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Post by pocoloco on Dec 20, 2012 22:24:18 GMT -5
Researchers at Morgellons Research Group (LR&LM) were recently directed to Applied Science Lab (ASL) in Carmichael, California by a State Department of Health Entomologist who has been helping us with examination of Lyme/Morgellons produced artifacts. Scientists at ASL have developed a compound that should be of great interest to all of us. Go to: WWW.VAXINATEWITH88.COMShould you contact Applied Science Lab, please mention Morgellons Research Lab. Thier e-mail is: appliedsciencelabs@att.net; phone number is (619)825-2121
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Post by skyship on Dec 22, 2012 5:15:03 GMT -5
Descriptions and name:An adult bed bug (_Cimex lectularius_)Figure 1 - an adult bed bug (Cimex lectularius). Photograph by Gary Alpert of Environmental Health and Safety, Harvard University. "Sleep tight, don't let the bed bugs bite." This old saying has gained renewed relevance in the western world in recent years. Reports have been made since the mid-1990s, both in the medical press and national newspapers, of the reemergence of infestations of the Common bed bug (Cimex lectularius) in many developed countries (Paul and Bates, 2000; Boase, 2001; Vandam, 2003; Hall and Yapp, 2004; Cleary and Buchanan, 2004). Previously, this species has been so rare in the U.K., that individual sightings have been considered worthy of publication (George, 1988). However, since 1995, infestations have almost doubled annually in the U.K. (Boase, 2004). This trend has also been seen in other parts of Europe, the United States and Australia. Unfortunately I have recently had first-hand experience of these unpleasant insects in my home in the United States. Bed bug species C. lectularius is distributed worldwide and is the most frequently encountered of the Cimicidae family that are known to feed on humans. In tropical regions, including Florida, the Tropical bed bug (C. hemipterus) is also very common. C. hemipterus is very similar in appearance, but somewhat larger than C. lectularius. The ranges of these two species overlaps and they have been reported to interbreed, albeit unsuccessfully (Newberry, 1988). Leptocimex boueti is associated with both humans and bats in the tropics of West Africa. In addition, other species may sometimes feed on humans or household pets in the absence of their normal hosts. For example, the Batbugs native to the British Isles (C. pipistrelli and C. dissimilis) can feed on human blood if, for instance, a bat control programme has eliminated their normal hosts (Whyte et al., 2001). Similarly the Pigeon bug (C. columbarius) may occasionally enter homes and annoy the occupants (Southwood and Leston, 1959). The Martin bug (Oeciacus hirundinis), while not strictly a bed bug, is a closely related genus primarily affecting birds and has been reported to humans (Southwood and Leston, 1959). In North America, opportunistic feeders on humans include the Batbugs (C. pilosellus and C. adjunctus), the Chimney Swift Bug (Cimexopsis nyctalis) and Haematosiphon inodora, which primarily infests poultry (Jacobs, 2004). Bed bug description and biology Adults of C. lectularius are 5-7 mm in length, oval in shape, flat, wingless and reddish-brown in colour (Figure 1). They are usually found in bedrooms as they generally feed at night when the host is asleep. During the day the bugs hide, often in crowds, behind loose wallpaper, in mattress seams, between floorboards, in cracks in walls, behind pictures and in furniture and electrical fittings. Feeding takes about 5-10 minutes and up to seven times their body weight in blood can be ingested in one feed (Figure 2). Females lay about 200-500 eggs (Figure 3), usually at the rate of three or four a day, in cracks and crevices in the floor or bed. Newly hatched bugs begin feeding immediately (Figure 4). www.amentsoc.org/publications/bulletin/articles/re-emergence-of-bed-bugs.html================= It looks like a miniature version of a reduviid bug. How did it get its name?Sometimes referred to as "red coats," "chinches," or "mahogany flats" (USDA 1976), bed bugs, Cimex lectularius Linnaeus, are blood feeding parasites of humans, chickens, bats and occasionally domesticated animals (Usinger 1966). Bed bugs are suspected carriers of leprosy, oriental sore, Q-fever, and brucellosis (Krueger 2000) but have never been implicated in the spread of disease to humans (Dolling 1991). After the development and use of modern insecticides, such as DDT, bed bug infestations have virtually disappeared. However, since 1995, pest management professionals have noticed an increase in bed bug related complaints (Krueger 2000). entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/urban/bed_bug.htm=========== These are hemipteras........... true bugs........ common name: bed bug scientific name: Cimex lectularius Linnaeus (Insecta: Hemiptera: Cimicidae) entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/urban/bed_bug.htm=========================== Were these altered? And do they still carry leprosy, Q fever and Brucellosis? It does look like bed bugs carry Rickettsia, this was one of the first findings from the Wymore Camp. I believe it was Rickettsia prowlewski?
