Post by Admin on Jul 20, 2015 7:48:03 GMT -5
Dear RM Agents and Readers,
It is a dangerous place to be; suggesting natural medicine, herbs, vitamins and quality food can actually help heal. Yet, that is what I know. They are going to do whatever they can to push their prescriptions such as antipsychotics onto people and create more heart patients as it only takes one dosing with some of these to ruin your heart.
They are aware of sAME', so how come the medical field doesn't suggest its use? It is safe? So what is up with this?
Many of the doctors and nurses can't see for the blinders that were applied on during their training. After they become ill, it often takes them twice as long to figure out that their own health field is s c r e w i n g people over. Fix the symptoms but never heal a person, that cuts into the bottom line. To be sure, this article does suggest that folks are being healed (but for how long?) What will cause reinfection? What must one do to build the body, mind, heart and soul so that they are protected? Can you be reinfected, yup.
This is the truth of it; to make it through the world such as, one must build the human body to the best it can be, mentally, physically, emotionally and spiritually. So Teach your children well folks because in these times they need as much truth as they can garnish from the parnets.
Do notice the years these articles were published and folks still getting treated like crap because of health issues.
Hopefully Morph will chime in on this one as it does mention WWARS ----
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2100128/
MedGenMed. 2007; 9(3): 54.
Published online 2007 Sep 13.
PMCID: PMC2100128
Do Bartonella Infections Cause Agitation, Panic Disorder, and Treatment-Resistant Depression?
James L. Schaller, MD, MAR, Director, Professional Medical Services of Naples, Glenn A. Burkland, DMD, Associate Clinical Professor, and P.J. Langhoff, science research assistant and medical writer
Author information ► Copyright and License information ►
This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.
Go to:
Abstract
Introduction
Bartonella is an emerging infection found in cities, suburbs, and rural locations. Routine national labs offer testing for only 2 species, but at least 9 have been discovered as human infections within the last 15 years. Some authors discuss Bartonella cases having atypical presentations, with serious morbidity considered uncharacteristic of more routine Bartonella infections. Some atypical findings include distortion of vision, abdominal pain, severe liver and spleen tissue abnormalities, thrombocytopenic purpura, bone infection, arthritis, abscesses, heart tissue and heart valve problems. While some articles discuss Bartonella as a cause of neurologic illnesses, psychiatric illnesses have received limited attention. Case reports usually do not focus on psychiatric symptoms and typically only as incidental comorbid findings. In this article, we discuss patients exhibiting new-onset agitation, panic attacks, and treatment-resistant depression, all of which may be attributed to Bartonella.
M
Bartonella is found in cities, suburbs, and rural locations,[11–14] and is an emerging infection. In recent decades, Bartonella research publications are increasing, but psychiatric disorders were underreported in the soldiers of World War I and World War II. For example, approximately 1 million soldiers in WWI were affected with Bartonella quintana,[15] but medical journals did not report much about its psychiatric manifestations.
In the last 15 years, 9 Bartonella bacteria have been identified that are known to infect humans: B henselae, B elizabethae, B grahamii, B vinsonii subsp. arupensis, B vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii, B grahamii, B washoensis, and, more recently, B koehlerae and B rochalimae.[16–20] Currently, the largest national laboratories offer tests for only 2 species[21–23] (B quintana and B henselae).
Some Bartonella cases have “atypical” presentations with signs or symptoms lasting more than weeks, causing diverse medical problems. For example, Bartonella can cause vision abnormalities, prolonged fever, joint pain, lung inflammation, respiratory disease, and granulomas throughout the body. It can occasionally cause abdominal pain, liver and spleen tissue abnormalities, thrombocytopenic purpura, bone infection, papules or pustules, maculopapular rashes, arthritis, abscesses,[20, 24–30] heart tissue and heart valve problems,[31–37] and neurologic illnesses.[38–42]
It is a dangerous place to be; suggesting natural medicine, herbs, vitamins and quality food can actually help heal. Yet, that is what I know. They are going to do whatever they can to push their prescriptions such as antipsychotics onto people and create more heart patients as it only takes one dosing with some of these to ruin your heart.
They are aware of sAME', so how come the medical field doesn't suggest its use? It is safe? So what is up with this?
Many of the doctors and nurses can't see for the blinders that were applied on during their training. After they become ill, it often takes them twice as long to figure out that their own health field is s c r e w i n g people over. Fix the symptoms but never heal a person, that cuts into the bottom line. To be sure, this article does suggest that folks are being healed (but for how long?) What will cause reinfection? What must one do to build the body, mind, heart and soul so that they are protected? Can you be reinfected, yup.
This is the truth of it; to make it through the world such as, one must build the human body to the best it can be, mentally, physically, emotionally and spiritually. So Teach your children well folks because in these times they need as much truth as they can garnish from the parnets.
Do notice the years these articles were published and folks still getting treated like crap because of health issues.
Hopefully Morph will chime in on this one as it does mention WWARS ----
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2100128/
MedGenMed. 2007; 9(3): 54.
Published online 2007 Sep 13.
PMCID: PMC2100128
Do Bartonella Infections Cause Agitation, Panic Disorder, and Treatment-Resistant Depression?
James L. Schaller, MD, MAR, Director, Professional Medical Services of Naples, Glenn A. Burkland, DMD, Associate Clinical Professor, and P.J. Langhoff, science research assistant and medical writer
Author information ► Copyright and License information ►
This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.
Go to:
Abstract
Introduction
Bartonella is an emerging infection found in cities, suburbs, and rural locations. Routine national labs offer testing for only 2 species, but at least 9 have been discovered as human infections within the last 15 years. Some authors discuss Bartonella cases having atypical presentations, with serious morbidity considered uncharacteristic of more routine Bartonella infections. Some atypical findings include distortion of vision, abdominal pain, severe liver and spleen tissue abnormalities, thrombocytopenic purpura, bone infection, arthritis, abscesses, heart tissue and heart valve problems. While some articles discuss Bartonella as a cause of neurologic illnesses, psychiatric illnesses have received limited attention. Case reports usually do not focus on psychiatric symptoms and typically only as incidental comorbid findings. In this article, we discuss patients exhibiting new-onset agitation, panic attacks, and treatment-resistant depression, all of which may be attributed to Bartonella.
M
Bartonella is found in cities, suburbs, and rural locations,[11–14] and is an emerging infection. In recent decades, Bartonella research publications are increasing, but psychiatric disorders were underreported in the soldiers of World War I and World War II. For example, approximately 1 million soldiers in WWI were affected with Bartonella quintana,[15] but medical journals did not report much about its psychiatric manifestations.
In the last 15 years, 9 Bartonella bacteria have been identified that are known to infect humans: B henselae, B elizabethae, B grahamii, B vinsonii subsp. arupensis, B vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii, B grahamii, B washoensis, and, more recently, B koehlerae and B rochalimae.[16–20] Currently, the largest national laboratories offer tests for only 2 species[21–23] (B quintana and B henselae).
Some Bartonella cases have “atypical” presentations with signs or symptoms lasting more than weeks, causing diverse medical problems. For example, Bartonella can cause vision abnormalities, prolonged fever, joint pain, lung inflammation, respiratory disease, and granulomas throughout the body. It can occasionally cause abdominal pain, liver and spleen tissue abnormalities, thrombocytopenic purpura, bone infection, papules or pustules, maculopapular rashes, arthritis, abscesses,[20, 24–30] heart tissue and heart valve problems,[31–37] and neurologic illnesses.[38–42]