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To: MHGinTN
Extensive work you've done here. Can this nematode be killed with a scabicide like 5% or 10% Permethrin?

No, all of us tried that stuff, at first folks often think of scabies, if only it were that easy. So far it is a life sentence, I have taken all forms of things, dog wormers, horse wormers, nothing can stop it, the best luck I am having now is with collodial silver, I think it's kills the bacteria and fungus they lay down, my lesions are healed, but my skin is literally crawling with them, under the skin, all we can do is control the fungus, that is the worst part of these, from time to time my eyes get bad, I use sulfer, it burns like hell but then they're gone for a few weeks from there. This manifiest in humans much like river blindness, only so far nobody has lost their vision.

If you get this, your entire life, hours per day will be spent on your skin, taking vitamins, washing your clothes, cleaning your environment, just to live is damn difficult, but we have no choice, the medical communtiy is akin to the church not accepting that the earth is round.

However, I know from the numbers pouring into our forums just how fast this is spreading, and it work, lots of folks coming down with it, only you can't tell them what they have, they'll think you gave it to them, and I know for a fact they were in the building before I got there.
39 posted on 02/11/2007 8:28:33 PM PST by Scythian
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To: Scythian

Has your physician tried ivermectin?


40 posted on 02/11/2007 8:35:28 PM PST by MHGinTN (If you've had life support. Promote life support for others.)
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To: Scythian
There is an article that states that the disease has been around a long time: "The sickly skin disease has actually been around for centuries. In 1935, an English physician wrote a paper about Morgellons including excerpts from medical journals from the 1600's, describing the disease. "
42 posted on 02/11/2007 8:41:02 PM PST by Lazamataz (Global warming turns people gay.)
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To: Scythian
And as to the contagiousness, it appears that sometimes only one family member contracts it, even after long exposure to the person by other members: "There is no conclusion yet as to whether it is contagious. Some families have only one member who is affected, even after long exposure, while other families report multiple sufferers."

From the same article, it seems to be clustered in Florida, Texas, amd California.

43 posted on 02/11/2007 8:45:45 PM PST by Lazamataz (Global warming turns people gay.)
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To: Scythian
Y'see, the idea that there's no support for this condition because the Medical Community is too proud to take a look seems . . . unlikely. When doctors prove the existence of new diseases they get their names in the medical texts. When pharmaceutical companies find new diseases, they make lots of money off the treatments.

Okay, your contention is that the people making these transgenic nematodes make lots of money selling them to farmers for pest control. I'll say that may be so.

Now compare the revenues from one of many forms of pest control to the revenues for just one lifesaving drug. There's no comparison! If big money favors revealing the disease over concealing the disease, the disease will be revealed.

47 posted on 02/11/2007 8:52:07 PM PST by sociotard (I am the one true Sociotard)
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