Guest guest Posted September 21, 2010 Report Share Posted September 21, 2010 I haven't eliminated the white floaters yet Zoe. Pretty sure they are what is driving me batty. I'm steaming floors, which helps. Think I will need to resort to the heavy duty hospital cleaners that kill everything, especially ones with stabilized chlorine dioxide....Bessie used the H202 in a humidifier. B > > > > > > The article Marie posted is interesting because it does seem like there is a fungal/bacterial component to morgellons and hiding within an amoeba would make the infection more successful in the human body... like living in a house with a secure fence in order to keep the bad guys (immune systems antibodies/macrophagies/WBC'c) out. > > > > > > A large scale scientific research study needs to look at morgellons individuals and those of us who are 'target hosts' to mites everywhere, to find out if we do have a specific type of biofilm on our skin or a specific amoebae or fungi or bacteria or virus in our blood, within our intestines, or in our external or internal skin layers. > > > > > > I suppose there is no $ or interest for this kind of research because dermatologists and MDs tend to NOT believe the symptoms are real. The last biopsy they took from a skin lesion on my thigh came back as probable insect bite... do the pathologists who exam the samples look for amoebae or fungus, virus or bacteria? Do they culture the skin around the bite or stain it to look for pathological organisms? I know I have bug/mite bites, but I want to know what is attracting these mites to me. > > > > > > There is another theory that I think is very highly possible that goes along with this: Some types of microscopic Bird mites are like 'super scabies' living in the external and internal dermal tissue and also living in the environment. The are social feeders and fighters. When they feed or become scared or active they attract other mites from the environment to the human being they live on/in. Perhaps it is almost impossible to rid the body of these mites after they establish themselves within the endodermal and exodermal tissues and that is why they are so hard to treat. > > > > > > If this is the case, then perhaps Morgellons and bird-mite infections are very very different and one can cause the other because they BOTH cause humans to because attractive to insects and mites. If this way they also both can increase the likelihood of lyme disease as well. > > > > > > Eventually affected individual are at high risk of ending up with bird-mites, morgellons and lyme disease altogether. This frightens me terribly. > > > > > > I don't know of any research that is looking at any this though. The article Marie posted looked interesting theoretically but extremely general in nature with no specific scientific peer-reviewed research done with groups of morgellons pts and control groups. We desperately need these studies to be carried out. What ever happened to the Kaiser study? What did they do? What were their results? > > > > > > z3 > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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