Jun
29
CDC - Unexplained Dermopathy
June 29, 2007 | Leave a Comment
THE CDC acknowledges Morgellons.
At Last.
If you would like to email them about the subject.
morgellonssyndrome@cdc.gov
Jun
24
Can Anybody Identify This Problem ?
June 24, 2007 | Leave a Comment
Answer Below :



Jun
21
Playing God
June 21, 2007 | Leave a Comment
Scientists are on the brink of creating the world’s first artificial life form – a living organism never before found in nature. They promise solutions to everything from malaria to climate change. Salvation? Or a step too far?
“…… Pathway engineering is already being used for commercial applications. For example, California-based Genencor has been working with chemical giant DuPont to add synthetic genetic networks to the cellular machinery of E. coli. When mixed with corn syrup in fermentation tanks, their modified bacterium produces a key component in Sorona, a spandex-like fibre. DuPont hopes that its new bio-based textile will cause as much fuss as the introduction of nylon back in the 1930s. DuPont plans to build additional Sorona production factories, probably in the global South. According to John Ranieri, Dupont’s vice-president of bio-based materials, one thing is for sure: we need to be close to the agricultural producing centres, in Brazil, India or the USA.
Jun
7
Thraustochytriaceae & Omega-3
June 7, 2007 | Leave a Comment
Interesting and familiar layout is it not ?
Images and Article From Here :
Found in estuarine and marine environments on organic debris, algae, diatoms, and marine vascular plants, these microscopic organisms can be
identified by the association of their globose or colonial structures with a network of branched, anastomosing, wall-less filaments. The network, known as an ectoplasmic net, is produced by a specialized cell-surface organelle called a bothrosome (also referred to as a sagenogen).

The two families that are currently recognized by Porter (1990) include the Labyrinthulaceae and the Thraustochytriaceae. Labyrinthulaceae contains one genus, Labyrinthula, with nine species while Thraustochytriaceae contains thirty species classified in seven genera. One species of Labyrinthula, L. zosterae, has been proven to cause a wasting disease of eelgrass, an ecologically important marine vascular plant. Schizochytrium aggregatum is being used as a source of commercially produced omega-3 fatty acids. Though it is known that the group as a whole is basal to the Oomycota, the relationships of the members within the order are still being worked out. At the University of Georgia, Dr. David Porter and his student, Celeste Leander, have found that the thraustochytrid-labyrinthulid clade is monophyletic based on 18S small subunit ribosomal DNA. However, the clade is composed of two supported branches; the first contains three species of Thraustochytrium and Ulkenia profunda, the second includes three species of Labyrinthula, two species of Labyrinthuloides and Schizochytrium aggregatum.
More Info
Jun
4
Morgellons: MD’s Letter
June 4, 2007 | Leave a Comment
Psychiatry News June 1, 2007
Volume 42, Number 11, page 24
© 2007 American Psychiatric Association
Comments by a US doctor about the distinction between Morgellons Disease and Delusional Parasitosis.
Jun
2
A Personal Story
June 2, 2007 | Leave a Comment
Morgellons, Fiber Disease, Elliot’s Disease or Stealth Virus?
Judith Knilans, N.D./PhD her personal story
Links
- Alliance for Natural Health
- Andy Coyle UK
- Carnicom
- CCID
- Center for Disease Control USA
- Charles E. Holman Foundation
- Chlamydia Pneumoniae Info
- Cliff Mikelson’s Forum
- DSP
- GMContaminationRegister
- Health Protection Agency UK
- ISIS
- LDA - UK Lyme Information
- Lymebusters
- LymeNet
- LymePhotos
- MMS
- Morgellons - Canada
- Morgellons Exposed
- Morgellons Research Foundation
- Morgellons Sanctum
- Morgellons UK
- Morgellons-Research
- Morphborgs
- National Geographic
- Natural News
- Neuro-Cutaneous Syndrome
- New Morgellons Order
- Oklahoma State University
- SilentSuperbug
- The Sunshine Project
- Union of Concerned Scientists