Guest guest Posted April 28, 2006 Report Share Posted April 28, 2006 You mentioned in a previous post. I copied below. Do You know what other pathogens like the oxygen? I read on another forum something about babesia liking oxygen but then later on Saul Pressman I think he is a MD told someone ozone would help with babesia. How does someone know if they had a psuedonomas infection? Is this the type of infection you might get in a finger when you pull a hangnail? I have heard of stallions having this bacteria but didn't know what symptoms they had. It would make sense that a yeast would like oxygen if you think of making bread. Can you explan a little more about these? Hi, I have a few thoughts about this. First, if you had a coinfection like babesia that might need to be treated first. has some studies showing that some strains of babesia may do okay in oxygen--I'm not convinced that organisms other than yeast, and maybe something like psuedonomas or very aerobic organisms, flourish much in higher oxygen, but in any case, that might be an issue. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 28, 2006 Report Share Posted April 28, 2006 Well, ozone and hyperbaric oxygen are very different. Ozone is 03, but it is the oxygen radical that kills pathogens. Hyperbaric oxygen pushes oxygen itself into the tissues under pressurized conditions. This may " kill " some pathogens esp. anaerobic ones, but it is not germicidal like ozone. On the other hand, new research from the Univ. Pennsylvania shows hbo increases stem cell production, we also know it stimulates the immune function etc. They are distinctly different approaches. I personally also feel that for me, hbo offsets some of the downstream effects of lyme; i.e. it improves liver/gallbladder function, improves digestion, it takes away inflamation, lyme headaches etc (for me). Since lyme likes to live in the tissues, and adheres to collagen matrices, and burrows in, hyperbaric oxygen can inhibit the lyme. I'm pretty sure we all have pseudomonas in our bodies, and I think its basically an opportunistic pathogen that takes over if you are weakened. Yeasts are facultative anaerobes--they can switch from anaerobic to aerobic. I personally believe that hbo *can* stimulate yeasts, from my own experience, but only if you are already vulnerable or have a lot of yeast. Anyway, ozone and oxygen are very different, and both good. - > I read on another forum something about babesia liking oxygen but > then later on Saul Pressman I think he is a MD told someone ozone > would help with babesia. > How does someone know if they had a psuedonomas infection? > Is this the type of infection you might get in a finger when you > pull a hangnail? > I have heard of stallions having this bacteria but didn't know what > symptoms they had. > It would make sense that a yeast would like oxygen if you think of > making bread. > Can you explan a little more about these? > > Hi, I have a few thoughts about this. > First, if you had a coinfection like babesia that might need to be > treated first. has some studies showing that some strains of > babesia may do okay in oxygen--I'm not convinced that organisms other > than yeast, and maybe something like psuedonomas or very aerobic > organisms, flourish much in higher oxygen, but in any case, that > might > be an issue. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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