Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Blogs

Whoever sponsors these Blogs,  (I suppose Google),  has made them so unweildy,  as to discourage anyone from Blogging.  There is an old saying that goes like this :  If it ain't broke,  then don't fix it.  Blogging was working perfectly well about one year ago,  but now it does not.  The nerds are going to nerd the internet to death ! 

Monday, May 20, 2013

Shelomi,  Pollack,  and Yanega  have in the past tried to refute the NPA Oklahoma Study,  by repeating the mantra....'collembolans have no biting mouth parts'....they are not known to parasitize humans.....the study was not scientific....BUT they never give any references to back up their assertions.  There are however many websites that refute these 3 stooges.
Just look up 'collembola,  horses'  and you will find that Springtails (collembola) are able to find a way through horse hide. 
And here is one study from the Himalayas:

Dasgupta, R. & Dasgupta, B. (1990:438) India:
"We report that certain collembolan insects in our laboratory (
Hypogastrura sp.) have exhibited a parasitic propensity, attacking newts (Tylototriton verucosus) and toads (Bufo himalayanus), causing running sores in the skin of these animals. Other Collembola (Seira indica), whose gut contents were examined, were engorged with blood from the newt. We believe that this is the first record of these insects feeding on blood."

When is someone going to take these three to task for their absolute total lack of evidence (other than the excrement coming from their pie holes) !!

Monday, May 6, 2013

Some honest and competent professionals

Picture of david wootton  All of the article did not appear when I copied it,  so you can see thewhole article at the address below
 
http://www.prweb.com/releases/2013/5/prweb10694837.htm#.UYKD5hh79s4.email
:Please read this report.  Ask yourself,  why didn't the CDC make these discoveries?  The answer has to be A:  the CDC is incompetent
                              B:  the CDC did find something,  and are lying about it.
So CDC's of the world,   which is it?  Are you liars,  or are you just useless ???
 
Evidence that Morgellons Disease is an Infection, not a Delusion

The Charles E Holman Foundation Medical Advisor Suggests New Name for Mystery Disease Based on latest Research.

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Fig. 10 Papillae projecting from the dermis into the subdermal plane ... 100X
The medical profession must be careful when making a diagnosis …The consequences of such misdiagnosis include delay in appropriate treatment, worsening of the actual disease process, and punitive labeling of the patient as "psychiatric"…Edward Kilbane, MD
London, UK (PRWEB) May 02, 2013
The prestigious F1000 Research journal has published yet another paper linking the controversial Morgellons disease (MD) to a spirochetal bacteria. Until recently, MD was widely believed in the medical community to be purely psychological in origin; however, this latest in a string of new publications strengthens the evidence that sufferers are anything but delusional. Internist/Dermatologist Peter Mayne of Laurieton, NSW, Australia is the principal author of the latest scientific article on MD, Morgellons: a novel dermatological perspective as the multisystem infective disease borreliosis. The co-authors in this international team of collaborators include: Dermatologist Dr. John English from Nottingham University, Nottingham, UK; Psychiatrist Dr. Edward Kilbane from Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, USA; Jennie Burke, Director of Australian Biologics, Sydney, NSW, Australia; Veterinary microbiologist Marianne J. Middelveen from Calgary, Alberta, Canada; and Internist Dr. Raphael B. Stricker from San Francisco, CA, USA.
The unusual fibers seen in skin lesions of patients with Morgellons Disease are considered the hallmark of the disease and believed by mainstream doctors to be deliberately implanted by patients. Earlier studies on these multicolored fibers showed that they were actually produced in the skin by the patients’ skin cells and composed of the skin proteins collagen and keratin. These studies also found Borrelia spirochetes in the skin lesion. This bacteria is known for causing Lyme disease, thus suggesting that MD may actually be an unusual manifestation of Lyme disease.
This new paper by Mayne and his colleagues paints MD as a multisystem disorder and elaborates by examining an Australian family where three members simultaneously had symptoms of MD. Spirochetes were detected in the skin lesions of two members and one was identified by DNA sequencing as Borrelia garinii, a causative agent of Lyme disease in Europe and Asia.
The new paper also presents a differential diagnosis from a dermatological perspective and an in-depth analysis of the diagnosis of delusional disorders from a psychiatric perspective. The study arduously points out that an infectious disease can produce psychiatric symptoms. The authors propose to de-stigmatize this illness within the medical community by replacing the popular moniker Morgellons disease with a proper medical name, Borrelial Dermatitis.
The CEHF applauds the publication of this preeminent research by volunteer Medical/[Scientific Board members, Peter Mayne, Edward Kilbane, Marianne Middelveen and Raphael Stricker. The Charles E. Holman Foundation (The CEHF), based in Austin, TX, is a 501(c) (3) nonprofit organization committed to advocacy and philanthropy for Morgellons disease. The foundation was named for Charles E. Holman, a pioneer in the fight against Morgellons disease and is led by Executive Director Cindy Casey Holman, RN.
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