Guest guest Posted March 28, 2005 Report Share Posted March 28, 2005 > you're having a good time eric . you're keeping your mind awake > and alive. Ehh... well... I'll admit I enjoy this study a *tiny bit.* But if practical applications of this stuff can indeed succeed, I want to get going ASAP. Alas, ASAP is one hell of a relative term. > There was some kind of 3-d imaging study by NIH some years ago > that showed tremendous [bb] numbers. We may not be able to image > them correctly. Like yo, hand it over! Do you know where to find it? I'd be eternally grateful. I've spent hours and hours on this question at the Nat'l Library of Medicine, and plan on more... even looked into Treponema and MS. Thought I had done a fairly serious lit review (of course all the real work was done by the lymeRICK people, with their awesome bibliographies). Mattman, ed 3, has some pics suggesting a tremendous density of Bb in red cells, white cells... but I'm a touch unsettled that these pics are so thinly addressed in the text despite being so revolutionary. I'd be overwhelmingly interested to learn about anyone else finding something similar. I know for sure from the Wirostko/ papers I've been shown that tiny cytoplasmic bacterial L-forms can be *damn* hard to detect. So they are a candidate for where the missing Bb biomass could be. > an interesting fact about epidemics is the virulence of an > infection decreases over time, host and pathogen adapt to each > other. why is that. maybe to some extent in the beginning you just > kill off the > weaker ones (genetically). but also the more successful pathogen is > one that can live with its host and be transmitted. so maybe there > is selective pressure on the pathogen that way. Yeah, definitely. Bb causes a many-month persistant infection in the White-footed Mouse (a major reservoir species), and infects a huge percentage of individuals. Generally these mice are feelin just fine. Bugloads are presumably low. Alot of bacteria-infecting viruses probably have extremely nuanced and unstable relationships with their bacterial hosts - the more so since they can easily serve as vectors for gene transfer. Probably in some situations they slaughter bacteria and in others they are virtually bacterial appendages. There are wars between humans but no wars between organisms - only dances that are variably cruel and exploitative. > Also Nick of Igenex says that in babesia, though only 1% > may parisitize the obvious red blood cells, bone marrow testing > will show 20% of bone marrow infected. Like says itd be great to know more about this. Perhaps this is another way babesias avoid the perils they evidently encounter during splenic filtration of circulating red cells. Are there mature red cells in the marrow or just immature ones (reticulocytes) and less differentiated forebears? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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