Direct Treatment of Infections
Nov 25, 2024 13:55:59 GMT
Post by Admin on Nov 25, 2024 13:55:59 GMT
Here is the question some people may ask: If I kill my infections with antibiotics then won’t my immune system be fixed? The answer is NO.
Antibiotics don’t kill the infection completely and there are a lot of reasons for that.
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23090599/
“we actually never had antibiotics capable of eradicating an infection. All pathogens produce a small subpopulation of dormant persister cells that are highly tolerant to killing by antibiotics. Once an antibiotic concentration drops, surviving persisters re-establish the population, causing a relapsing chronic infection.”
When the immune system is active it can kill the infection inside cells and it can kill bacteria in the plasma.
Lyme disease, Borrelia, and Co-infections, especially Bartonella, shut off the immune system in a variety of ways and you can find plenty of well researched scientific papers that establish that fact.
Here is one;
journals.plos.org/plospathogens/article?id=10.1371/journal.ppat.1004976
“Suppression of Long-Lived Humoral Immunity Following Borrelia burgdorferi Infection”
“We show here that B. burgdorferi infected mice show a similar rapid disappearance of Borrelia-specific antibodies after infection and subsequent antibiotic treatment. This failure was associated with development of only short-lived germinal centers, micro-anatomical locations from which long-lived immunity originates. “
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29610317/
“Plasticity in early immune evasion strategies of a bacterial pathogen”
“Here we report a unique innate immune evasion strategy of B. burgdorferi, orchestrated by a surface protein annotated as BBA57, through its modulation of multiple spirochete virulent determinants. BBA57 function is critical for early infection but largely redundant for later stages of spirochetal persistence, either in mammals or in ticks. The protein influences host IFN responses as well as suppresses multiple host microbicidal activities involving serum complement, neutrophils, and antimicrobial peptides.”
These pathogen use a lot of different strategies to shut down the immune system and they are very hard to kill with just antibiotics because they are intracellular, they get inside the cells where antibiotics don’t go very well. Antibiotics are designed to target bacterial cells and not human cells so when the pathogen is hiding inside they don’t work very well. The pathogens also create their own compartments inside the cells to live inside, vacuoles.
You can target the microbes directly with antibiotics and that doesn’t work very well, it works best in the acute stage but cause more problems than it fixes.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8756738/
“Impact of antibiotics on the human microbiome and consequences for host health”
“This review has summarized the importance of the gut microbiota in host metabolism and immune functions such as immunity development, colonization resistance, cell signaling, and with the help of advanced omics technologies, the complex interactions between host and microbiota are now becoming clear. Antibiotics disrupt the microbial balance and hence the networking within the bacterial community, and that with the host. The resulting resistant bacteria make clinical treatment difficult.”
You can also target the infections directly with herbs and that can work a little better because there are less side effects but it also ignores the fact that you need to do some immune system repair. Combining herbs and ABX has shown the best results for a treatment that ignores the problem of immune system involvement.
What will happen when you use thing that kill the infections directly is that you will spread outer surface proteins that are antigens around in your system so that if your immune system is working then it will activate. You don’t need very much to do that, Carvacrol from oil of oregano and Monolaurin from Coconut work just fine for that, that’s all.
The rest of an appropriate treatment should be fixing the immune system because it is the most powerful weapon against these infections provided it is working.
Here is an example of trying to target the infections directly;
www.lymedisease.org/herbs-against-lyme-bart-babesia
Again missing the point and that is why these approaches fall short of good results.
And this is how to repair the immune system;
bartonella.freeforums.net/thread/138/cell-exhaustion-fixed
~d
Antibiotics don’t kill the infection completely and there are a lot of reasons for that.
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23090599/
“we actually never had antibiotics capable of eradicating an infection. All pathogens produce a small subpopulation of dormant persister cells that are highly tolerant to killing by antibiotics. Once an antibiotic concentration drops, surviving persisters re-establish the population, causing a relapsing chronic infection.”
When the immune system is active it can kill the infection inside cells and it can kill bacteria in the plasma.
Lyme disease, Borrelia, and Co-infections, especially Bartonella, shut off the immune system in a variety of ways and you can find plenty of well researched scientific papers that establish that fact.
Here is one;
journals.plos.org/plospathogens/article?id=10.1371/journal.ppat.1004976
“Suppression of Long-Lived Humoral Immunity Following Borrelia burgdorferi Infection”
“We show here that B. burgdorferi infected mice show a similar rapid disappearance of Borrelia-specific antibodies after infection and subsequent antibiotic treatment. This failure was associated with development of only short-lived germinal centers, micro-anatomical locations from which long-lived immunity originates. “
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29610317/
“Plasticity in early immune evasion strategies of a bacterial pathogen”
“Here we report a unique innate immune evasion strategy of B. burgdorferi, orchestrated by a surface protein annotated as BBA57, through its modulation of multiple spirochete virulent determinants. BBA57 function is critical for early infection but largely redundant for later stages of spirochetal persistence, either in mammals or in ticks. The protein influences host IFN responses as well as suppresses multiple host microbicidal activities involving serum complement, neutrophils, and antimicrobial peptides.”
These pathogen use a lot of different strategies to shut down the immune system and they are very hard to kill with just antibiotics because they are intracellular, they get inside the cells where antibiotics don’t go very well. Antibiotics are designed to target bacterial cells and not human cells so when the pathogen is hiding inside they don’t work very well. The pathogens also create their own compartments inside the cells to live inside, vacuoles.
You can target the microbes directly with antibiotics and that doesn’t work very well, it works best in the acute stage but cause more problems than it fixes.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8756738/
“Impact of antibiotics on the human microbiome and consequences for host health”
“This review has summarized the importance of the gut microbiota in host metabolism and immune functions such as immunity development, colonization resistance, cell signaling, and with the help of advanced omics technologies, the complex interactions between host and microbiota are now becoming clear. Antibiotics disrupt the microbial balance and hence the networking within the bacterial community, and that with the host. The resulting resistant bacteria make clinical treatment difficult.”
You can also target the infections directly with herbs and that can work a little better because there are less side effects but it also ignores the fact that you need to do some immune system repair. Combining herbs and ABX has shown the best results for a treatment that ignores the problem of immune system involvement.
What will happen when you use thing that kill the infections directly is that you will spread outer surface proteins that are antigens around in your system so that if your immune system is working then it will activate. You don’t need very much to do that, Carvacrol from oil of oregano and Monolaurin from Coconut work just fine for that, that’s all.
The rest of an appropriate treatment should be fixing the immune system because it is the most powerful weapon against these infections provided it is working.
Here is an example of trying to target the infections directly;
www.lymedisease.org/herbs-against-lyme-bart-babesia
Again missing the point and that is why these approaches fall short of good results.
And this is how to repair the immune system;
bartonella.freeforums.net/thread/138/cell-exhaustion-fixed
~d