- Category: Phage Viruses
The Process of Demyelination and Acquired Diseases Pycnogonida and their associated viral infections attack, destroy, and manipulate the brain, spine, and nervous system of hosts that they infect. During autopsies of hosts of lethal viruses, the proteins, cytokines, macrophages, granulocytes, plasmodium parasites, and their various Genuses are found within the white matter of the cerebrum, in the meninges which surrounds the brain, and within the spinal cord. The fatty lipid layers which cover and insulate portions of the brain are called Myelin. Myelin to the function of the nervous system is like the silicone insulation which surrounds and insulates electrical copper wires and cables or used in circuit boards to separate individual electric components.
Myelin protects and isolates electrical signals produced within the brain which travel down the spinal cord and throughout the nervous system. To viruses, Mylin has only one function, being a source of available calories as a food supply. In the brain, virus infections target and consume the fatty lipid content which surrounds and insulates neurons, dendrites, and nerve bundles contained within the white matter of the cerebrum. When Myelin which protects the brain is consumed in a process called Demyelination, electrical signals within the nervous system are unprotected. Degeneration of signal power and quality of transmissions throughout the nervous system are common systems of Demyelination resemble symptoms of decay found on insulation within electrical systems and devices from rodent infestations.
Acute demyelination of the nervous system can lead to more severe short circuits within the nervous system of a host of a virus infection. Acute demyelination or short-circuiting of the nervous system is often responsible for seizures, tremors, shaking, spasms, uncontrollable muscle movement, physical impairment, mental degradation, and trouble during speech found as epidemic diseases such as M.S., Parkinson’s, and epilepsy. Demyelination can only be halted and reversed via removal of the virus infection from the body and consumption of massive volumes of regenerative supplements such as collagen, MSM, and glucosamine, and amino acids.
Zinc is used by the body to build and repair neurons and nerves within your body. These regenerative supplements help rebuild the Myelin lipid content throughout the nervous system. While modern science and medicine offer multiple prescriptions and medications to treat Demyelination in hosts of disease, only high-Ph alkaline treatments and a high intake of regenerative supplement-rich diets can repair and stimulate Myelin growth needed for rebuilding and supporting a healthy nervous system.
Pycnogonida are a highly intelligent, hive-minded species that uses electrical signals generated from Tritium beta decay as a method of communication. Coiled nervous systems found within the species use double latch gates to keep quantum bonds between generations of the species. Physical breakage between a child Pycnogonida’s nervous system and the gonopore of its parent leaves behind chemical bonds which can transmit electrical signals throughout offspring exponentially produced by generations of the species. Electrical signals, data, information, communication, and knowledge received by a signal Pycnogonida is available to a neural network which is expanded throughout every connected generation of the species.
The neural network available to Pycnogonida is larger than any other species found on earth, except possibly for another yet Unkown species of polyping medusa found within the ocean. Exponentially reproducing Pycnogonida parasites that have gained access to an infected host’s brain and neural network quickly learn (or already have knowledge) of the language of signal code used by the human nervous system to command the executive functions. In “Acquired” diseases, a host or host has been demyelinated and the viral infection has acquired the ability to intercept, interpret, and send electrical signals to and from an infected brain of an infected host.
A host of an acquired disease becomes a puppet of varying degrees of control to a type of “middle-man attack" by the virus population. Acquired hosts stand for the well-documented appearance of schizophrenia, delirium, mental inertia, physical prostration, psychosis, mental collapse, mental disturbances, and general insanity documented after the appearance of a majority of historical influenza and virus outbreaks. At the height of the largest and deadliest virus epidemic in modern recorded history, the influenza outbreak of 1918 brought in reports of outbreak induced mental disturbances from all over the world:
At the U.S. Army’s Walter Reed Hospital, physicians Dr. Egbert Fell reported via the June 1919 issue of the Journal of the American Medicine Association, that patients possessed “Delirium occurring at the height of the Disease”, and that these symptoms did not “clear with cessation of fever”. Patients developed severe mental health symptoms during influenza infections which did not pass even when other symptoms of the virus had. Doctors in Britain reported “profound mental inertia with intense physical prostration. Delirium has been very common … It has varied from more confusion of ideas through all grades on intensity up to maniacal excitement”. Influenza patients were having and communicating wild ideas that may not have existed prior to a virus infection. These hosts became motivated by these ideas from an unknown origin to the point that they became excited and overcame physical inhibitions in response. These symptoms resulted from the presence of alien virus infections.