogspot.com/2012/11/inflammatory-spirochete-debris-left.htmlThis person keeps all the spirocette scientific reports from 2012 together here: Spirochetes Unwound
Blogging about those twisty bacteria known as spirochetes
THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 2013
Spirochete research: 2012 in review
Here are some of my favorite spirochete papers from 2012. Direct access to all research articles (some behind a paywall) is provided via the DOI links. Where present, the links above the citations lead to my blog posts about the studies. spirochetesunwound.blogspot.com/
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Post by Lynn on Jan 9, 2013 0:13:10 GMT -5
Hi Gina
This is so interesting. Back on one farm we all lived in a studio and they gave us a camper trailer too. We were waiting for them to complete the garage as a down stairs for our boys. The cow feed was rat infested and the camper was mouse and rat infested. I scoured and cleaned and I know I inhaled dust from the pee and poo even though I was being so careful not too.
Years later I again was renting a small farm house and the vent pipe to the well lost its lid and the landlord had a brick over the opening. Sometimes the brick would get moved and a few days later would be discovered and I wondered if a mouse or rat fell in and contaminate our drinking water. On top of all the the Almond orchard had originally been a cow farm. My folks drove by it all the time going to church when I was a kid. Living there we buried many a critter and found old antique medicine bottles for cattle. So many of your list things I could have easily come into contact sense I was the one that did the cleaning and back as caretakers; Feeding the animals.
In Light Lynn/TorpedoLynn
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Post by Baraka Obam on Jan 9, 2013 1:18:41 GMT -5
Gina, this could be a avenue, the fact of the matter, when I caught this disease is this,
All three of these spirochetes could easily have been in the bodies of the ladies of the night in Asia, they for the most part. were farm girls, even in the city rat populations would be high, suggesting transfer of the rodent spirochetes.
In the country they would be subjected to rat and lyme spirochetes, because of their profession also syphilis's spirochetes.
The fact that there was massive treatment with antibiotics could easily have mutated these similar issue disease to morph and mutate together, sharing all their traits making a brand new unknown type, Genus, of spirochetes disease capable of alluding all form of treatment and diagnostics known to mankind.
I am quite sure that the overuse of antibiotics in these endemic areas and the permissive and risky behavior of the soldiers was the original breeding ground for this sickness.
I got mine 40 years ago, that's where I was when it happened. all of my friends I was stationed with came home with disease issues.
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Post by scabdraggr on Jan 9, 2013 12:49:56 GMT -5
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Post by toni on Jan 10, 2013 14:18:45 GMT -5
Scab, That first link you posted: farm9.staticflickr.com/8368/8365249120_326874accf_m.jpgThat looks exactly like what I just got out of my arm this morn. I can't take a picture (was using my other scope that hasn't any way to take pictures) and it's more powerful, and I saw the strangest "knobby looking attachments every few micro meters" along the bluish black fiber. I am not sure what it is, and I wish I could post it, but my QX5 isn't hooked up yet to my new computer. It reminded me of "septae" (in a knobby form) along (the fiber) only because of the "knobs, where septae would be" if you know what I mean. Can you put hint of water on that first specimen and get the dark fiber to float off of it, and then you'll see when it's magnified more, "there may be knobs" along the fiber. Geeze, I hope that makes sense what I'm saying. Right now, I'm lost without knowing how to use anything on this computer...sorry, but soon I'll get the hang of it.
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Post by simone on Jan 11, 2013 9:37:01 GMT -5
Thanks for the post and spreading this great news Gina. I forward it to a friend in Spain who will share it I'm sure to sufferers in Russia and Ukraine. Many thanks to Sunny and Cindy in getting it out to the press. I remember a post of mine where I said that hoping 2013 brings good news. I'm sure more to come. Hang in there everyone.
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Post by scabdraggr on Jan 11, 2013 11:45:53 GMT -5
Toni, I will put up more pics of the next stages of the animal larva, which is what it is. I see it giving birth to live young, through paedogenisis, parthenogenesis and by division.Everything that I see are this one thing, just different stages of growth.
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Post by Baraka Obam on Jan 11, 2013 12:41:35 GMT -5
The most important issue, if your showing these globs of matter to be animals, bugs, parasites where is the mass of its kindred.
Pictures of the many?
Slug looking matter does not make a slug.
Last question are you SURE your right this time?
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Post by scabdraggr on Jan 11, 2013 16:26:24 GMT -5
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Post by Baraka Obam on Jan 11, 2013 16:47:59 GMT -5
This stuff is by no means a complete and exact anything, it looks more like growth material than a entity.
Dragonfly has posted many pictures of similar matter all taken from her hands.
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Post by scabdraggr on Jan 11, 2013 16:52:08 GMT -5
df and I have gone over her pics and some of hers show the true legs.
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Post by Baraka Obam on Jan 11, 2013 17:39:19 GMT -5
Would there be any pictures of ONE whole insect, with all of us infected there should be piles of whole bugs, if bugs are the reson we are sick.
I would think, do you have any ideas on why there should only be legs visable?
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Post by scabdraggr on Jan 11, 2013 20:03:49 GMT -5
I never said that only true legs were visible, both the true legs and the prolegs are visible in the CEH foundation's picture D in the new PRJ, PDF document that is downloadable. To the left of the red arrow in pic D, the true leg is almost completely formed, as is the proleg, along with the round cysts with the brown spot in them, this being a tiny clone.
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