Guest guest Posted May 3, 2005 Report Share Posted May 3, 2005 Sue , couple of posts ,as you see from The MP last year This article caught my eye today, I see some have referred to modified Phage virus’s as a possible weapon against pathogenic bacteria. The technology looks like its here now .. Is phage therapy feasible with CWD bacteria or are our bacteria too small to be considered ? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3867331.stm Phage therapy “The Virus That Cures,” http://www.phagetherapy.com/ptlinks.html And the reply There is a very active Sarcoidosis patient community in Russia, wherephage therapy has been a front-line antibacterial treatment for years,and so this issue has been one that I looked into. The online biology textbook explains how bacteriophages work at URLhttp://tinyurl.com/ywvxv They are viruses, and very active ones that target specific bacterialgenomes.The problems in using bacteriophages to fight a disease such as CFS are1. The virus targets the DNA of the bacteria. This is a mechanismwhereby genetically antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria can evolve 2. After the phage has done its job some of the virus stays in thepatient's body. The virus could well do harm in susceptibleindividuals (bacteriophage research has been focused largely on thehealthy components of the population. IMO, Benicar and the Antibiotics we use are immeasurably safer than aphage approach. But I would be happy to help any research teams whowant to explore this area more fully. I hope this helps. ...Trevor.. -----Original Message-----From: infections [mailto:infections ]On Behalf Of SueSent: 03 May 2005 21:30infections Subject: [infections] Phage TherapyI just downloaded and watched a BBC documentary on Phage Therapy - a therapy discovered in the 30's and 40's specifically designed for antibiotic resistant infections.The documentary talks about how this therapy was developed in the Soviet Union and more recently, sponsored by an American millionare and now again, the researh has been split across oceans over patent disputes.Has anybody heard of this? The Phage are actually virus designed to attack specific infection. Here is the blurb on the program I watched.BBC Horizon - The Virus that Cures ---------------------------------- VHS>XviD 720x576 647MB 49min Channel: BBC2 Date: 1997 With the rise of MRSA and the so called "superbugs", antibiotics are becoming less and less effective against an increasing number of bacteria. What was once an easily teatable infection could now be potentially fatal. The solution to this crisis could be held by a tiny research institute in the ex-Soviet republic of Georgia who, over the past 50 years, have taken a very different approach to treating infection.Cheers,*S* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2005 Report Share Posted May 3, 2005 J: I'm a bit taken aback that you would quote the Unnameable One on the subject of his protocol's comparitive safety, without at least mentioning his many well-known efforts to prevent unfavorable patient reports from seeing the light of day. It is a little like quoting the tobacco industry on the safety of second-hand smoke. S. > Sue , couple of posts ,as you see from The MP last year > This article caught my eye today, I see some have referred to modified > Phage virus's as a possible weapon against pathogenic bacteria. The > technology looks like its here now .. Is phage therapy feasible with CWD > bacteria or are our bacteria too small to be considered ? > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3867331.stm > > Phage therapy " The Virus That Cures, " > > http://www.phagetherapy.com/ptlinks.html > > And the reply > > There is a very active Sarcoidosis patient community in Russia, where > phage therapy has been a front-line antibacterial treatment for years, > and so this issue has been one that I looked into. > > The online biology textbook explains how bacteriophages work at URL > http://tinyurl.com/ywvxv > > They are viruses, and very active ones that target specific bacterial > genomes. > The problems in using bacteriophages to fight a disease such as CFS are > 1. The virus targets the DNA of the bacteria. This is a mechanism > whereby genetically antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria can evolve > > 2. After the phage has done its job some of the virus stays in the > patient's body. The virus could well do harm in susceptible > individuals (bacteriophage research has been focused largely on the > healthy components of the population. > > IMO, Benicar and the Antibiotics we use are immeasurably safer than a > phage approach. But I would be happy to help any research teams who > want to explore this area more fully. > > I hope this helps. > > ..Trevor.. > > > > [infections] Phage Therapy > > > I just downloaded and watched a BBC documentary on Phage Therapy - a > therapy discovered in the 30's and 40's specifically designed for > antibiotic resistant infections. > The documentary talks about how this therapy was developed in the > Soviet Union and more recently, sponsored