Influence of Potassium Dichromate on * Tracheal Secretions in Critically Ill Patients

Influence of Potassium Dichromate on * Tracheal Secretions in Critically Ill Patients
Michael Frass, Christoph Dielacher, Manfred Linkesch, Christian Endler, Ilse Muchitsch, Ernst Schuster and Alan Kaye
Chest 2005;127;936-941 DOI 10.1378/chest.127.3.936
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Chest is the official journal of the American College of Chest Physicians. It has been published monthly since 1935. Copyright2005by the American College of Chest Physicians, 3300 Dundee Road, Northbrook, IL 60062. All rights reserved. No part of this article or PDF may be reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of the copyright holder. (http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/site/misc/reprints.xhtml) ISSN:0012-3692
Influence of Potassium Dichromate on Tracheal Secretions in Critically Ill Patients*
Michael Frass, MD; Christoph Dielacher, RN; Manfred Linkesch, MD; Christian Endler, PhD; Ilse Muchitsch, PhD; Ernst Schuster, PhD; and Alan Kaye, MD
Background: Stringy, tenacious tracheal secretions may prevent extubation in patients weaned from the respirator. This prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study with parallel assignment was performed to assess the influence of sublingually administered potassium dichromate C30 on the amount of tenacious, stringy tracheal secretions in critically ill patients with a history of tobacco use and COPD.
Methods: In this study, 50 patients breathing spontaneously with continuous positive airway pressure were receiving either potassium dichromate C30 globules (group 1) [Deutsche Ho- mo ̈opathie-Union, Pharmaceutical Company; Karlsruhe, Germany] or placebo (group 2). Five globules were administered twice daily at intervals of 12 h. The amount of tracheal secretions on day 2 after the start of the study as well as the time for successful extubation and length of stay in the ICU were recorded.
Results: The amount of tracheal secretions was reduced significantly in group 1 (p Conclusion: These data suggest that potentized (diluted and vigorously shaken) potassium dichromate may help to decrease the amount of stringy tracheal secretions in COPD patients.
(CHEST 2005; 127:936–941)
Key words: COPD; double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study; extubation; homeopathy; tracheal secretions
Abbreviations: APACHE 􏰁 acute physiology and chronic health evaluation; BMI 􏰁 body mass index; CPAP 􏰁 con- tinuous positive airway pressure; Fio2 􏰁 fraction of inspired oxygen
Weaning from a respirator is a significant prob- lem in patients receiving mechanical ventilation in the ICU.1 Some factors involved in the assessment for extubation include the severity of the patient’s premorbid condition and the extent to which the patient’s respiratory muscles have been decondi- tioned by mechanical support. Most patients are easily weaned and extubated following short periods
*From the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Homeopathy (Drs. Frass, Endler, and Muchitsch), Vienna, Austria; II Department of Internal Medicine (Mr. Dielacher and Dr. Linkesch); Depart- ment of Medical Computer Sciences (Dr. Schuster), University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; and Department of Anesthesiology (Dr. Kaye), Texas Tech University Lubbock, TX.
Manuscript received March 17, 2004; revision accepted July 17, 2004. Reproduction of this article is prohibited without written permis- sion from the American College of Chest Physicians (e-mail: permissions@chestnet.org).
Correspondence to: Michael Frass, MD, Professor of Medicine, Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Homeopathy, Duerergasse 4, A 8010 Graz, Austria; e-mail: michael.frass@kabsi.at
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of mechanical ventilation. While most patients need only a short period of nonaugmented spontaneous breathing through the endotracheal tube before extubation, patients receiving mechanical ventilation as the result of ARDS, pneumonia, exacerbations of COPD, septicemia, pulmonary edema, or other com- plicated medical conditions often require prolonged periods to be successfully weaned. Besides weaning, extubation may be difficult because of multiple causes, including the presence of profuse, stringy, tenacious tracheal secretions.
COPD is the fourth leading cause of death in the United States, and it accounts for approximately 500,000 hospitalizations for exacerbations each year.2 One of the problems of COPD and tobacco-use patients encountered in the ICU is difficulty in extubating related to profuse tracheal secretions. Weaning before extubation may be facilitated using different ventilatory modes, such as spontaneous breathing with continuous positive airway pressure
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spontaneous breathing with CPAP with a Fio2 varying between 0.21 and 0.3, and positive airway pressure from 5 to 7 cm H2O after weaning from controlled mechanical ventilation. Addition- ally, extubation was impossible due to profuse tenacious, stringy tracheal secretions according to the criteria listed above.
Exclusion Criteria
Exclusion criteria included signs of additional lung diseases other than COPD at the time of enrollment or during the study observational period; positive blood culture results during the period of controlled mechanical ventilation; concomitant disease of the larynx and trachea obstructing the airway or inhibiting the extubation process; concomitant heart disease; need for cat- echolamines; pregnancy; and failure to give written informed consent.
Medication
In homeopathic concentrations, potassium dichromate acts primarily by its mucolytic properties.5 In this study, we used a preparation of C30, which is equivalent to a potentiation of 30 dilutions, in which each of the 30 dilution steps is followed by subsequent vigorous succussions. Therefore, the above-described toxic effects were eliminated. In addition, the original orange-red color disappeared during the preparation. Onset of action may vary from patient to patient but is generally observed within 24 to 48 h.
Potassium dichromate (Deutsche Homo ̈opathie-Union, Phar- maceutical Company; Karlsruhe, Germany) was prepared accord- ing to the German Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia6 by repeated dilution and vigorous shaking. Saccharose globules with a spher- ical shape and a diameter of approximately 1 mm were impreg- nated with a C30 dilution of potassium dichromate (group 1). Same-sized globules for placebo in group 2 were impregnated with the same water-alcohol diluent used for the preparation of the globules in group 1, without inclusion of any drug. Placebo globules exhibited the same appearance as the homeopathic globules and were therefore indistinguishable from the globules of group 1 according to the double-blind design of the study. Neither patients nor members of the critical care team or members of the study group knew whether the globules admin- istered to the respective patient belonged to group 1 or group 2.
Randomization Process
Patients were sequentially randomized into two groups: group 1 received the therapeutic agent, and group 2 received according to a computer-generated code. An independent physician not involved into the study held the code. A person not involved in the decision and/or application process of the study filled glob- ules of group 1 and group 2 into separate flasks for each study patient with an increasing number.
Sublingual Administration of the Globules
Globules were administered by pouring five globules into the lid of the flask containing the globules. Then, the globules were poured from the lid directly underneath the patient’s tongue. In patients intubated endotracheally, the globules were adminis- tered just aside the endotracheal tube. Globules were adminis- tered twice daily at an interval of 12 h until extubation of the patient. Fifteen minutes before and after administration of the globules, no oral fluid or oral hygiene was allowed.
Suctioning Procedures and Classification of Sputum Volume
An open suctioning system was used during this study. Suc- tioning was performed routinely every 6 h and in addition when
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(CPAP). A problem preventing successful extubation may be profuse tracheal secretions.3
Potassium dichromate is a drug that is commonly used in homeopathy for treatment of profuse, stringy, tenacious tracheal secretions. It is prepared according to homeopathic rules and is preferably administered by help of globules.
The aim of this prospective, double-blind, ran- domized, placebo-controlled study was to evaluate the influence of potassium dichromate on the amount of the described secretions with respect to the time of successful extubation as well as to length of stay in the ICU in these patients after start of the study.
Materials and Methods
The study was approved by the local Institutional Review Board. Patients signed informed consent before enrollment into the study. To ensure patient understanding, information was provided in the presence of their respective relatives and/or next of kins and documented. The study was planned prospectively, randomized, placebo controlled, and double blind.
Patients
Due to the severity of the acute respiratory failure, patients received controlled mechanical ventilation with a respirator (Servo 900C; Siemens Elema; Solna, Sweden) between 3 days and 7 days before study enrollment in a university hospital. The study lasted 18 months. The pulmonary status of the patients did not allow for noninvasive positive airway pressure ventilation during this period. Patients enrolled into the study could be successfully weaned from controlled or assisted mechanical ventilation and were switched to spontaneous breathing with CPAP provided by a continuous flow machine (Dra ̈ger CF 800; Dra ̈ger; Lu ̈beck, Germany). All patients were intubated with either a conventional endotracheal tube (8-mm inner diameter; Mallinckrodt; Athlone, Ireland) or a tracheostomy tube (8-mm inner diameter; Mallinckrodt). Despite regular suctioning and therapeutic bronchoscopy, extubation for these patients was impossible due to profuse, tenacious, stringy tracheal secretions (equal to grade 3 as described below) for 36 to 48 h before enrollment into the study. Administration of mucolytic agents was avoided due to observation of increased secretions in previ- ous patients. 􏰂-Agonist bronchodilators were stopped at the start of the study to avoid any potential influence and/or interaction. A daily screening was performed in accordance with the methods described by Ely et al.4 Criteria used to decide extubation were that patients should be alert, with stable vital signs, and have an intact gag reflex. Physiologic guidelines were Pao2 􏰃 60 mm Hg during spontaneous breathing with CPAP (fraction of inspired oxygen [Fio2] 􏰄 50%) and positive end-expiratory pressure from 3 to 5 cm H2O, and respiratory rate 􏰄 20 breaths/min. Extuba- tion failure was defined as need for reintubation within the following 72 h except for respiratory deterioration due to newly developed pneumonia. Physicians not involved into the study decided when patients would be extubated.
Inclusion Criteria
Inclusion criteria included a documented history of tobacco use and COPD for at least 10 years before acute deterioration;
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patients had profuse secretions. Flow-volume loops could not be used during spontaneous breathing with CPAP. The quantity of tracheal secretions during routine suctioning was distinguished by volume of suctioned sputum in a graduated vial interposed between suctioning catheter and the tubes leading to the suc- tioning pump. Tracheal secretions were classified into three grades (grade 1, 0 to 5 mL; grade 2, 6 to 10 mL; grade 3, 11 to 15 mL). Sputum did not exceed 15 mL in the investigated patients. The amount and viscosity of sputum production prior to study enrollment were not different between both groups as evaluated three times in subsequent order within 24 h. In this study, sputum was classified as grade 3 in all patients before administration of medication. Furthermore, the volume of spu- tum was evaluated again on day 2 after administration of the globules. The mean of three grades was used for classification.
