Deep mycoses therapy

Deep mycoses therapy

AUTHORS : Andreychenko G.Yu.

RELEVANT UNIVERSITIES : Vorkuta, Russia
YEAR : 2005 | Category : Method of Treatment

Today, fungal diseases are a very serious problem in modern medicine. The next step after the therapy of miasms and the renewal of protein structures is the therapy of deep mycoses. This problem becomes key after the protein structures in patients are completely renewed after miasm therapy. In order to develop a decent tactics in solving this problem, you need to analyze what fungi are, how they enter the body and parasitize in it.

Fungi are one of the largest and most common groups of organisms. It includes about 80,000 described species. Fungi sizes range from unicellular yeasts to large raincoats. Mushrooms occupy a wide variety of habitats, both in water and on land. In addition, mushrooms are important both in connection with the role they play in the biosphere and in connection with the fact that they are used by people for medical and economic purposes.

Fungi include countless molds growing on raw organic material (bread, leather, decaying plant and animal debris), unicellular yeasts that grow abundantly on the sugary surface of ripe fruits, and many plant parasites. Some fungi are parasites on animals. Parasitic fungi can be optional or obligate. Obligate parasites, as a rule, do not cause the death of their hosts, while facultative parasites often do this and then live saprophytic on the dead remains. Obligate parasites are limited to a narrow range of hosts, from which they need a specific set of nutrients. Facultative parasites are usually less specialized.

مطالب دیگر

Next Post
Traditional medical activity, its possibilities and problems in modern conditions
Previous Post
Dominant miasms detected using autonomic resonance test “IMEDIS-TEST +” (results of work from May 2003 to January 2005)
برای نوشتن دیدگاه باید وارد بشوید.
فهرست