by an American millionare > and now again, the researh has been split across oceans over patent > disputes. > Has anybody heard of this? The Phage are actually virus designed to > attack specific infection. Here is the blurb on the program I > watched. > > BBC Horizon - The Virus that Cures > ---------------------------------- > > VHS>XviD 720x576 647MB 49min > > Channel: BBC2 > Date: 1997 > > With the rise of MRSA and the so called " superbugs " , antibiotics > are becoming less and less effective against an increasing number > of bacteria. What was once an easily teatable infection could now be > potentially fatal. The solution to this crisis could be held by a > tiny research institute in the ex-Soviet republic of Georgia who, > over the past 50 years, have taken a very different approach to > treating infection. > Cheers, > *S* > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- > -- > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2005 Report Share Posted May 3, 2005 Upstairs I have 2 papers, not available online, that I can cite if anyone wants em. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2005 Report Share Posted May 3, 2005 I'm interested anything you might have bearing on the safety issues. > Upstairs I have 2 papers, not available online, that I can cite if > anyone wants em. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2005 Report Share Posted May 5, 2005 The safety issues arent really addressed in the papers I have. Dont quote me, but I dont think any phage could ever reproduce in human cells. There are some conceivable but probably very unlikely ways they could cause you problems without doing so, and one must recognize one might be hosting them at low levels for life in our situation. A big problem is the possibility they could exchange genes between bacteria. That could possibly produce abx strains of bacteria or strain better adapted to exploit you. This is also a concern with a mutagen like metronidazole, as one of the papers weve been discussing notes. I try not to think about it whilst hooking down my tini... Other problems are micro-delivery, poor control of herx (possibly a danger), etc. The one paper I read used phage-infected Mycobacterium smegmatis (essentially avirulent for humans) as a vehicle to deliver phage to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. They used advanced microscopy (confocal or something?) to demonstrate that the smegmatis-containing phagosomes fused with the TB-containing phagosomes of infected macrophages. Pretty sly - and they achieved killing comparable to abx. But they cited an old Eastern European study where mycobacteria-infected guinea pigs were treated with mycobacteriophage directly in the bloodstream, and it somehow worked! (I forget to what degree.) A problem is, whos got the phage? To isolate a phage to decimate something like a staph infection (as has apparantly been done), I think all you have to do is grab a bunch of different staphylocci from nature, perhaps from your own skin or the lab floor, and one of them (out of ten zillion) will be dying right then of a phage suitable to brutalize the staph strain of interest, which will easily spread thru a petri dish of the latter when you drop it in. Whereas to find eg a hot borrelia phage could be a challenge. <compucruz@y...> wrote: > I'm interested anything you might have bearing on the safety issues. > > > > > > Upstairs I have 2 papers, not available online, that I can cite if > > anyone wants em. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2006 Report Share Posted July 11, 2006 I am involved in a company that is commercializing therapeutic phage preparations, I just joined the group a couple of days ago to observe. When I scanned the messages in search of discussions about phage therapy, I came across a past discussion about safety. Safety is a very common concern of the medical and scientific communities. I frequently travel to Republic of Georgia, which is the world center for phage therapy. I have sat on the fence during numerous discussions with physicians who use therapeutic phages in their practices. Most Georgian physicians and surgeons are well aware that treatment with phages internally, inside the body, can take place continuously for approximately 15 days. After that period of time the immune system develops antigens for the phages and clears them from the system. Consequently, phage treatment must halt for a few weeks, until those antigens clear, and then treatment can resume for another couple of weeks. For topical use of bacteriophages it is necessary to keep bandages moist with the phage preparation because once the bandage dries, the phages become less effective. For internal use for such conditions as osteomyelitis or some surgical infections it is necessary to continually irrigate the infected area with liquid phages. So, clearance of phages from the body is definitely not a problem – just the converse: for the practitioner, there is more of a problem keeping the phages constantly applied to the infected areas. Fortunately, bacteriophages