Parameters Recorded
Prehospital historical and demographic information included age, sex, weight, height, BMI, FEV1, stage of COPD (1, mild; 2, moderate; 3, severe), tobacco use, need of long-term oxygen therapy, and home noninvasive ventilation before admission.7 In the hospital prior to entry into the treatment period, APACHE (acute physiology and chronic health evaluation) II, Pao2/Fio2, and Paco2 were measured. During the treatment period, suc- tionings per day and therapeutic bronchoscopies in hospital after randomization, antibiotic regimen during the period of controlled mechanical ventilation, time to extubation, and length of stay in the ICU after enrollment into the study were recorded.
Statistical Analysis
Statistical analysis was done at the Department of Medical Computer Sciences, University of Vienna, using a software package (Statistical Analysis System; SAS Institute; Cary, NC). All statistical analyses were done before breaking the randomiza- tion code. Statistical analysis of the data was performed using Kruskal-Wallis test for comparing the two groups. Values are expressed as mean 􏰅 SD.
Results
Fifty-five patients were evaluated for the study. Five patients (two patients in group 1 and three
patients in group 2) had to be excluded because of the development of pulmonary infiltrates described as pneumonia by independent radiologists within 2 days after enrollment into the study. Therefore, 25 patients remained in each group. Three patients in each group were breathing via a tracheostomy tube. No patients refused to participate in the study.
With respect to parameters recorded before hos- pitalization and historical and demographic informa- tion, three was no difference in age, sex, height, weight, BMI, FEV1, stage of COPD, and need of long-term oxygen therapy, as well as home noninva- sive ventilation (Table 1). Severity and duration of COPD and tobacco use was equal in both groups.
With respect to parameters recorded in the hos-
pital prior to entry into the treatment period, no
differences were found between both groups for
APACHE II, Pao /Fio , and Paco (Table 1). There 222
was no difference in the number of regular suction- ings and therapeutic bronchoscopies between both groups (Table 2).
With respect to parameters recorded during treat- ment period, there was no significant change of the amount of tracheal secretions between both groups on day 1 after start of the study; tracheal secretions were reduced significantly in group 1 (p 􏰄 0.0001, Table 2) on day 2. Extubation could be performed significantly earlier in group 1 (p 􏰄 0.0001, Table 2). Similarly, length of stay at the ICU was significantly shorter in group 1 (p 􏰄 0.0001, Table 2).
All patients underwent a trial of extubation. None of the patients in group 1 had to be reintubated or needed noninvasive ventilation. In group 1, the amount of secretions remained stable and did not increase. Similarly, blood gas analyses after extuba- tion remained stable in group 1 and did not show
Parameters
Pre-hospital information Age, yr
Male/female gender, No. Weight, kg Height, cm BMI
FEV1, % Stage of COPD‡ Need for long-term oxygen therapy, No. Home noninvasive ventilation, No.
In-hospital (prior to study entry) information APACHE II Pao2/Fio2 Paco2, torr
Table 1—Patient Characteristics*
Group 1, Potassium Dichromate (n 􏰁 25)
69.2 􏰅 9.1 (49–89) 19/6
81.0 􏰅 9.8 (59–102) 170.2 􏰅 6.3 (157–179)
28.0 􏰅 2.8 (21.7–33.3) 54.0 􏰅 5.3 (32–60) 1.08 􏰅 0.4 (1–3)
5 1
21.2 􏰅 2.2 (18–25) 222.5 􏰅 18.6 (178–250)
61.6 􏰅 4.5 (53–69)
Group 2, Placebo (n 􏰁 25)
68.4 􏰅 10.1 (45–88) 20/5 78.8 􏰅 10.2 (59–101)
171.2 􏰅 5.8 (161–183) 26.8 􏰅 2.8 (21.1–32.6) 52.4 􏰅 5.5 (32–59) 1.20 􏰅 0.5 (1–3)
9 1
21.6 􏰅 2.2 (18–26) 219.4 􏰅 22.4 (176–250)
59.8 􏰅 4.1 (51–67)
p Value†
0.748
0.599 0.763 0.174 0.152 0.178
0.583 0.985 0.140
*Data are presented as mean 􏰅 SD (range) unless otherwise indicated. †Kruskal-Wallis test. ‡COPD stage: 1 􏰁 mild, 2 􏰁 moderate, 3 􏰁 severe.
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Table 2—Parameters Recorded During Treatment Period (Secretions and Suctionings per Day on Day 2)*
Variables
Secretions Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 Suctionings per day Therapeutic bronchoscopies Extubation, d
Length of stay, d
*Data are presented as mean 􏰅 SD (range). †Kruskal-Wallis test.
Group 1, Potassium Dichromate (n 􏰁 25)
1.52 􏰅 0.59 1 (1–3) 13 11
1 7.2 􏰅 0.7 (6–8)
0.64 􏰅 0.57 (0–2) 2.88 􏰅 1.20 (1–6) 4.20 􏰅 1.61 (2–8)
Group 2, Placebo (n 􏰁 25)
2.44 􏰅 0.65 3 (1–3) 2
10
13 6.9 􏰅 0.8 (6–8)
0.76 􏰅 0.66 (0–2) 6.12 􏰅 3.13 (3–14) 7.68 􏰅 3.60 (4–17)
p Value†
􏰄 0.0001
0.206
0.555 􏰄 0.0001 􏰄 0.0001
significant differences as compared to pre-extubation values. Four patients in group 2 had to be reintu- bated because of deterioration of blood gas analysis results due to recurrence of tracheal secretions grade 2 to 3.
Discussion
Potassium dichromate (kalium bichromicum, K2 Cr2 O7 ) is a drug widely used in natural and homeopathic medicine. One of its features is its efficacy to treat patients with stringy, tenacious nasal and tracheal secretions. An open-label, practice- based homeopathic study5 described the efficacy and safety of a fixed-combination homeopathic medica- tion containing potassium dichromate in 119 male and female patients with clinical signs of acute sinusitis not previously treated. At the first visit, after a mean of 4.1 days of treatment, mucolysis had increased significantly and typical sinusitis symp- toms, such as headache, pressure pain at nerve exit points, and irritating cough, were reduced. Adverse drug effects were not reported.5
The physical properties of potassium dichromate are its appearance as bright orange-red crystals, a melting point of 398°C, and a specific gravity of 2.67. When swallowed undiluted, it can be harmful or fatal.8–11 As a systemic poison, it may be primarily toxic to kidneys,8 liver,8–9 and GI tract.10 Further- more, it can cause severe irritation of the eyes and conjunctivitis. Contact with breaks in the skin can cause “chrome sores” (skin ulcers). Dichromates are skin sensitizers.12 In the construction industry of Northern Bavaria, potassium dichromate is still the most important allergen. Potassium dichromate caused roughly half of all cases of sensitization such as allergic contact dermatitis and irritant contact dermatitis found to be occupationally relevant in the construction industry.12
The use of in vitro release of interferon-􏰆 in the www.chestjournal.org
diagnosis of contact allergy to potassium dichromate was studied in 20 patients who had positive patch test results to chromate and in 30 control subjects (10 patients with contact dermatitis, allergic to other allergens, 10 patients with other dermatologic dis- eases, and 10 healthy subjects).13 The release of interferon-􏰆 in the supernatants of the peripheral blood lymphocytes was significantly higher in the patients with proven allergy to chromate (p 􏰁 0.001).13 In an animal toxicity study,14 a protec- tive effect of SnCl2 on K2 Cr2 O7 -induced nephrotox- icity could be observed in rats.
The data suggest that potassium dichromate may be a substance allowing earlier extubation due to a reduction in stringy, tenacious tracheal secretions. While the basic parameters were comparable in both groups, the group receiving potassium dichromate showed a statistical significant improvement within a short time period.
The presence of one or more of the following findings defines acute COPD exacerbation: increase in sputum purulence, increase in sputum volume, and worsening of dyspnea.15 Patients with COPD typically present with acute decompensation of their disease one to three times a year, and 3 to 16% of these will require hospital admission. Hospital mor- tality from these admissions ranges from 3 to 10% in severe COPD patients, and it is much higher for patients requiring ICU admission.15 One of the problems encountered in the ICU is difficulty in extubating the patient because of profuse tracheal secretions. This is a special problem in patients with tenacious, stringy tracheal secretions who have to- bacco use and COPD in their history. In some patients, these secretions are resistant to antimicro- bial and mucolytic therapy, administration of glyco- pyrroniumbromide is contraindicated because it may worsen the patient’s situation. There is no evidence for mucolytic agents or chest physiotherapy in the acute exacerbation setting of COPD.2
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Weaning before extubation may be facilitated using different ventilatory modes. One of them, spontaneous breathing with CPAP, is used fre- quently for weaning from mechanical ventilation. Heart-lung interaction, fluid retention, and renal dysfunction can be observed with CPAP too, al- though the extent of these alterations is generally lower when compared to mechanical ventilation with positive end-expiratory pressure. Interestingly, pro- tocol-guided weaning of mechanical ventilation, as performed by nurses and respiratory therapists, is safe and leads to extubation more rapidly than physician-directed weaning.16 In contrast with adult patients, the majority of children are weaned from mechanical ventilator support in 􏰇 2 days. Weaning protocols did not significantly shorten this brief duration of weaning.17
If a patient tolerates successive decreases in ven- tilator support, that patient is successfully weaned.1 It is important to separate weaning from extubation. A patient may tolerate being on a minimum amount of ventilator support for an extended period of time from which no further decreases are considered necessary. However, a physician may refuse to extu- bate the patient for other reasons. Some reasons may be related to the patient, such as the inability to tolerate profuse secretions, the need for sedation for a scheduled diagnostic study, or the concern that another organ system is deteriorating.
Profuse stringy, tenacious tracheal secretions may be responsible for postponed extubation. While the weaning process was successful and the patient was able to breathe spontaneously with CPAP, extuba- tion sometimes may be postponed because of the presence of intense tracheal secretions.
The present study suggests that potassium dichro- mate C30 may be able to minimize the amount of tracheal secretions and therefore to allow earlier extubation when compared to placebo. Since the potentiation (dilution and vigorously shaking) of the study drug beyond the Avogadro number imposes no interaction with the patient’s metabolism, and due to the low cost of the drug, its use in the ICU may be beneficial, minimizing morbidity and mortality.18,19 Studies give some insight into the potential way of action of homeopathically prepared drugs. Cluster- cluster aggregation phenomena in aqueous solutions of fullerene-cyclodextrin conjugates, b-cyclodextrin, sodium chloride, sodium guanosine monophosphate, and a DNA oligonucleotide revealed that there are larger aggregates existent in dilute aqueous solutions than in more concentrated solutions.20 In another study, ultra-high dilutions of lithium chloride and sodium chloride (10-30 g cm-3) have been irradiated by x-rays and gamma-rays at 77 K, then progressively rewarmed to room temperature.21 During that
phase, their thermoluminescence has been studied and it was found that, despite their dilution beyond the Avogadro number, the emitted light was specific of the original salts dissolved initially.
This is the first scientific study of the effect of potassium dichromate on tracheal secretions. While the mechanism of potentized (diluted and vigorously shaken) drugs still remains subject to research, sev- eral articles describe its clinical usefulness.22–24 The effect may be best explained by cybernetics, which means that the information of the homeopathic drug acts consensually on the regulator. Thereby, the body regains its original property to regulate physical parameters.
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Influence of Potassium Dichromate on Tracheal Secretions in Critically Ill Patients * Michael Frass, Christoph Dielacher, Manfred Linkesch, Christian Endler, Ilse
Muchitsch, Ernst Schuster and Alan Kaye Chest 2005;127; 936-941 DOI 10.1378/chest.127.3.936
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"vaccine vs homeopathic remedy for swine flu"

