"Kofi" <kofi@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:kofi-5B3ECA.00092502102008@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> In article
> <b4d6b68f-f426-48d1-b345-436dd1fe44e7@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> jackson.alonso@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>
>> Kofi, what are your palns to treat the infection? It is well known
>> that herpesviri modulate the immune system towards a Th2 ****ft by
>> producing the necessary ILs. However we still lack efficient methods
>> of diagnosis as well as treatment
>
> Well, my IgG/IgM titers seem to be pretty accurate. Varicella and CMV
> fit a good number of symptoms. What bothers me are those chronic
> infections I might have that aren't prompting an antibody response. I
> suppose those require PCR. What we really need are shotgun chips that
> look for thousands of antibodies and fragments of pathogen DNA/RNA at
> once. With modern chip fabrication techniques, economies of scale could
> churn them out pretty cheaply. Sadly, I'm not aware of any push in
> microfluidics to put something like this on the market any time soon.
>
> Having said that, I've got a definite viral problem. I've suspected
> something like this for a long time, but with a condition this
> complicated, I've had little other choice than peeling each layer of the
> onion one at a time. The viruses are simply the most recent layer
> that's stuck to the onion. I've done well on the chlorella and this
> seems to indicate I didn't fully take care of the earliest, most obvious
> layer - the mercury poisoning. There's not much recent in the pubmed
> literature, but there are some intriguing abstracts on mercury, CMV and
> chlorella (in fact, I'm surprised the NIH slipped up and let them
> through). There seems to be a viscious cycle involving local mercury
> deposits left over in my gut after detox (apparently the DMPS missed
> them; low blood flow, maybe?), resistance to growth hormone in those
> areas and viral infection [PMID 8931761, 8686573, 7526487, 8686573].
>
[snip]
You may want to run a program in the background on your computer to
help virus research.
This one helps herpes research, but doesn't emphasize it; also HIV:
http://boinc.bakerlab.org/rosetta/
World Community Grid - dengue and HIV; also the proteosome
project helps somewhat
http://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/index.jsp
You mentioned also being interested in cell adhesion. This one is
developing software to help research into that:
http://cels-at-home-dev.dyndns.org/cels/
You might want to participate in all of these on the same
computer to fill in times when one or more of them doesn't
have any workunits they need you to work on; I participate in
all of these projects and more with my computer.
Those interested in allergies or autoimmune conditions may want to
participate in some of protein folding projects. I also participate in
these:
World Community Grid - proteome
http://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/
POEM@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
are even much projects still in alpha test or beta test, but
I don't consider those suitable for the general public to
participate yet.
Also, there's a web site for herpes sufferers. Seems to have
problems with registering new members, though.
<http://www.righthealth.com/Health/Herpes%20C-s?lid=goog-ads-sb-8536643334>
These sites may be relevant to your herpes problem:
http://jn.nutrition.org/cgi/content/full/138/1/130
http://www.pnas.org/content/97/5/2208.full
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1559766
http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=6450&page=249
http://www.immunesup****t.com/chronic-fatigue-syndrome-causes.htm
I found them with a Google search for "herpes IL-10 vitamin C"
without the quotes.


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