Guest guest Posted June 13, 2008 Report Share Posted June 13, 2008 Doug, I'll have to study the links you sent. To me it seems difficult to understand how diabetes could be infectious, but hey, who am I to question? I'll have to think about it. If it were infectious, how would one treat it? I figure it's mostly bad eating habits, being overweight, and not exercising enough. I just need some help in lowering the blood sugar and keeping myself healthy. That's one of the reasons I decided to give MMS a try. You see I have other weird things with my health and figured, what have I got to lose, right?Anyway, thanks for the food for thought and the websites. Lilo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2008 Report Share Posted June 13, 2008 Lilo, Well, why do you thing MMS might have helped out your Dad's diabetes? MMS is an antimicrobial, so if it did indeed help your dad's diabetes, then chances are, it may be killing an infectious agent. At the moment, I cannot think of another reason why MMS would help? Can you? If diabetes is only from bad eating habits, obesity, non-exercise (as you think),,,,,,,then why would a MMS remedy those three components? It makes no sense to think MMS would. It is well known that the use of the common antibiotics will not improve diabetes. So you may say, well doesn't this show it is not an infection? I say to this, NO. We are just now appreciating unique forms of bacteria, virus, fungi that have the capability of changing accepted cell form and circumventing the common antibiotics. The L-form is not easily cultured, nor will many of the common antibiotics kill or stall its growth. The many of our common antibiotics use the pathogen's cell wall as the weak link to act upon. The problem is that L-forms do not have a cell wall. We have nanobacteria and we have biofilms to contend with as well. These too, cannot be affected by the common array of anti-biotics out there for different reasons.So just maybe, if MMS is an effective antimicrobial, it could have an affect on the unique pathogen that may be diabetes? As you say, food for thought. doug [ ] mms/diabetes/infectious Doug, I'll have to study the links you sent. To me it seems difficult to understand how diabetes could be infectious, but hey, who am I to question? I'll have to think about it. If it were infectious, how would one treat it? I figure it's mostly bad eating habits, being overweight, and not exercising enough. I just need some help in lowering the blood sugar and keeping myself healthy. That's one of the reasons I decided to give MMS a try. You see I have other weird things with my health and figured, what have I got to lose, right?Anyway, thanks for the food for thought and the websites. Lilo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 13, 2008 Report Share Posted June 13, 2008 Here are a few more links Lilo: http://mmsadvisor.com/?cat=22 " Generally, what is involved with the diabetes is the pancreas being inflamed; MMS gets the inflammation down, thus the pancreas starts working again. However, it is not a solution for everybody, and only half of the people taking MMS have been helped. If the inflammation goes down the problem might be microbe related. " http://www.psha-inc.com/guai-support/sf/MoreResources.htm#Chronic_Neurotoxins " The pathogens may differ, but the biotoxins they produce all do their damage by setting off an " exaggerated inflammatory response " in humans. While hiding out in fatty tissues where blood-borne disease-fighters can't get at them, they " trick " the body's immune system for fighting germs into launching attacks of inflammation in many organ systems, including joints, muscles, nerves and brain. Increasingly, there is evidence to show that these attacks are carried out by a newly discovered group of molecules, the " proinflammatory cytokines, " and that the devastation they cause is clearly linked to recent surges in the rates of heart disease, obesity and diabetes. Much more research is needed, of course. Nonetheless, the recent findings about inflammatory disorders caused by biotoxin-driven cytokines do seem likely to challenge our understanding of the body's " immune system " in the years immediately ahead, while also forcing us to reevaluate much of our currently accepted medical practice. At the same time, these provocative discoveries will require medical researchers to confront the grim possibility that these organisms have " figured out " how to skew our basic immune responses. How? By targeting them with powerful toxic molecules that can wreak havoc on the body's system for protecting itself from disease. " http://www.psha-inc.com/guai-support/sf/MoreResources.htm#MP-LaymanTerms " These treatment-resistant bacteria, acquired over a lifetime, are thought to stimulate inflammation in many diseases, ranging from sarcoidosis, “autoimmune” diseases and diseases of aging, such as diabetes, osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. " And for something a little different just to show that research turns up different causes. Maybe in the end they are all connected. http://www.psha-inc.com/guai-support/sf/InsulinResistanceSyndrome.htm#DiabetesBreakthrough " In a discovery that has stunned even those behind it, scientists at a Toronto hospital say they have proof the body's nervous system helps trigger diabetes, opening the door to a potential near-cure of the disease that affects millions of Canadians. Diabetic mice became healthy virtually overnight after researchers injected a substance to counteract the effect of malfunctioning pain neurons in the pancreas. " I couldn't believe it, " said Dr. Salter, a pain expert at the Hospital for Sick Children and one of the scientists. " Mice with diabetes suddenly didn't have diabetes any more. " " They also conclude that there are far more similarities than previously thought between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, and that nerves likely play a role in other chronic inflammatory conditions, such as asthma and Crohn's disease. " " They also discovered that their treatments curbed the insulin resistance that is the hallmark of Type 2 diabetes " Best wishes........LD At 10:46 AM 13/06/2008, you wrote: Doug, I'll have to study the links you sent. To me it seems difficult to understand how diabetes could be infectious, but hey, who am I to question? I'll have to think about it. If it were infectious, how would one treat it? I figure it's mostly bad eating habits, being overweight, and not exercising enough. I just need some help in lowering the blood sugar and keeping myself healthy. That's one of the reasons I decided to give MMS a try. You see I have other weird things with my health and figured, what have I got to lose, right? Anyway, thanks for the food for thought and the websites. Lilo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.