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** I do not own this video and it is copyright of channel 10 Australia **
this doesn't really provide much in depth information but is interesting to note difference in the way each vaccine was presented. For more information on homeopathic remedies and their effectiveness look on pub med or do some research yourself. note that homeopathy is considered a pseudoscience by the vast majority of the medical community with an effect tantamount to that of a placebo.
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Alternative to Vaccines. A Personal Quest

By Elena Cecchetto DCH, CCH, RSHom(NA)
Certified Homeopath

For a while I had been reading about homeopathy and knew that Homeopathic Remedies for Immunizations existed (Homeoprophylaxis). I knew that somehow you could use Homeopathic Remedies for the purpose of protection against targeted infectious diseases. I just didn’t know exactly how to do this. My fear of needles (specifically the vaccine dangers) sent me on this quest. So I called a few people to find out if they knew how. I called my friend’s cousin who had studied Homeopathy. I
called a few Homeopaths listed in the yellow pages (yes, back in the days of the yellow pages). I told them what I would like to do and asked if they knew how. I got a few different responses.

They all agreed that indeed it is entirely fitting for the system of medicine known as homoeopathy to be able to perform this function. But they just weren’t sure exactly how to do this. Keep in mind that I was investigating this many years ago. Now there are many Homeopaths internationally working with Homeopathic Remedies for Immunization.

