"It produces a second contagious episode, after a long enough time has passed, that a new, non-immune generation of humans has arrived to host its replication." How does it survive through generations if it is lodged in spinal nerve roots and has no contact with the reproductive system? PT From: John Popelish <jpopel...@gmail.com> To: silver-list@eskimo.com Sent: Sunday, September 27, 2015 1:16 PM Subject: Re: CS>Fwd: Any thoughts on this article On 09/27/2015 12:56 PM, PT Ferrance wrote: > I still don't buy it and I usually can accept things. But > this is illogical. The piece of DNA coding sits in a > person's spinal nerve root for generations? How does it get > from the nerve root to the sperm and eggs? Why does it wait > for every other generation? Why not manifest in the > generation that had the chicken pox in the first place... or > the parents? Why wait for the grandparents? > Also, shingles can be successfully treated with Acupuncture > and Oriental Medicine.
Sorry that I nave not explained clearly. When a person gets chicken pox, the virus inserts its DNA into the DNA of nerve cells, causing those cells to produce copies of the virus, that are released into the environment, where those nerves connect with the skin, at the pox lesions. This provides an obvious contagious route to get the virus into other people. But this eventually means that almost everyone has been exposed to the virus and had become immune to it, and the contagion does down, in any given human community. This saturation process takes enough time, that a couple of human generations become immune at the same time. If this was all there was to chicken pox, with its high contagion success, it would cause it to run out of hosts and go extinct in about two human generations. But this virus has another trick up its sleeve to let it get around its too effective spread. And that trick is shingles. It produces a second contagious episode, after a long enough time has passed, that a new, non-immune generation of humans has arrived to host its replication. It does this in potentially every person who had chicken pox. I didn't mean to imply that shingles affects only alternate generations of humans. I was saying that the point of shingles is to jump over a generation of immune humans to infect a later generation that has no immunity. Shingles is chicken pox's way of patiently waiting for a new generation of non-immune hosts. This has been its survival trick for thousands of years. -- Regards, John Popelish -- The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver. Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org Unsubscribe: <mailto:silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com?subject=unsubscribe> Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/silver-list@eskimo.com/maillist.html Off-Topic discussions: <mailto:silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com> List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:mdev...@eskimo.com>