Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Was Pasteur wrong ? Salerian AJ

  Letters From Modern Psychiatry
                                               Alen J Salerian MD     www.modern psychiatry.gr

                         Was Pasteur Wrong ?
                              

   Letters From Modern Psychiatry
August 1.2017 issue 20
                                               Alen J Salerian MD     www.modern psychiatry.gr
      Should we reconsider the accuracy of the classic   germ theory advanced by Louis Pasteur  and other  giants of medicine ?
    Pasteur has become synonymous with our current paradigm of” all human infectious disorders are caused by foreign microorganisms invading human body”. Although the germ theory has been the bedrock of medicine there are still some unanswered questions about whether foreign microorganisms are the exclusive source of all infectious disorders.
   The possibility that “human cells may transform to bacteria “ has been prompted by 3 observations .
A:  No scientific evidence  suggests that only microorganisms generate  microorganisms .
B:   Many infections  of diverse origin ,such as tinea pedis , tinea versicolor,   urinary tract infections , opportunistic infections and  stomach ulcers  attributed to h. pylori may develop without any evidence of  host to host  transmission.
C: Host to host transmission does not rule out transformation. Thus , proving transmission  cannot be  the defining evidence of new bacterial or fungal growth.
  If indeed infections are not imported , where do they come from ?
 Is it possible for human cells to transform to bacteria?
 The answer  demands  two  specific questions  and their answers.
A: Can human cells transform to other living cells ?
B: Do human cells have the properties to generate bacteria?
  1.  Science suggests unicellular organisms may transform to other living cells (human cells may become cancer cells and pneumococcus may transform to streptococcus).
 2. Science suggests human cells contain the necessary ingredients –water, carbon, oxygen and nitrogen-to generate or transform to bacteria. This is how the original bacteria  were created  from water carbon oxygen and nitrogen on earth 3.5 billion years ago.
    So far we have proven that human cells are capable  to transform to other living cells  and they  contain  the properties to generate bacteria.
 Are there any observations to support  “human cells produce  or transform to  bacteria” ?
  Opportunistic infections in compromised immune - terminally ill , people with HIV  disease,  people receiving  cancer treatment -may develop bacterial or fungal infections .
    Various other infections (tinea pedis , tinea versicolor)may develop  in hosts with functional   immune systems  and with  clinical observations  suggesting  local growth without any host to host   transmission. This finding suggests compromised Immunity by itself cannot explain the emergence of some infections.
   Also, stomach ulcers further support the observation that stomach cells do transform to h.pylori during cellular degeneration.  Stomach  due  to its  acidic environment  is sterile.  This makes importing  h pylori  from environment  less likely  .In essence it is  as likely that h pylori maybe transformed from stomach cells during cellular degeneration despite the observation that healthy hosts may develop stomach ulcers by digestion of H. pylori infected fluids collected from ulcered stomachs.
 In summary due to their diverse origins and mechanisms of action , systemic opportunistic infections , local not imported fungal infections and h.pylori  observed in stomach ulcers   are consistent with the  thesis that human cells do transform to bacteria”:
The Implications of” human cells produce bacteria”:
·            The germ theory is flawed; for not all infections are caused by foreign bacteria invading human body.
·            Prevention and treatment of infections must also address the transformation of bacteria from human cells


            


                                 






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