"In addition to the relationships between pathogenic rickettsial species and hematophagous arthropods directly affecting human health, non-pathogenic rickettsial endosymbionts have been identified in annelids, amoebae, plants, and a variety of insects. Within the invertebrate host, many obligate endosymbionts such as Rickettsia in booklice, aphids, and bedbugs ",,, , Rhizobium in leeches [8], and Buchnera in aphids reside in a specialized organ called a mycetome ......www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0016396?imageURI=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0016396.t001=================== The article below would tell us if the rickettsia is involved with the BED BUG. This is in aphids, book lice, cat flea and bed bug and most likely any tic or mosquito.======= www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4208302This goes back to 1972.Chang KP, Musgrave AJ (1973) Morphology, histochemistry, and ultrastructure of mycetome and its rickettsial symbiotes in Cimex lectularius
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Post by skyship on Dec 22, 2012 5:28:47 GMT -5
I think the Rickettsia symbiote is the bioilluminating element in the bedbug.? possibly? One cannot find the full article, but, there are hints that this was part of some agent creation within these bugs. It is this we need to find: Effects of elevated temperature on the mycetome and symbiotes of the bed bug Cimex lectularius (Heteroptera).So, I believe this is misnamed. they are calling this Cimex a Heteroptera not a hemiptera. What is the mycetome? Now, notice that it is called a "haematophagous bug,". So this bug cannot be all three. This is def misnamed. and there is some link to the "leaf hopper" which gets us closer to the Reduviid bug, which also is a "true bug".
============ AbstractThe haematophagous bug, Cimex lectularius L., harbored in mycetomes two kinds of rickettsia-like microorganisms: morphologically, one was a small rod, the other pleomorphic, often globular. Both kinds of symbiotes had Gram-negative profiles and nuclear areas. 'Rod-shaped' symbiotes were enveloped by amorphous materials but lay freely in the mycetomes. The 'pleomorphic' symbiotes were enclosed by vacuolar membranes. Both symbiotes were lysed in cytolysomes and became masses of membranes, suggesting that this is a method of maintaining a population balance between host and symbiote.www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/abs/10.1139/m73-171#.UNWKl6z2G2ZThe membrane mass could be the biofilm?============================================= We certainly do have a lead here. And thanks again to those helping us get there. The bacteria is what would form the biofilm, and it is all symbiosis. There are 12 who cited this paper.
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Post by skyship on Dec 22, 2012 5:30:27 GMT -5
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Post by skyship on Dec 22, 2012 12:50:16 GMT -5
Krits,
This could be the yeast connection? This is an ancient symbiote.Candidatus Sulcia Muelleri" Genome: It is a circular chromosome. ========= Genome informationT number T00630 Org code smg Aliases SULMW, 444179 Full name Candidatus Sulcia muelleri GWSS Definition Candidatus Sulcia muelleri GWSS Annotation manual Taxonomy TAX: 444179 Lineage Bacteria; Bacteroidetes; Flavobacteriia; Flavobacteriales; Candidatus Sulcia Data source RefSeq (Project:58943) Original DB U Arizona Chromosome Circular Sequence RS: NC_010118 Length 245530 Statistics Number of nucleotides: 245530 Number of protein genes: 227 Number of RNA genes: 36 Reference PMID: 18048332 Authors McCutcheon JP, Moran NA. Title Parallel genomic evolution and metabolic interdependence in an ancient symbiosis. Journal Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104:19392-7 (2007) www.genome.jp/kegg-bin/show_organism?org=smg============== Did Mueller name this?Symbiosis and Insect Diversification: an Ancient Symbiont of Sap-Feeding Insects from the Bacterial Phylum Bacteroidetes
" Some of these bacteria have been shown to descend from ancient infections. Here we show that the large group of related insects including cicadas, leafhoppers, treehoppers, spittlebugs, and planthoppers host a distinct clade of bacterial symbionts. This newly described symbiont lineage belongs to the phylum Bacteroidetes. Analyses of 16S rRNA genes indicate that the symbiont phylogeny is completely congruent with the phylogeny of insect hosts as currently known. These results support the ancient acquisition of a symbiont by a shared ancestor of these insects, dating the original infection to at least 260 million years ago. As visualized in a species of spittlebug (Cercopoidea) and in a species of sharpshooter (Cicadellinae), the symbionts have extraordinarily large cells with an elongate shape, often more than 30 μm in length; in situ hybridizations verify that these correspond to the phylum Bacteroidetes. “Candidatus Sulcia muelleri” is proposed as the name of the new symbiont."........ Related articles: Cited: Two ancient bacterial endosymbionts have coevolved with the planthoppers (Insecta: Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea) [BMC Evolutionary Biology. ] Symbiotic Associations in the Phenotypically-Diverse Brown Alga Saccharina japonica [PLoS ONE. ] Genome Shrinkage and Loss of Nutrient-Providing Potential in the Obligate Symbiont of the Primitive Termite Mastotermes darwiniensis [Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 201...] Lessons from Studying Insect Symbioses [Cell host & microbe. 2011] Bacterial symbionts in insects or the story of communities affecting communities [Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Soc...]www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1317441/========== Elongated cells: Image:Comparison of the a-symbiont as depicted by Müller (33) and FISH with symbionts from Auchenorrhyncha bacteriomes. (A) Reproduction of drawing (33) of a-symbionts dissected from the bacteriome of Philaenus spumarius (Cercopoidea). (B and C) FISH of the Bacteroidetes symbiont (“Candidatus Sulcia muelleri” [Sm]) dissected from the bacteriomes of Clastoptera arizonana (Cercopoidea) intermixed with round Buchnera aphidicola (Ba) cells from a pea aphid as controls. (B) FISH results from a Bacteroidetes diagnostic rRNA probe with 6-carboxytetramethylrhodamine (red); (C) FISH results with a Gammaproteobacteria-diagnostic rRNA probe with Alexa488 (green). (D) Superimposed FISH images of bacteriome contents of the sharpshooter Homalodisca lacerta, showing “Candidatus Sulcia muelleri” (Sm) (red) and “Candidatus Baumannia cicadellinicola” (Bc) (green). www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1317441/figure/f3/
They almost look like protozoans, like a short worm, they make circles, and those make up the lesions, I bet!
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Post by skyship on Dec 22, 2012 13:18:39 GMT -5
Bedbugs as sap feeders. If they are misnamed, this is why.BED BUGS AND OTHER BUGS"Entomologists and lexicologists (those who write dictionaries) are at odds when it comes to the word "bug." Those who professionally deal with Cimex lertulaviur and its "fellow hug folks" put space between the "bed and the bug, the "bat" and the bug, and the "kissing" and the bug, while those who publish dictionaries do not. Beside the rather feeble arguments that entomologists use to justify their traditional way of using "bug words," a kind of professional logic exists in wanting to separate the bug from the bed or the pest from its habitat. Entomologists insist that the only "true" bugs are "Hcmiptera" and when we see "bug" as a sepa- rate word, we are dealing with this insect order. Thus, we know that the ladybug isn't a hug, nor is the ladybird a bird, nor are all of them ladies, hut they are something else, lady and laddie beetles. Entomologists, however, are not in complete agreement as to their other notions about the order Hemiptera. Most older American entomology textbooks separate true bugs and homapterans into two separate orders, and use the time-honored names Hemiptera and Homoptera. Unfortunately for those of us who arc used ro rhis way of classifying these groups, rhis usage never was universally accepted by the experts. From time to time, the true bugs have been lumped together with the "not so true bugs," the Homoptera. The current reference of most specialists dealing with "bugology" is that Heteroptera is the proper taxonomic name for the true bugs, and that they are a "suborder." With the homopterans, they constitute a single order, Hemiptera. When Linnaeus fathered the current system of classification, he included aphids, scale insects, and even thrips in his order Hemiptera; later one of his students included fleas. Since then, much controversy has raged as to the names of the groups; Hemiptera has generally been used by the Europeans as inclusive of true bugs and Entomologists and lexicologists (those who write dictionaries) are at odds when it comes to the word "bug." BED BUGS, BAT BUGS, AND BIRD BUGS Family Cimicidae Members of the Cimicidae are small, oval, dorsoventrally flattened insects with very short hemelytra (shortened forewings). These parasites of mammals and birds are also characterized by a rostrum (combined mouthparts) that lies in a ventral groove and three-jointed tarsi. They are mahogany brown in color, .....are without functional wings. Table 9-1 (page 396) lists the species of Cimicidae found in the United States. Of the 92 described species of bed hugs and their relatives in the world (Henry and Froeschner 1988; Coetzee and Segerman 1992), 16 species have been reported from the continental United States and Canada (Tablc 9-1). www.scent-tek.com/bed_bugs/continued_learning/penn_paper.pdfFroeschoer 1988). Table 9-1. Bed bugs and other cimicids found in the United States Species, Hosts and Where these are found are listed in this Table. (this is an older paper, and some letters do not scan correctly)"It is essential to take into account what hosts, other than humans, that might be involved, and on the location of an infestation within a structure when an infestation of cimicids is discovered. Simply, could bats, chimney swifts, swallows, or poultry be the primary hosts, and that for some reason, bugs from one of these hosts have strayed and humans have become an alternative host? If hosts other than humans may be involved, then a somewhat different approach may he required than For control of Cimn.lecruLurir(bed bug) or C. hemipterur (tropical bed bug), found in Florida, Puerto Rico, and orher warmer climates. " We forget that these infect plants, trees, and are in the wild.
