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Years ago, my autopsy research into the "acid-fast bacteria" discovered in systemic scleroderma convinced me that these microbes are implicated in the muscle, cardiac and kidney abnormalities that accompany the hardening and thickening of the skin in fatal cases. Figure | shows tiny, round, granular, coccoid-appearing bacteria in the deep portion of the skin in scleroderma. (For more details, Google "Alan Cantwell + scleroderma”.) Years ago, my autopsy research into the "acid-fast complex "dense bodies" and developed into "ordinary bacteria" discovered in systemic scleroderma convinced bacteria". The authors concluded: "These organisms me that these microbes are implicated in the muscle, may represent an adaptation of certain bacteria to life in cardiac and kidney abnormalities that accompany the _ the blood." (Their full report, which contains full-screen hardening and thickening of the skin in fatal cases. pictures of the bacteria grown from human blood, is Figure | shows tiny, round, granular, coccoid-appearing —_ online at http://tinyurl.com/ksrvqd) bacteria in the deep portion of the skin in scleroderma. In the 1990s, microbiologists Phyllis E. Pease and (For more details, Google "Alan Cantwell + scleroderma".) _ Janice Tallak termed these blood bacteria as "the human bacterial endoparasite". Finnish researcher Kajander Bacteria and the blood and colleagues described them as "novel bacteria-like Recent research, based on molecular biology, particles" which are staphylococcus-like. These tiny indicates that 90 per cent of the bacterial forms, like viruses, are cells of the human body are able to pass through bacterial bacteria cells! Despite this filters and are exceedingly amazing new discovery, mos Despite this amazing new difficult to culture. The Finnish physicians do not believe tha discovery, most physicians team called them bacteria are involved in any way "nanobacteria" and proposed a with the major diseases (hear do not believe that bacteria tentative name for the novel disease, stroke, cancer) that kil 1 i agent: Nanobacterium most of us. In addition, mos are involved Jel way sanguineum physicians still believe tha with the major diseases... In 2002, McLaughlin and healthy blood is sterile; that is, that kill most of us colleagues presented a study entitled "Are there naturally During the 1970s, Guido occurring pleomorphic bacteria Tedeschi and his colleagues a in the blood of healthy the University of Camerino in Italy showed that human humans?" The researchers were surprised to discover blood is universally infected with staphylococcus-like bacteria in the blood, "since it is generally free of bacteria. and streptococcus-like bacteria. acknowledged that the blood stream in healthy humans In 1977, Domingue and Schlegel confirmed "the _ is a sterile environment, except when there is a breach existence of a novel bacteriologic system" in the blood. __ in the integrity of the tissue membranes". (More details They cultured staphylococcus-like bacteria and — on blood bacteria can be found in my article "All Human filamentous cocco-bacillary forms from 71 per cent of Blood is Infected with Bacteria", posted on the Internet.) the blood specimens of ill patients and from seven per In addition, these blood bacteria studies confirm the cent of supposedly healthy people. These pleomorphic findings of Giinther Enderlein (1872-1968), Wilhelm (varying in size and shape) bacteria grew out of round Reich (1897-1957), Royal Raymond Rife (1888-1971), Virginia Livingston (1906-1990), Gaston Naessens (1924-) and others, whose research can be easily Googled. Bacteria and hypertension Because cryptic bacterial infection of the blood is not accepted by most scientists, there have been no studies correlating infection with hypertension. However, a recently published report (16 May 2009) suggests that high blood pressure could be caused by infection with a common virus, known as cytomegalovirus (CMV), affecting between 60 and 99 per cent of adults worldwide (see http://tinyurl.com/ oekqgc). This new study brought Figure I: Tiny, round, granular, coccoid-appearing bacteria in the deep portion of — together a team of researchers from the skin in scleroderma a variety of disciplines—infectious Despite this amazing new discovery, most physicians do not believe that bacteria are involved in any way with the major diseases... that kill most of us. 32 ¢ NEXUS www.nexusmagazine.com AUGUST — SEPTEMBER 2009