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Tag Archives: H-pylori family

26 Jan

H-heilmanni

Carolyn Merchant Blog 1 0

H-heilmannii is a serovar of H-pylori. Animal reservoirs for H-heilmanni include cats, dogs, cattle, pigs, and primates. Medicine questioned whether humans contract H-heilmanni; however, H-heilmanni has been found in gastric biopsies. H-heilmanni in humans demonstrates transmission from animals-to-people; H-heilmanni attacks in the same or a similar way as H-pylori; and both H-pylori and H-heilmanni can cause chronic disease in humans. When immortal animal pathogens are transmitted from animal-to-human, the pathogens often cause the same or similar diseases in both humans…..

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25 Jan

H-pylori

Carolyn Merchant Blog 0 0

H-pylori can become an originating cell or trigger for cancer. H-pylori can migrate or metastasize via the lymphatic system, invade the brain, and cause cancer at remote sites—not just in the stomach. Patients with H-pylori are six times more likely to develop MALT lymphoma, and the recommendation for first-line treatment of lymphoma is now treatment of h-pylori. Research suggests patients with co-morbid h-pylori and chlamydia psittacosis are at higher risk of MALT lymphoma, MALT lymphoma of the stomach, MALT lymphoma…..

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24 Jan

H-pylori

Carolyn Merchant Blog 2 0

A 2015 study, in Greece, of 44 patients with multiple sclerosis and 20 patients in a matched control group, showed h-pylori in 86.4% of MS patients, and in 50% of patients in the control group. The study also found co-morbid intestinal and autoimmune diseases in MS patients, including espophagitis, Barretts esophagus, hiatus hernia, duodenal ulcer, and hypothyroid. The study concluded h-pylori may be a causal factor for developing MS. The study showed H-pylori is more common in MS patients, and more…..

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23 Jan

H-pylori

Carolyn Merchant Blog 4 0

When H-pylori attacks epithelium and burrows through layers of tissue, the separating membranes are damaged and lose adherence, collagen structures are damaged, and eventually tissue thins and atrophies. H-pylori can cause loss of normal apoptosis (normal programmed cell death); and generate sticky proteins. H-pylori can invade immune cells, particularly neutrophils, and cause neutrophils to change size and shape, to resemble cancer. H-pylori can become more pathogenic when combined with other immortal pathogens. H-pylori as a cause of stomach ulcers and…..

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22 Jan

H-pylori

Carolyn Merchant Blog 1 0

H-pylori resides in the mouth and intestinal tract of fifty percent of the population, and is a recognized cause of ulcers and stomach cancer. H-pylori is a spiral bacterium which can be transmitted from person-to-person, by saliva, food handling, feces, and poor hygiene; and can be acquired by drinking contaminated water or swimming in contaminated water. H-pylori has many strains, and not all strains and not all modes of transmission have been identified. In addition to humans, cats, pigs, sheep,…..

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07 Dec

Infection and ulcers

Carolyn Merchant Blog 0 0

In 1874, Dr. Arthur Boettcher discovered a small curved bacterium in ulcers. In the 1940’s, Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York taught residents to treat ulcers with antibiotics, after doctors observed antibiotics cured the ulcers, even though they did not know the pathogen. In the 1950’s, knowledge ulcers were caused by an infection was deleted from medical texts and medical training. Doctors were taught ulcers were caused by stress, and patients were left to suffer indefinitely from a curable disease……

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