Erich Grotewold See book keywords and concepts |
Washington: American Society for microbiology. Cone, K. C, Burr, F. A. and Burr, B., 1986, Molecular analysis of the maize anthocyanin regulatory locus
Cl, Proc Natl Acad Sci. USA 83: 9631-9635. Cone, K. C, Cocciolone, S. M., Burr, F. A. and Burr, B., 1993, Maize anthocyanin regulatory gene pi is a duplicate of cl that functions in the plant, Plant Cell 5: 1795-1805. Debeaujon, I., Peeters, A. J. M., Leon-Kloosterziel, K. M. and Koornneef, M. |
Peter h. Fraser and Harry Massey See book keywords and concepts |
Just as the birth of microbiology revolutionized medicine at the turn of the twentieth century, physics is revolutionizing medicine at the start of the twenty-first century. And NES is on the forefront of that revolution.
Nearly every week Peter uncovers some new, and often startling, information about the body-field through his matching experiments. We will continue to explore, test, and probe for answers and puzzle things out to add to our knowledge of how the body-field is the master control system of the physical body. |
| Under her tutelage, Peter learned a great deal about microbiology, especially about virology.
What surprised Peter about his test results was that many of the flower nectars contained the energetic imprint of various viruses, especially the Flaviviridae family of viruses, which are associated with encephalitis. Peter decided to test the CFS patients' saliva samples he had been sent for the energetic signature of that family of viruses: he found that almost all of them contained a tag to the Flaviviridae family of viruses in general or at least the energetic signature of them. |
| Peter's matching experiments have shown that certain kinds of body-field errors are energetically linked to the fields of disease-causing microbes. microbiology tecognizes categories of microorganisms, such as amoebas, fungi, yeasts, bacteria, and viruses, and in his testing Peter found that the Energetic Terrains matched to entire categories of microorganisms, rather than to specific, individual organisms. So the Terrain Infoceuticals cover these broad categories, and NES cannot be used diagnostically to identify a specific microbe. |
Andreas Moritz See book keywords and concepts |
A study by Scottish researchers, published in the journal Applied and Environmental microbiology, examined the prolonged use of exceptionally low-carbohydrate weight-loss diets on gut health. The scientists at Aberdeen's Rowett Research Institute found that prolonged adherence to the low-carb diet may adversely affect the gut bacterial populations that beneficially produce a substance called butyrate, which is important for keeping the gut healthy and preventing colorectal cancer. |
Peter h. Fraser and Harry Massey See book keywords and concepts |
THE NES THEORY OF ENERGETIC TERRAINS
According to conventional microbiology, organisms such as bacteria and viruses reproduce inside the body using our cells as mediums for thriving, and in some cases they even hijack our DNA to reproduce. What if this is not the whole picture? We know that at the quantum level, everything is mediated by energy and information exchanges. Why should microorganisms, the very earliest forms of life in most cases, be any different? The NES model says that they are not. |
Ron Garner See book keywords and concepts |
Their findings were presented to the First International Congress of microbiology in Paris in 1930, under the title The Influence of Cooking Food on the Blood Formula of Man.1
White blood cells, also called leukocytes or immune cells, are a component of blood and part of the body's immune system that help defend the body against infections or foreign materials. The conclusion of Dr. |
J. Douglas Bremner See book keywords and concepts |
The Gram staining method, named after the Danish bacteriologist who originally devised it in 1882, Hans Christian Gram, is one of the most important staining techniques in microbiology. It is almost always the first test used to identify bacteria. The primary color stain of Grams method is crystal violet. The microorganisms that retain the crystal violet-iodine complex appear purple-brown under microscopic examination (gram-positive). Those that are not stained by crystal violet are referred to as gram-negative and appear red. |
Lester A. Mitscher and Victoria Toews See book keywords and concepts |
Researchers from the Department of Oral microbiology at Osaka University in Japan say that fewer cavities develop because the polyphenols block production of glucosyltransferase by the bacteria.7
Another investigation conducted by the same research group examined the effects of tea polyphenols on plaque deposition in human subjects. At the start of this study, thirty-five volunteers aged eighteen to twenty-nine were given thorough dental examinations and the level of bacteria in their mouths was measured. |
| Hamilton-Miller of the Department of Medical microbiology at the Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine in London, noted that tea extracts have been shown to inhibit the growth and reproduction of many species of bacteria, and outright kill them, especially the kinds that cause diseases of the diarrhea type. Furthermore, the amount of tea extract required to achieve these antibacterial effects is generally equivalent to what a person consumes when drinking tea as a beverage. |
Bottom Line Health See book keywords and concepts |
| Clinical microbiology and Immunology at New York University Medical Center, questions the logic of petting zoos. "You have too many pathogens that can create problems in people. It's not worth it," he says. "The problem is that the public is not aware of the dynamic of infection. It's not just on your hands. So, even if you wash your hands, you are not assured that you [haven't] picked it up."
