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Re: Echinococcus hydatidosis 7100/yr
 
jessesmom1987 Views: 31,834
Published: 16 y
 
This is a reply to # 1,448,922

Re: Echinococcus hydatidosis 7100/yr


What's hard to imagine, is that within those water balloon looking cysts, there are numbers of scoleces, so you can imagine what happens when the cyst bursts.

Newport..will Rife hit the Hydatid cyst, and what happens if it does..does it kill the stuff that is inside of it??

I wouldn't imagine that any herbal treatment would be able to get it cleaned up...would the proteolytic enzymes do anything to keep it from growing? :(

Not only am I liking dogs (and cats) less and less all the time..I've started to become the opposite of any kind of animal lover :(

My husband told me once that he'd read where farm type kids grow up with better immunites because of what they've been exposed to...maybe what they are exposed to, not just parasites, but the mold in the hay/grain, bacterias & weird spirochetes from livestock/animals...is why people used to DIE so young in those olden days too. It was common for most families to raise their own food. My father and mother-in-law both talk about how the meat used to be hung outside on the shady side of the house, and they would just cut slices off of it as they needed it. I know my grandmother grew up with no electricity, no refrigeration on a homestead way out in the boonies. Actually, so did my grandfather..they were on neighboring homesteads. My family for generations back have worked with livestock and animals.

I think the show I was watching before the "Monstor's within us show" was the one that did the surgery for the Hydatid cyst. Something like "Eaten alive". It's an older show (2002) that has been on before, but it was interesting. It showed a brain with cysticercosis, and a lady that had had to have brain surgery for it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cysticercosis


The actual parasite that causes the hydatid cyst is not very big, but there can be alot of them.

http://www.medcyclopaedia.com/library/radiology/chapter27/27_4.aspx?p=1


>>>The parasite is a tiny tape worm only 3-6 mm in length, but it may occur in hundreds or thousands, particularly in the small intestine of dogs. Man becomes infected by close contact with dogs or by ingesting food, water or soil which has been contaminated by faeces. Children and agricultural workers are the most likely to be infected, but uncooked food may also transmit the parasite.

When the ova have been ingested by the intermediate host, the walls of the ova are destroyed and the larvae escape, to migrate through the mesenteric venules and lymphatics. The majority are filtered out by the liver, but some will pass through to the right side of the heart and then to the lungs. As a result, the liver and lungs are the organs most commonly infected, but larvae also may lodge anywhere in the body, including soft tissues and bone. When the larva is lodged in any tissue, it develops within seven days into a tiny cyst, (or, if E. multilocularis, multiple cysts) which steadily grows over a period of years at an average rate of about 1-3 cm annually. Cysts grow more quickly in lungs than in the liver, even more slowly in bones. The cysts may remain clinically silent for many years, depending very much on the anatomical site. Each hydatid cyst has two walls (the ecto-cyst and the germinal membrane, the endo-cyst). A third wall, the pericyst is formed as the cyst grows, causes an inflammatory re action and compresses the surrounding host tissue. Within the cyst are hydatid fluid and brood capsules (scolices), which can be seen radiographically and with ultrasound as "sand" at the bottom of the cyst.>>>

 

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