Guest guest Posted May 22, 2006 Report Share Posted May 22, 2006 FIBER DISEASE http://www.chemtrailcentral.com/forum/thread7527.html Hi Cliff, I have previously emailed you regarding my slides that were sent by a mutual friend named Linda. I had hoped to hear back from you. I am recalling a post I read at NUSPA board about a year ago. There was a statement about cotton in Haines underwear being the source of this disease and that there had been an accidental release of some bioengineered cotton seeds which contained silkworm cells to kill other insects . You may all ready familiar with this URL http://www.consciouschoice.com/issues/cc1209/geneticcontroversy1209.html I am in agreement with what you are saying but I am also seeing and treating myself for an oomycetes pathogen. The widely used mosquito spray Laginex /Lagenidium giganteum is now known to cause disease in human beings. I always suspected it but now it has been confirmed. http://www.doctorfungus.org/Educatio/conf_highlights/focus14/pdf/focus14_abs_42.\ pdf#search='human%20disease%20in%20lagenidium' I see more than one pathogen in my body and oomycetes is jjust one of them. The others you mentioned seem to be there as well. I have observed the writhing white strands as well. I am treating myself for oomycetes which is a protist in disguise. I am getting some good results with Mycoxan and Candex along with copper, oregano oil and an antiprotozoal from the rainforest called guaco. I have cellulose /glucan residue from the oomycetes on my normal tissue. This has been identified by a lab with microspectroscopy. I need to get this pathogen off of my body because it is is a natural food for insects and bacteria. You may not be convinced that oomycetes is a partof this pathogen but I can tell you that it is responding to treatment and the cellulose component is being expelled. The oomycetes family has motile zoospores which look very worm-like. I have no financial interest in any of the products but if you are suffering from this disease then don't be without hope. I was deathly ill with this pathogen for 7 years. I thougt I would be dead by now I felt so toxic and had given up. I will look forward to your follow-up on this topic. Best Wishes, Greema To Cliff PostTue Nov 23, 2004 7:20 pm As you have mentioned, there is definite dislike of salt. There is another website that you may or may not be familiar with at http://www.lymephotos.com/ that has a recommended cure for this pathogen of salt and Vitamin C. I am not sure I agree with what their various conclusions are regarding the identification of the pathogen but some people seem to have results with their cure. Others have reported elevated blood pressure and diarrhea. I would bet the farm that some of this pathogen is from the oomycetes family. First of all the lab identification is cellulose. The pathogen I have has components that greatly rememble mold or fungus. True mold and fungus contain chitin. I have had 10 fungual cultures done and as many negative results for fungus even though I can observe strands of conoctic aseptate hyphae on my slides. The true test of this fact is that I was able to get a dermaologist to view my slides of hyphae in his office. He prepped this slide with KOH solution and put it under the scope. First he looked and smugly asked me to take a look. Lo and behold, there was nothing left of my sever hyphal strands on the slide. I was taken aback. I didn't understand how that could happen at the time. Live and learn they say. After more research I found that KOH is commonly used to look at fungus since it will dissolve all other materials on the slide except the chitin residue of the fungus. It will readlly dissolve cellulose and that's exactly what happened. I now had more information to narrow down my search. I needed to find a fungus-like pathogen which contained aseptate conoctic hyphae. This shape ruled out candida which is septate hyphae and the pathogens Muror and rhizopus since they contained chitin. That pretty much left me with the oomycetes family . I was not happy to learn this . The Irish potato famine pathogen p.infestans, downy mildew. pythiosis, and saprolegnia were among the family along with 500 plus other varieties. The oomycetes family is a freshwater mold by name but has only recently be understood to be a protist which mimics the shape of mold. They do not like salt. In aquarium fish there is a disease that is called Ich. In larger fish it is called saprolegnia and infests salmon and a few other varieties. These are more of the oomycetes family. All members of oomycetes have motile zoospores. T o shorten up this long story I will tell you that the fibers I have on my body were hollow, cellulose, fluorescent and were blue , red and whitish as well as crystalline . This led me down the rabbit holle to bioengineered fibers containing pathogens. I next focused on oomycetes pathogens that were being bioengineered into pesticides and Lagenidium Giganteum came on the scene as a bioengineered Mosquito larvacide . It was touted to be harmless to mammals It was in the form of " mycelium and oospores " to quote the pan pesticides data base. Sounds like fibers to me. A common practice in making biofibers is to add fluorescent marker dyes. Luciferase and Green fluorescent protien could account for the color and fluorescence Of these strands. A short time later it was documented that a number of dogs had died from an emerging new oomycetes pathogen called Lagenidium Giganteum. It presented in cutaneous lesions like pythiosis and then went systemic. I called an expert in the field named Leonel Mendoza and asked him some questions about this emergent new pathogen. He said it presented much like pythiosis but was even faster to become systemic. I asked him about human implications land he said " only dogs have it " Since the disease, pythiosis he compared it to was zoonotic I really believed that it could possibly be a human pathogen as well. Just last week I was made aware of the article written by Amy Grooters that indeed the harmless mosquito pathogen Lagenidium Giganteum was now a human disease. There was never a mention of the mosquito pesticide in any of the illness reports. That same University had an ongoing research project on campus as well making bioengineered pesticides. Of course they found that pathogen , they knew what to look for. Colleges get grants for research from the government. No mention of their approved pesticide was ever mentioned. Go figure- The Morgellons organization as well as a study by NUSPA both show the largest numbert of cases of this unknown fiber diseaseare reported from Texas , Florida and California. These were the same three states that were doing the most extensive spraying with Laginex. Targets of choice included rice fields and soybean fields in addition to wetlands and theme parks. . California even had a stronger strain of their own for use. That has now been discontinued without explanation. There is an ELISA test that is available from Pan American Labs to detect antibodies from both pythium and lagenidium. Physicians don't even know it exists. I have not been able to get one of theses tests. It is very frustrating to be on an HMO. Cellulose and glucans (sugar) comprise the structure of oomycetes. Humans have no enzymes to break down this pathogen in the human body. The cellulose glucan resudue is a natural food for many insects. Infestation with insects can also add to the pathogen as well as bacteria. I know that the form of lagenidium used for this spray is bioengineered and the cells of many other creatures have been used to make this product durable and give it longevity In it's natural state lagenidium is a frail and scarce form of oomycetes . In its bioengineered state the product stays active for about a month as used and will go into a encysted dormant survival phase which lastws for up to 7 years. God only knows what the other types of cells were that are a part of this pathogen. I am doing very well on the holistic medication I am taking. It has been of great help to deal with this disease as a fresh water protist. The Mycoxan is superior for being able to penetrate the cell walls and kill the pathogen, research xanthones. The candex is a must because it contains the enzymes cellulase and hemicellulase which is in fact the enzyme from another variety of mold that is know to break down the cellulose residue. The copper and Guaco address and protist aspect of this disease. I must say it has been great getting rid of all 30+ nonhealing lesions on my body and well as feeling much better. I will continue my regimen for a while though. It may take a while to break down all encysted spores and get them out of my body. From time to time I am still getting white hardened exudate coming out of my skin. It is a process but so far so good. Love, Greema Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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