act very quickly and infections can typically be cleared within a few days, the normal treatment time frame involved is approximately 10 days. Two other safety factors to consider are in the areas of phage isolation and the toxicology testing that occurs during both clinical trians and during production of the therapeutic phage preparation. Not all phages are equal and the author of the above posting is absolutely correct in stating that some species of phages will exchange genes with certain pathogens, making the bacteria more pathogenic, more dangerous. Those phages that behave in this manner are called lysogenic phages. There have been many scientific papers written on this topic. In fact part of the holdup in getting the FDA to approve clinical trials is this issue is whether or not the therapeutic phages contain pathogenic genes that can be transferred to the host bacteria. However, only lytic phages are used for therapeutic purposes. Since lytic phages lyse (explode) their host bacteria, the argument of pathogenic gene passing is most likely moot – there are no descendent bacteria to receive such genes, but that argument continues… In addition to validating the efficacy of a particular therapeutic phage, clinical trials also involve toxicology testing. Therapeutic phages of course should not cause the release of massive amounts of toxins during lysis as this could harm the patient. Vast collections of therapeutic phages that have passed such clinical trials are the intellectual properties of both Eliava Institute (Tbilisi, Georgia) and Herzfeld Institute (Wroclaw, Poland). These entities have been building their therapeutic phage collections for well over 70 years. There is a definite scientific method involved in isolation of the correct lytic phages, toxicology testing, typing various phages to produce effective combinations of phages in a given " phage cocktail " , and clinical trials. It appears that many major universities here in the West are now attempting to build libraries or collections of therapeutic phages. One example of this activity is occurring at Evergreen State College: http://www.evergreen.edu/phage <- and this URL is a great place to start learning about phage biology and phage therapy. Phage Therapy is a very important alternative to antibiotics, particularly for those having antibiotic resistant infections. Note, for example, that the Canadian Ministry of Health has just recently begun funding therapeutic phage research (I placed a link to the program in the Links section of this forum for anyone who might be interested). Bacteriophages are the most ubiquitous life form on the planet and this is the likely reason, according to Dr. Kutter of Evergreen State College, that phage therapy is safe and has no harmful side effects. You've been eating, drinking and wearing phages all your life! Dr. Kutter and Sulakvelidze's book, " Bacteriophages: Biology and Applications " provides great depth of information for many of these areas discussed in this thread. There is also a new translation of a book that was originally published in German in 2003, on the topic of phage therapy; it was written by Hausler, the title is " Viruses vs. Superbugs: A Solution to the Antibiotic Crisis " . Both books can be purchased on Amazon.com. Hope this clarifies the safety issue and answers some of the questions that were brought up in the thread. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2006 Report Share Posted July 11, 2006 Wow, very cool to have you here. Im the guy from up-thread. This group focuses (not exclusively) on bacterial causition of chronic diseases like CFS, MS, rheumatoid arthritis. For most of these diagnoses, there is no well-characterized bacterial cause. (Tho some here might disagree with that.) In others, like chlamydial ReA, specific persistent bacteria (C trachomatis) are clearly present in the diseased tissue, but theres not a clear consensus in the scientific community on the extent of their contribution to the disease (its likely to be large tho, would be my best guess). So, for some of us, treatment trials like these http://tinyurl.com/nlnqs http://tinyurl.com/qtdba along with anecdotal evidence are what inspire us most, and we dont feel exactly sure what bacteria (or viruses, or autoimmune processes) might be involved... phage therapys prospects in well characterized infections are tough to duplicate when you dont have a specific bacterial target in mind, Im guessing. I dont know much about phage host ranges, other than that phage mu can take out a range of enterobacterial species (largely because its receptor is the highly conserved molecule LPS). I wonder if any have a host spectrum larger than that, such that they could truly be called " broad-spectrum. " However, some here have osteomyelitis dxd, and/or feel they know what taxa they are aiming at, so for them phage therapy advancements could become exciting. Do you happen to know if osteomyelitis is established to be largely extracellular or largely intracellular? I havent nailed that down yet. Best of luck for your firms projects; this world could use a few zillion years worth of medical innovation ASAP. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2006 Report Share Posted July 11, 2006 By the way - how does finance work with small firms once you get to the clinic? I've heard phase III trials cost ~10x as much as phase II trials, which in turn outstrip phase I by ~10x. I still dont quite understand how on earth these things cost so much (~US$700 million total for FDA approval studies on one treatment? And thats mostly phase III?). But clearly they do! What I'm trying to ask is, what is the point where a small biotech invariably has to sell some/most/all of its intellectual property share of the project in order to raise this kind of astronomical money? I'm guessing its the start of phase II? Does that sometimes come from venture capitalists or is it invariably from large pharma firms? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2006 Report Share Posted July 11, 2006 I guess it may not be totally impossible a priori that some phage could replicate in mammal cells, at least when your knowledge of viruses is as tiny as mine is. Others may know better. However, its easy to collect trillions of viable phage (theyre everywhere) and see if they can lyse mammal cell cultures. That sort of experiment should go a long way. Proving that they cannot persist in mammal cells (non-replicatively) might be quite a bit harder, and I guess its conceivable they could still be pathogenic that way. Truly, theres nothing under the sun that could not possibly be harmful in some way... Here are some virion titers from a paper I did for university on phages. These titers are for all viruses, but I think most of them would be bacteriophage: various natural virion densities cited by Chibani-Chennoufi et al, 2004: nutrient-rich estuarine saltwater 10^7 /mL marine sediment 10^9 /mL soil 10^7 /g ruminants' stool 10^7 /g whey for human consumption 10^9 /mL air 10^5 / cubic meter or 0.1 /mL total number of viruses on the entire earth 10^30 or more So we are definitely exposed to alot of them as it is, all the time. And I'm thinking the only phage that might conceivably have some special reason to acquire the ability to infect mammal cells, would be those that are already in contact with mammals because they infect mammal-associated bacteria. Those, obviously, we would already in contact with as it is, tho maybe only in our GI lumens as opposed to in tissues where they would be during phage therapy. I would say that if you infect many rats systemically with staph, clear them up with a staph phage, and the rats have clean blood parameters and their tissues look good under a microscope (double blinded vs control animals), thats about as good a pre-clinical-trial safety ascertainment as you can make for that phage. Thats pretty much how pre-clinical toxicology is done with new small-molecule drugs (rats and dogs). Certainly some degree of risk always remains with any treatment - thats true even after FDA phase III trials in humans clears a treatment for the USA market, because those phase III trials simply cant be made large enough to prove causality for any rare side effects that might occur say once per 10,000 subjects. > > Thanks for your post , it's good to know the research is ongoing ..Safety > would be an issue for most of us here , the obvious fear is introducing > virus's that may shall we say linger . It's thought that we host virus's as > a co-infection .Our IS do not eradicate those ..You say that the IS will > clear the phages ..How can you be so sure ? > Looking at the site below ,the author has a different take, Phages rely on > the target bacteria when the bacteria goes so do the phages ..Is this old > news? can you explain the apparent contradiction? > I'm not saying throw the idea out .It's just there seems to be > contradictions ... > 1.. They are both self-replicating and self-limiting, since they will > multiply only as long as sensitive bacteria are present and then are > gradually eliminated from the individual and the environment. > http://www.evergreen.edu/phage/phagetherapy/phagetherapy.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Hello Penny. You did not mention in your post what price you were quoted for treatment nor what you are comparing the price to. Nor did you mention whether or not Tony from Australia is a physician and what was the nature of his medical condition. Can you please provide more information? