I came across this old silverlist post which I thought current members
would be interested in. It also mentions scleroderma and SLE (lupus). Rowena

Posted by Douglas Haack.

----- Original Message ----- 
Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2003 1:43 AM
Subject: CS>Bacteria & Mental Illness & Cancer


Bacteria & Mental Illness & Cancer

Is it not amazing that cancers are rampant in the population and nobody
in the higher echelons of the medical profession are calling for
research into "why and how" these cancers are rampant!!

Where have all those billions gone and continue to go -- those billions
gone into medical & cancer research? They all have wonderful careers
and earn great salaries!!

Forgive my rant! and now for my contribution --

Bacteria & Mental Illness -- The renowned Mayo Clinic medical
researcher Dr Carl Rosenow wrote a paper on this very subject 50 years ago.

My recollection is the following: He was working in a NY
mental hospital with serverely disturbed patients.

He took nasal mucus from patients and transferred this to rats
noses (I presume). He observed the rats began behaving in
a similiar manner as patients. How one deduces that, I'm not sure
about!

One can't expect the (Witch) doctors of the mental health profession to
accept such a simple medical concept!!

NOTE: The most important personal good health pratice one can develop
is "wash your hands" often!!

As soon as you enter your home environment from outside -- wash
your hands!! Avoid introducing the dirt and bacteria etc from outside.
Forgive me for reminding us all about this very simple but important
habit.

CS is probably your most reliable personal "anti-bacterial". Have your
squirt bottle/s of CS handy. Get into the habit of squirting a shot of
CS down your throat during the day -- especially at least once during
the night. One squirt does it -- just let it trickle down the throat!

In SILvation, Douglas Haack


PS -- See the Jeff Rense (rense.com) posted article about the Bacterial
cause of Cancer


The Russell Body
The Forgotten Clue To
The Bacterial Cause Of Cancer
© 2003, by Alan Cantwell, Jr. M.D. 11-17-3

The twentieth century was indeed the century of Modern Medicine with
tremendous strides made in the understanding and control of infectious
diseases, as well as the introduction of life-saving antibiotics and
vaccines. Unfortunately, along with these advances came the perils of
genetic engineering, the increasing threat of newly emerging viruses,
biowarfare, and bioterrorism

Despite these scientific achievements, the cause of cancer remains a
mystery. Scientists suspect genetic susceptibility, possible
cancer-causing viruses, and environmental factors might play a role in
some cancers, but none of these factors explain why millions of people
die yearly from a variety of malignancies.

William Russell 1852-1940, as pictured in
The British Medical Journal, August 24, 1940.

How could scientists put men on the moon, but remain so ignorant about
cancer and its origin? How can the infectious causes of tuberculosis,
leprosy, syphilis, smallpox, polio, malaria, and other viral and
bacterial and parasitic diseases be understood, but the cause of cancer
be unknown? Could the cause of cancer conceivably be an infectious
agent that has been overlooked, ignored, or unrecognized by medical doctors
in the twentieth century? Could the germ of cancer be hidden in the
Russell body? - a large microscopic form known to every pathologist for over 
a
century!

William Russell (1852-1940) and "the parasite of cancer"

On December 3, 1890 William Russell, a pathologist in the School of
Medicine at the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh, gave an address to the
Pathological Society of London in which he outlined his histopathologic
findings of "a characteristic organism of cancer" that he observed
microscopically in fuchsine-stained tissue sections from all forms of
cancer that he examined, as well as in certain cases of tuberculosis,
syphilis and skin infection.

The parasite was seen within the tissue cells (intracellular) and
outside the cells (extracellular). The size of Russell's parasite
ranged from barely visible, up to "half again as large as a red blood
corpuscle." The largest round forms were easily seen microscopically.
The large size of some of these bodies suggested a fungal or yeast-like
parasite. Russell provisionally classified the parasite as a possible
"blastomycete" (a type of fungus); and called the forms "fuchsine
bodies" because of their bluish-red staining qualities.

Microbiology was still in its infancy in Russell's era, and it was
generally thought that each microbe could only give rise to a single
disease. Thus, the idea of a cancer germ (especially one that could
also be identified in TB and syphilis) was received cautiously. Nine years
later in 1899, in yet another report on "The parasite of cancer"
appearing in The Lancet (April 29), Russell admitted that finding
cancer parasites in diseases other than cancer was indeed a "stumbling 
block."
By this time a considerable number of scientists concluded that Russell
bodies were merely the result of cellular degeneration of one kind or
another. Furthermore, no consistent microbe was cultured from tumors;
and the inoculation of these microbes into animals produced conflicting
and often negative results.

