Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

STEALTH PATHOGENS?

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Interesting . . .

 

[Posted at SymphonicHealth group]

 

STEALTH PATHOGENS

        Posted by: " Ruby " ruby

rubysemporium   Tue May 22, 2007 7:31 pm ((PDT))

STEALTH PATHOGENS

http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Gallery/6412/stealth.htm

  sent in by AL Credits to: Alternative Medicine Digest and Richard

Leviton Source listed: Lida H. Mattman, Ph.D., Cell Wall Deficient

Forms-Stealth Pathogens, 2nd Edition, CRC Press (1993), CRC Press, 2000

Corporate Blvd. N.W., Boca Raton, FL 33431

 

An Introduction to Stealth Pathogens

 

While they differ in function, most of the body's estimated 100 trillion

cells have many similar features, including a defined cell membrane, or

wall, separating the cell's inside from the surrounding fluid outside

the cell. The cell membrane is ultrathin (about 1/2,500,000 inch thick),

composed of proteins and fats arrayed in a scaffolding of different

fibers, struts, and hollow rods. The purpose of the cell membrane is to

regulate the passage of materials into and out of the cell.

 

The term stealth pathogens refers to bacteria that have cell walls that

are deficient in shape, structure, rigidity, and/or layering. This

feature enables such bacteria (CWD, or cell wall deficient) to easily

move DNA between cells and for groups of CWD bacteria to fuse together

and " facilitate genetic experiments, " explains microbiologist Lida

Holmes Mattman, Ph.D., a leading authority in this field.

 

Such " genetic experiments " can include many of today's more baffling

autoimmune diseases such as MS and rheumatoid arthritis, along with

other forms of arthritis, septicemia, meningitis, urinary tract

infections, heart valve infection, eye inflammations, " and a host of

other maladies, " says Dr. Mattman. These organisms are " clandestine,

almost unrecognizable, and omnipresent, " says Dr. Mattman. They are

capable of considerable shape-changing and growth resulting in

disease-hence the apt term, stealth pathogens.

 

In fact, the cell shapes produced by a diminished, discontinuous, or

absent cell wall are " almost endlessly variegated " and work their way

into " all aspects of microbe participation in life. " They're known by

various technical names, according to the degree to which they've lost

their cell wall: spheroplast, protoplast, L-phase, L-forms,

transitionals, and mycoplasma. According to some physicians, mycoplasma,

which are unable to make any cell wall whatsoever and are highly

divergent in type, may be involved in the initiation of cancer.

 

Rheumatoid Arthritis and Multiple Sclerosis--The Cause May Be in the

Blood

Changes in the shape and function of common microorganisms may explain

the origin of certain autoimmune diseases. A live blood analysis

provides the startling evidence--and points the way towards successful

treatment.

 

Many theories are put forward to account for the development of

autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis,

both of which are marked by the body's strange destruction of its own

tissues, as if they were foreign, even dangerous, matter.

 

Physicians believe rheumatoid arthritis is caused by, variously, food

allergies, nutritional deficiencies, intestinal permeability, genetic

susceptibility, or microorganisms. For multiple sclerosis (MS), proposed

causes range from food sensitivities, yeasts, environmental toxins, and

dental mercury amalgams to fatty acid deficiencies, stress, and the

herpes virus.

 

A new theory may dispel the cloud of uncertainty surrounding both

diseases and the baffling nature of the autoimmune response itself This

theory holds that the cause may be fairly ordinary bacteria that have

changed their body structure and activity and become what

microbiologists now call " stealth pathogens " or cell wall deficient

organisms. These pathogens can be seen through darkfield microscopy in

living blood samples of patients with rheumatoid arthritis or MS.

 

However, according to Philip Hockstra, Ph.D., director of Therma-Scan,

Inc., a blood-imaging and specialty diagnostic company in Huntington

Woods, Michigan, you can only begin to understand the clinical relevance

of these pathogens if you study living blood without any preconceived

ideas.

