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The Fiber DiseaseModerator: BioTeam Thank you for posting those links Fiber Symptoms!
I know your symptoms have gotten better from following the Candida Diet plus other modifications you use, but I was wondering if any of your labwork, heartrate, blood pressure, or anything else is still maybe out of kilter? Although my symptoms are much better than when I first knew I had this disease, my heart rate and breathing has began a steady nose dive. Anyone else with the experience that although your tactile and visuals of the intensity of this disease has lessened, you are now testing the opposite way? I.e. labwork is still going downhill although you feel better? And Randy, don't yell at me........I didn't forget your advice on getting the C - Reactive protein Test either......How did you know to get this test? Was it just a normal part of their screening you? My heartrate is elevated now and had bad electrocardiogram, yet my Stress Test said my heart was strong.......just beats extremely HIGH.....my resting pulse rate is always in the mid-nineties. Point being, I wonder why they did not test me for this way back when???? ______________________________ I also wanted to make a comment on Anthrax. Just a day or two ago, I read an article that had a statement in it saying that why most of our gulf war vets are experiencing illnesses was because of the Anthrax vacination they were given ( probably unbeknownst to them). I did not follow up on that article but i probably do have it saved somewhere, but today I started really thinking about it more and more. Our symptoms are very similar to the Gulf War Vets....... Hmmmm Hey, Canalon...... I have been reading more but can't find much info in the books on the Anthrax Vacination. Do you happen to know what all that it entails? If you have any spare time, could you please share your thoughts on this. I think it has been great to have you writing..... Sincerely, London
Hartuk,
Mattman was removed from her office for treating Lymes patients. They said she was not to continue. I sent a letter to the Michigan Attorney General on that one. They changed the laws about treating Lymes patients in Michigan, and we are stuck with labs that do not test accurately for Lymes. So, no good tests are done here that I know of. Skytroll
London,
I see that name Wiley keeps coming up on those types of links, dealing with aerosol propellent spraying. I have seen that name so many times. mmmmmmm But, I do wonder electromagnetic connection which seems to affect animals, insects etc. The reactome: Reactome map Humans Lineage; Now if we look along this lineage (inter)actions we will probably find every type of morph going on. This is a reactome, reactions, (inter)actions. Close Tam Tam? http://banon.cshl.org/cgi-bin/eventbrow ... &ID=48887& give you any ideas? http://banon.cshl.org/cgi-bin/frontpage?DB=gk_current Skytroll
And then we have the equivalent in gene expression.
http://banon.cshl.org/cgi-bin/eventbrow ... 160&ZOOM=2 The Ortholog groups of protein sequences: http://orthomcl.cbil.upenn.edu/cgi-bin/OrthoMclWeb.cgi eugenes: Eukaryotes. http://eugenes.org/ how we are similar: http://eugenes.org/all/hgsummary.html Daphnia stocks: http://iubio.bio.indiana.edu:7182/stocks/ UniGene: An Organized View of the Transciptome. Each UniGene entry is a set of transcript sequences that appear to come from the same transcription locus (gene or expressed pseudogene), together with information on protein similarities, gene expression, cDNA clone reagents, and genomic location. Species UniGene Entries Chordata Mammalia Bos taurus (Cow) 41,986 Canis familiaris (Dog) 23,414 Homo sapiens (Human) 95,887 Macaca fascicularis (Crab-eating monkey) 7,488 Macaca mulatta (Rhesus monkey) 4,870 Mus musculus (Mouse) 65,970 Oryctolagus cuniculus (Rabbit) 3,726 Ovis aries (Sheep) 4,081 Rattus norvegicus (Rat) 72,085 Sus scrofa (Pig) 37,862 Actinopterygii Danio rerio (Zebrafish) 32,539 Fundulus heteroclitus (Killifish) 3,154 Gasterosteus aculeatus (Three spined stickleback) 14,936 Oncorhynchus mykiss (Rainbow trout) 24,466 Oryzias latipes (Japanese medaka) 11,521 Pimephales promelas 18,541 Salmo salar (Atlantic salmon) 17,032 Takifugu rubripes 3,546 Amphibia Xenopus laevis (African clawed frog) 29,244 Xenopus tropicalis (Western