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Hi - I'll respond the best way that I am able. I can't really answer your question on behalf of Dr. Kutter. I believe that she and several other prominent American microbiologists are convinced that phage therapy is not ready for the US market because of the potential issue around pathogenic genes, and not so much the clearing issue. Many of the Georgian scientists disagree with this pathogenic gene idea, by the way. Dr. Kutter states in her book that phages appear to be very safe and she does refer patients to the clinics in Georgia via links on her web site. Dr. Kutter wrote that article that you are referring to about 10 years ago, and I believe she was just getting her feet wet at that time. As I understand, the way that the Georgians know the antigens show up is via blood tests that are administered during therapy. This correlates with a reduction in effectiveness during treatment. Here is a paper that lists the major human studies: Minireview - Bacteriophage Therapy: http://aac.asm.org/cgi/content/full/45/3/649. The PDF version has tables showing the various studies that were done in Poland and Russia. and I think this one has some good general information as well: The pospect for bacteriophage therapy in Western medicine http://www.phageinternational.com/doc/nrd1111.pdf Given the host specificity of the phages (described in the above article), why would we care if phages linger in our bodies when they will only infect a specific strain of bacteria? We know this to be true about phages, because they are utilized in the lab for the purpose of identifying specific strains of bacteria. Here's a study that illustrates that we probably are all populated or colonized with phages: Bacteriophage isolation from human saliva http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/links/doi/10.1046/j.1472- 765X.2003.01262.x/abs/ We also know that our normal flora consists of various strains of Lactobacillus, Acidophilus, Bifidobacterium, etc. as well as non- pathogenic strains of E.coli, Enterococcus, and even Clostridium. We need these to survive and I wouldn't refer to this as being " infected " . Phages may in fact be integral to our immune system. There is great interest in the Western scientific community around using phages to treat bacterial infection - but the Georgians have a 70 year lead. Because their primiary purpose was support of the military, Eliava Institute's funding was substantial during Soviet times, and there is a lot of research there performed by hundreds of scientists over the years. There's is simply much that the Western scientific and medical community still do not know about producing safe and effective therapeutic phage products. There has been, however, some rapid progress in this area in Canada, the US, and the UK. Nearly the entire population of Georgia are treated with phages -- beginning at birth, and this has continued for over 70 years. There are no known side effects. If you contrast that with the side effects of antibiotics -- and the fact that they no longer clear many infections, it would seem worth the risk of being colonized temporarily with benign viruses, if it would clear a painful and potentially deadly infection. Literally millions of people in the US suffer with chronic infections that antibiotics won't touch; hundreds of thousands die every year. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Hi , I don't know the answer to your question off hand, but I will try to find out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 hi Just think that phagetherapy can be beneficial to most on these forums because conventional antibiotics really can't take out pseudonomas. Phage therapy is very succesfull against this bug according to my georgian friends. > > Hi , > > I don't know the answer to your question off hand, but I will try to > find out. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Hi Penny, I am one of the founders of Phage International and we are the holding company for the Phage Therapy Center located in Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia. Our History We started with the idea of establishing a Phage International clinic in Tijuana, Mexico where we would treat resistant infections - primarily diabetic foot ulcers and osteomyelitis. We had (and still have) located a very nice clinic in Tijuana, and also established the necessary relationships in Georgia required to perform phage sensitivity tests and receive sufficient quantities phages for treatment of our patients. We mistakenly believed that getting an import license and approval in Mexico would be the easy part. We halted that process, which has been ongoing for over a year, just before elections because, per our attorneys in Mexico City, the decision-makers at the Ministry of Health left their posts in order to run for office. So, we have been unable to open in Mexico, but continue to try to open new Phage Therapy Centers there and elsewhere. With your permission, I will post any announcements of future clinic openings. When the group from Phage International we went to Georgia for the first time, we met the owners of the Georgian clinic, Phage Therapy Center. Phage Therapy Center was founded by one group from Eliava Institute and another from the Center for Medical Polymers and Biomaterials. The clinic was established to bring foreign patients into Georgia for treatment of chronic infections. This group quite obviously had the medical and scientific expertise but they were having a little trouble getting necessary investment, and better access to the Western markets. We decided that a merger was a great idea and, as I recall, this