 

" Most blood testing starts with too many preconceptions, but if you

simply remove your biases and allow the blood to show you what is going

on, you can see a whole story. Every cell has a story to tell. You can

physically see these microorganisms. You may not be able to identify

exactly what they are, but you can tell fairly quickly whether these

microorganisms are at a problematic level and affecting the immune

system. " This in turn sheds new light on the process of autoimmune

diseases, Dr. Hoekstra adds.

 

Understanding the Autoimmune Response

Dr. Hoekstra disagrees with the prevailing concept of an autoimmune

disease; that is, for a mysterious reason, the immune system starts

attacking itself as if it were suddenly crazy. " I do not believe that in

the wisdom of the body the immune system goes 'nuts' and targets the

body's tissues for destruction. Rather, I see this as collateral,

secondary damage while the immune system is actually seeking out a

specific, though somewhat hidden, target. "

 

To explain his new model of autoimmune activity which is based on

extensive laboratory observation, Dr. Hoekstra relies on a hunting

metaphor. Hunters with torches move through the woods in search of a

raccoon. In pursuit of the elusive raccoon the hunters accidentally set

fire to trees and the hunting dogs damage much of the undergrowth. In

fact, they nearly trash the entire woods, creating a tremendous amount

of collateral damage, says Dr. Hoekstra.

 

" Let's see the dogs as immune system antibodies (out to digest foreign

matter), the hunters as white blood cells, the woods as the body, and

the raccoon as a specific microorganism, " he comments. " In pondering

this analogy, it occurred to me that in an autoimmune disease, the

immune system is probably tracking down a specific, targeted microbial

agent. "

 

The quest to identify this elusive microbial agent in rheumatoid

arthritis has occupied rheumatologists for over one hundred years, but

it has been a quest marked by numerous false starts and dead ends,

partly because it has been based on misleading animal studies, says Dr.

Hoekstra. But when you start looking with wide-open eyes at the living

blood of humans, as a researcher you are brought a lot closer to an

accurate identification of that microbial " raccoon. "

 

Bacteria in an Altered State

 

Quite often, when he examines a slide of blood using darkfield

microscopy, Dr. Hoekstra can quickly surmise the patient's entire health

history. If the platelets are " sticky, " or clump together, there is a

high probability the person suffers from headaches. Similarly,

variations in shape among red blood cells tell him a great deal about a

person's biochemistry, their nutritional intake and nutrient levels. " We

are committed to patient education here, so patients sit with me while I

analyze their living blood sample, watching its shapes and movements on

the video monitor. "

 

Patients new to the information-gathering potential of darkfield

microscopy often liken the technology's remarkable ability to reveal

detailed health histories to a crystal ball, says Dr. Hoekstra. " There

is no psychic intuition here--it's all there in the blood for us both to

see. With our specially equipped microscopes, we can look for many

things that are commonly missed in routine blood studies. The goal is to

get more than routine information about a patient's condition so that it

might be used in a holistic, preventive way. "

 

It doesn't take long--watching the blood for 20-40 minutes--to get to

the heart of the problem, says Dr. Hoekstra. " Then I can show the

patient different features in the blood that are probably linked to

their health problem. You can see features of chronic viral infections,

such as herpes, cytomegalovirus, and Epstein-Barr, that cause shape

changes in the white blood cells called lymphocytes. "

 

In the case of rheumatoid arthritis, Dr. Hoekstra has found that

virtually all the patients he has studied have had significant amounts

of a bacteria called Propioni bacterium acnes. " This is the genus and

species of the organism we believe is responsible for propagating and

perpetuating this disease, " says Dr. Hoekstra. " It is a very common

bacteria in an altered state of being--it's cell wall deficient. "

 

The bacteria was first identified and described in 1981 by G.A. Denys at

Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. " This bacteria is passed

transplacentally, from mother to fetus, and this may be responsible for

rheumatoid arthritis showing up in generations in a single family, " says

Dr. Hoekstra.

