![]() |
| |||||||
| Register | Invite Your Friends | FAQ | ChatBox Full | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| Parasites Discussion on Various Parasites and Diseases. |
| |
![]() |
| | LinkBack (1) | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
| |||
| Everyone, Bumps under the skin. What are they? The doctors don't know. They don't even know what to test for. "It's a cyst" SOME say. Really? Well, doctor.....give me the answers.com definitions of a cyst. What? They know more than you? HUH! Go figure!..................Oh.... secondary bone formation? Now that's a good one! How does that differ from a cyst, doctor? Here are a few links for subcutaneous cysts. If you google just that, you will find many others. We need to educate ourselves and bring information to their attention, and when they try to brush us off, we need to demand specific tests if nothing more than to "Just humor me, doctor". Carla, for the life of me, I cannot understand why BONE all of a sudden forms as a result of a 'bump'. Did you tell your arrogant MD that her bump was from a year ago, or did he assume it? SECONDARY BONE!!!! This is becoming almost laughable. I'm sorry if I am so aggressive in my manner in so many posts here and if I upset anyone, please let me know. I'm just getting so OVER THE LINE with these so-called professionals who make so much MONEY and know AND care so LITTLE!!! CYSTS http://www.acta-cytol.com/toc/auto_a...t.php?id=22401 I love this last line: “What the mind does not know, the eye does not see” and if vesicular fibrils are present, the sensitivity of US increases to 100%. CT scan should be performed in suspicious cases or in order to determine the technique of surgery with demonstration of the relationship to adjacent organs [11]. Preoperative diagnosis of musculoskeletal E. granulosis infection is difficult clinically and radiologically. It may resemble any soft tissue tumor. MRI is capable of adequately demonstrating most features of hydatid disease, with the exception of calcifications [12]. Garcia-Diez reported MRI examinations of 7 patients with musculoskeletal hydatidosis. Typical signs of hydatidosis were multivesicular lesions with or without hypointense peripheral ring (rim sign). According to the presence of viable daughter cysts MRI conveyed as high signal intensity or low signal intensity on T2-weighted images [13]. There is controversy about the value of MRI in diagnosing the vitality of the cyst. Hypointensity of daughter cysts compared with the matrix of the mother cyst on T2-weighted images is a clue for the death of the parasite [14-16]. Proton density-weighted images generated by gradient echo sequences as a sign of biological activity was suggested by Tekkok et al [15]. The diagnosis of Echinococcus granulosus infection was confirmed peroperatively after visualization of the cyst wall http://stage1.answers.com/topic/echi...initiator=CANS http://www.ijdvl.com/article.asp?iss...;aulast=Sharma Comments Dematiaceous fungi have a worldwide distribution. These fungi are found as saprophytes on wood, wood products and soil, and may produce disease in persons exposed to such environment. Our patient hailed from a town situated amidst thick forests having climatic conditions suitable for the growth of fungi. In pheomycosis an early localisation of the disease occurs by cyst formation. Lymphatic spread of this fungus in such lesions has not yet been documented. However, in the present patient multiple lesions developed in a linear fashion starting from the site of injury upto the regional lymph nodes. This pattern is very much suggestive of lymphatic spread as is seen in sporotrichosis. |
| Sponsored Links |
| |
| |||
| Kritts ,These lumps on my Daughters forehead are hard .AS hard as her skull.They dont move at all. Wouldnt cyst be softer than bone. I dont know what hes thinking and it doesnt look like he knows either . He has put several question marks after his diagnosis. Carla xxx |
| |||
| hi kritts and carla kritts.... remember when I had the big cyst on my first finger? Seems like I even took a pic.? and posted it? I do remember that you told me that if you had it, you would want to see what was in there and get it out, lol. carla....It was huge & hard & wouldn't move either. as if attached to the bone. Well, I asked the Dr about it and he said it was part of the rhuematoid artheritis, a bone growth. But it seems to have gone away? ![]() Your poor little sweetie and you..... This is so maddening with the Doctors! and kritts, that last line hits it right on the nose! (only thing I understood after reading the whole link) ??? ![]() "What the mind does not know, the eye does not see." luv ya, wth |
| |||