happened around January or February of 2005. We made the Phage Therapy Center a wholly-owned subsidiary. We opened a " Western Style " clinic in September of last year and since then, we have been treating both Georgian and foreign patients. Phage International now consists of three persons in the US who handle IT, marketing, and business development. In Georgia our stakeholders include eight PhD-level microbiologists; five PhD level chemists; a physician, and two support individuals. Phage International is a US corporation that is privately held and privately funded; our investors include two US physicians and an entrepreneur from the Silicon Valley. The Clinic Phage Therapy Center has a new director, his name is Dr. Tengiz Chikvashvili. Dr. Chikvashvili has over 25 years of medical experience that includes extensive use of bacteriophages in his practice. The clinic is staffed with two physicians, a nurse, and a translator. Phage Therapy Center has also established a network of relationships with many specialists and professors at the medical universities in and around Tbilisi. Our network includes Dr. Guram Gvasalia, who is a professor at the State Medical University and teaches interns courses in the use of phages in surgical practice. Dr. Gvasalia is mentioned in many of Betty Kutter's papers, he's the surgeon featured in the White Pines documentary " Killer Cure " . Our goal is to establish Phage Therapy Centers, staffed with the best professional medical personnel who are trained in the use of phages, in a number of countries. Cost of Treatment I don't want to post the price ranges here and would rather refer readers to the FAQ on the www.phagetherapycenter.com web site. The current URL is: www.phagetherapycenter.com/pii/PatientServlet? command=static_clinicfaq The FAQ also contains the caveats and some of the conditions around the logistics of getting treatment; it includes the price ranges. Medical Conditions Treated We are getting excellent results treating the following conditions: - sinusitis / rhinitis; - ear infections; - urinary tract, kidney infections, cystitis; - intestinal infections; - infected wounds, diabetic ulcers and osteomyelitis; - surgical infections; and - chronic prostatitis. Generally, if you have or suspect a bacterial infection it is very likely that we can treat it. We request a bacterial sample and medical records before you come for treatment; if you can't get a bacterial sample, the clinic will still accept you. Getting the sample has been very difficult for most patients; it is not a requirement, it just shortens your stay at the clinic. Here's why: phages are very narrow spectrum, they will only infect a single species and in many cases a specific strain of bacteria. The clinic uses phage cocktails, which are combinations of multiple species of phages. The commercial versions of these cocktails were developed by Eliava Institute, and they are " tuned " for the dominant clinically significant pathogens in the Caucasus region. What's clinically significant depends on where you live; in the US, this varies from state to state (for example, check out www.narsa.net and go to their page on Clinical Relevant Strains: http://www.narsa.net/control/member/search?repositoryId=106). To determine what is going to work for the individual, the lab performs a " phage sensitivity test " – it is essentially an antibiogram that includes the commercial phage cocktail in the test. The test and evaluation of results takes around a week to complete. If your infection is sensitive to that commercial cocktail, and assuming your medical condition is treatable, then you are our patient. If the infection is resistant to the cocktail, and if you approve the extra costs involved, the lab will develop an autophage. Autophage development involves manually searching a massive library or " bank " of phages for ones that the infection is sensitive to. All of the phages in this bank have been through clinical trials, to verify that they are safe to use on humans. Sometimes this development takes a couple of days; sometimes it takes a month or more – it depends on many variables. So, if you come to our clinic without having sent a sample, best case you'll need to stay an extra week; worst case, you'll have to stay quite a bit longer that the average ten to twelve days of therapy required for treatment of chronic infection. However, some very complex, resistant conditions can take as long as six weeks or more to complete treatment. A little over half of our foreign patients have infections that are resistant to this commercial preparation and require development of an autophage. Bacteria That We Target (Genus): - Staphyloccus; - Proteus; - E.coli; - Pseudomonas; - Enterococcus; - Shigella; - Klebsiella; - Salmonella; and - several others. We have also had success at treating Candida/yeasts, and recently several cases of very resistant forms of Citrobacter. There are no bacteriophages in any of the phage banks for Citrobacter, and phages do not work with yeasts - they were both treated with other approved medications