Guest guest Posted October 13, 2009 Report Share Posted October 13, 2009 From I your link in regards to the fungus is not working. Hope you have success and healing with the MMS2. --- In , " Yochanan " <yburkett@...> wrote: > > Healinghope, I couldn't find the original references, but did manage to locate some pertinent information about the connection between diabetes type 1 and fungus: > ------------------ > > http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL & _udi=B6VKN-4PF0R79 & _user=10 & \ _rdoc=1 & _fmt= & _orig=search & _sort=d & _docanchor= & view=c & _searchStrId=1045616197 & _r\ erunOrigin=google & _acct=C000050221 & _version=1 & _urlVersion=0 & _userid=10 & md5=fb868\ 484b77e11c6221269db90b57432 > > " Alloxan is a classical diabetogen which is used to achieve â-cell destruction and type 1 diabetes due to its selective cytotoxic effect on pancreatic â-cells. Although alloxan-induced diabetes is widely used in the laboratory to mimic diabetic pathology and for screening antidiabetic drugs, there has not been any comprehensive research in vivo on its diabetogenicity. " > ------------------------------ > > Now, just what is alloxan? It is the bleaching agent used to make white bread! No wonder we have a pandemic of diabetes. Also: > > --------------------------- > www.thinkfungus.com/public/163.cfm?sd=21 > > " Alloxan is a chemical made up of two others called allantoin and oxalic acid. Oxalic acid is a corrosive toxin produced by Aspergillus fungi-... " > > ---------------------------- > In yet another source: > ---------------------------- > > http://www.liebertonline.com/doi/abs/10.1089/107628003322490698 > > " Alloxan produces necrosis of pancreatic beta cells and is used to induce diabetes in animals. " > ---------------------------- > So will MMS2 eliminate Aspergillus fungi in the pancreas (or elsewhere)? > ---------------------------- > > http://books.google.com/books? > > id=6IlntkKAjHYC & pg=PA41 & lpg=PA41 & dq=aspergillus+induce+diabetes & source=bl & ots=Ck\ gkDeqXLj & sig=WGoxUhviUEXIlvycxXnqGX2FSL4 & hl=en & ei=igPUSrDMO4uPsAa97oDRCw & sa=X & oi\ =book_result & ct=result & resnum=8 & ved=0CDUQ6AEwBw#v= > onepage & q=aspergillus%20induce%20diabetes & f=false > > Immunology of the fungal diseases By A. > > " Resting Aspergillus conidia were also resistant to hypochlorous acid. " p 41 > ---------------------------- > The connection of Aspergillus to cancer in general: > ---------------------------- > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aflatoxin > > " Aflatoxins are naturally occurring mycotoxins that are produced by many species of Aspergillus, a fungus, most notably Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus. Aflatoxins are toxic and among the most carcinogenic substances known. " > ---------------------------- > > from Israel > > > > > --- In , " healinghope " <mfrreman@> wrote: > > > > J of I please inform me as well with Type 1 diabetes is caused by fungus of any sort?? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2009 Report Share Posted October 13, 2009 http://tinyurl.com/yloj39r --- In , " healinghope " <mfrreman@...> wrote: > > From I your link in regards to the fungus is not working. Hope you have success and healing with the MMS2. > > --- In , " Yochanan " <yburkett@> wrote: > > > > Healinghope, I couldn't find the original references, but did manage to locate some pertinent information about the connection between diabetes type 1 and fungus: > > ------------------ > > > > http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL & _udi=B6VKN-4PF0R79 & _user=10 & \ _rdoc=1 & _fmt= & _orig=search & _sort=d & _docanchor= & view=c & _searchStrId=1045616197 & _r\ erunOrigin=google & _acct=C000050221 & _version=1 & _urlVersion=0 & _userid=10 & md5=fb868\ 484b77e11c6221269db90b57432 > > > > " Alloxan is a classical diabetogen which is used to achieve â-cell destruction and type 1 diabetes due to its selective cytotoxic effect on pancreatic â-cells. Although alloxan-induced diabetes is widely used in the laboratory to mimic diabetic pathology and for screening antidiabetic drugs, there has not been any comprehensive research in vivo on its diabetogenicity. " > > ------------------------------ > > > > Now, just what is alloxan? It is the bleaching agent used to make white bread! No wonder we have a pandemic of diabetes. Also: > > > > --------------------------- > > www.thinkfungus.com/public/163.cfm?sd=21 > > > > " Alloxan is a chemical made up of two others called allantoin and oxalic acid. Oxalic acid is a corrosive toxin produced by Aspergillus fungi-... " > > > > ---------------------------- > > In yet another source: > > ---------------------------- > > > > http://www.liebertonline.com/doi/abs/10.1089/107628003322490698 > > > > " Alloxan produces necrosis of pancreatic beta cells and is used to induce diabetes in animals. " > > ---------------------------- > > So will MMS2 eliminate Aspergillus fungi in the pancreas (or elsewhere)? > > ---------------------------- > > > > http://books.google.com/books? > > > > id=6IlntkKAjHYC & pg=PA41 & lpg=PA41 & dq=aspergillus+induce+diabetes & source=bl & ots=Ck\ gkDeqXLj & sig=WGoxUhviUEXIlvycxXnqGX2FSL4 & hl=en & ei=igPUSrDMO4uPsAa97oDRCw & sa=X & oi\ =book_result & ct=result & resnum=8 & ved=0CDUQ6AEwBw#v= > > onepage & q=aspergillus%20induce%20diabetes & f=false > > > > Immunology of the fungal diseases By A. > > > > " Resting Aspergillus conidia were also resistant to hypochlorous acid. " p 41 > > ---------------------------- > > The connection of Aspergillus to cancer in general: > > ---------------------------- > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aflatoxin > > > > " Aflatoxins are naturally occurring mycotoxins that are produced by many species of Aspergillus, a fungus, most notably Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus. Aflatoxins are toxic and among the most carcinogenic substances known. " > > ---------------------------- > > > > from Israel > > > > > > > > > > --- In , " healinghope " <mfrreman@> wrote: > > > > > > J of I please inform me as well