PLANT BACTERIAL-SPORES, ACTIVE SYSTEMICALLY AS A SEPARATE ENTITY, PLAY A SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN HUMAN ILLNESSES SUCH AS CANCER, GRANULOMAS, AIDS, AND MILKY WHITE ABDOMINAL ASCITES THAT CURRENTLY DEFIES RECOGNITION
Mw. White, PLANT BACTERIAL-SPORES, ACTIVE SYSTEMICALLY AS A SEPARATE ENTITY, PLAY A SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN HUMAN ILLNESSES SUCH AS CANCER, GRANULOMAS, AIDS, AND MILKY WHITE ABDOMINAL ASCITES THAT CURRENTLY DEFIES RECOGNITION, Medical hypotheses, 44(6), 1995, pp. 493-503
There is currently an unrecognized chapter in medical illnesses, occur
ring in living human beings, that defies recognition in explaining the
diseases' origin and growth, and failing accurately to account for th
e pathophysiology involved. It is pertinent, therefore, to alert medic
al science, based upon facts as uncovered by my research studies (1-5)
, that plant bacterial spores can exist as a separate entity systemica
lly. Being totally devoid of the presence of their adult origin, they
can survive with a degree of viability. Ultimately, they may become em
bedded within, or nearby, a network of cells, consisting of the reticu
loendothelial, squamous, or epithelial group. With an ensuing adequate
but compatible circulating flow of blood by the host to the specific
tissue site as muscles, bone, or bone marrow, it can thus lead to the
various pathophysiological changes and illnesses that currently defy a
n accountable recognition.