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Originally posted by Farnhold
Hello guys, I have been for 2 weeks now, it first started with me coughing, fatique and higher temperature (around 37,5 degrees celsius, which is around 100 fahrenheit), during few first days I was very fatiqued and needed a lot of sleep. I was very weak. On 3-4 day I started coughing a lof of mucus. After a week I went to see my PG, she did complete serology, and then I received the results. I stopped coughing mucus after week and half aproximately, but I still get dry cough, just less.
So the results were:
I have increaed IgM - value 414 - normal is 0,0-30,0
IgG -value 46 - normal is between 0,0-8,0
around and IgA -1,6. Normal is 0,0 - 0,5
According to this, I have mycoplasm virus and chlamydia virus in my body.
This indicates acute infection.
I have been prescribed antibiotics fromilid (Clarithromycinum), and I should be taking them for 3 weeks. I am in the middle of 1st week.
I also take probiotics.
Anyways, is it common? How can I cure it? I read that this is very difficult to get rid of,and can do a lot of damage in body :/. It can take up to year to cure it with few antibiotics taken at the same time, and I don't like that. Even then it's not certain that I will cure myself. I don't take antibiotics, unless I really have to. I know you guys are more informed, and some of you may have gone through same, and perhaps cured it. Help would be much appreciated , have a nice day .edit on 6-2-2013 by Farnhold because: (no reason given)
Life cycle and method of infection Life cycle of Chlamydophila pneumoniae Chlamydophila pneumoniae is a small bacterium (0.2 to 1 μm) that undergoes several transformations during its life cycle. It exists as an elementary body (EB) between hosts.
The EB is not biologically active, but is resistant to environmental stresses and can survive outside a host for a limited time.
The EB travels from an infected person to the lungs of an uninfected person in small droplets and is responsible for infection. Once in the lungs, the EB is taken up by cells in a pouch called an endosome by a process called phagocytosis.
However, the EB is not destroyed by fusion with lysosomes, as is typical for phagocytosed material. Instead, it transforms into a reticulate body and begins to replicate within the endosome.
The reticulate bodies must use some of the host's cellular metabolism to complete its replication.
The reticulate bodies then convert back to elementary bodies and are released back into the lung, often after causing the death of the host cell.
The EBs are thereafter able to infect new cells, either in the same organism or in a new host.
Thus, the life cycle of C. pneumoniae is divided between the elementary body, which is able to infect new hosts but can not replicate, and the reticulate body, which replicates but is not able to cause new infection.
Originally posted by JrDavis
Colloidal Silver... True Colloidal Silver Heat + Electricity + Silver rods + current x time = CS
You will need equipment to make it. And I wouldn't buy CS off the internet because most of it is Ionic Colloidal Silver and can give you the blues.
You could always make Colloidal Gold if you have the money...
GL
Originally posted by Farnhold
reply to post by kimish
Thanks , do you know how, except long-term usage of antibiotics?
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Originally posted by cfnyaami
reply to post by Farnhold
Make sure you get re-checked by a physician (especially if you don't improve) after taking the meds.
Chlamydia is dangerous if not treated and often males are asymptomatic. Consider telling any sexual partner you've had to get checked (down below as well as in the throat) as it is serious and they most likely have it as well, even if they don't have your symptoms.
In the states chlamydia is rampant on college campuses. It can and must be treated.
"As soon as people hear the name Chlamydia their ears shut down," said Dr. Charles W. Stratton, associate professor of Pathology. "They either don't hear or don't understand the second part - pneumoniae. They think of Chlamydia trachomatis, a common cause of sexually transmitted diseases. Chlamydia pneumonia is the one that's not fun to catch."
The Chlamydia pneumoniae (C. pneumoniae) organism, first described in 1988, is not the sexually-transmitted type. It is an airborne organism that you get from breathing after a person carrying the organism has coughed.
"They float around as droplet nuclei, similar to TB. People cough and up come these infectious bodies. They float around a room. You breathe. In they come and now you've got your own."
Originally posted by antar
You saw this right?
Life cycle and method of infection Life cycle of Chlamydophila pneumoniae Chlamydophila pneumoniae is a small bacterium (0.2 to 1 μm) that undergoes several transformations during its life cycle. It exists as an elementary body (EB) between hosts.
The EB is not biologically active, but is resistant to environmental stresses and can survive outside a host for a limited time.
The EB travels from an infected person to the lungs of an uninfected person in small droplets and is responsible for infection. Once in the lungs, the EB is taken up by cells in a pouch called an endosome by a process called phagocytosis.
However, the EB is not destroyed by fusion with lysosomes, as is typical for phagocytosed material. Instead, it transforms into a reticulate body and begins to replicate within the endosome.
The reticulate bodies must use some of the host's cellular metabolism to complete its replication.
The reticulate bodies then convert back to elementary bodies and are released back into the lung, often after causing the death of the host cell.
The EBs are thereafter able to infect new cells, either in the same organism or in a new host.
Thus, the life cycle of C. pneumoniae is divided between the elementary body, which is able to infect new hosts but can not replicate, and the reticulate body, which replicates but is not able to cause new infection.
en.wikipedia.org...
This was a good read, it explains alot about the process and where it can lead if you do not get treated properly, BOOST your immune system etc.
altered-states.net...edit on 6-2-2013 by antar because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by OutonaLimb
chlamydia chlamydia
i thought i got ridda ya
but you came back knocking
on my back door.
insideous chlamydia
who ever lingers in absentia
my core you'll go rocking
no never no more.
whip yourself up some liposomal vitaminC, OP.
www.abovetopsecret.com...,
and get yourself some cordyceps mushrooms.
www.alohamedicinals.com....
thereafter, you're good. do it yourself. fix it yourself. you easily have the power.
(steer clear of doctors and the dehabilitating and monstrous concoctions they push).
Originally posted by Farnhold
reply to post by JrDavis
Thanks mate . I would try the colloidal silver, but I am still very afraid of what it could possibly cause. The papa smurf guy who was using it ended with skin permanently dyed to blue. That seriously frightens me and is much worse than having chlamydia pneumoniae itself imo.
And how does one use and prepare colloidal silver btw?how much does it cost and where can it be bought? Do I have to keep taking it for the rest of my life to keep diseases at bay, or can they be completely cured? I mean, lets that I'd be taking it for a month, or more, and then stopped, would diseases come back,or would I be completely cured?
Thank you for your information
Originally posted by Farnhold
reply to post by JrDavis
Thanks mate . I would try the colloidal silver, but I am still very afraid of what it could possibly cause. The papa smurf guy who was using it ended with skin permanently dyed to blue. That seriously frightens me and is much worse than having chlamydia pneumoniae itself imo.
And how does one use and prepare colloidal silver btw?how much does it cost and where can it be bought? Do I have to keep taking it for the rest of my life to keep diseases at bay, or can they be completely cured? I mean, lets that I'd be taking it for a month, or more, and then stopped, would diseases come back,or would I be completely cured?
Thank you for your information