Guest guest Posted October 20, 2011 Report Share Posted October 20, 2011 I've just been reading up, and found that something interesting happens when HIV invades a cell: nothing. It splices itself into the DNA of the cell and unless the cell " activates " the virus is not reproduced. In other words if there is no need for the cell to do any work fighting an infection, the virus cannot multiply. This has useful implications to anyone wanting to give the best possible treatment. The main one is keep the body away from germs, deal with germs using godzilla, beck's protocol, whatever else helps to that end, and use the HIV meds to reduce the virus in addition. The most likely reason some people go into AIDS quickly and others more slowly would seem to be involved at least to some major extent, with how " activated " their immune cells become over time. Beck's protocol has demonstrated its usefulness in AIDS cases, clearing up OI's (opportunistic infections) but it did not rid the person of HIV (nothing else has, either). So reducing the virus is the current best case we have. Many with HIV have reported better health when they did the things like diet, exercise, etc which would normally tend to strengthen themselves. It could very well be that by keeping the burden off the immune system, so it remains dormant and does not reproduce the virus, could suppress the replication of the virus. This is in addition to what the meds can do for virus already in existence. I am very convinced of the validity of this, and I see examples in the literature of it working this way. Without the meds, these additional things do not work, the virus begins to trigger a large reaction in the immune system, which just makes more virus. So meds are needed. But to reduce the overall virus most effectively it makes compelling mechanical sense to combine the therapies. By doing so, you remove the most virus that is circulating around, plus you quiet down the virus factories in the infected cells. How big an effect? Each infected cell produces hundreds of thousands of new virus. Each one is slightly mutated, which is part of the problem for vaccine development. Note, it is the cell which makes the virus! It cannot do so unless it becomes " activated " . If not activated, it sits there looking normal. By keeping many of these cells in such a quiet state, they eventually can disappear, or become active here and there. But the vastness of the ocean of virus in the body would be reduced considerably at the source. bG Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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