Dr. David L. |
| PhD, director, Clinical microbiology and Immunology, New York University Medical Center, New York City.
David L. Katz, MD, MPH, associate professor of public-health, and director, Prevention Research Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases, Atlanta.
Petting zoos may be fun for kids, but they are breeding grounds for bacteria that can cause severe gastrointestinal illness, new research contends. |
Erich Grotewold See book keywords and concepts |
Washington: American Society for microbiology. Feschotte, C, Jiang, N. and Wessler, S. R, 2002, Plant transposable elements: where genetics meets genomics, Nat Rev Geneti: 329-341. Foo, L. Y. and Karchesy, J. J., 1989, Chemical nature of phlopaphene. In R. W. Hemingwa and J. J.
Karchesy, eds, Chemistry and Significance of Condensed Tannins (pp. 109-118). New York and
London: Plenum Press.
Franken, P, Niesbach-Klosgen, U., Weydemann, U, Marechal-Drouard, L., Saedler, H. and Wienand, U. |
Peter h. Fraser and Harry Massey See book keywords and concepts |
In frontier microbiology, pleomorphic organisms are believed to be the most elementary forms of precelluar life and may play a major role in the development of many diseases, including cancer. For this reason, Energetic Integrator 8 links to all of the Energetic Terrains. This Integrator also regulates fields that bioenergetically help the body deal with endogenous body waste and exogenous environmental toxins. |
Tori Hudson, N.D. See book keywords and concepts |
Reinfection implies that the original problem was reversed and the patient was completely asymptomatic before recurrence; relapse indicates that the symptoms and microbiology have never returned to normal even though there may have been improvement or a period of improvement. Reinfection is a possibility due to exposure to the same factors that caused the first episode. In heterosexual women not using condoms, reinfection may be due to the alkalinizing effect of semen. This alkaline environment fosters overgrowth of BV. |
Donna Jackson Nakazawa See book keywords and concepts |
Allen Silverstone, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the State University of New York Upstate Medical University at Syracuse, has been demonstrating in the lab how endocrine disruptors disturb the regulation of the immune system, given the profound influence the endocrine system has over the workings of our immune cells. When our endocrine system's exquisite communication network goes on the blink, the immune system's network can go haywire as well. |
| Kathleen Gilbert, a forty-eight-year-old associate professor in the Department of microbiology and Immunology at the Arkansas Children's Hospital Research Institute in Little Rock and coauthor of much of today's groundbreaking work on TCE and autoimmunity, has devoted the last decade to helping scientists understand how chemicals like TCE precipitate an autoimmune reaction at the cellular level in the body. |
| A recent report from the American Society of microbiology highlights how widely this "new germ theory" applies to some thirty viral and bacterial microorganisms for which there exists strong evidence of an association to chronic disease. |
Bill Sardi See book keywords and concepts |
J Medical Screening 9: 38-39, 2002; Acta Pathology microbiology Immunology Scandinavia 93: 13-16, 1985; Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis Vascular Biology 20: 1926-31, 2000; Atherosclerosis 34: 469-74, 1979] Of interest is a study where researchers noted that the rapid disappearance of calcifications in breast mammograms was indicative of the onset of breast malignancies. [British J Radiology 72: 3-8, 1999] This spontaneous resolution of calcifications in breast tissue could indicate a rise or resumption in estrogen production and thus a signal for tumors to grow. |
| Journal Applied microbiology 98: 1303-15, 2005] Several studies have shown that consumption of bifidobacteria reduces colon cancer risk in carcinogen-treated animals, suggesting that consumption of certain bacteria has a beneficial effect on the balance of colon bacteria. Probiotics have even been shown to reduce the recurrence of bladder cancer. [European Urology 47: 288-96, 2005]
There are many misconceptions regarding probiotics, the most prevalent being that yogurt delivers beneficial bacteria. |
| In a study of probiotic supplements, the labeled strain of bacteria could not be found in 9 of 11 brands. [New microbiology 2006 Oct; 29(4):281-91] In another study, only two of five probiotics studied produced improvement in gastrointestinal symptoms (indigestion, bloating, and abdominal discomfort). [Digestive Diseases and Science 2006 Dec; 51(12):2134-44]
Bifidobacterium infantis is the strain of bacteria that is abundantly found in breast-fed newborns and affords special protection. |
| Applied microbiology Biotechnology 67: 453-68, 2005] The critics will claim medicinal mushrooms are unproven. So oncologists continue to prefer disproven monoclonal antibodies over unproven mushroom extracts.
