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originally posted by: TheAMEDDDoc
a reply to: Justoneman
I doubt it, the only vaccines that have GO are still struggling to get approved. We use them in meds too.
I would have to find it but several groups did isolate bacteria in these patients that may have contributed to the disease. It was something we didn’t usually test for so I would have to find the journal articles. I mentioned because I thought the bacteria were introduced by arthropods to these patients.
ETA: it was related to borrelia, different strains, and Lyme disease.
originally posted by: BrokenCircles
originally posted by: marg6043
Wow another covid variant the mites one, yep we are creating super bugs now, since the china virus shot has taken place.
It just sunk in, I think I know what you meant now.(
Are you saying that the vaccine is now causing the Covid to evolve into a more complex life-form(mites)?
delayed skin responses described in the study often start a day or so after vaccination, but can appear as long as seven to eight days later. They are different from severe and immediate allergic reactions, which occur within the first four hours of getting vaccinated.
Ivermectin can also be used to control demodicosis. Ivermectin cream has been shown to reduce papulopustular rosacea, which is thought to be due to its effects on demodex mites and its anti-inflammatory action.
cancer too
U.S. health officials said Thursday they now have evidence of an untreatable fungus spreading in two hospitals and a nursing home
originally posted by: frogs453
This is interesting to me. I read up on these and they are common here in the Midwest also. Installed a pool this year in my yard with 3 big Oak trees. I spend a lot of time skimming the pool, don't judge I find it relaxing. Anyway, last week I had a bite on my elbow. Definitely wasn't a mosquito which are terrible this year. I thought it was a spider as we live near a lake and have tons of them. I react to any type of bite so my elbow was swollen for two days. But oh my gosh, the itching was crazy! I used an antibiotic I have on hand for topical stuff from my doc as I can't use antibiotic ointments, but hydrocortisone and benadryl did nothing for the itch for a few days. I now wonder if maybe it was one of those mites. Ugh now I'm weirded out and don't even want to go in the yard anymore. It did clear up though just fine.
originally posted by: MichiganSwampBuck
The incessant, shrieking sounds of cicadas may no longer be afflicting the Washington region, but experts say the insects may be bringing a new nuisance — oak leaf itch mites. And they bite.
LINK
originally posted by: Justoneman
originally posted by: MichiganSwampBuck
The incessant, shrieking sounds of cicadas may no longer be afflicting the Washington region, but experts say the insects may be bringing a new nuisance — oak leaf itch mites. And they bite.
LINK
Thank you for finding this.
Not sure how they know of a symbiosis from these mites with cicadas that spend one year in a dozen or more above ground. Not a very fruitful adventure to wait for your catalyst. I suspect the author of that article is full of bull poop. No way it waits up to 17 years for a feast. It has to be there thriving all along like other mite species do. Mites would be starved out if that was their game plan to eat the larvae for food. Not enough other larvae to sustain them the rest of the time.