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how much nicotinamide and how is it working any feedback on this yet?

bleu

> Re:Message: 9 

> - Thanks for the references and Matts original

> post. I think I'll email this to Wheldon, who has

> kindly responded to other questions in the past, and

> see what he says. As a medical microbiologist and MD

> treating actual cases (in Cpn) he may have a more

> complex take on this. If he replies I'll post it. I'll

> also ask his opinion on the " metro wall " phenomenon--

> herx or sensitization, that is the question.

>

> Wheldon, in my read, is referring to what Stratton

> calls the " cryptic " form (Stratton actually referrs to

> two cryptic stages, one of which is especially

> sensitive to nicotinamide related agents- it took me a

> third read of his patent papers to register this) as

> the non-replicating phase.

> A good puzzle to follow!

>        Jim

>

>    Date: Tue, 03 May 2005 21:31:44 -0000

>    From: " Hodologica " <usenethod@...>

> Subject: Jim - metronidazole

>

> Jim,

>

> Here are the papers:

>

> http://www.ub.rug.nl/eldoc/dis/medicine/e.j.van.der.wouden/c8.pdf

>

> http://tinyurl.com/62tz2

>

> And if those dont work, here is Matts earlier post

> #92, from which I

> got both papers:

>

> infections/messag

> e/92

>

> Your idea about the metro-wall could be right, but I

> cant really

> say. I dont know if the reduced (active) form

> circulates - I kinda

> suspect not - in the 2nd paper there they found that

> non-metro-

> reducing cells were unharmed when mixed with metro and

> metro-

> reducing cells. The reduced form may be so reactive

> that it exists

> only something very roughly like one second or less,

> before being re-

> oxidized in a reaction that damages some other

> molecule. Also,

> enzymes are not depleted or worn out by use; they are

> just molecular

> machines that basically stay in good shape, re-usably.

> Saturation

> occurs if there is too much substrate present,

> relative to the

> number of copies of the enzyme - the enzymes get

> " backed up " , at

> which point the enzymatic reaction does not stop, but

> its rate has

> maxed out and substrate may continue to accumulate.

> But some enzymes

> in the liver (and elsewhere?) are inducible, meaning

> the body can

> sense their saturation and respond by synthesizing

> extra enzyme

> copies. All my knowledge is pretty vague since I'm

> just taking early

> college bio classes now.

>

> I think I see what you mean about what Wheldon's

> saying. By non-

> replicating form, do you know if he means the

> elementary body, or

> something else?

>

>

>

>

> -

>

>

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