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Post by skyship on Dec 22, 2012 13:45:05 GMT -5
Vig. 9-3. The first publication on the control of bed bugs was written by John Southall, a pest cantrol operator (exterminator) in London in 1730. A facsimile of the title page from the earliest book on the bed bug appears above. (Rare Books and Manuscript Li- brary, Pem State University) Conenose bugs are PINE BUGS.........talked of later in this paper. so, this hidden and disputed knowledge was put under a rug, just like the bug, in the walls, ceilings, all over America, but such denial is sickening. " Of the 12 species reported from mainland United States (Table 9-2, page 407), eight are reported from Arizona, five from Texas, and four from California (Henry and Froeschner 1988). Only two species, Triatoma lectimfaria (reported from 16 states), and T sanguisuga (reported from 20 states) appear to be widely distributed across the United States."............ www.scent-tek.com/bed_bugs/continued_learning/penn_paper.pdfSo, we may have found our variations of bugs. It is what they leave behind, the rickettsia and the wohlbachia, and the fungal species involved with their symbiosis, which could be the "brown algae" in rain? Or the Whirlwind? They are different depending on where you live.
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Post by skyship on Dec 26, 2012 14:05:58 GMT -5
Of the 12 species reported from mainland United States ....., eight are reported from Arizona, five from Texas, and four from California ...... Only two species, Triatoma lectimfaria (reported from 16 states), and T sanguisuga (reported from 20 states) appear to be widely distributed across the United States."............ ====== Triatoma lectimfaria (reported from 16 states) This triatoma lectimfaria; is a reduviid bug, these carry leishimaniasis, Chagas Disease. www.ask.com/pictures?qsrc=167&o=100000031&l=dis&q=Triatoma%20lectimfaria&gct=serp&locale=en_US============== T sanguisuga (reported from 20 states) Administrative Order Arizona: azdhs.gov/phs/oids/vector/chagas/files/chagadmord.pdf=================== AMA is denying that Chagas disease and Leishmaniasis is all over US now. Morgellons is very similar to Chagas Disease, as in Lymes, and triatomas have been genetically altered, so you cannot tell if what they are calling a bedbug is not he same thing. They live in house walls, in trees are all around us. now in the states, they were not here before. I have the spotted rimmed one in a jar. AMA is denying they are the reduviid bugs, leafhoppers etc. What Morgellons is, is close to a cross between chagas, leishmaniasis types, and oncho the worm, but, it is not the worm, it is the coating of the worm with the kinesia from the reduviid bug. This wohlbachia would be there, the rickettsia and kinesian gene from the Triatomas. Wohlbachia is in the oncho worm. Seems to have been some kind of agent used for killing the bugs, but the bugs themselves were altered. As if they would be free from dispensing Chagas Disease, but in a different form, since there are about 8 laters which corresponds with the 8 stages of Chagas, and again, not like the original Chagas, but with altered genetics. So, this would have a different form, but the leishmaniasis protozoan would still be there. All part of the stages. So, the AMA will not recognize or will not inform the public that a form of Chagas/Oncho is all over America and included in that would be the spirochete forms with the "Candidatus Sulcia muelleri”" So, the kinesia from the Chagas bug, the worm coat protein, the geoengineered reuduviid, with the symbiosis of wohlbachia/rickettsia and Candidatus Sulcia muelleri”? This was not any one thing, it was combined to make an agent of sorts. IMO. the new Chagas/Oncho disease and symbionts. S
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Post by skyship on Dec 27, 2012 0:25:33 GMT -5
Researchers at Morgellons Research Group (LR&LM) were recently directed to Applied Science Lab (ASL) in Carmichael, California by a State Department of Health Entomologist who has been helping us with examination of Lyme/Morgellons produced artifacts. Scientists at ASL have developed a compound that should be of great interest to all of us. Go to: WWW.VAXINATEWITH88.COMShould you contact Applied Science Lab, please mention Morgellons Research Lab. Thier e-mail is: appliedsciencelabs@att.net; phone number is (619)825-2121 Please Keep in mind.
