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Post by ctbarb on Nov 15, 2008 14:32:56 GMT -5
I have several photos of specimens from nasal, oral and stool samples that look exactly like this! Just 2 days ago, I passed a 6" long specimen that still had the female worm inside the male...that sounds like Schistosoma to me...it's the only organism that carries the female inside. Can someone help me post these? I don't have a clue how to do it! HELP! ctbarb
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Post by angela on Nov 15, 2008 14:35:01 GMT -5
Yes, I sure have seen these things I've checked in pink. Now the (tornado/diamond shaped thing) on the left...do those tinier "diamond shaped things" explode from the larger one? The reason I ask is someone else had told me they saw something like this that "sort of blew up" and made many more too!! Thanks Ang! (ooops! did that wrong at first) YESSSSSS! They explode like fireworks! Just like fireworks!
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Post by angela on Nov 15, 2008 14:43:07 GMT -5
I have several photos of specimens from nasal, oral and stool samples that look exactly like this! Just 2 days ago, I passed a 6" long specimen that still had the female worm inside the male...that sounds like Schistosoma to me...it's the only organism that carries the female inside. Can someone help me post these? I don't have a clue how to do it! HELP! ctbarb I'm barely learning how to post away myself (plus zoomonga photostorage boots me every couple days and have to create a new account every week) Maybe toni has suggestions. Good luck i'd like to see them! That part that looks like the Schistosoma/female tucked inside...i think is actually the "flagellar pocket" of the trophozoite. imo
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Post by toni on Nov 15, 2008 14:44:33 GMT -5
OMG! (about them exploding) I've not "yet" myself see that - but I WANT to. Is it by sheer luck and being at the right place at the right time to see this remarkable event....or can I induce this to happen from any of my specimens by using something on them? Like a solution or heat or what?? I wanna see too! Angela, thank you so MUCH....I see clearer now what you've been trying to get though my thick head!
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Post by ctbarb on Nov 15, 2008 14:46:15 GMT -5
Hi,
I also have photos of what appears to be Trypanasoma cruzi...complete with flagellar pocket...there is more than one organism in my body, that I'm sure of. I hadn't seen anyone with these same orgs before, but I'm sure glad that I'm not the only one! Not really, but, at least we can now look at alternatives here. I have also found these SAME orgs on pieces of tobacco from my cigs! This is indeed scary!!!
Hugs, ctbarb
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Post by toni on Nov 15, 2008 14:54:38 GMT -5
CTBarb, Ant had mentioned ( Devcan.com ) and I love that site, it's quick as it gets and easy. If you have your pictures (in your computer) pic part...then go to Devcan.com Click on (across the top part) you'll see (free image hosting) click that on. Then you'll see three links below. Highlight and copy the (second link). Bring it back here to this print box, and click on this symbol, which is right here above this box where we type our posts. See the little happy faces above here (once you click on reply)? Directly above the "angry" face, is where this symbol is. Click that and you'll see IMG][IMG then appear. Put your new link you've copied right between these IMG's brackets.
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Post by angela on Nov 15, 2008 14:56:53 GMT -5
ooooh oooh ooooh !
This is gettin goood ;D i dont what what to respond to first... both of you got me all giddy!
toni... acid makes it happen. i dont think you will see the explosions with a regular microscope. If you pull off a 30X lens, put it right on you eybrow and right on you speciman... and blurr your vision... while you cover a speciman with a drop of vinegar, you might see this activity!
barb...tobacco boy howdy my rolling tobacco is fill with "trophozoites". My boss asked me "how can you still smoke it"? good question! uhgh! this is so fd up!
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Post by ctbarb on Nov 15, 2008 15:02:16 GMT -5
Toni, Thanks for the help! Give me a few minutes to try it out...can I post several pics or will I overload the board? Don't want to do that....we're getting into something VERY interesting! Ya think?
ctb
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Post by angela on Nov 15, 2008 15:13:24 GMT -5
Send em on barb ...as long as the images are not too large on the pixels they can be posted. These are towel bits on left and bottom and that one on right is the Husky fur. I see you may have just emailed me huh barb? hope so... cool! I will try it!