 

Why this bacteria is prevalent in seemingly all cases of rheumatoid

arthritis is not clear; overuse of antibiotics may be a factor

encouraging its growth. " The use of antibiotics is one of the most

potent ways of inducing cell wall deficiency; bacteria seem to do this

as a survival mechanism. "

 

In other words, when a bacteria is transformed into a cell wall

deficient form, it assumes different characteristics from the whole or

native type of microorganism it used to be, Dr. Hoekstra explains. " The

organism remains intact except it loses its cell wall and its antigenic

characteristics, enabling it to function as a cellular chameleon. " When

it loses its antigenic signature, the bacteria is able to mask itself

against destruction by the immune system's antibodies which can no

longer recognize it as an antigen (foreign protein).

 

Dr. Hoekstra's mentor, Lida Holmes Mattman, Ph.D., also of Wayne State

(now professor emeritus of biology), confirmed the causal role of P.

acnes in a laboratory experiment. Dr. Mattman extracted the bacteria

from the synovial fluid (which lubricates joints) of human arthritis

patients, and injected it into chicken embryos. The chicks then

exhibited symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis. When she treated the chicks

with antibiotics known to disable P. acnes, the disease disappeared.

 

A different bacteria, operating on similar principles, seems to be the

organic cause of multiple sclerosis, says Dr. Hockstra. It's tentative

name--not yet widely accepted by other microbiologists--is Borrelia

mylophora, so named because its characteristics seem to resemble those

of Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacteria believed responsible for Lyme

disease.

 

In multiple sclerosis, the myelin sheath covering nerves gets eaten away

by the immune system, explains Dr. Hoekstra. " That is exactly like the

hunters' torches setting fire to the forest. Most of the destruction of

the myelin sheath takes place from actions of the white blood cells and

their antibodies. But their primary target is not the myelin sheath at

all. It's the Borrelia mylophora bacteria, running around in the nervous

system. B. mylophora has an extremely high affinity for the myelin

sheath. It loves it. "

 

Unfortunately, the myelin sheath sustains a lot of collateral damage as

the immune cells attempt to find and destroy the microbe, Dr. Hoekstra

says.

 

As with rheumatoid arthritis, the work on identifying a possible

microbial agent in multiple sclerosis has been under way for many years,

since 1913. One of the difficulties is that the microbiologist must be

very patient, able to culture a blood specimen and keep it

uncontaminated for as long as nine months before a positive bacterial

identification can be made, explains Dr. Hoekstra Both P. acnes and B.

mylophora are examples of stealth pathogens, of organisms with deficient

cell walls, capable of acting secretly in the body, creating disease,

and hardly leaving a trace.

 

Pushing Away Their Wheelchairs

 

Once you understand the nature of the organism causing an autoimmune

disease, it's much easier to develop an effective strategy against it,

says Dr. Hockstra. " We have a number of multiple sclerosis patients who

have pushed away their wheelchairs or thrown away their canes and are

walling now. And their vision has been restored, " he adds.

 

Physicians use different strategies in dealing with the underlying

bacteria. Dr. Hoekstra cites the example of Phoebe, a 36-year-old woman

with MS. After B. mylophora was cultured from her blood, Phoebe's doctor

prescribed a heavy dose (about 100 mg daily) of a standard antibiotic

called doxycycline. After four weeks, she was able to lift both hands in

the air, comb her hair without losing her balance, see clearly again

without dizziness, and move about without her cane; after six months

(four of which involved continuous dosing), Phoebe was free of all

symptoms, says Dr. Hoekstra.

 

The successful use of this antibiotic against B. mylophora was first

verified by a physician in South Dakota who reasoned that the symptoms

of MS (which he had) were suggestively similar to those of Lyme disease,

which responds fairly well to doxycycline. After dosing himself for

three months with the antibiotic, he was symptom free.

 

However, the long-term use of antibiotics has many drawbacks, cautions

Dr. Hoekstra. It seriously damages the ecology of intestinal microflora

and can lead to a condition of microbial imbalance called dysbiosis.

