Guest guest Posted February 5, 2009 Report Share Posted February 5, 2009 Harald, I seem to have these little calcium deposits on my hands. Sometimes when they itch I work on them till I get them out. Sometimes the cream helps to loosen them. I have them mostly on the inside of my hands on the lower part of my palms and on the right first two fingers. I have been using Manuka wound honey and it seems to help to loosen them on my fingers and palms. The Manuka wound honey has an antibiotic healing compound. I have dermatomyositis and synovial lining inflammation and my hands used to be very red. Now the redness is going down and as I said the calcium deposits are less. I ix the Manuka wound honey with vanicream (compounding cream) then wear white cotton gloves all day if possible. I will read all the articles on your msg. Thank you Eva From: Harald Weiss, Technical Marketing Group <hweiss@...> Subject: rheumatic Nanobacteria, Calcium Deposits and Arthritis rheumatic Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009, 11:54 AM Dear Group, There is a connection between arthritis and calcium deposits in the form of nanobacteria, which may well be a cause of RA along with mycoplasma. Nanobacteria are dwarf forms of bacteria, mostly 0.05 to 0.2 micrometers, about one-tenth the diameter and 1/1000 the volume of ordinary bacteria. They are on the frontier of science. Researchers have shown that nanobacteria grown in the laboratory produce calcium phosphate formations, much like those found in kidney, gall, and bladder stones. Many of our chronic diseases may be due to nanobacteria that wall themselves off inside of calcium deposits, becoming resistant to antibiotics. Inflammatory nanobacteria that produce calcified deposits like those found in arthritic joints have been cultured from the synovial fluid of rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis patients by Japanese researchers, as reported in the Journal of Proteome Research. Nanobacteria produce a calcium phosphate material known as calcification, which is shown in many studies, and cited in the Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, as provoking inflammation. Nanobacteria testing and treatment are available from nanobacLabs. Their web page claims: " Available by physician prescription only, NanobacTX and UroBac are the only effective treatments to eradicate nanobacterial infections. The urine screening test, nanobacTEST- U/A is available as is the comprehensive nanobacTEST- S bloodtest for Nanobacterial Antigen and Antibodies. At this time, both nanobacTEST methods are available only through nanobacLabs participating physicians. Call NanobacLabs TollFree at 1-877-676-2241 to arrange for testing through a participating research physician in your area. " For more information, please see: http://www.nsti. org/press/ PRshow.html? id=1004 http://naturalscien ce.com/ns/ articles/ 01-03/ns_ folk.html http://www.mbio. ncsu.edu/ MB451/lecture/ extraPaperSummar ies/nanobacteria /proported. pdf http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_1 http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521? tag=content; col1 http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_2?tag= content;col1 http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_3?tag= content;col1 The good news is that nanobacteria have been shown to be susceptible to several antibiotics and sequestering agents. For more relevant articles, do a Google search on the terms +nanobacteria +arthritis and +nanobacteria +antibitotics Sincerely, Harald Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 5, 2009 Report Share Posted February 5, 2009 Eva, Calcium deposits in the hands can be sign of scleroderma. A google seach on calcium deposits on hands brings up pages like the following: http://www.scleroderma.org/medical/other_articles/weller_2004_2a.htm Please make sure that the URL is complete on the line. Sincerely, Harald At 10:34 AM 2/5/2009, you wrote: >Harald, > >I seem to have these little calcium deposits on my hands. Sometimes >when they itch I work on them till I get them out. Sometimes the >cream helps to loosen them. I have them mostly on the inside of my >hands on the lower part of my palms and on the right first two >fingers. I have been using Manuka wound honey and it seems to help >to loosen them on my fingers and palms. The Manuka wound honey has >an antibiotic healing compound. I have dermatomyositis and synovial >lining inflammation and my hands used to be very red. Now the >redness is going down and as I said the calcium deposits are less. I >ix the Manuka wound honey with vanicream (compounding cream) then >wear white cotton gloves all day if possible. >I will read all the articles on your msg. > >Thank you >Eva > > > >From: Harald Weiss, Technical Marketing Group ><<mailto:hweiss%40tmgp.com>hweiss@...> >Subject: rheumatic Nanobacteria, Calcium Deposits and Arthritis ><mailto:rheumatic%40>rheumatic >Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009, 11:54 AM > >Dear Group, > >There is a connection between arthritis and calcium deposits in the >form of nanobacteria, which may well be a cause of RA along with mycoplasma. > >Nanobacteria are dwarf forms of bacteria, mostly 0.05 to 0.2 >micrometers, about one-tenth the diameter and 1/1000 the volume of >ordinary bacteria. They are on the frontier of science. Researchers >have shown that nanobacteria grown in the laboratory produce calcium >phosphate formations, much like those found in kidney, gall, and >bladder stones. Many of our chronic diseases may be due to >nanobacteria that wall themselves off inside of calcium deposits, >becoming resistant to antibiotics. > >Inflammatory nanobacteria that produce calcified deposits like those >found in arthritic joints have been cultured from the synovial fluid >of rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis patients by Japanese >researchers, as reported in the Journal