Post by andycoyle1 on Jun 29, 2010 17:02:51 GMT -5
Have you heard of it?
Possibly the cause of Morgelllons
Check out your cotton garments
Dab a freed up translucent fibre with moisture
see it come alive
It is a gmo hybrid of a nematode crossed with a cotton fibre
POSSIBLY
It is alive all the same
I believe it is causing Morgellons disease
I just exchanged emails with Vitaly Citovski
I urged him, if possible, to investigate this
He was very decent and considerate of my sufffering
I thank him for that
However his initial reaction was not goood
Hope he takes a look though as he is a top scientist
The organism became known about in 1983
read the following article at
health.nytimes.com/health/guides/test/protein-urine/news-and-features.html
THE DOCTOR'S WORLD
February 8, 1983 - By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, M.D. - Science Desk - 1448 Words
ACARDINAL rule of medicine is to greet startling new research findings with a healthy dose of skepticism and not to accept their validity until confirmed by other scientists. Take the case of two articles in the Jan. 1 issue of the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, in which researchers in Chicago reported discovery of a microorganism they believe causes toxemia of pregnancy, a disease that may cause the deaths of up to five million pregnant women and fetuses throughout the world each year. They named the organism, apparently a tiny worm, Hydatoxi lualba. Despite its publication in a respectable medical journal, news of the report startled many doctors and raised serious questions in the minds of some scientists, especially those specializing in parasitology. There had been little evidence in the past linking toxemia to any environmental condition that might favor the transmission of a parasite. The new organism would add toxemia to legionnaire's disease and a growing list of other conditions newly attributed to organisms medicine had somehow failed to find before. And parasitologists who read the articles severely criticized technical aspects of the studies themselves.
And Go to the following website that discusses the lesions it causes at
lib.bioinfo.pl/meid:199221/pmid
It also discusses that they are found on the cotton fibres
Email me at andycoyle1@hotmail.com
If you want to discuss this further
Possibly the cause of Morgelllons
Check out your cotton garments
Dab a freed up translucent fibre with moisture
see it come alive
It is a gmo hybrid of a nematode crossed with a cotton fibre
POSSIBLY
It is alive all the same
I believe it is causing Morgellons disease
I just exchanged emails with Vitaly Citovski
I urged him, if possible, to investigate this
He was very decent and considerate of my sufffering
I thank him for that
However his initial reaction was not goood
Hope he takes a look though as he is a top scientist
The organism became known about in 1983
read the following article at
health.nytimes.com/health/guides/test/protein-urine/news-and-features.html
THE DOCTOR'S WORLD
February 8, 1983 - By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, M.D. - Science Desk - 1448 Words
ACARDINAL rule of medicine is to greet startling new research findings with a healthy dose of skepticism and not to accept their validity until confirmed by other scientists. Take the case of two articles in the Jan. 1 issue of the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, in which researchers in Chicago reported discovery of a microorganism they believe causes toxemia of pregnancy, a disease that may cause the deaths of up to five million pregnant women and fetuses throughout the world each year. They named the organism, apparently a tiny worm, Hydatoxi lualba. Despite its publication in a respectable medical journal, news of the report startled many doctors and raised serious questions in the minds of some scientists, especially those specializing in parasitology. There had been little evidence in the past linking toxemia to any environmental condition that might favor the transmission of a parasite. The new organism would add toxemia to legionnaire's disease and a growing list of other conditions newly attributed to organisms medicine had somehow failed to find before. And parasitologists who read the articles severely criticized technical aspects of the studies themselves.
And Go to the following website that discusses the lesions it causes at
lib.bioinfo.pl/meid:199221/pmid
It also discusses that they are found on the cotton fibres
Email me at andycoyle1@hotmail.com
If you want to discuss this further