Homeopathy has been well known for its incredible results during epidemics. In the era of the 1912 epidemic, the Homeopathic Remedy called Gelsemium had high success rates among the Homeopathic Doctors of the day. Yes, in the early 1900’s, in North America, Homeopaths were considered Doctors. Some excellent anecdotes and statistics that stick in my mind describing the use of Homeopathy for epidemics go something
like this:

1. One of the earliest tests of the homeopathic system was in the treatment of Typhus Fever (spread by lice) in an 1813 epidemic which followed the devastation of Napoleon’s army marching through Germany to attack Russia, followed by their retreat. When the epidemic came through Leipzig as the army pulled back from the east, Samuel Hahnemann, the founder of homeopathy, was able to treat 180 cases of Typhus, only losing two (1.11%). This was at a time when the conventional treatments were having a mortality rate of over 30%.

2. Within three years of the Diphtheria outbreak in Broome County, NY from 1862 to 1864, there was a report of an 83.6% mortality rate amongst the conventional medical Doctors and a 16.4% mortality rate amongst the Homeopaths.

3. The May 1921 edition of the Journal of the American Institute for Homeopathy had an article about the use of homeopathy during the Influenza Pandemic of 1918. Dr. T. A. McCann, from Dayton, Ohio reported that 24,000 cases of flu treated with conventional medicine had a mortality rate of 28.2%, while 26,000 cases of flu treated homeopathically had a mortality rate of 1.05%.

My quest wasn’t successful and I got the shots to go travelling. Luckily, I had no side effects that I know of, so far. Even better, I spent months reading the Homeopathic literature that I carted around with me and became completely enamored with the Philosophy of Homeopathy.

More than a decade later and I am finally one of the handful of Homeopaths in Vancouver with the level of education and accreditation that gives me the title of “Certified Classical Homeopath”. Even better, I have the opportunity to offer Homeopathic Remedies to help people be protected for specific infectious diseases. There are various protocols that can be used depending on the disease.

There is a great personal satisfaction that I get when I receive postcards from the travellers who have received excellent Homeopathic Care. Imagine going to India without experiencing any gastro-intestinal complaints! Amazing! Fun! That is how travel is meant to be. I am determined to be able to support people in attaining this kind of travel experience.

Nobel Prize winner scientifically describes Homeopathy

ABSTRACT
A novel property of DNA is described: the capacity of some bacterial DNA sequences to induce electromagnetic waves at high aqueous dilutions. It appears to be a resonance phenomenon triggered by the ambient electromagnetic background of very low frequency waves. The genomic DNA of most pathogenic bacteria contains sequences which are able to generate such signals. This opens the way to the development of highly sensitive detection system for chronic bacterial infections in human and animal diseases.