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Post by angela on Nov 15, 2008 15:30:29 GMT -5
These spores in acid look ALOT like this! I sure do hope you get to see this...its this above but in miniature. It's as if you are the Jolly Green Giant peekin in on their teensie little world and they dont know you're watchng. I felt like i was watching them gravitate over the mountains of my jagged and brilliant colored scabs. ...or like they were a kaliedascope (sp?) of everchanging miniature stained glass windows in an all-stain-glass-church! Feels like you are a gigantic fly on the wall or a peeping tom watching them expose themselves! You will speechless when you see it! It will be so overwhelming it will make you sob! It is a feeling you will never forget when you finally see it happening!
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Post by angela on Nov 15, 2008 17:29:45 GMT -5
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Post by ctbarb on Nov 15, 2008 17:45:10 GMT -5
Thank you so much Angela for posting these for me. My head feels like it's about to burst like a ripe melon! Hugs, ctbarb
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Post by angela on Nov 16, 2008 9:03:06 GMT -5
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Post by angela on Nov 16, 2008 10:02:37 GMT -5
I have several photos of specimens from nasal, oral and stool samples that look exactly like this! Just 2 days ago, I passed a 6" long specimen that still had the female worm inside the male...that sounds like Schistosoma to me...it's the only organism that carries the female inside. Can someone help me post these? I don't have a clue how to do it! HELP! ctbarb Something i read here and have read elsewhere also reminds me of this... If you took one end of this artifact and were able to spin/twist it manually...you would come up with a deeper "cavity" similar to what the hyphae are doing here. images1.zoomonga.com/photos1/dab254ad-3619-4268-9360-125220a36915_medium.jpegSometimes there is something inside (a reformed flagallar pocket? fake sporocysts?) and sometimes it is empty.......and can give the impression that something belonged inside. But that's not necessarily the case. Point is, many artifacts are doing the same thing that many of the hyphae are doing ...SPIRALLING. ((and doing the same thing as the original oocyst is doing)))
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Post by toni on Nov 16, 2008 10:13:15 GMT -5
I sure see what you mean. And the twisting. Also thank you, cause I'll try the vinegar, even lemon too on these and see what I can see.
Thanks Ang.
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Post by toni on Nov 16, 2008 10:32:30 GMT -5
Angela, your link above has a drawing you did (that looks like what we call *bacon*) A few days ago, this brand new opened package of cotton Qtips - I noticed a speck inside the qtip, and scoped it. I had to wet the qtip to tease out the speck, and it was the "bacon bit" looking thing. Is this the same specimen you've drawn in your pics/link? Angela's drawing
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Post by angela on Nov 16, 2008 15:29:38 GMT -5
toni... that is a drawing of one hyphae strand. Im sorry its not as 3-dimensional as i thought. I now see where you see "bacon" but no, the larger item on left is supposed to be a higher magnified fiber ...with the spiralling fold down the center.
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Post by toni on Nov 16, 2008 15:53:39 GMT -5
Thanks Ang, I understand.
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Post by angela on Nov 17, 2008 9:19:06 GMT -5
Question: So when saran wrap shapes itself into these shapes too or toiley paper...are you saying that these organisms then basically do a quorem sensing type communication to align themselves into the "troph" looking shape? (sorry i missed this the first time around) YESSSSS! Same as quorum sensing! But it's not bacteria at work here. They're spores (or what Wilhelm Reich called bions) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quorum_sensing
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Post by angela on Nov 17, 2008 9:23:04 GMT -5
...spores from a Protozoa.........
Bions, Protocells, Biogenesis, Pleomorphism and Genetics
In the early 1940s in Norway, while on the run from the Nazis, Wilhelm Reich was observing, via high-magnification microscopy, the disintegration of organic materials into small energy vesicles, which he called bions. These bions, upon further observation and as documented with time-lapse movies, would organize themselves into basic life forms such as amoeba and paramecia. Various control procedures, involving high temperature, pressurized sterilization, demonstrated the reality of this "natural organization of protozoa". Reich came to believe that life did not originate only in some ancient, dark corner of history, but that life is being recreated every day, right under our noses, through the specific process of bionous disintegration and reorganization. He observed bions develop not only from organic materials, but also from inorganic materials as well. Before and since Reich, other scientists have also discovered what Reich called bions, giving them other names.
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