H1N1 Kills Another Cat

Posted by admin | Industry News | Friday 11 December 2009 3:26 pm

A first cat died from H1N1 Swine Flu back in November.  It appears now, as Fox News reports, that a second feline fatality has occurred.  Read more below, and don’t forget that you can stop H1N1 in its tracks with Sklar Disinfectants.

Original Source: Fox News

A second cat has died of swine flu in Oregon, leading veterinarians to investigate why the disease has become a threat to a household pet.

Emilio DeBess, the state public health veterinarian, said the cat died about two weeks ago on the Oregon coast after catching the H1N1 virus from its owner.

Another cat died from the virus early in November in the town of Lebanon after a child in the household got sick with swine flu.

DeBess is working with veterinary researchers at Oregon State University to find clues about why cats might be susceptible to the virus.

Various diseases in animals have long been a threat to humans, such as rabies, or the West Nile virus. But with swine flu, the disease is going the other way, from humans to an animal — which is rare.

Arsenic exposure increases swine flu severity

Posted by Dr. Martha Grout | Industry News | Saturday 30 May 2009 4:06 pm

Scientists at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) and Dartmouth Medical School have found that the ability to mount an immune response to influenza A (H1N1) infection is significantly compromised by a low level of arsenic exposure that commonly occurs through drinking contaminated well water. Study findings are reported in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.br /br /”When a normal person or mouse is infected with the flu, they immediately develop an immune response,” says Joshua Hamilton, the MBL’s Chief Academic and Scientific Officer and a senior scientist in the MBL’s Bay Paul Center. However, in mice that had ingested 100 ppb (parts per billion) arsenic in their drinking water for five weeks, the immune response to H1N1 infection was initially feeble, and when a response finally did kick in days later, it was too late. “There was a massive infiltration of immune cells to the lungs and a massive inflammatory response, which led to bleeding and damage in the lung,” Hamilton says.br /br /The EPA considers 10 ppb arsenic in drinking water safe, yet concentrations of 100 ppb and higher are commonly found in well water in regions where arsenic is geologically abundant, including Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, Florida, and large parts of the Upper Midwest, the Southwest, and the Rocky Mountains.br /br /”One thing that did strike us, when we heard about the recent H1N1 outbreak, is Mexico has large areas of very high arsenic in their well water, including the areas where the flu first cropped up. We don’t know that the Mexicans who got the flu were drinking high levels of arsenic, but it’s an intriguing notion that this may have contributed,” Hamilton says.br /br /Arsenic exposure not only disrupts the innate immune system, as the present study shows, it also disrupts the endocrine (hormonal) system in an unusually broad way, which Hamilton’s laboratory discovered and first reported in 1998.br /br /strongDr. Grout’s Comment:/strongbr /br /The good news is that arsenic does not accumulate in the body over a lifetime, as do other a href=”http://www.arizonaadvancedmedicine.com/therapies/heavy_metal_detox.html”toxic metals/a such as lead, cadmium, and mercury. Organic arsenic usually exits the body through urine in a few months, but when you have constant daily exposure to it through drinking water or by eating commercially-raised chickens who were fed a href=”http://www.arizonaadvancedmedicine.com/articles/kid_food.html#arsenic”arsenic-laced feed/a, then you have a constant supply of arsenic on board that can do harm. Arsenic is a carcinogenic. br /br /Although the use of arsenic has been recently banned by various countries in various ways, there is a lot of it out there. The vast majority of pressure-treated wood was treated with an arsenic compound because the toxicity of arsenic to insects, bacteria and fungi makes it a great preservative. The arsenic leaches out however when it leaches out of the wood into the surrounding soil (from playground equipment, for instance). Arsenic is also released when treated wood is burned. br /br /A good description of arsenic toxicity can be read at the following website, from the University of Arizona. a href=”http://ag.arizona.edu/pubs/water/az1112.pdf”http://ag.arizona.edu/pubs/water/az1112.pdf/adiv class=”blogger-post-footer”img width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4769404502414351890-5246954709502671740?l=arizonaadvancedmedicine.blogspot.com’ alt=” //div

Will a worse version of swine flu come next winter?

