Guest guest Posted April 4, 2006 Report Share Posted April 4, 2006 Could this reference be posted? A.V. Constantini of the WHO with comments on_____ Stachybotrys Chartarum & CFS > > > I'm one of the '85 Incline Village epidemic. I've been saying since > day one with this illness that mold is primary in my illness. Drs. > Cheney & disagreed and would not help me research it. I > decided to trustmy perceptions and conduct my life as if my symptoms > of anxiety and depression and fatigue represented an exposure to > toxic mold. In the 2 years since I've applied my mold avoidance > strategy I have eliminated almost all of my long standing CFS > symptoms. My recovery continues but at present I am finally able to > work full time, have no headaches or cognitive dysfunction, no > fatigue and if it weren't for the reactivity I have to people and > objects who come into my presence from contaminated buildings, I > could live a completely normal life. I have been trying to tell > doctors and CFS patients about this but despite seeing my recovery, > nobody thinks it could possibly apply to them. While they tell me > this, I'm shaking with the reaction I get to their clothes. I see > know after the 48 Hours special that some people want to look into > this but find little information and so far, no feedback from CFS > patients with this experience. I have been diagnosed by the famous > doctors Cheney and as the perfect case of CFS and yet I > have told them about this mold and my recovery and they are > completely uninterested. Even if Stachybotrys is not the primary > cause of CFS, I believe that there must be a connection between the > illness and an extreme reactivity to mold. > - > > > > > Science News Online > > Week of March 25, 2006; Vol. 169, No. 12 > Moldy whiff kills brain cells > > > Janet Raloff > > > From San Diego, at a meeting of the Society of Toxicology > > Watch out, Hurricane Katrina and Rita cleanup crews. A common black > mold that blooms on moist cellulose-based materials-from wallboard > and ceiling tiles to cardboard- creates a toxin that can kill > certain brain cells. In an experiment with mice, the chemical, > satratoxin, targeted neurons running from the inside of the nose to > the brain's smell center. > > " This is the first demonstration that a neuron can be killed by > satratoxin, " notes Jack R. Harkema of Michigan State University in > East Lansing. > The fungal toxin's " specificity is what's really unique, " notes > Harkema's Michigan State colleague J. Pestka. Among the > exposed nasal cells, the toxin proved lethal only to those that > sense odors. > The black mold Stachybotrys chartarum, commonly found in water- > damaged buildings, had already been linked to people's respiratory > irritation and asthma. To identify nasal effects, Harkema, Pestka, > and Zahidul Islam, also of Michigan State, made mice inhale a > single dose of satratoxin and then monitored tissue changes over the > next month. > > Within a day of exposure, 75 to 80 percent of the olfactory neurons > in the animals' noses had died, Harkema notes. Although these cells > can regenerate, he says, even after a month, many had still not been > replaced. > As little as 25 micrograms of toxin per kilogram of mouse-body > weight elicited this neural toxicity. The scientists now plan to > evaluate whether prolonged exposure to even lower doses-as could be > assaulting hurricane-cleanup crews-might trigger similar changes. > > A full report of the findings will appear in an upcoming > Environmental Health Perspectives. >> >> >> >> >> >> If you have a comment on this article that you would like > considered for publication in >> Science News, send it to editors@... Please include your name and > location. >> >> >> >> References: >> >> Islam, Z., J.R. Harkema, and J.J. Pestka. In press. Satratoxin G > from the black mold >> Stachybotrys chartarum evokes olfactory sensory neuron loss and > inflammation in the >> murine nose and brain. Environmental Health Perspectives. > Available at http://dx.doi.org/ >> 10.1289/ehp.8854. >> >> >> ______. 2006. Satratoxin G from the black mold Stachybotrys > chartarum evokes olfactory >> sensory neuron loss and inflammation in the murine nose and brain. > Society of Toxicology >> meeting. March 6-9. San Diego. >> >> >> >> >> Sources: >> >> Jack R. Harkema >> Michigan State University >> Department of Pathobiology and Diagnostic Investigation >> East Lansing, MI 48824 >> >> >> J. Pestka >> Michigan State University >> Department of Pathobiology and Diagnostic Investigation >> East Lansing, MI 48824 >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20060325/note14.asp >> >> >> From Science News, Vol. 169, No. 12, March 25, 2006, p. 190. >> >> >> Copyright © 2006 Science Service. All rights reserved. >> > > > > > > > > > FAIR USE NOTICE: > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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