http://www.springerlink.com/content/0557v31188m3766x/

Interdiscip Sci Comput Life Sci (2009) 1: 81–90 DOI: 10.1007/s12539-009-0036-7
Electromagnetic Signals Are Produced by Aqueous Nanostructures Derived from Bacterial DNA Sequences
Luc MONTAGNIER1,2?, Jamal A ?ISSA1, St ?ephane FERRIS1, Jean-Luc MONTAGNIER1, Claude LAVALLE ?E1
1(Nanectis Biotechnologies, S.A. 98 rue Albert Calmette, F78350 Jouy en Josas, France) 2(Vironix LLC, L. Montagnier 40 Central Park South, New York, NY 10019, USA)
Recevied 3 January 2009 / Revised 5 January 2009 / Accepted 6 January 2009
Abstract: A novel property of DNA is described: the capacity of some bacterial DNA sequences to induce electromagnetic waves at high aqueous dilutions. It appears to be a resonance phenomenon triggered by the ambient electromagnetic background of very low frequency waves. The genomic DNA of most pathogenic bacteria contains sequences which are able to generate such signals. This opens the way to the development of highly sensitive detection system for chronic bacterial infections in human and animal diseases.
Key words: DNA, electromagnetic signals, bacteria.
Pathogenic microorganisms in this day of age are not only submitted to high selective pressure by the im- mune defenses of their hosts but also have to survive un- der highly active antiviral or antibiotic treatments. Not surprisingly, they have evolved in finding many ways to escape these hostile conditions, such as mutations of re- sistance, hypervariability of surface antigens, protective biofilms, latency inside cells and tissues.
We initially observed (Montagnier and Lavallee, per- sonal communication) that some filtration procedures aimed at sterilizing biological fluids can yield under some defined conditions the infectious microorganism which was present before the filtration step. Thus, fil- tration of a culture supernatant of human lymphocytes infected with Mycoplasma pirum, a microorganism of about 300 nM in size, through filters of 100 nM or 20 nM porosities, yielded apparently sterile fluid. The latter however was able to regenerate the original my- coplasma when incubated with a mycoplasma negative culture of human lymphocytes within 2 to 3 weeks.
Similarly, a 20 nM filtration did not retain a minor in- fective fraction of HIV, the causal agent of AIDS, whose viral particles have a diameter averaging 100-120 nM.
In the course of investigating the nature of such filter- ing infectious forms, we found another property of the filtrates, which may or may not be related to the former: their capacity to produce some electromagnetic waves of low frequency in a reproducible manner after appro-
*Corresponding author. E-mail: nadiacpt@yahoo.fr
priate dilutions in water. The emission of such waves is likely to represent a resonance phenomenon depending on excitation by the ambient electromagnetic noise. It is associated with the presence in the aqueous dilutions of polymeric nanostructures of defined size. The super- natant of uninfected eukaryotic cells used as controls did not exhibit this property.
In this paper we provide a first characterization of the electromagnetic signals (EMS) and of their underlying nanostructures produced by some purified bacteria.
In addition to M. pirum, a more classical bacterium, E. Coli, was utilized for the purpose of the analysis. The nanostructures produced by HIV will be the sub- ject of another paper.
M. pirum is a peer-shaped small bacterial cell, ressembling M. pneumoniae, which can be grown in syn- thetic enriched medium (SP4) (Tully et al., 1977) but also mutiplies at the surface of human T lymphocytes.
The strain (Ber) used in our experiments was isolated from a T lymphocyte culture derived from the blood of an apparently healthy subject (Grau et al., 1993). The strong mycoplasma adherence to lymphocytes is mediated by a specific adhesin, whose gene had been previously cloned and sequenced by the authors (Tham et al., 1994).
We used as primary source of the mycoplasma, super- natants of infected human T lymphocyte cultures or of cultures of the CEM tumor T cell line. All cell cultures were first tested for the lack of M. pirum contamination by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and nested PCR, before starting the experiments. Titers of 106-107 infec-
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tious Units/ml of M. pirum were readily achieved after 5-6 days of incubation following deliberate infection of both types of cultures.
Filtration of the clarified supernatant was first per- formed on 0.45 ?M (450 nM) Millipore filters to remove debris, and subsequently on 0.1 ?M (100 nM) Milli- pore filters or on 0.02 ?M (20 nM) Whatman filters, to remove mycoplasma cells. Indeed, the two 100 nM and 20 nM filtrates were confirmed sterile when aliquots were incubated for several weeks in SP4 medium. Re- peated search for traces of mycoplasma DNA by PCR and nested PCR using specific primers for the adhesin gene or for the 16S ribosomal gene was consistently neg- ative.
However when the filtrates were incubated for two weeks (100 nM filtrate) or three weeks (20 nM filtrate) with a culture of human activated T lymphocytes, the mycoplasma was recovered in the medium with all its original characteristics as previously observed.
The same filtrates were analyzed just after filtra- tion for production of electromagnetic waves of low fre- quency. For this purpose we used a device previously designed by Benveniste and Coll (1996; 2003) for the detection of signals produced by isolated molecules en- dowed with biological activity. The principle of this technology is shown in Fig. 1.
Blaster Card itself connected to a laptop computer, preferentially powered by its 12 volt battery. Each emission is recorded twice for 6 seconds, amplified 500 times and processed with different softwares for vizual- ization of the signals on the computer's screen (Fig. 1).
The main harmonics of the complex signals were an- alyzed by utilizing several softwares of Fourier transfor- mation.
In each experiment, the internal noise generated by the different pieces of the reading system was first recorded (coil alone, coil with a tube filled with water). Fourier analysis shows (Fig. 2(c, d)) that the noise was predominantly composed of very low frequencies, prob- ably generated at least in part by the 50/60 Hz ambi- ent electric current. The use of the 12 V battery for the computer power supply did reduce, but not abolish this noise, which was found to be necessary for the induc- tion of the resonance signals from the specific nanos- tructures.
When dilutions of the M. pirum filtrate were recorded for wave emission, the first obvious phenomenon ob- served was an increase of the overall amplitude of the signals at certain dilutions over the background noise (Fig. 2(a)) and also an increase in frequencies (Fig. 2(b)). This change was abolished if the tube to be analyzed was placed inside a box sheltered with sheets of copper and mumetal (David, 1998).
Fourier analysis of the M. pirum signals showed a shift towards higher frequencies close to 1000 Hz and multiples of it. Profiles were identical for all the dilu- tions showing an increase in amplitude (Fig. 2(c) and 2(d)).
The first low dilutions were usually negative, showing the background noise only. Positive signals were usu- ally obtained at dilutions ranging from 10-5 to 10-8 or 10-12. Higher dilutions were again negative (Fig. 3).
The positive dilutions varied according to the type of filtration, the 20 nM filtrate being generally positive at dilutions higher than those of the 100 nM filtrate.
The original unfiltered suspension was negative at all dilutions, a phenomenon observed for all the microor- ganisms studied. Size and density of the structures producing the signals in the aqueous dilutions:
An aliquot of the 20 nM filtrate was layered on the top of a 5-20% (w/v) sucrose gradient in water and centrifuged for 2 hours at 35,000 rpm in a swinging bucket rotor. These conditions had previously been used to obtain the density equilibrium of the intact my- coplasma cells wich formed a sharp bound at 1,21 den- sity. Fractions were collected from the bottom of the tubes, pooled 2 by 2 and assayed for signal emission.
Fig. 4 shows that the signal emitting structures were distributed in a large range of densities from 1.15 to 1.25 and also had a high sedimentation coefficient.
Fig. 1
Device for the capture and analysis of electromag- netic signals (EMS): (1) Coil: a bobbin of copper wire, impedance 300 Ohms; (2) Plastic stoppered tube containing 1 mL of the solution to be analyzed; (3) Amplifier; (4) Computer with softwares.
Briefly, the 100 nM or 20 nM filtrates are serially di- luted 1 in 10 (0,1 +0,9 in sterile water (medical grade). The first 2 dilutions (1/10 and 1/100) are done in serum-free RPMI medium, in order to avoid eventual protein precipitation in deionized water.
Each dilution is done in 1.5 mL Eppendorf plastic tubes, which are then tightly stoppered and strongly agitated on a Vortex apparatus for 15 seconds . This step has been found critical for the generation of signals.
After all dilutions have been made (generally 15-20 decimal dilutions), the stoppered tubes are read one by one on an electromagnetic coil, connected to a Sound
Interdiscip Sci Comput Life Sci (2009) 1: 81–90 83
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Detection of EMS from a suspension of Mycoplasma pirum: Left: background noise (from an unfiltered suspension or a negative low dilution). Right: positive signal (from a high dilution D-7 (10-7)). (a) actual recording (2 seconds from a 6 second recording) after WaveLab (Steinberg) treatment; (b) detailed analysis of the signal (scale in millisecondes); (c) Matlab 3D Fourier transform analyzis (abcissa: 0-20 kHz, ordinate: relative intensity, 3D dimension: recording at different times); Frequencies are visualized in different colors; (d) Sigview Fourier transform: note the new harmonics in the range of 1 000-3 000 Hz.
A typical recording of signals from aqueous dilutions of M. Pirum (Matlab software): note the positive signals from D-7 to D-12 dilutions.
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1.25
SN CEM/M.pirum Filtered 0.02?
1.20
1.15
1.30
1.20
10,000 rpm for 15 minutes, the supernatant was fil- tered on 450 nM filter and the resulting filtrate was filtered again on a 100 nM filter. The final filtrate was found sterile, when plated on nutrient agar medium and was analyzed for electromagnetic wave emission, as de- scribed above for M. pirum. Signal producing dilutions usually range from 10-8 to 10-12, with profiles upon Fourier transformation, similar to those of M. Pirum (Fig. 5). In one experiment, some very high dilutions were found positive, ranging from 10-9 to 10-18. An aliquot of the unfiltered supernatant did not show any signals above background up to the 10-38 dilution, in- dicating again the critical importance of the filtration step for the generation of specific signals.
The only difference with M. pirum was that no sig- nal appeared after filtration on 20 nM filters, suggesting that the structures associated with the signals were re- tained by these filters and, therefore, had a size greater than 20 nM and lower than 100 nM.
We then asked why the lower dilutions, which logically should contain a larger number of signal- producing structures, were "silent". When we added 0.1 mL of a negative low dilution (e.g. 10-3) to 0.4 mL or 0.9 mL of a positive dilution (10-8), the latter became negative. This indicate that the "silent" low dilutions are self-inhibitory, probably by interference of the multiple sources emitting in the same wave length or slightly out of phase, like a radio jamming. Alterna- tively, the abundance of nanostructures can form a gel in water and therefore are prevented to vibrate. -Evidence for homologous "cross talk" between dilutions
We then wonder whether or not it was possible to generate new signal-emitting structures from tube to tube by using wave transfer. The following experiment
107
106 1.10 105
104
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Fig. 4
Sucrose density centrifugation (35000 rpm, 2 Hr) of a 0.02? filtrate of Mycoplasma pirum suspension. The collected fractions were pooled 2 by 2 and di- luted up to D-15 and tested for EMS. The bars in- dicate the fractions positive for EMS.
We then turned to a more classical bacterium, E. Coli, using the laboratory strain K1.
A culture of E. Coli in agitated (oxygenated) con- ditions, yielded 109 bacterial units/mL, measured by spectrometry. The suspension was then centrifuged at
Density
E.M.S. naneons
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Fig. 5 EMS from E. Coli 0.1 ? filtrate. EMS positive from dilution D-8 to D-11: (a) Actual recording; (b) millisecond analysis; (c) Fourier transform analysis Matlab; (d) Fourier transform analysis SigView. NF: not filtered.
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which was repeated several times showed that indeed this was the case.
A donor tube of a low "silent" dilution of E. Coli (10-3) was placed side by side close to a receiver tube of the positive "loud" highest dilution of the same prepa- ration (10-9). Both tubes were placed in a mumetal box for 24 hours at room temperature, so that the tubes were not exposed to external electromagnetic noise, and only exposed to the signals generated by the structures present in the tubes themselves.
The tubes were then read again by the signal detect- ing device: the donor tube was still silent, however the receiver tube became also silent.
Moreover, when further dilutions were made from the receiver tube (10-10, 10-11, 10-12), these dilutions had became positive (Fig. 6). These results suggest that the receiver tube was made silent by formation of an excess of new nanostructures, which could emit signals upon further dilution.
