Chronic / Hidden Infection

Chronic / Hidden Infection: Overview

From gallstones to arthritis to heart disease, many illnesses long presumed to have roots in genes or lifestyle may be caused largely by infectious agents, a growing number of scientists believe.  Most of the evidence, however, remains circumstantial.

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Evidence is mounting that a variety of common germs long thought to cause only mild, short-lived illnesses such as the flu play a role in causing chronic health problems ranging from allergies, asthma and arthritis to obesity, heart disease and cancer.  Long after one recovers from the microbe's initial insult, viruses, bacteria and other germs silently chew away at the body's tissues and organs, causing insidious, permanent damage, it is believed.

For some conditions, many scientists feel certain that microbes play at least a contributing role where none was suspected previously.  A microbe may be suspiciously present in people who have a disease, for example, and not in those who don't, suggesting causality.

Microbe hunters now estimate that anywhere from one-third to more than one half of chronic diseases will eventually be explained by infection with a variety of microorganisms.  They point to new research that links germs to some forms of infertility, kidney disease, diabetes, stomach problems and even obsessive-compulsive disorder.

No one can avoid the wide variety of microorganisms that are in our environment.  Within minutes of birth and continuing throughout our lives, our bodies are exposed to virus after virus, bacterium after bacterium.  Under normal circumstances, the body's natural defenses fight off harmful microbes, but when our immune systems are weakened, when our normal defense barriers are not intact, or when we come in contact with a highly invasive infectious agent that is either new to our bodies or present in large numbers, the balance shifts in favor of the microbes.

Modern living has helped to tip the scales in favor of the tiny, microscopic bugs: international travel, misuse and overuse of antibiotics, and air pollution, to name but a few, all improve the efficiency by which germs spread from person to person and place to place.

Causes and Development

Exactly how germs act to cause chronic disease is still a mystery.  But scientists believe that the microbes may stimulate white blood cells to aggregate, causing the chronic inflammation that has now been implicated in asthma, allergies, heart disease and other disorders.  Alternatively, the bug may induce a so-called autoimmune response.  There are molecules on the surface of bacteria and viruses that resemble human versions of these molecules, and when infected with these organisms, certain people respond by producing substances that attack their own tissue.

In trying to fight off an infection, in other words, your body's defense cells are tricked into attacking the healthy tissue.  Among the microbe-disease links now suspected or proven: Ulcers.  After years of being shunned, Dr. Barry Marshall's theory that ulcers can be caused by the bacteria Helicobacter pylori is now accepted medical doctrine.  The link between infectious diseases and cancer is becoming increasingly clear: According to the World Health Report, up to 84% percent of certain cancers, notably, stomach, cervical, and liver, are attributable to a variety of germs.

The implications of this new theory are enormous, researchers say.  Most important, it suggests that vaccines, anti-viral drugs or antibiotics may have an unexpectedly big role to play in the treatment of chronic diseases that today are treated with only modest success through lifestyle changes, such as exercise and improved diet.  There is also likely to be a role for anti-oxidant vitamins, which can remove some of the damaging molecules that the microbes leave in their wake.

It wasn't easy getting the medical community to accept such a paradigm shift in thinking.  But new testing methods that allow molecular biologists to detect the footprints of the microscopic creatures long after any symptoms disappear are slowly winning over even the most recalcitrant.

"If an infectious agent is responsible for even a portion of these diseases, that could change the outlook for treatment and prevention dramatically," said Barry Bloom, dean of the Harvard School of Public Health.

For example, a so-called adenovirus, the same type of germ that causes the common cold, may be to blame for the excess pounds you can't seem to shed, according to Nikhil Dhurandhar of the University of Wisconsin in Madison.  In a study of 154 obese people, 15% had evidence of infection with an adenovirus called Ad-36.

Baltimore scientists reported in 2002 that they have found the first hard evidence that viral infections can cause asthma and allergies in humans, suggesting that vaccinations against the viruses could prevent the diseases.

In test-tube studies of human cells, the researchers showed that weak viral infections can cause immune system cells called B cells to produce immunoglobin E or IgE, a protein that orchestrates the reactions that cause allergies and many cases of asthma.  Still other studies have implicated mycoplasmas, germs of intermediate size between viruses and bacteria, and the lung bacteria pneumoniae in asthma.

Evidence is mounting that coronary heart disease may be caused in part by inflammation that silently simmers away for years inside the blood vessels, and that chronic infection with common bacteria or viruses may play a role in causing the chronic inflammation in the first place.  Among the suspected culprits: the ulcer-causing bacteria H. pylori or herpes virus, or even chronic tooth decay.

The common respiratory bug Chlamydia pneumoniae has been linked in new studies to arteriosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries.  And still other studies have shown that regrowth of plaque in patients who have undergone surgery to open up clogged arteries may be spurred by cytomegalovirus a bug found in almost two out of three elderly Americans.

New evidence suggests that both the common respiratory bug Chlamydia pneumoniae, as well as another type of germ called mycoplasma, can cause arthritis.  The findings may explain why so many arthritis patients get relief from joint pain and swelling after antibiotic treatment.

Researchers have found that mycoplasmas can live in a woman's reproductive tract, causing infertility, premature birth and spontaneous abortion.

Conditions that suggest Chronic / Hidden Infection:

Circulation

Aneurysm / Rupture

Results of a small study suggest that an antibiotic may help people with abdominal aortic aneurysms.  The condition is usually treatable only with surgery.  The drug doxycycline appears to inhibit enzymes that play a role in weakening of the arterial walls.  This is a medical problem that might be influenced by an impaired immune system which allows an infection to take hold.  If doxycycline seems to help, then it is possible that either chlamydia or mycoplasma are involved. [Annual Meeting Society for Vascular Surgery meeting in Washington, DC June 1999]

Inflammation

Bursitis

Both acute and chronic infections, notably staphylococcus, have been known to cause bursitis.

Lab Values

High White Blood Cell Count

A high white-blood-cell count is often a sign of infection.

Low White Blood Cell Count

A hidden chronic or overwhelming infection – especially a viral infection – can result in a depressed white blood cell count.

Mental

Tumors, Benign

Risk factors for Chronic / Hidden Infection:

Glandular

Lab Values

Neutropenia

Recurrent infections typically occur with neutropenia.

Nutrients

Folic Acid Deficiency

Folic acid deficiency anemia can lead to increased susceptibility to infection.

Symptoms - Immune System

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Chronic / Hidden Infection suggests the following may be present:

Nutrients

Chronic / Hidden Infection can lead to:

Sleep

Night Sweats

A hidden infection, such as an abscess in the liver or spleen, can cause night sweats and fever without many other symptoms.

Recommendations for Chronic / Hidden Infection:

Botanical / Herbal

Picrorhiza

Picrorhiza is used for fever due to all manner of infections. [Nadkarni KM, Nadkarni AK. Indian Materia Medica. Bombay, Popular Prakashan, 1976, pp.953-5]

Picroliv (a mixture of iridoid glycosides from the rhizomes of picrorhiza) has been shown to have an immuno-stimulating effect in hamsters, helping prevent infections. [Puri A, Saxena RP, Sumati, et al. Immunostimulant activity of Picroliv, the iridoid glycoside fraction of Picrorhiza kurroa, and its protective action against Leishmania donovani infection in hamsters. Planta Med 1992;58: pp.528-32]

Cayenne Pepper

Cayenne may have some benefit as an antimicrobial to help control infections in general.

Mineral

Oxygen/Oxidative Therapies

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