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| Morgellons Theories & Speculations Discussion on Theories and Speculations on Morgellons |
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| Bacteria-killing viruses called bacteriophages can speed up pathogen evolution by a billion years. by Jessica Ruvinsky From the April 2009 issue, published online A promising next-generation antibiotic— bacteria-killing viruses called bacteriophages—could end up creating the next superbug, two scientists warn. Their research, published in January, shows that bacteriophages can rapidly accelerate the evolution of human pathogens by transferring genes from one bacterial species to another. The recipient “could literally bypass a billion years of evolution in a single event,” says microbiologist John Chen of New York University. The viruses have been known to transmit genes between bacteria of the same species. But Chen and coauthor Richard Novick, also of NYU, showed that bacteriophages could even shuttle deactivated genes for the toxic shock syndrome toxin from Staphylococcus aureus—one of the most prevalent, and increasingly lethal, causes of hospital infection—to the distantly related Listeria monocytogenes, a common foodborne pathogen that killed 20 in Canada last summer. Bacteriophages can also transport plasmids, which often carry antibiotic resistance. A staph-enabled Listeria bacterium “would be a monster,” says Pascale Cossart, a Listeria expert at the Pasteur Institute in Paris who was not involved in the research. The gene transfer is also hard to detect. “It could be happening all over the place,” Novick says, “and we would never see it.” |
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| iHow do we keep/maintain the healthy bacteria (that covers our skin and is in our intestines) that fights the bad bacteria? Oprah and Dr. Oz discussed this subject yesterday and said that taking an anti-biotic can kill natural, healthy bacteria that fights off infections, leaving the door open to MRSA infection, the "superbug". Advice is wash your hands often. If you go to a gym, wash your work-out clothes after each time you exercise. If you are in the hospital, don't let your guests sit on your bed and have them wash their hands before they touch anything in your room. If they bring presents or flowers, beware... don't touch! What a tangled web we weave (again). In the white light, ~jonsi
__________________ There is a reason I have "Morgellons". Helping and teaching others how to survive in our toxic world may be the reason. Hang in there everyone who has this. |
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