Finally, two others problems were investigated in the E. Coli system: the first was the role of the initial number of bacterial cells in the induction of the fil- terable signal-producing structures. For this a station- ary culture of E. Coli was counted and adjusted to 109 cells/mL and serial dilutions from 100 to 100 were done down to 1 cell/mL. Each dilution was filtered at 100 nM and then analyzed for signal emission. Surprisingly, the range of positive dilutions were not strictly depen- dent on the initial concentration of E. Coli cells, being roughly the same from 109 cells down to 10 cells, sug- gesting that the same final number of nanostructures was reached at all concentrations. Thus, paradoxically, 10 cells are giving the same signals than 109 cells.
We were also concerned by the possible personal in- fluence of the operator in the reading.
To address this point, two healthy operators were asked to measure independantly the same dilutions of E. Coli, each one unknowing the results of the other. The results of their readings were identical.
In addition, the results were independant of the order in which the samples were read, whether in descending dilutions from to the lowest to the highest or in ascend- ing the dilutions from the highest to the lowest.
Finally an other laboratory worker placed the diluted samples in a random order, the labels being unknown from the person reading the samples. The same range of positive dilutions was detected again provided each tube was well separated from the other, to avoid their "cross talk".
We also found that the results were also indepen- dant of the location of the reading site: starting from the same unfiltered preparation of E. Coli, positive di- lutions of the filtrates were found to be the same in two different locations in France (Paris center and sub- urb), one in Canada (Montreal), and one in Cameroun (Yaound ?e).
As shown in the figures, the background noise was variable, according to the location and time of record- ing. It was generally higher in large cities than in iso- lated aeras. However, positive signals always clearly differenciate over the background by higher frequency peaks.
Nature of the aqueous nanostructures:
Treatments by RNAseA (Promega, 1 ?g/ml, 37 °C 1 h), Dnase I (Invitrogen, 10 U/?g DNA, 37°C, 18 h), Lysozyme (Fisher, 1 mg/mL, 37 °C 10 min), Proteinase K (Promega, 0.12 mg/mL, in 1% sodium dodecyl sul- phate, 56°C 1 h) did not suppress the EMS produc- ing activity of the "loud" dilutions nor did activate the "silent" dilutions.
However, heating at 70 °C for 30 min suppressed irre- versiblly the activity, as well as did freezing for 1 hour at -20 °C or -60 °C. DMSO (10%), and formamide (10%) had no effect.
Treatment with lithium cations, known to affect the
Fig. 6
Cross-talk between dilutions (from an E. Coli 0.1 ? filtrate), see explanation in the text.
This effect was suppressed by interposing a sheat of mumetal between the two tubes during the 24 hours contact period, pointing to a role of low frequency waves in the phenomenon.
Emission of similar electromagnetic signals was also observed with some other bacterial species such as: Streptococcus B, Staphylococcus aureus, Pseu- domonas aeroginosa, Proteus mirabilis, Bacillus sub- tilis, Salmonella, Clostridium perfringens, all in the same range of dilutions observed for E. Coli, and only after filtration at 100 nM (and not at 20 nM).
Importantly, the transfer effect between two tubes, one silent, one loud, was only observed if both contained dilutions of the same bacterial species. In other words, a Staphylococcus donor tube could only "talk" with a receiver tube containing a Staphylococcus dilution, and not with a tube of Streptococcus or E. Coli, and reciprocally.
These results indicate that the transfer effect is medi- ated by species-specific signals, the frequencies of which remain to be analyzed.
Interdiscip Sci Comput Life Sci (2009) 1: 81–90
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hydrogen bonding of water molecules, was able to re- duce the intensity of the signals, while the range of the positive dilutions remained unchanged.
Nature of the bacterial molecules at the origin of the nanostructures:
In preliminary experiments, we had observed that a pretreatment of a suspension of E. Coli by 1% formaldehyde did not alter its capacity to induce the electromagnetic signals, while killing the bacteria. This treatment alters the surface proteins of the bacte- rial cells without attacking their genetic material, i.e. double- helical DNA. This suggested that the source of the signals may be the DNA itself.
Indeed, DNA extracted from the bacterial suspension by the classical phenol: chloroform technique was able upon filtration and appropriate dilutions in water to emit EMS similar to those produced by intact bacteria under the same conditions. DNAse treatment of the extracted DNA solution abolishes its capacity to emit signals, at the condition that the nanostructures pre- viously induced by the DNA are destroyed. A typical experiment is described as follows:
E. Coli DNA was treated by Proteinase K in the presence of SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate) and further deproteinized by phenol-chloroform mixture. The pel-
let obtained by ethanol precipitation was resuspended in Tris 10-2 M, pH 7,6 and an aliquot was diluted 1/100 in water. The dilution (10-2) was filtered first through a 450 nM filter and the resulting filtrate was then fil- tered again on a 100 nM filter. The filtrate was further diluted in serial decimal dilutions in water as previously described.
As for the intact microorganisms, the filtration step was found to be essential for detection of the EMS in the DNA dilutions. In its absence, no signals could be detected at any dilutions.
In contrast to the microorganism suspension, where the filtration was supposed to retain the intact cells, the filtration at 100 nM did not retain the DNA, which was still present in the filtrate, as measured by optical density. However, filtration with a 20 nM Whatman filter retained the nanostructures emitting the EMS, suggesting that they have the same range of sizes than those originating from intact bacteria.
In the case of DNA, the role of the 100 nM filtration is probably to dissociate the network of nanostructures organized in a gel-like liquid crystal at high concen- trations in water, allowing their dispersion in further dilutions. As shown in Fig. 7, the dilutions positive for EMS were in the same range that those observed for the intact bacteria, generally between 10-7 to 10-13.
Fig. 7 DNAse effect on EMS production. The DNAse treated E. Coli DNA solution and the untreated DNA are diluted from D-2 to D-15. Analyzis of the EMS as described in Fig. 5. D-2 dilution (negative for EMS) is shown as control. D-9 is positive for EMS (from a range of positive dilutions D-8 to D-11). Note the signal disappearance in the DNAse treated DNA.
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At the high dilution of 10-13, calculations indicate that there is no DNA molecule of MW larger than 105 in the solution, making it unlikely that the EMS are pro- duced directely by the DNA itself, but rather by the self-sustained nanostructures induced by the DNA.
Generally, all the bacterial species shown to be posi- tive for EMS yielded also DNA preparations positive for EMS. Further demonstration that the EMS produced by bacteria come from their DNA was shown by their disappearance after DNAse treatement.
This inactivation was however only complete when the nanostructures induced in the DNA solution which are themselves resistant to DNAse were previously fully destroyed.
This destruction was obtained either by freezing the DNA solution at -20°C for 1 hour or heating it at 90 °C for 30 minutes.
After slow cooling to allow the heated DNA to re- anneal, DNAse 1 at a final concentration of 10 U/?g of DNA was added and the mixture was incubated at 37°C for 18 hours in the presence of 5 mM of MgCl2. An aliquot of the untreated DNA solution was kept as a positive control.
The DNAse-treated preparation was found com-
pletely devoid of EMS emission at any dilution (Fig. 7). Treatment of the DNA solution by a restriction en- zyme acting at many sites of E. Coli DNA (EcoRV) did not suppress the production of EMS, suggesting that this emission is linked to rather short sequences or is
associated with rare sequences.
Nature of the DNA sequences at the origin of the EMS:
A non exhaustive survey of the bacterial species and of their DNA able to display EMS suggests that most of bacteria pathogenic for humans are in this category.
By contrast, probiotic "good" bacteria as Lactobacil- lus and their DNA are negative for EMS emission.
In the case of E. Coli, we found that some strains used to carry plasmids for gene cloning were also nega- tive (Fig. 8).
This suggested that only some sequences of DNA are at the origin of the EMS.
As pathogenicity is often associated with the capac- ity of the microorganism to bind eukaryotic cells, par- ticulary mucosal cells, we focussed our analysis again to M. pirum DNA, where a single gene (adhesin: 126- kDa protein) is responsible for the adhesion of the my- coplasma to human cells.
Fig. 8 EMS produced by the 1.5 kb fragment of the adhesin DNA of M. Pirum. The plasmid DNA containing the 1.5 Kb fragment was used to transform an E. Coli vector, XL1blue. The whole DNA was extracted and diluted for EMS analysis. Left: control background noise of a negative dilution (D-2). Right: positive signal at D-10 (range from D-9 to D-12). Bottom: Note the lack of EMS produced by the DNA extracted from the strain transformed by the plasmid alone.
Interdiscip Sci Comput Life Sci (2009) 1: 81–90
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This gene had previously been cloned and sequenced in our laboratory (Tham et al., 1994). The cloned DNA existed as two fragments in two plasmids, corresponding respectively to the N terminal (1.5 Kbp) and the C terminal (5 Kbp) of the protein.
The two plasmids (pBluescript SK, Stratagene) con- taining the DNA fragments were amplified in a E. Coli strain, XL1blue.
The DNA of the E. Coli strain (with or without the plasmid) alone did not yield EMS at any dilutions.
By contrast when the strain was transformed with ei- ther plasmids carrying an adhesin gene fragment, EMS were produced (Fig. 8).
The two adhesin DNA fragments were then cut by specific restriction enzymes (N Terminal: 1.5 kbp/SpeI- EcoRI) (C Terminal: 5 kbp/HindIII-XbaI) and isolated by electrophoresis in 0.8% agarose gel. Each DNA frag- ment was able to induce EMS (not shown).
We also purified a large fraction of the adhesin DNA from the whole mycoplasma genomic DNA using spe- cific primers and amplification by PCR.
Again this fragment induced EMS, thus indicating that no contaminant DNA coming from the plasmid carried by E. Coli was involved (not shown).
Discussion
We have discovered a novel property of DNA, that is the capacity of some sequences to emit electromag- netic waves in resonance after excitation by the ambient electromagnetic background.
Owing to the low sensitivity and specificity of our signal capture and analysis, the frequencies emitted are all alike, regardless of the bacterial species involved.
However, the experiments of transfer of information through plastic tubes suggest that, by refining the analysis and eliminating the variability of the excit- ing signals, we might detect specific differences between species, and even between sequences. Indeed, this prop- erty may be a general one shared by all double-helical DNAs, including human DNA.
But in our conditions of detection, it seems to be associated with only certain bacterial sequences.
It remains to be seen whether they are restricted to some genes involved in diseases.
Experiments to be reported elsewhere indeed indi- cate that this detection applies also at the scale of the human body: we have detected the same EMS in the plasma and in the DNA extracted from the plasma of patients suffering of Alzheimer, Parkinson disease, mul- tiple Sclerosis and Rheumatoid Arthritis. This would suggest that bacterial infections are present in these diseases.
Morever, EMS can be detected also from RNA viruses, such as HIV, influenza virus A, Hepatitis C Virus. In these cases, optimal filtration for detection
of EMS requires prior 20 nM filtration suggesting that the nanostructures produced are smaller that those pro- duced by bacterial DNA.
In patients infected with HIV, EMS can be detected mostly in patients treated by antiretroviral therapy and having a very low viral load in their plasma. Such nanostructures persisting in the plasma may contribute to the viral reservoir which escapes the antiviral treat- ment, assuming that they carry genetic information of the virus.
The physical nature of the nanostructures which sup- port the EMS resonance remains to be determined.
It is known from the very early X-ray diffraction stud- ies of DNA, that water molecules are tightly associated with the double helix, and any beginner in molecular biology knows that DNA in water solution forms gels associating a larger number of water molecules.
Moreover, a number of physical studies have reported that water molecules can form long polymers of dipoles associated by hydrogen bonds (Ruan et al., 2004; Wer- net et al., 2004).
However these associations appear to be very short- lived (Cowan et al., 2005). Could they live longer, being self-maintained by the electromagnetic radiations they are emitting as previously postulated by Del Guidice, Preparata and Vitielo (1988)?
We have studied the decay with time of the capac- ity of dilutions for emitting EMS, after they have been removed (in mumetal boxes) from exposure to the exci- tation by the background. This capacity lasts at least several hours, some time up to 48 hours, indicating the relative stability of the nanostructures.
Are the latter sufficiently specific of DNA sequences to be able to carry some genetic information?
If so, what could be their role in pathogenicity, par- ticularly in the genesis of chronic diseases?
Further studies involving close collaboration between physicists and biologists are obviously needed to resolve these problems.
Acknowledgments
We thank Dr A. Blanchard for gift of Mycoplasma pirum DNA and Drs D. Guillonnet, R. Olivier, L. Thibodeau and J. Varon for helpful dis-
cussion.
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Completed another Certification Level.

