Guest guest Posted December 18, 2007 Report Share Posted December 18, 2007 Steve (T), As a sensitized person, with absolutely no credentials and no science to back up my opinion, my answer is yes, there are two additional processes I'd hypothesize. 4. Direct modulation, in the bloodstream, of the level of one or more substances used by neurons, such as ion channel ions, neurotransmitters, etc. This typically occurs in sensitized individuals, not the general population. For plausibility I point out that these substances are typically in the bloodstream at concentrations of 1 part in 10^10 to 1 part in 10^12, so nanograms of a contaminant reaching the bloodstream would be significant unless regulated by some body mechanism. Although I am primarily MCS and tolerate most molds, I have had experiences since being sensitized in which exposure to particular molds noticeably but subjectively impacted the operation of my nervous system, in a reaction which cleared rapidly when leaving the area where the mold was. Although I claim no expertise, from my reading there is no known allergic reaction which clears in less than 2 hours. Likewise it takes 2 hours just to get the body's blood supply through the kidneys or liver (once, on average). Occupying a nervous system receptor the way alcohol or an opiate does likewise does not clear quickly. Almost a decade ago I reached the conclusion that none of the mechanisms in the literature could explain what my family and I were experiencing -- but as a guy who used to design computers the behavior is very much like what a computer chip does when the power at its pins is " noisy " . 5. Autoimmune reactions, in which something the mold put into the environment (could be half digested building materials, not limited to something the mold directly secreted) got into the bloodstream, acting as a hapten landed on a circulating protein or other structure, and was attacked by the immune system. I hypothesize this is the mechanism of sensitization for #4. Steve Chalmers stevec@... > > In a message dated 12/18/2007 11:18:38 AM Eastern Standard Time, > aahavics@... writes: > > " Molds and other fungi may adversely affect human health through three > > processes: 1) allergy; 2) infection; and 3) toxicity. " > > > Does chemical sensitization to bioaerosols and MVOCs fall into category 1 or > 3? Or should a 4th category be added? > > Steve Temes > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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