Russell was trained as a pathologist, not as a microbiologist, and he
avoided getting into the bacteriologic controversies regarding various
microbes grown from cancer. He simply concluded, "It seems almost
needless to add that there remains abundant work to be done in this
important and attractive field."

After three years' work at the New York State Pathological Laboratory
of the University of Buffalo, Harvey Gaylord confirmed Russell's research
in a 36 page report titled "The protozoon of cancer", published in May,
1901, in the American Journal of the Medical Sciences. Gaylord found
the small forms and the large sacs characteristic of Russell bodies in
every cancer he examined. Some large spherical bodies were four times the
diameter of a leukocyte (white blood cell). Red blood cells measure
about 7 micron in diameter and leukocytes are 2 to 3 times larger than
red blood cells. Thus, some of the bodies that Gaylord observed
attained the amazing size of around 50 micron in diameter. In addition, he 
found
evidence of internal segmentation within the larger bodies "after the
manner recognized in malarial parasites." The tiniest forms appeared
the size of ordinary staphylococci.


Russell bodies in a lymph node of Hodgkin's disease. Gram's stain,
magnified 1000 times, (in oil). Russell's 1899 paper ended his writings
of a cancer parasite, but his discovery quickly became known to
pathologists as Russell bodies. These bodies continue to fascinate
researchers and physicians (like myself) up to the present time.
Solitary "giant" Russell body in a lymph node of Hodgkin's disease
(cancer), magnified 1000 times. Gram's stain, magnified 1000 times.


When Russell died at the age of 89 in 1940, the British Medical Journal
published a large obituary noting that he was universally respected and
embued with the dignity and highest ideals of his profession, and that
he had served at one time as President of the Royal College of
Physicians. No mention was made of his "parasites" or his "bodies",
except to remark that "in his earlier years Russell devoted much time
to the study of the cancer cell." Similarly, a large obituary appeared in
the Edinburgh Medical Journal along with a full-page photo. His
published books on Clinical Methods and widely read texts on
circulation and gastro-intestinal diseases were cited, but not a word about 
his
discovery in cancer.

The heresy of "the cancer microbe"

By the early part of the twentieth century the top cancer experts had
all rejected so-called "cancer parasites" as the cause of cancer. The
most influential physician to speak against it was James Ewing, an
American pathologist and author of the widely-read textbook, Neoplastic
Diseases. In 1919 Ewing wrote that "few competent observers consider it
(the parasitic theory) as a possible explanation in cancer." According
to Ewing and other authorities, cancer did not act like an infection.
Therefore, microbes could not possibly cause cancer. He concluded, "The
general facts of the genesis of tumors are strongly against the
possibility of a parasitic origin."

As a result, the parasitic theory was totally discarded and few doctors
dared to contradict Ewing's dogma by continuing to search for an
infectious agent in cancer. Nevertheless, a few die-hard physicians
remained convinced microbes were at the root cause of cancer and wrote
about it convincingly in medical journals. The long history of this
research is recorded in my book, The Cancer Microbe (1990) and anyone
with internet access can do a Google search (type in "cancer microbe")
and obtain a wealth of information on the microbiology of cancer.
Another excellent history of cancer microbiology and the suppression of
this controversial research is contained in David Hess' Can Bacteria
Cause Cancer? (1997).


Photo #5: Larger Russell bodies (RB) in a lymph node showing
non-cancerous "reactive lymph node hyperplasia" from a fatal case of
AIDS. The arrow points to nearby bacterial-sized intracellular coccoid
smaller forms from which the Russell bodies are derived. Fite
(acid-fast) stain, magnified 1000 times.


In the 1920s James Young, an obstetrician from Scotland, repeatedly
grew pleomorphic (having many forms) bacteria from various cancers. The
microbes had a "specific life cycle" and "spore stages" comprised of
exceedingly tiny and barely visible spores. In the laboratory these
tiny spores transformed into larger coccoid (round) forms, rod-forms and
yeast-like forms (similar in size to Russell bodies). John Nuzum, a
Chicago physician, reported a pleomorphic coccus he repeatedly isolated
from breast cancer. The tiniest forms were virus-like and passed
through a filter designed to hold back bacteria.

In 1925 Northwest Medicine published two papers by Michael Scott, a
Montana surgeon who learned about the cancer microbe in TJ Glover's lab
in 1921. Scott's microbe was similar to Young's. The parasite had a
life cycle composed of three stages: a coccus, a rod, and a "spore sac"
stage. Scott believed cancer was an infection like tuberculosis and
attempted a vaccine treatment, but his treatment methods were quickly
suppressed by the medical establishment.