clawed frog) 33,132 Ascidiacea Ciona intestinalis (Seasquirt) 15,587 Ciona savignyi 7,291 Molgula tectiformis 7,351 Aves Gallus gallus (Chicken) 30,470 Cephalochordata Branchiostoma floridae (Florida lancelet) 11,300 Echinodermata Echinoidea Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (Purple sea urchin) 14,658 Arthopoda Insecta Aedes aegypti (Yellow fever mosquito) 15,392 Anopheles gambiae (African malaria mosquito) 15,609 Apis mellifera (Honeybee) 4,583 Bombyx mori (Domestic silkworm) 6,755 Drosophila melanogaster (Fruit fly) 16,635 Tribolium castaneum (Red flour beetle) 6,328 Nematoda Chromadorea Caenorhabditis elegans (Nematode) 21,529 Platyhelminthes Trematoda Schistosoma japonicum 8,951 Schistosoma mansoni 8,669 Embryophyta Bryopsida Physcomitrella patens 7,926 Coniferopsida Picea glauca (White spruce) 6,867 Picea sitchensis (Sitka spruce) 6,907 Pinus taeda (Loblolly pine) 14,198 Eudicotyledons Aquilegia formosa x Aquilegia pubescens 7,675 Arabidopsis thaliana (Thale cress) 26,793 Brassica napus (Rape) 3,955 Citrus sinensis (Navel orange) 8,786 Glycine max (Soybean) 15,047 Gossypium hirsutum (Upland cotton) 10,845 Gossypium raimondii 3,120 Helianthus annuus (Sunflower) 2,653 Lactuca sativa (Lettuce) 6,748 Lotus corniculatus 9,639 Lycopersicon esculentum (Tomato) 12,746 Malus x domestica (Apple tree) 17,180 Medicago truncatula (Barrel medic) 13,467 Populus balsamifera 11,310 Populus tremula x Populus tremuloides 7,641 Solanum tuberosum (Potato) 17,089 Vitis vinifera (Wine grape) 15,194 Liliopsida Hordeum vulgare (Barley) 13,485 Oryza sativa (Rice) 51,482 Saccharum officinarum (Noble cane) 4,787 Sorghum bicolor (Milo) 12,464 Triticum aestivum (Wheat) 35,263 Zea mays (Maize) 28,952 Dictyosteliida Dictyostelium Dictyostelium discoideum (Slime mold) 3,866 Apicomplexa Coccidia Toxoplasma gondii 6,005 Ascomycota Eurotiomycetes Coccidioides posadasii 3,403 Sordariomycetes Gibberella moniliformis 5,214 Magnaporthe grisea 5,736 Neurospora crassa 3,225 Basidiomycota Heterobasidiomycetes Filobasidiella neoformans 4,006 Chlorophyceae Chlorophyceae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 6,079 Cnidaria Hydrozoa Hydra magnipapillata 10,370 Pythiales Pythiaceae Phytophthora infestans (Potato late blight agent) 3,330 In addition to sequences of well-characterized genes, hundreds of thousands novel expressed sequence tag (EST) sequences have been included. Consequently, the collection may be of use to the community as a resource for gene discovery. UniGene has also been used by experimentalists to select reagents for gene mapping projects and large-scale expression analysis. SOURCE:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=unigene So, we are comparable to animals, insects, and plants. Okay. skytroll
Sky excellent my friend ( re your above post plus , "dug the hyperlinks-
specially the third one.......... I have sdme new articles / favorite doctomemts articles as wll saved. Evem cyanobacteria And sky. I have heard it bother you before > re: EVOLUTION AND NEW THINGS and also as a vector to get in e. Coli (probably
Hi All,
You don't think the authorities responsible for biosafety within these high containment level laboratories would act, if you were to raise a formal query about a putative link between your apparent condition, and what a person claiming to be a scientist has been repeatedly asserting? They would have to respond. Biosafety within high containment laboratories is taken extremely seriously, both in the US and the UK, and elsewhere. Tam tam has introduced other drugs, supplementary to the Schwartz protocol, viz. amphotericin, which should be prescribed in cases where the eye infection/infestation is so bad that the vitreous is involved. Dr Schwartz did not argue with him about that suggestion, when they had a discussion on this very site. So, he would certainly seem to have specialist knowledge about the drugs that would be needed because of the protozoal element. Because of this specialist knowledge, and other things he has said, he could very well be what he says he is. If you have a condition that is not being satisfactorily treated, partly because it is not showing up on standard laboratory tests, you would have nothing to lose by alerting the authorities to what has been repeatedly claimed. You would have everything to gain.