of Proteome Research. >Nanobacteria produce a calcium phosphate material known as >calcification, which is shown in many studies, and cited in the Merck >Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, as provoking inflammation. > >Nanobacteria testing and treatment are available from nanobacLabs. >Their web page claims: " Available by physician prescription only, >NanobacTX and UroBac are the only effective treatments to eradicate >nanobacterial infections. The urine screening test, nanobacTEST- U/A >is available as is the comprehensive nanobacTEST- S bloodtest for >Nanobacterial Antigen and Antibodies. At this time, both nanobacTEST >methods are available only through nanobacLabs participating >physicians. Call NanobacLabs TollFree at 1-877-676-2241 to arrange >for testing through a participating research physician in your area. " > >For more information, please see: ><http://www.nsti.>http://www.nsti. org/press/ PRshow.html? id=1004 ><http://naturalscien>http://naturalscien ce.com/ns/ articles/ >01-03/ns_ folk.html ><http://www.mbio.>http://www.mbio. ncsu.edu/ MB451/lecture/ >extraPaperSummar ies/nanobacteria /proported. pdf ><http://findarticles>http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ >is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_1 ><http://findarticles>http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ >is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521? tag=content; col1 ><http://findarticles>http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ >is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_2?tag= content;col1 ><http://findarticles>http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ >is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_3?tag= content;col1 > >The good news is that nanobacteria have been shown to be susceptible >to several antibiotics and sequestering agents. > >For more relevant articles, do a Google search on the terms >+nanobacteria +arthritis >and >+nanobacteria +antibitotics > >Sincerely, Harald Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 5, 2009 Report Share Posted February 5, 2009 Thank you Harald for the info. I was not diagnosed with scleroderma but with interstitial pulmonary fibrosis, RA, DM, AS and synovial inflammation. That's enough stuff anymore and I may go crazy trying to take care of these different RA problems. I had to cut already out the gluten food and with AS you supposed to cut all the starches. Soon I am just going to live on veggies and there are a lot that I can't eat either, yack. HAHA< they going to come and take me HAHA. No more milk, bread, potatoes, rice, etc. What's left??? Take care, keep us informed. Eva > >From: Harald Weiss, Technical Marketing Group ><<mailto:hweiss% 40tmgp.com>hweisstmgp (DOT) com> >Subject: rheumatic Nanobacteria, Calcium Deposits and Arthritis ><mailto:rheumatic% 40groups. com>rheumatic@grou ps.com >Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009, 11:54 AM > >Dear Group, > >There is a connection between arthritis and calcium deposits in the >form of nanobacteria, which may well be a cause of RA along with mycoplasma. > >Nanobacteria are dwarf forms of bacteria, mostly 0.05 to 0.2 >micrometers, about one-tenth the diameter and 1/1000 the volume of >ordinary bacteria. They are on the frontier of science. Researchers >have shown that nanobacteria grown in the laboratory produce calcium >phosphate formations, much like those found in kidney, gall, and >bladder stones. Many of our chronic diseases may be due to >nanobacteria that wall themselves off inside of calcium deposits, >becoming resistant to antibiotics. > >Inflammatory nanobacteria that produce calcified deposits like those >found in arthritic joints have been cultured from the synovial fluid >of rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis patients by Japanese >researchers, as reported in the Journal of Proteome Research. >Nanobacteria produce a calcium phosphate material known as >calcification, which is shown in many studies, and cited in the Merck >Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, as provoking inflammation. > >Nanobacteria testing and treatment are available from nanobacLabs. >Their web page claims: " Available by physician prescription only, >NanobacTX and UroBac are the only effective treatments to eradicate >nanobacterial infections. The urine screening test, nanobacTEST- U/A >is available as is the comprehensive nanobacTEST- S bloodtest for >Nanobacterial Antigen and Antibodies. At this time, both nanobacTEST >methods are available only through nanobacLabs participating >physicians. Call NanobacLabs TollFree at 1-877-676-2241 to arrange >for testing through a participating research physician in your area. " > >For more information, please see: ><http://www.nsti.>http://www.nsti. org/press/ PRshow.html? id=1004 ><http://naturalscien>http://naturalscien ce.com/ns/ articles/ >01-03/ns_ folk.html ><http://www.mbio.>http://www.mbio. ncsu.edu/ MB451/lecture/ >extraPaperSummar ies/nanobacteria /proported. pdf ><http://findarticles>http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ >is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_1 ><http://findarticles>http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ >is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521? tag=content; col1 ><http://findarticles>http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ >is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_2?tag= content;col1 ><http://findarticles>http://findarticles .com/p/articles/ mi_m0ISW/ >is_2003_Jan/ ai_95676521/ pg_3?tag= content;col1 > >The good news is that nanobacteria have been shown to be susceptible >to several antibiotics and sequestering agents. > >For more relevant articles, do a Google search on the terms >+nanobacteria +arthritis >and >+nanobacteria +antibitotics > >Sincerely, Harald 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.