This in turn can be the foundation for numerous diseases. As stated

above, it can also facilitate the growth of more cell wall deficient

forms. To counteract this, Phoebe's doctor recommended a product called

Probioplex, made from concentrated globulin whey protein.

 

" This is a source of passive immunity, like the concentrated antibodies

in colostrum [breast milk at childbirth], " Dr. Hoekstra explains. Phoebe

used Probioplex as a gentle, broad-spectrum, natural antibiotic (at a

dosage of 1/2 teaspoon, four times daily) to suppress the overgrowth of

nonbeneficial bacteria, whose numbers may have increased from the

prolonged antibiotic intake.

 

Phoebe further supported her intestinal ecology by regularly taking

supplements of Lactobacillus acidophilus and L. bifidus (in refrigerated

powder form). To offset the toxic effects of the antibiotic on her liver

and kidneys (which filter all the body's toxins), Phoebe took high doses

of vitamin C, typically 4.5 g daily in divided doses. She continued this

regimen for a month after the end of the antibiotics course, adds Dr.

Hoekstra.

 

Often patients with MS have a problem with mercury amalgam fillings,

says Dr. Hoekstra. " Some MS patients seem to benefit greatly from having

their mercury fillings removed. " Phoebe had her mercury amalgams

replaced, a procedure that seemed to help her considerably, he adds.

 

Halting Bacteria with Colloidal Silver

 

In the case of rheumatoid arthritis, a hallmark of conventional medical

treatment is the use of steroids, which can provide symptomatic relief,

but no cure. The danger here, cautions Dr. Hoekstra, is that such drugs

" give a free and clear run to the bacteria involved (Propioni bacterium

acnes). If such a patient is ever to subdue this microorganism, they

must have a competent immune system, and to have this, they must be off

the steroids. "

 

Dr. Hoekstra notes that while it may seem daunting to an arthritis

patient to surrender the comfort of symptomatic relief from steroids,

there are effective natural alternatives by which inflammation can be

diminished without suppressing the immune system. The herb gentian

violet, for example, is a nonspecific antimicrobial agent of benefit

here. Other helpful herbs include echinacea, goldenseal, and chaparral.

A homeopathic preparation called a nosode can be cultured from the

bacteria itself then reintroduced into the patient as a subtle vaccine,

says Dr.Hoekstra.

 

Colloidal silver and the omega-3 group of essential fatty acids can also

be used successfully. Dr. Hoekstra cites the case of a 45-year-old

carpenter with rheumatoid arthritis. Over the course of four years, he

progressively deteriorated to the point where he could only price jobs,

but was no longer able to do the manual work. He took colloidal silver

(an ultrafine liquid suspension of medicinal silver) for several months

at the rate of 3 cc of 30 ppm colloidal silver per day for 60 days.

 

In addition, he took daily dosages of immune-enhancing herbs and

vitamins. Specifically, these were: esterified vitamin C (4 g), vitamin

B complex, zinc (30 mg), vitamin E (400 IU), folic acid (1 mg), vitamin

B 12 (0.8 mg), fish oils (5 g), goldenseal (500 mg), echinacea (500 mg),

and chaparral (500 mg). After this supplementation, he improved

spectacularly, " says Dr. Hoekstra.

 

On the basis of the " disease stories " Dr. Hoekstra has read in the

living blood of numerous patients, he affirms a message of clinical

hope. " We have made a serious crack in these autoinunune diseases by

showing that there is a cause involving microorganisms which can be

handled. People who have been dealing with what they've been told is a

hopeless medical situation should realize it is not at all hopeless. "

 

Health, Hope, Joy & Healing :

May you Prosper, even as your Soul Prospers 3John 2

Jennifer Ruby

Email advice is not a substitute for medical treatment.

http://www.rubysemporium.com

SymphonicHealth

Therapeutic-Laser_Therapy

http://www.lazrpulsr.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...