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Heterorhabditis with Photorhabdus possible cause of Morgellons?
 
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Published: 13 y
 

Heterorhabditis with Photorhabdus possible cause of Morgellons?


Interesting observation from the CDC. What if M is an infestation of the Heterorhabditis spp nematode that has this Bioluminescence bacteria inside it. According to the article, the nematode spits out the bacteria once it enters the host in order to kill it. What if the fibers are this fluorescent bacteria which appear clear or crystal-like and the red and blue inside is the nematode wrapped around the bacteria? The black could be it's eggs.

This nematode/bacteria was released by the FDA to kill other opportunistic organisms from invading plants and veggies and is widely used in the U.S. Has this ever been mentioned here on the forum before or researched as a possibility?

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol9no2/02-0222.htm


Here is the last paragraph that really caught my attention.

"Photorhabdus spp. have never been shown to live freely in soil, although they will survive in soil under laboratory conditions (8). Photorhabdus spp. have only been isolated naturally from two nonclinical sources: insect-pathogenic nematodes (Heterorhabditis spp) and the insects they parasitize (beetles, moths, and the like). It seems likely therefore that Photorhabdus spp are transmitted to humans by a terrestrial invertebrate (nematode or arthropod), but that vector has not yet been identified."

 

 
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