that are available only in Georgia. There is also a medication and proprietary treatment protocol for treating sinusitis that is only available at Phage Therapy Center Georgia. They are able to remove or reduce polyps without surgery and it apparently suppresses the symptoms for life (this requires 10 treatments; return in six months for another treatment; return again in 10 years for a final treatment). Phages or other medications, as necessary, are utilized to eliminate any infection. Most of our patients whose conditions caused migraines, fatigue, muscle aches and pains have claimed that these symptoms are eliminated during the first few days of therapy. In my opinion, Phage Therapy Center is the best place in the world to get treatment for chronic bacterial infections. Thank you very much for the opportunity to write about our clinic, it is very much appreciated by all of us. Here are our web sites: www.phageinternational.com www.phagetherapycenter.com I would be very pleased to answer any questions. Sincerely, , SVP and Founder Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 , sorry that I can't answer either of your questions directly but here are some leads that might help: The Genesis Clinic in Tbilisi, Georgia is a Children's clinic. The physician that runs this clinic in the Didube district refuses to use antibiotics, he uses bacteriophages exclusively for treating bacterial infection. As I recall and there is a statistician on staff there. Here's their web site: http://www.genesis.org.ge/ As for contacts in the UK, it is my understanding that a number of people are doing phage work at Warwick University and there is a commercial company, Novolytics (HQ is Coventry) that is also developing products. I read your web site last night. Very interesting. Can you please provide some references to research on Lyme and Candida and their relationship to autism? Autism is indeed epidemic in our area. > > Well, thanks for the detailed and in-depth reply ,fascinating stuff , I > haven't read the links yet I'll look forward to reading them over the next > week...Couple of questions , have you any health statistics from Georgia > that show clear benefits from the dosing at birth with Phage's. And have you > any contact details for the UK researches > Your remarks on gut flora and immunity rings a bell, Its the central them of > my web site .In the " Autism is an infectious disease " section one group of > pioneering researches [click Bacteroides Frgilis] have found that TH2 is our > default setting Immune system.TH1 [adaptive] response is entirely > attributable to our interaction with microbes. In short we depend entirely > on our symbiotic relationship with our microbial flora for good health .. > > http://www.yeast-candida-infections-uk.co.uk/ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 Hi , my sources tell me that osteomyelitis begins on the surface of the bone but it will " go deeper " as the infection progresses. I didn't quite understand your question regarding whether or not it is intracellular. I think that depends on the bacteria responsible for the infection. From my recollection, it is typically Staphylococcus and perhaps Pseudomonas (don't quote me on that) that is involved in causing osteomyelitis. Generally you will find that where a pathogen is intracellular, for example the genus Mycobacterium, there are usually no phages available to treat it. > > > Wow, very cool to have you here. Im the guy from up-thread. > > This group focuses (not exclusively) on bacterial causition of > chronic diseases like CFS, MS, rheumatoid arthritis. For most of > these diagnoses, there is no well-characterized bacterial cause. (Tho > some here might disagree with that.) In others, like chlamydial ReA, > specific persistent bacteria (C trachomatis) are clearly present in > the diseased tissue, but theres not a clear consensus in the > scientific community on the extent of their contribution to the > disease (its likely to be large tho, would be my best guess). > > So, for some of us, treatment trials like these > > http://tinyurl.com/nlnqs > http://tinyurl.com/qtdba > > along with anecdotal evidence are what inspire us most, and we dont > feel exactly sure what bacteria (or viruses, or autoimmune processes) > might be involved... phage therapys prospects in well characterized > infections are tough to duplicate when you dont have a specific > bacterial target in mind, Im guessing. I dont know much about phage > host ranges, other than that phage mu can take out a range of > enterobacterial species (largely because its receptor is the highly > conserved molecule LPS). I wonder if any have a host spectrum larger > than that, such that they could truly be called " broad-spectrum. " > > However, some here have osteomyelitis dxd, and/or feel they know what > taxa they are aiming at, so for them phage therapy advancements could > become exciting. Do you happen to know if osteomyelitis is > established to be largely extracellular or largely intracellular? I > havent nailed that down yet. > > Best of luck for your firms projects; this world could use a few > zillion years worth of medical innovation ASAP. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 Hi Penny, With osteomyelitis, wherether or not it requires debridement depends on a number of factors. X-rays would be necessary to make this determination. Unfortunately there are no known phages in any of the phage banks for treating actinomyces; there is currently no research under way that we know of. > > Hi > > Thanks very much for the detailed description and the links. And yes, you have permission to post news at this site, since I think it's something we're all very interested in. I will also post a link to your site in our links/files section. > > I'm very hopeful about phage therapy and sincerely hope things progress quickly and smoothly for everyone's benefit. > > I have a couple more questions. I'm curious if you've found a phage cocktail, or are working on one, for actinomyces? This is a very destructive organism, but perhaps not so well known. > > I'm also curious about the osteomyelitis treatment. Are you able to forego debridement of the necrotic bone and still accomplish a cure? Or is debridement necessary first? > > Also very happy to hear you've got testing capabilities, as that's been a very big missing piece for us so far. > > thanks again, > > penny > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 Good point... I wasnt thinking of that in phrasing my question. I read that Staph aureus causes 80% of cases but the less common causes are numerous and include mycobacteria. M tuberculosis populations are actually almost completely extracellular during active pulmonary TB, tho they are intracellular during latent infection. I dont know exactly what happens during TB of other anatomic sites. For other mycobacteria it may be different. On top of this thread I think I posted some refs about phage treatment of animals experimentally infected with mycobacteria. In one case the (apparantly) generally benign M. smegmatis was used as a vehicle to get the phage into the phagosomes containing M tuberculosis; in another case (an older Eastern bloc paper) free virions were administered (IV as I recall), yet still seemed to have a therapeutic effect (perhaps incomplete; I dont recall). Surprising... but I cant really analyze it, lacking much knowledge of phagosome trafficking. I wonder if a hypometabolic physiology can affect a cells ability to be lysed by a phage. I havent looked into that. It may have some importance for phage therapy of certain diseases. > > Hi , my sources tell me that osteomyelitis begins on the surface > of the bone but it will " go deeper " as the infection progresses. I > didn't quite understand your question regarding whether or not it is > intracellular. I think that depends on the bacteria responsible for > the infection. From my recollection, it is typically Staphylococcus > and perhaps Pseudomonas (don't quote me on that) that is involved in > causing osteomyelitis. Generally you will find that where a pathogen > is intracellular, for example the genus Mycobacterium, there are > usually no phages available to treat it. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2006 Report Share Posted July 19, 2006 > > Hi , my sources tell me that osteomyelitis begins on the surface > of the bone but it will " go deeper " as the infection progresses. Hello Thank you for your work and for joining the forum. This chronic osteomyelitis of the jaws, sinuses, skull and disseminated chronic infection seems to be frighteningly common (and unaddressed). Are there phages available for the following: Stomatococcus mucilaginosus Viridans streptococci H. influenzae Haemophilus sp, NOT H. influenzae Diptheroids Neisseria sp Aerobic non-sporeforming gram positive rods (I believe the answer is " yes " to the V. strep) If anyone has any info re the biofilm-producing status of any of above, I'd like to hear it. Thank you, Jo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2006 Report Share Posted July 19, 2006 Hi Jo, Of the ones on your list, our sources only have phages for the S. viridans. > Hello > > Thank you for your work and for joining the forum. This chronic > osteomyelitis of the jaws, sinuses, skull and disseminated chronic > infection seems to be frighteningly common (and unaddressed). > > Are there phages available for the following: > > Stomatococcus mucilaginosus > Viridans streptococci > H. influenzae > Haemophilus sp, NOT H. influenzae > Diptheroids > Neisseria sp > Aerobic non-sporeforming gram positive rods > > (I believe the answer is " yes " to the V. strep) > > If anyone has any info re the biofilm-producing status of any of > above, I'd like to hear it. > > Thank you, > Jo > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 20, 2006 Report Share Posted July 20, 2006 > > Hi Jo, > > Of the ones on your list, our sources only have phages for the S. > viridans. Thank you, Chris. I guess these aren't the usual OM bugs then. BW Jo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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