Posted by Dr. Martha Grout | Industry News | Tuesday 19 May 2009 3:55 pm

The Centers For disease Control have lost the ability to track swine flu, according to Daniel Jernigan, MD, PhD, and deputy director of the CDC’s influenza division. Jernigan noted that the 4,714 confirmed or probable cases of swine flu reported to CDC represent a gross underestimate. When asked how many actual cases there were, Jernigan noted that 7% to 10% of the U.S. population — up to 30 million people — get the seasonal flu each year.br /br /”So with the amount of activity we are seeing now, it is a little hard to know what that means in terms of making an estimate now of the total number of people with flu out in the community,” Jernigan said. “But if I had to make an estimate, I would say … probably upwards of maybe 100,000.”br /br /The CDC’s most recent data, for the week ending May 9, shows that about half of Americans with confirmed flu had the H1N1 swine flu. If Jernigan’s off-the-cuff estimate is correct, more than 50,000 people in the U.S. have the new flu.br /br /At a time when flu season should be ending or over, the CDC’s flu season indicators are going up instead of down. As of May 9, 22 states had widespread or regional flu.br /br /Meanwhile, Maricopa County – home to Phoenix – reported that a woman in her late 40s died from complications of the H1N1 swine flu. She is the nation’s fourth H1N1 swine flu fatality. The woman had an underlying lung disease, according to the Maricopa County public health department.br /br /strongDr. Grout’s comment:/strongbr /br /Thankfully, swine flu has not turned out to be the pandemic that some feared. However, there is a valid question about what will happen this fall. The concern is that the H1N1 genetic code could mix with various seasonal flu strains, creating a lethal and contagious strain at a time vitamin D reserves are low. The 1918 pandemic struck during the winter months when people were most vulnerable with vitamin D deficiency. Influenza is an Italian word that may have originated in the mid-18th century as influenza di freddo, or “influence of the cold.” During winter, we are exposed to less sunlight and our bodies make less a href=”http://www.arizonaadvancedmedicine.com/articles/skin_cancer.html”Vitamin D/a which nourishes the immune system.br /br /Mankind was designed to bask in the rays of the sun. About 90 percent of the vitamin D in your body is made when your skin is exposed to sunlight. Only about 10 percent comes from food – butter, egg yolk, fish oil, and human milk.br /br /The preparation for swine flu is two-fold: build a strong immune system, and be able to destroy the pathogen if the immune system cannot do it on its own. The potential for a more robust version of swine flu this fall is one more reason to go free of a href=”http://www.arizonaadvancedmedicine.com/articles/sugar.html”sugar/a, white flour, and all those things we know weaken the a href=”http://www.arizonaadvancedmedicine.com/articles/immune_system_dysfunction.html”immune system/a. In our a href=”http://www.arizonaadvancedmedicine.com/newsletters/Apr2009.html”special advisory/a on swine flu last month, we described the various tools we have to kill the pathogen.div class=”blogger-post-footer”img width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4769404502414351890-7062585706585921165?l=arizonaadvancedmedicine.blogspot.com’ alt=” //div

Flu vaccines can carry big risks

Posted by Dr. Martha Grout | Industry News | Wednesday 13 May 2009 1:08 pm

The renowned Dr. Russell Blaylock issued a very on-point essay about the fears surrounding swine flu:br /br /“I was in the military during the first swine flu scare in 1976. At the time it became policy that all soldiers would be vaccinated for swine flu. As a medical officer I refused and almost faced a court martial, but the military didn’t want the bad publicity. Despite the assurance by all the experts in virology, including Dr. Sabin, the epidemic never materialized.br /br /“What did materialize were 500 cases of Gullian-Barre paralysis, including 25 deaths not due to the swine flu itself, but as a direct result of the vaccine. At the time President Gerald Ford, on advice from the CDC, called for vaccination of the entire population of the United States.br /br /“Today, the pharmaceutical companies are busy designing a vaccine for the swine flu in hopes that this administration will make the vaccine mandatory. And as before, a number of equally qualified experts are calling for calm, based on a number of carefully conducted studies. To no one’s surprise, they too are being ignored by the media and government planners.br /br /“According to science reports, this current strain of flu is H1N1. It can be forcibly inoculated into pigs, but it has been shown not to spread among the pig population. This means that the danger of a swine-based epidemic is small.br /br /“There are several strains of this flu virus however, including H1N1, H1N2, H3N1, H3N2 and H2N3. What the science has shown is that when the virus passes through the pig, it becomes less virulent—that is, it is less likely to cause serious disease in people. With each passage, it becomes even weaker.”br /br /strongDr. Grout’s Comment:/strongbr /br /Dr. Blaylock asks the timely question about where public health interests and financial concerns intersect. You can read his entire essay at a href=”http://socioecohistory.wordpress.com/2009/04/30/dr-russell-blaylock-on-1976-swine-flu-and-current-outbreak/”http://socioecohistory.wordpress.com/2009/04/30/dr-russell-blaylock-on-1976-swine-flu-and-current-outbreak//abr /br /We just issued a a href=”http://www.arizonaadvancedmedicine.com/newsletters/Apr2009.html”uSpecial Advisory on Swine Flu/u/a concerns. If you think you have flu symptoms, call us immediately. We’ll get you in right away for an intravenous dose of vitamin c and glutathione to help your body destroy the virus in your system. If you know you have flu, we can also clean the blood of viruses, fungi and more with UV light.div class=”blogger-post-footer”img width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/4769404502414351890-1129059497075204352?l=arizonaadvancedmedicine.blogspot.com’ alt=” //div

CyberXpress Wordpress Theme