The staph bacterium is gram-positive and does not need oxygen but can
still use it. It eats away connective tissues and walls of blood vessels
from the outside and then inward.
Wounds caused by staph do not coagulate, clot or harden.
Staph dissolves connective tissues and the walls of blood vessels
instantly. Staph is also a lethal anticoagulant.
Here are the characteristics of a wound caused by Staph bacteria:
1. The epidermal, papillary-dermal, and reticular-dermal tissues are
dissolved and the
portions of capillaries supplying them are also dissolved.
2. Profuse bleeding from the wound [due to damage of the capillary walls
and the anti-coagulant affects of Staph bacteria].
Fatalities associated with Staph wounds are a result of massive
hemorrhaging from those wounds.
Also significant is that Staph causes blood vessels leading to the
dissolved capillaries to dilate while causing blood vessels leading from
those capillaries to constrict. Hence blood is diverted to the wound
leading to further blood loss.
Enzymes produced by the Staph bacteria prevent blood from oxidizing or
losing oxygen. Hence the blood at the site of injury always remains
bright red and liquid.
The Staph bacterium also spikes blood pressure extremely high by
increasing the speed and intensity of the heart-muscles' contractions
and relaxations as well as diverting blood away from areas other than
the burn wound.
Some of the symptoms are not caused by the bacterium itself, but rather
by the body reaction to it. The hypertension, palpitations, and other
changes in circulation are examples of this.
Only right before death does the patient's blood-pressure fall.
Otherwise the blood pressure is acutely high after being infected by
Staphylococcus.
Staphylococcus has an affinity for scar tissues and inflamed areas.
Hence Staphylococcus easily dissolves scar tissue and un-roofed blisters
making it impossible for the infected regions to swell.
Staphylococcus's coagulase enzyme breaks down any coagulated tissue --
including blood clots.
Staphylococcus also feed on solids and liquids in the digestive system.
As a result, the patient does not need to defecate as much. It also
feeds on all odorous compounds.
Staphylococcus patients have no urine, feces, plaque, phlegm or mucus in
them because Staphylococcus completely feeds on them and cleans them
out. Their teeth and gums are also totally clean as the result of the
Staphylococcus. Patients don't vomit because there is nothing to vomit.
Staphylococcus also dissolves any cholesterol, chylomicrons, saturated
fats, trans-fats, LDLs and VLDLs that happen to be in the blood and
blood vessel tissue -- without causing any harm to HDLs.
Staphylococcus also kills and feeds on any other foreign organism in the
human body -- including bacteria that are naturally present on the body
as well as cancer cells. A cure for cancer but it costs you your life.
In addition, Staphylococcus dissolves and feeds on white blood cells,
anti-bodies, mast cells, and other immune system and inflammatory
components.
Last but not least, Staphylococcus breaks down the serum and consumes it.
Paul Cassel - 13 Feb 2008 00:47 GMT
> The staph bacterium is gram-positive and does not need oxygen but can
> still use it. It eats away connective tissues and walls of blood vessels
> from the outside and then inward.
Some call it acne.
Green Xenon [Radium] - 13 Feb 2008 02:18 GMT
>> The staph bacterium is gram-positive and does not need oxygen but can
>> still use it. It eats away connective tissues and walls of blood
>> vessels from the outside and then inward.
> Some call it acne.
Acne swells. Staph wounds don't. The staph germs eats away mast cells
and other inflammatory components before that can divert fluid to the
area. Staphylococcus easily un-roofs blisters -- by breaking the outer
covering of the blister -- making it impossible for the infected regions
to swell.
Green Xenon [Radium] - 13 Feb 2008 02:21 GMT
On Feb 12, 4:11 pm, truehawk <trueha...@yahoo.com> wrote in
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.health.alternative/msg/b3794c10a5790266
> Not so much.
>
[quoted text clipped - 25 lines]
> so the average CS sufferer's immune system is holding it off otherwise
> it would get in the bloodstream.
Staph infections are acute and cannot cause inflammation because they
damage mast cells in the area they infect.