In fact, a number of mushroom molecules have proceeded through phase I, II, and III clinical trials. (Phase I tests a new drug or treatment in a small group; Phase II expands the study to a larger group of people; Phase III expands the study to an even larger group of people; and Phase IV takes place after the drug or treatment has been licensed and marketed. |
| Applied Environmental microbiology 66: 2269-73, 2000], actual human use of garlic oil does not inhibit H. pylori. [Helicobacter 6: 249-53, 2001]
Drug resistance
Tumor cells develop resistance to anti-cancer drugs. They do this by overproducing a protein (P-glycoprotein) that energizes tumor cells so they can efficiently pump out anti-cancer drugs as they enter. Di-allyl sulfide, a breakdown product of allicin, decreases P-glycoprotein activity back to normal in a laboratory study. This garlic component could be coupled with anti-cancer drugs to inhibit drug resistance. |
| International Journal Food microbiology 115: 1-11, 2007]
Furthermore, probiotics have been shown to reduce diarrhea that frequently occurs among cancer patients undergoing radiation treatment. Probiotics have been shown to be "easy, safe and feasible approach to protect cancer patients against radiation-induced diarrhea. |
Andreas Moritz See book keywords and concepts |
American Society for microbiology. Researchers discovered that in the presence of salt, H. pylori is more likely to produce proteins that cause it to be more dangerous to humans, and more likely to produce ulcers.
"Apparently H. pylori closely monitors the diets of those people whom it infects," said lead researcher Dr. Hanan Gancz of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland. "We think that when there are high levels of salt in the stomach environment, H. |
Bottom Line Health See book keywords and concepts |
| Michael Doyle, PhD, professor of food microbiology, and director, Center for Food Safety, University of Georgia, Griffin.
Myth: Willpower Is the Key to Weight Loss
James M. Rippe, MD, associate professor of medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, and founder and director, Rippe Lifestyle Institute, a health research organization, Shrewsbury, MA. www.rippehealtb.com. He is coauthor, with the editors at Weight Watchers, of Weight Watchers Weight Loss That Lasts. Wiley.
Most misconceptions about losing weight are based on a kernel of truth. |
C. W. Randolph, M.D. See book keywords and concepts |
These guidelines include:
• Raw materials testing
• Potency testing
• Product traceability
• Purity testing
• Product freshness
• microbiology testing
The bottom line is truth in packaging. People have the right to know what they are putting in their bodies and they deserve to get the amount of active ingredient they are paying for.
To order Dr. Randolph's products online, go to www. hormonewell.com/shop_online.htm.
Life Extension is a highly reputable source for vitamins and supplements. This company's manufacturing standards ensure exceptional purity and quality. |
Peter h. Fraser and Harry Massey See book keywords and concepts |
We don't have any problem with microbiology in that respect, but there is another aspect to healing, which is energetic. From past and present research, we are suggesting that the body can create ETs—these energetic environments—after exposure to triggering events, such as prolonged exposure to geopathic stress or electromagnetic fields or some other factor, and so host a microorganism, but?and this is a pretty big statement—it can do this even when there has been no invasion by an actual microorganism at all! |
Connie Bennett, C.H.H.C. with Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D. See book keywords and concepts |
Applied microbiology and Biotechnology 42 (1994): 173-78.
Larimer, Mary E., Rebekka S. Palmer, and G. Alan Marlatt. "Relapse Prevention: An Overview of Mar-latt's Cognitive-Behavioral Model." Alcohol Research and Health 23, no. 2 (1999): 151-60.
Larson, Joan Mathews. Depression-Free, Naturally. New York: Ballantine, 1999.
Lieberman, Shari. Dare to Lose: 4 Simple Steps to a Better Body. With Nancy Bruning. New York: Avery, 2002.
Lord, G. H., and P. M. Newberne. "Renal Mineralization—a Ubiquitous Lesion in Chronic Rat Studies." Food and Chemical Toxicology 28 (1990): 449-55. |
Paula Begoun and Bryan Barron See book keywords and concepts |
A serious, problematic side effect is that acne-causing bacteria can become immune to the antibiotic after a short period of time, causing the acne to return (Sources: Dermatology, January 2003, pages 54-56; American Journal of Clinical Dermatology, April 2003, pages 813-831, and March 2001, pages 135-141; and The General Meeting of the American Society for microbiology, May 2001). Whatever course of action you take should be discussed at length with your dermatologist, who, like you, should also be carefully monitoring you for any side effects. |