| I had only one on middle finger. It hurt like heck, then got one on another finger! It was red and on the first knuckles. I realized when I stopped taking antibiotic they got more inflamed. I look like I dressed my hand up for Halloween! Not that witches are bad or ugly! LOL! So I showed the doc and he said nothing! Looks like athritus. I looked it up and saw there is a such thing as infectious athritus. But getting him to do anything for me is hard. He just gives me drugs and hope Ill go away! Man oh man! LOL! Im going to pray about leaving him. I promised myself I would stop running but I think its time to look around again. GREAT post. So thankful for you guys. |
| |||
| Carls, Whatthe, Natalie and all, In the book "Parasite Rex" (really? you never mentioned THAT book before Kritts!) he describes how plants and parasites encapsulate themselves. I think cysts could either be fluid filled, parasite filled or both. First thing doctors will say is arthritis because they are ignorant, stupid and cheated their way through medical school. (Why don't you tell us how you REALLY feel, Kritts?) Sorry to any doctors reading this forum who actually have a brain and do care. I would have an mri done. They probably didn't suggest it because a) They are clueless and b) insurance companies discourage them from ordering it because of expense. xoxo Kritts Last edited by Kritters; December 6th, 2008 at 10:54 PM. |
| |||
| Good thread!! This is an important research topic. I've wondered if there is any link between cysts on ovaries and morgellons/parasites? Given the amount of woman that suffer from this compared to men and the hormonal imbalances seen. Seems to be a common problem in the general female population these days. It affects me and quite a few of my friends. Jo xxx |
| |||
| Hey Jo, ![]() I remember reading in Hulda Clark's book (I will look it up and probably read the book agin now in a new enlightened state) that tumors (either often or always....I'll check) are bundles of parasites so thick they look like a solid mass. Now from all I've read there is not a doubt in my mind that cysts and tumors are results of some encapsulization of parasites. Hey, I'm going to have to apply for a study grant for all this research with which I'm so obsessed (I know you and some of my other Morgie family are as well). How about I apply for our team efforts??? okay...and this book "DNA" is really a cd turner!!! (get it? page turner for audio books) ![]() I just crack me up! xoxo Kritts |
| |||
| I agree Kritts about parasites forming compact cysts and tumours - they are colonies, a secure base for them. Well, I have been enlightened with this reply someone had on dermoid cysts. This link makes me wonder if they use all the matter mentioned to build a home and also as a food store (keratin, fat etc). I apologise right now about the yukky factor regarding this topic. http://www.goaskalice.columbia.edu/2584.html Jo xxx |
| |||
| Quote:
I just began a new thread, "Parasite Rex" to bring a few excerpts to everyone's attention. I was looking for the info I read (maybe it was somewhere else) about how plants actually form cyst-like shells when attacked by a parasite. I'm wondering about the implications of cysts in pathogens as well as victims (pathogees? ;-) or rather, hosts. Anyway, here is a duplicate of excerpts pertaining to cysts: Aristotle, for instance, recognized creatures that lived on the tongues of pigs, encased in cysts as tough as hailstones. P.2 The cysts that Aristotle had seen in the tongues of pigs had little wormlike creatures coiled up inside, but these were helpless animals that didn’t even have sex organs. Parasites, most scientists assumed, must have been spontaneously generated in bodies, just as maggots appeared spontaneously on a corpse, fungus on old hay, instects from within trees. P 3 Trypanosomes are only one of many parasites inside the people of southern Sudan. If you could travel Fantastic Voyage-style through their skin, you would probably come across marble sized nodules where you’d float past coiled worms as long as snakes and as thin as threads. Krits |
| |||
| Just to add what I 'read' today in "DNA"....regarding cysts: Not word for word, but from memory, he was discussing agrobacteria and what Monsanto, etc. are doing to eliminate pests through bio-engineered plants which have the natural bacterial pesticides incorporated inside their dna which he says will eliminate all that pollution from the air. He spoke of the process by which bacteria (parasites) use plants for hosts and how they take over the dna in a cyclical manner in which the reproduction of food and organisms are reproduced in a self contained 'gall' which is actually a cyst....in the stem or in the leaves. That way they have an abundance of nutrients and can live there forever. This is what I believe is the purpose of all cysts in animals, including humans. Kritts |
| Sponsored Links |
| |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
LinkBacks (?)
LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.morgellons-disease-research.com/Morgellons-Message-Board/parasites/3727-cysts.html | ||||
| Posted By | For | Type | Date | |
| Forehead cysts Articles, Information & Research | This thread | Refback | January 6th, 2010 01:28 PM | |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|