In the 1930s in Germany the controversial Wilhelm von Brehmer described
microbes in the blood of cancer patients, evoking the wrath of his
scientific colleagues and prompting an intervention by Adolf Hitler.
(See Proctor's The Nazi War on Cancer [1999]) Georges Mazet, a French
physician, also found pleomorphic bacteria in Hodgkin's disease in
1941.
Hodgkin's is a type of lymphoma cancer involving the lymphatic system.
Mazet later reported similar acid-fast (red staining) bacteria in many
different kinds of cancer, including leukemia.

In the 1950s, 60s, and 70s, a quartet of women further refined the
microbiology of cancer, emphasizing the extreme pleomorphism of the
organism and its detection in tissue with the acid-fast stain. The
published research of Virginia Livingston, Eleanor Alexander-Jackson,
Irene Diller and Florence Seibert, is essential reading for the most
updated understanding of the microbiology of cancer.

In the late 1970s Guido Tedeschi and other Italian microbiologists at
the University of Camerino discovered "granules" in the red blood cells
of healthy and ill people that turned out to be bacteria that could be
cultured in the laboratory. Some of the staphylococcal and
corynebacteria-like bacteria cultured from the red blood cells were
acid-fast and cell wall-deficient, a staining and growth characteristic
shared with the cancer microbe. This research has been confirmed by
newer studies suggesting that bacteria reside in blood from healthy as
well as sick individuals. These findings of tiny blood bacteria
(nanobacteria) provide further evidence to support the theory that
microbes can cause cancer. Some other well-known scientists in the
field of cancer microbiology include Gunther Enderlein, Royal Raymond Rife,
Gaston Naessens and Wilhelm Reich. All have web sites devoted to their
cancer research.

Russell bodies and their Origin

More than a century has passed since Russell's discovery and although
electron microscopes (which have been used since the 1950s) have the
ability to magnify objects tens of thousands of times, the significance
and function of his bodies still remains unknown.

What is well-known is that Russell bodies can be found, not only in
cancer, but in the majority of inflamed tissues throughout the body.
Distinguishing large Russell bodies from actual fungal forms of
Blastomyces can still be difficult, particularly when a pathologist
encounters a true case of fungal infection due to Blastomyces.

In 1954 RG White, in "Observations on the formation and nature of
Russell bodies", produced Russell bodies in animals by injecting them
with different species of bacteria. He then studied the ensuing
development of these bodies in the spleen, lymph nodes and plasma cells
of the injected animals. Plasma cells are specialized forms of white
blood cells that normally produce antibodies.

EM Schleicher, in his 1965 paper on "Giant Russell bodies", discusses
the various theories of origin. Possibilities include origin from the
lymphocyte, origin in plasma cells with later degeneration, origin from
the mitochondria of cells, and even an origin from a red blood cell
(erythrocyte) swallowed up by a plasma cell.

Most researchers currently believe Russell bodies are essentially
immunoglobulins (proteins that acts as antibodies), but an electron
microscopic study by SM Hsu et al. in 1981 has cast some doubt on this
belief.

None of these studies mention the possibility that Russell bodies might
represent unusual large growth forms of bacteria. However, if Russell
bodies prove to be tiny intracellular microbes that grow and enlarge
within leukocytes, it would be natural to expect these white blood
cells (especially the plasma cell) to produce an antibody attack against
these invading organisms, resulting in the production of immunoglobulin-
coated cells and organisms.

Bacterial transformation into Giant forms (L-form "large bodies')

There are many different kinds of bacteria but only one type that has
been consistently observed and studied in cancer for over a century.
The cancer microbe has many forms, some of which appear as ordinary
staphylococci or larger yeast-like forms that further enlarge to the
size of Russell bodies. As mentioned, some Russell bodies enlarge to
truly gigantic proportions, one hundred times the diameter of small
cocci. One can liken this growth potential to an empty balloon that is
then blown up to full-size. In addition, the microbe has exceedingly
small filterable submicroscopic forms approaching the size of viruses,
visible only by use of the electron microscope.

Part 2 on separate post.


Alan Cantwell, M.D. is a retired dermatologist and cancer researcher.
His book, The Cancer Microbe, is available through Internet sources. A
number of his full-length papers on the microbiology of cancer can be
found on the net at the Journal of Independent Medical Research web
site
(www.joimr.org/) Email: alanr...@aol.com


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