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Post by pocoloco on Dec 30, 2012 23:13:28 GMT -5
Re reply #7: Who is the they who says Bed Bugs are not infectious?
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Post by pocoloco on Dec 30, 2012 23:13:59 GMT -5
I believe the Mississippi Department of Health has identified over twenty pathogens vectored by Bed Bugs.
Please limit the discussion here to the vaxinate88 product.
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Post by lilsissy on Dec 31, 2012 0:35:27 GMT -5
Interesting indeed, are we sure here...this is good? Porous Carriers stores.appliedscienceusa.com/-strse-template/about/Page.bokPorous Carriers Any one that has taken a “time release” capsule has experienced what the pharmaceutical industry calls a porous carrier. In order to have a residual and kill the emergent nymph populations which compose more than 50% of any infestation, the protein is encapsulated in a porous carrier so that the product provides a binary kill. It is applied as liquid mist spray. The spray delivers the active ingredient in its liquid form to provide an immediate kill and in an encapsulation in the form of porous carriers that remain behind to provide the necessary residual. The carriers are hollow inert particles, approximately 10 microns across that are filled with the active ingredient, “GlycineTM”. When the product is first applied, the liquid mist comes into contact with the insect’s torso and emulsification begins immediately. The barrel like particles accompanying the mist has jagged exterior edges which cause them to become enmeshed in textiles and fabrics. When the insect crawls and disturbs the particles, the protein spills onto its torsos and emulsification begins which causes them to die.
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Post by lilsissy on Dec 31, 2012 2:39:00 GMT -5
from MRG page morgellonsresearchgroup.com/morgellons-syndrome-a-programmed-matrix-system/2. Filaments (CB001) cyanobacteria or PNAs ( glycine). Short Telechelic Polymers connect the network, carries the protocells or quantum dots for signals. (a). colored filaments, (protofibrils developed from monomers, amphiphiles and bolamphiphiles) can be sensors and trackers). Nanowires, Nanotubes and Polymers can form smaller filaments.
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Post by lilsissy on Dec 31, 2012 3:31:35 GMT -5
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Post by lilsissy on Dec 31, 2012 3:53:45 GMT -5
I had a circular bruise, bullseye type, after a spider bite. This bullseye brusing is indicative of rickettsia, where as a bullseye rash is usually formed in the area around a lyme infected insect bite. rickettsia has evolved rapidly www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16934288
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Post by aqt on Dec 31, 2012 10:57:49 GMT -5
pocoloco,
I can see why this thread has taken off in the direction of the bedbugs as the vaxinate88 product is what prevents them.
I see the folks here are expanding into bedbug information as it may indeed be a carrier of what is ailing us....
I have searched my home far and wide and see no evidence of them.....
aqt
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Post by pocoloco on Jan 5, 2013 21:34:36 GMT -5
Understandable Aqt; thanks. More than bedbugs are suceptable to this agent. A scientist I spoke with recently told of dipping his wifes two flea ridden dogs in this product with the result being flea free dogs for four months and counting.
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Post by skyship on Jan 5, 2013 23:56:40 GMT -5
This could be a product in the early signs of Morgellons that would get it out of the environment, for that has to be cleaned in some manner to get the carriers out of the house, along with your fine air filter, pocoloco?
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