Elena Cecchetto DCH, CCH, RSHom(NA) has new Certification and new letters. She's one of the 13 Homeopaths in Vancouver's Lower Mainland
who've been accredited at this level. Or one of 7 in the whole City of Vancouver.
North American Society of Homeopaths

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Fenugreek for Breast Milk Production

Fenugreek (Trigonella foenum-graecum L.) appears to be the herb that is most often used to increase milk supply. It is an excellent galactagogue, and has been used as such for centuries.

I recommend it to everyone needing assistance with low milk or even no milk. It is safe and is not a hormone, nor does it contain anything hormonal. You need to look up all that you can on it, but it is safe for both you and the baby. It is given to cows to increase milk production. It can also lower serum cholesterol as well and is used to treat diabetes.

To speed milk production and increase overall milk supply, the key is to remove more milk from the breast and to do this frequently, so that less milk accumulates in the breast between feedings. The more frequently you nurse, the more the message is sent to produce more milk.

It works within about 3-4 days. You'll see your milk gradually come in and then by 4th day should be all back! Drink 1 cup every couple hours hot or cold for up to 4 days straight. That should produce the desired results.

For anyone with access to any middle eastern influenced food stores, Helba is Fenugreek. So if you want to save some money on Fenugreek and have a more fresh product, go to a middle eastern store and ask for Helba. It super cheap, and looks like little brown seeds, just boil a couple of tablespoon in a tea pot.

Another "nursing supplementer" that you can use in between your pumping sessions to feed your baby that will help him/her recognize you as food again. It is a contraption with a bottle you can put formula or expressed breastmilk (once you have some) in, hanging upside down from the front of your bra. Then there are tubes that come out and you tape them to your breast alongside your nipple. When this is installed correctly then when (s)he sucks from you he gets through the tube what is in the bottle. Medela makes them, you can order it from their website, or you may be able to get one at Walgreens. Or you can order it on EBay

I suggest doing the pumping routine as previously suggested, taking some herbals, like mother's milk tea, and using the supplementer has the added advantage of stimulating your breasts much more effectively than even a pump. good luck! Other than that - see one of us at <a href=”http://www.accessnaturalhealing.com/our-people/default.htm”>Naturopathy North Vancouver</a>
 
People always ask about 'side effects' (I always find this sooo sad). Anyhoo - here is one for you:
Possible side effects are that your sweat and urine smell like maple syrup!

Swiss Expert Defends Homeopathy

Quotes article from Carlo Odermatt, a Swiss expert who defends Homeopathy.
Full Article Link

“Last year, 67% of Swiss people demanded that complementary medicine must be promoted in future. Furthermore, US market research shows that sales of homeopathic medicines have grown at a rate of 25-50% a year during the past 10 years,” he said.

A number of studies have already pointed to the efficacy of homeopathic products, Carlo Odermatt [a Swiss Chemist] said, for instance in the treatment of hay-fever, rheumatoid arthritis and childhood diarrhoea.

The mere fact that homeopathy had been around for almost 200 years was proof of its efficacy, Carlo Odermatt said.

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Homeopathy defended by visiting Swiss expert

2010/09/20
Shaanaaz de Jager WEEKEND POST REPORTER dejagers@avusa.co.za

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A FAMOUS homeopath has defended the much-debated practice after a physician to Japanese Emperor Akihito as well as top scientists slammed homeopathy as “absurd” and urged health workers to steer clear of this alternative treatment which is growing in popularity.

Carlo Odermatt, a Swiss homeopath and chemist with more than 25 years’ experience in classical homeopathy, spoke on the subject in Port Elizabeth this week.

Homeopathy, an independent system of healing which seeks to stimulate the body’s ability to heal itself, is practised in 41 of 42 European countries. It is believed to work in harmony with the immune system.

Odermatt said the greater the success of homeopathy, the fiercer the opposition – to the extent that the evidence supporting the efficacy of homeopathic treatment was completely ignored.