with Type 1 diabetes is caused by fungus of any sort?? > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2009 Report Share Posted October 13, 2009 Another link: http://tinyurl.com/yjvkgpo > > > > > > > > J of I please inform me as well with Type 1 diabetes is caused by fungus of any sort?? > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 I just purchased and read a very intriguing text by Doug Kauffman called " Infectious Diabetes " . His premise in the book is that diabetes could probably be a fungi infection and given the right " terrain " manifest itself into diabetes. Kauffman was primarily a nutritionist and he found in his early work that prescribing patients with obvious fungi problems like toe nail and vaginal infections, a low carb diet with antifungal medication often proved very beneficial. He also noticed that many of these same patients were diabetic and, accordingly, their diabetes vastly improved at the same time. He found that the low carb diet and antifungal medication could often drop a patients blood sugar down to normal levels and keep them there, but as soon as they went back to their old diet and stopped antifungal medications, the old problems came back! He was excited that he may have found a unique break through for diabetics and told some MDs which he was working with. They immediately discouraged him from further study basing their opinion on the status quo--that diabetes was never treated by low carb diets (well in the 1970s) and antifungal medication (even now). One of the main causes of diabetes as proposed by the American Diabetes Assoc is that people are over-weight and they eat too much. Kauffman asks, well if 20-30% of the American people are obese, why do not all of the obese people develop diabetes? We are missing 60-110 million diabetic cases in the rest of the obese population. He reasons that not all obese people get diabetes and 10% of type 2 diabetics are NOT over weight. He also finds the genetic angle to not hold water of which I will not go into in this post. His only logical conclusion is that diabetes is a fungi infection with the mycotoxins they produce. Fungi is every where. We cannot avoid them. Often antibiotic use can open up our immune system to terrible fungi infections. There is also very real world problem of steroid induced diabetes, Streptozotocin (a fungi mycotoxin) induced diabetes, etc, etc. Might I add here that these and others can be linked to fungi infections with the main stream seemingly oblivious to this connection. Could not steroid usage stimulate fungi infections or statins which are derived from fungi mycotoxins also suggest that diabetes may be fungi based? Kauffman points out that there is evidence linking the drinking of cows milk to type 1 diabetes in children and he suggests it is the mycotoxin in the fat cells of milk that may be the link. The USDA does not screen for mycotoxins and they can be found any where in feed stuffs. History of the Fungi/diabetic link: 1954...........uric acid can cause lab animals to develop diabetes 1963..........it is found that sacchromyces yeast produces uric acid. 1976...........Cryptococcus fungi is found in the islets of langerhans cells of two diabetic dying children. Later studies, Cryptococcus is injected into lab animals resulting in similar results. Cryptococcus also produces uric acid. 1990..........Type 1 diabetes was reportedly cured by using cyclosporin A an antifungal. --------------- 1973.........it was shown that mutton is loaded with mycotoxins 1981.........a study of preg Icelandic women who ate cured mutton close to their pregnancy gave birth to babies with diabetes. 1980...........alloxan (mycotoxin) damages insulin producing beta cells 1981..........Stremtozotocin, a mycotoxin was shown to produce diabetes in lab animals. 1990...........lab rats on a 10% brewers yeast diet developed diabetes ----------- 1973..........common to see cancer patients treated with mycotoxins develop diabetes. 1990.........lab animals were induced into diabetes with L-asparaginase Kauffman goes on to point out that a corn mycotoxin that is commonly found on corn may be one reason why there seems to be a diabetic epidemic in Latin America. Asperigillus niger is another fungi that is found in many foodstuffs, particularly peanuts and corn. It generates oxalic acid in large amounts which can inhibit our cells that convert carbohydrates into energy leading to high blood sugar. Sulfa drugs are commonly used to control blood sugar in diabetics by stimulating the pancreas. It is not normally recognized that sulfa drugs are also antifungals. The use of statin drugs have been shown to coincidently lower the risks of producing diabetes. Antifungal means anticholesterol! The anti-cholesterol drugs were discovered accidently because researchers were looking for antifungal medications! They found the statin group work against fungi because they inhibit an enzyme that our bodies need to process cholesterol. Fungi depend on cholesterol for survival Stopping cholesterol production in the fungi is an effective antifungal mechanism. Statin drugs are fungally derived and are mycotoxins. Fungi can produce cholesterol as well., So the ability of statin drugs to inhibit the enzyme and kill fungi at the same time may be the complex mechanism for statins,,,,,,,not simply a lowering of cholesterol. In short, Kauffman suggests that high cholesterol in the human may also be fungi related. That's enough of the Kauffman theories for now. On a personal level, my dog seemed to be develolping canine diabetes last summer and by giving her MMS, the diabetic symptoms seemed to have been reversed in hours. Of course, I treated her on immediate onset of symptoms which may be optimum! doug Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 , here is the ScienceDirect link: http://tinyurl.com/yjvkgpo from Israel > > > > > > > > J of I please inform me as well with Type 1 diabetes is caused by > > fungus of any sort?? > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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