Viruses in your Mucus
Aug. 26th, 2013 02:48 pmThe Russians have known about phages and used them to treat severe infections since the 1930's. New research shows that lots of phages live in mucus. Wherever there is mucus there is likely to be a large population of phages--including mucus produced by other species such as sea coral, plants, etc.
Phages are viruses that use bacterial cells to replicate in. They can also insert new DNA into bacteria, and they are able to evolve quickly enough to keep up with changing resistance patterns. Big Pharma is not putting any money toward phage research because phage therapy would compete with antibiotic sales, and as we know, for them, the bottom line IS the bottom line. They want us to think that phages are dangerous. But according to Dr Mercola a normal human produces approximately a quart of mucus (snot) daily in the upper respiratory tract, most of which we swallow. So we are phage central already.
( notes from Mercola's new article on phages )
Phages are viruses that use bacterial cells to replicate in. They can also insert new DNA into bacteria, and they are able to evolve quickly enough to keep up with changing resistance patterns. Big Pharma is not putting any money toward phage research because phage therapy would compete with antibiotic sales, and as we know, for them, the bottom line IS the bottom line. They want us to think that phages are dangerous. But according to Dr Mercola a normal human produces approximately a quart of mucus (snot) daily in the upper respiratory tract, most of which we swallow. So we are phage central already.
( notes from Mercola's new article on phages )
CC: Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Mar. 10th, 2010 08:52 amIBD includes Crohn's, UC, and Celiac disease
( notes on Crohn's disease & Ulcerative Colitis )
( notes on Crohn's disease & Ulcerative Colitis )
Placebos getting More Effective
Aug. 29th, 2009 01:03 pmhttp://www.wired.com/medtech/drugs/magazine/17-09/ff_placebo_effect?currentPage=all
AWESOME article. Nutshell: research has show that the biochemistry of the placebo response is due to anticipation-activated opioids and dopamine. Effects of opioids include pain relief, heart rate and breathing modulation. Effects of dopamine include improved motor function in Parkinson's. Both contribute to elevated mood, sharpened cognitive ability, decreased digestive disorders and insomnia, and lower levels of insulin and cortisol. But the whole article is well worth reading. ( Here's the text. I would take notes but I admire this guy's prose too much to chop it up. This article matters. )
AWESOME article. Nutshell: research has show that the biochemistry of the placebo response is due to anticipation-activated opioids and dopamine. Effects of opioids include pain relief, heart rate and breathing modulation. Effects of dopamine include improved motor function in Parkinson's. Both contribute to elevated mood, sharpened cognitive ability, decreased digestive disorders and insomnia, and lower levels of insulin and cortisol. But the whole article is well worth reading. ( Here's the text. I would take notes but I admire this guy's prose too much to chop it up. This article matters. )
A Classmate's Blog on Crohn's Dz
Oct. 19th, 2008 10:02 amhttp://naturalcrohnscure.blogspot.com/
This is a brand new blog with only one entry so far, but I think J will have some good stuff to say about natural healing and Crohn's as time passes. He certainly has the experience.
This is a brand new blog with only one entry so far, but I think J will have some good stuff to say about natural healing and Crohn's as time passes. He certainly has the experience.