This disease was just brought to my attention today, and i'm worried that i had not heard about it sooner. It looks like it would be terrible to suffer from this, and to top it off it's kinda creepy. My sypathy to any afflicted, and my hopes to finding a cure.
~Oni
Cilla, would you be so kindHello Cilla, would you be so kind as to send me an email or any other means of speaking with you. My email is [email protected]
Thank you Southcity
"First they ignore you... Then they laugh at you... Then they fight you... Then you win." - Mahatma Gandhi
Hi all.....
Sky, sorry my above post to you did not make too much sense.....I actually fell asleep while writing that post early this morning....I will email you the rest of my sentence........ Cilla, You know what? I think I'm gonna follow your advice......about a month or so ago-right after Tam's new video came out, I PM'd about 5 people that write on this forum and said something quite like what you're saying and asked them all what they thought if we all did that....... The responses were varied. UG guy well, he lives in another Country, so that was out for him......and the rest said things like well, they would if they know just who did this- i.e., stating that they would have to know who they would be seeking litigation from.......blah, blah...... But what the hell, Eh? Do I actually like "care" if they think I'm nuts or laugh at me? So, you have a point......It will probably be like Friday before I will be able to complete the certified letter though. I think I will send a letter (certified) to the CDC and demand intervention. I will use Tam's video as a reference and also will use the response from Dr. Wymore. I think the CDC knows that Tam has Identified something that is a potential threat. I know they are trying to avod confrontation. I will probably mention lack of vigilance and that I will be seeking litigation/ compensation........ Maybe, I will have an attorney actually send my letter to them. What do you think? South, what do you think? I will await for your opinions ( and / or anyone elses) ______________________________ Now, check this out......it is called Mt. Dioxin and it sits in Pennsicola, Florida..... http://www.loe.org/shows/shows.htm?prog ... 6#feature1 Sincerely, London PS: I do not think Tam will mind if I use his video as a reference, but I will certainly write to him and ask (I know how you think I could easily get sued Cilla.... Hey, check this out, of course it's in the state of Hawaii, but it is about Authority and the BSO. (Bio Safety Officer) Is this kind of what you are referring to Cilla? http://www.hawaii.edu/ehso/bio/BSM_partI.htm Last edited by London on Mon May 22, 2006 12:53 am, edited 2 times in total.
Hey Skytroll,
You don't want to miss this one( yes, it's hard to read but I think it is very important.) Prokaryotic Chromosomes and Disease http://gasp.med.harvard.edu/micro200/do ... cience.pdf ____________________________ I also read last night a document produced in 2003 by the NIH, stating upcoming and emerging/ re-emerging diseases they were looking into.......... Morgellons/ fiber disease was not listed on it unless they have it coded in some weird name that I did not recognize. But, it gave a brief description of each one (disease) and I read nothing at all that sounded like what fit the description of our symptoms......... What I thought was also strange was the new wild names of diseases toward the end of this document that I had never heard of.........it was almost like they were not sure what Our Disease will eventually turn into and so to cover their bases, they listed them all....... Now that my dear Lynne, is maybe what you would call "Para", but the other thing......well, it was called "FACT!" London
check -it-out !
New Germ Labs Stir a Debate Over Secrecy and Safety http://www.gene-watch.org/news/nyt-biolabs.html London
Ok just heading off to bed and had a quick read.
Mr Hart! Great pictures...thank you for sharing. You raised some great points, not least the issue of Sarcoidosis. Reading through the list of symptoms.....hmmm..I have alot of those. Are we really quorum sensing magnets? Mr Hart, you made a great contribution and I hope you stay for a while. You have a rare sense of humour and understanding about this disease. Please people..be nice to this guy! He will be a great help. Did you hear Dr Wymore's interview? Thanks for the pictures once again Mr Hart...please share your full regime when you can. Speak to you soon Ukguy
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