“When a homeopathic study is not successful, this is often widely publicised by opponents of homeopathy. If a mainstream study fails, this is merely acknowledged (for instance, the devastating studies on antidepressants or hormone replacement therapy).

“It’s all about business. What is more, mainstream medicine has much more money at its disposal for propaganda – and funding clinical studies,” Odermatt said.

There are estimated to be more than 500000 physicians practising homeopathy worldwide, with an estimated 500 million people receiving treatment.

Odermatt said the public interest in and acceptance of homeopathic treatment was growing worldwide.

“Last year, 67% of Swiss people demanded that complementary medicine must be promoted in future. Furthermore, US market research shows that sales of homeopathic medicines have grown at a rate of 25-50% a year during the past 10 years,” he said.

A number of studies have already pointed to the efficacy of homeopathic products, Odermatt said, for instance in the treatment of hay-fever, rheumatoid arthritis and childhood diarrhoea.

The mere fact that homeopathy had been around for almost 200 years was proof of its efficacy, he said.


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By: Lorenco On: 2010/09/20 04:17:47 PM
Take one owl root and 12 rat eyes…
By: Lorenco On: 2010/09/20 04:18:10 PM
Yes that will fix it… I hope…

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Homeopathy defended by visiting Swiss expert

Homeopathy defended by visiting Swiss expert

2010/09/20

A FAMOUS homeopath has defended the much-debated practice after a physician to Japanese Emperor Akihito as well as top scientists slammed homeopathy as “absurd” and urged health workers to steer clear of this alternative treatment which is growing in popularity.

Carlo Odermatt, a Swiss homeopath and chemist with more than 25 years’ experience in classical homeopathy, spoke on the subject in Port Elizabeth this week.

Homeopathy, an independent system of healing which seeks to stimulate the body’s ability to heal itself, is practised in 41 of 42 European countries. It is believed to work in harmony with the immune system.

Odermatt said the greater the success of homeopathy, the fiercer the opposition – to the extent that the evidence supporting the efficacy of homeopathic treatment was completely ignored.

“When a homeopathic study is not successful, this is often widely publicised by opponents of homeopathy. If a mainstream study fails, this is merely acknowledged (for instance, the devastating studies on antidepressants or hormone replacement therapy).

“It’s all about business. What is more, mainstream medicine has much more money at its disposal for propaganda – and funding clinical studies,” Odermatt said.

There are estimated to be more than 500000 physicians practising homeopathy worldwide, with an estimated 500 million people receiving treatment.

Odermatt said the public interest in and acceptance of homeopathic treatment was growing worldwide.

“Last year, 67% of Swiss people demanded that complementary medicine must be promoted in future. Furthermore, US market research shows that sales of homeopathic medicines have grown at a rate of 25-50% a year during the past 10 years,” he said.

A number of studies have already pointed to the efficacy of homeopathic products, Odermatt said, for instance in the treatment of hay-fever, rheumatoid arthritis and childhood diarrhoea.

The mere fact that homeopathy had been around for almost 200 years was proof of its efficacy, he said.

Craniosacral Therapy

Bruce Gioia RCST®s
Registered Craniosacral Therapist

Bruce Gioia is a registered craniosacral therapist and designated RCST. He has extensive experience working with Ayurvedic massage after years of study with East Indian masters of the art. His counseling skills are based on the transformative healing powers of awareness rooted in present moment experience. Presently he is a student of Hakomi a form of western psychotherapy based on eastern Buddhist principals.

Bruce was born and raised in Vancouver, Canada. Early interests in meditation lead him to India where he lived for 15 of the past 20 years. This allowed him to effectively pursue his search for a deeper understanding of consciousness. Much of his time was spent in ashrams studying the art of inner alchemy through numerous self-awareness methods and techniques. Along with the pursuit of meditative practices a fascination with the healing arts was a parallel and complimentary study. In particular Craniosacral Biodynamic Therapy has come to the forefront as his primary healing modality. Zen counseling and Deep Tissue massage are effectively employed to assist in his core work.

As a healing practitioner Bruce’s perceptual skills are well developed. First and foremost he is able to create and hold a refined therapeutic space. He honors and deeply respects the personal history and healing process of his clients. There is no effort to willfully impose change or pass judgments. The focus is entirely on supporting the inherent healing dynamics of the client no matter what the circumstances.

Contact Bruce
604-568-4663 or info@accessnaturalhealing.com

Reiki

Reiki

Reiki is a form of channelled healing using universal life force energy in order to balance the subtle energies within and around a living being. Using the Chakra system (an electro magnetic field encapsulating the body) of ancient teachings,which enables the recipients of these energies to gradually or quickly heal themselves naturally. Blockages in this bio-system is perceived as the root cause of all "dis-ease." In this way it enables one to once again achieve a harmonious, healthy equilibrium. The body becomes more resistant and has more of it's own healing power available to it.

Book your appointment for Reiki now info@accessnaturalhealing.com

Classical Homeopathy

Classical Homeopathy

The first appointment with your Homeopath is the most important. The Homeopath will spend between 1 and half to 2.5 hours with you. During this time, you’ll be asked about your health concerns and how they affect you plus a bit about your health history.

We work with you to reach your health goals and attend to your health concerns by finding the right Homeopathic Remedy and by coaching you through important decisions. Homeopathic remedies work toward restoring health rather than masking or suppressing symptoms. The result is felt by the mind, body and spirit.

After the first consultation, appointments are 45 minutes.

Talk to one of our Homeopaths about Treatment with You In Mind. Call us at 604-568-4663 or email us at info@accessnaturalhealing.com.

Elena Cecchetto DCH, CCH Certified Classical Homeopath

El Cecchetto is on the founding board of Side by Side Homeopathy, a group of Homeopaths who are helping people in the Downtown Eastside with any of their health concerns. Some of the common complaints she helps people to address include anxiety, PTSD, depression, migraines, digestion concerns and insomnia. Her most happy moments are when she hears back from new parents about getting the colic, teething, nursing, sleeping, coughing, and rashes successfully addressed with homeopathic care. Her Homeopathic Pediatrics studies have been supported by extra conferences with Dr. Sunil Anand and Louis Klein.

El makes generous contributions to creating the opportunity for natural healing by being very involved in Homeopathic associations such as the West Coast Homeopathic Society (WCHS), the BC Society of Homeopaths (BCSH) and the Canadian Society of Homeopaths (CSH).

El believes that helping people heal with Homeopathic Treatment is a wonderful gift and feels fortunate to have the opportunity to put it into practice and seeing the benefits for her patients. She is one of the leaders in making Homeopathy available to everyone.

El is passionate about the use of Homeopathy for children and to help people with substance misuse and addictive behaviours.

Contact El
604-568-4663
info@accessnaturalhealing.com

Homeopathic Immunization - Alternative to Vaccines?

International Research Demonstrating the Validity of Homoeoprophylaxis
Homoeoprophylaxis was first used by Dr Samuel Hahnemann in 1798 to prevent Scarlet Fever. It has been used in many countries since then to successfully immunise millions of people. This use has been well documented. However some question whether there is objective evidence that the method works (everyone agrees that it is non toxic). In recent years two pieces of evidence have emerged that will satisfy any objective person, although not of course people who have drawn conclusions based on conjecture, and refuse to study the material available.

The Brazilian Experience
In 1998 there was an outbreak of meningococcal meningitis in a region of Brazil. Many doctors in that country are also homeopaths. There was no vaccine available at the time, so a group of doctors who worked in the region used the meningococcal Nosode to immunize 65,826 children. Another 23,539 children in the region were not immunized. The doctors followed the two groups for 12 months. After 6 months the efficacy of homeoprophylaxis was 95%, and after 12 months was 91%. A complete and statistically rigorous report was published in a leading peer reviewed Homeopathic journal, and is available for study (see reference following).
Mroninski C, Adriano E, Mattos G (2001) Meningococcinum: Its protective effect against meningococcal disease. Homoeopathic Links Winter Vol 14(4); pp. 230-4.