On 09/27/2015 02:15 PM, PT Ferrance wrote:
"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?

The virus has nothing to do with human sperm or egg cells,
or getting involved in human reproduction.
It gets to infect future generations of humans,
simply by waiting for later humans to be born,
in a previously infected and still surviving human.
It uses our species multi-generational longevity
for its survival.

If humans usually died by age 25,
this trick would not work.

This option is not available
to something like small pox,
that has to continuously keep reinfecting new hosts,
in order to survive,
because it usually kills each infected host,
in turn.

Chicken pox, being much less lethal,
and being able to hibernate in infected hosts,
can wait out the birth of a new,
non-immune generation to regenerate itself
by their exposure to an old person
with shingles.


--
Regards,

John Popelish


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