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There has been significant progress in the field of stealth virus research. While the existence of stealth viruses has been a very controversial issue, it bas now been scientifically proven that stealth viruses do, indeed, exist and can be at the root of many multi-system neuro-degenrative illnesses, such as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, fibromyalgia, attention deficit disorder, autism and other diseases causing behavorial changes. Culturing methods for these viruses
has improved and hard sequence data is now available on them which
show how these viruses have assembled themselves, the way that they've recombined with other genes, their cellular, viral and bacterial origins. It is now known that the stealth virus can take varying structural forms but it has the basic capacity to imbed itself in the brain and persist in the brain causing brain dysfunction. While transmission of the stealth virus used to be from contaminated vaccines, it now can now be transmitted directly from person to person and also from humans to animals. Stealth viruses also have the capacity
to assimilate cellular genes which gives them the capacity to incorporate genes with potential cancer causing capacity. There is also now evidence that stealth viruses may be passed along within bacteria.
Four articles supporting these claims have been published in the May, 1999 issue of Experimental and Molecular Pathology. Three of these articles are currently available for viewing online. They are:
1. Stealth Adaptation of an African Green Monkey Simian Cytomegalovirus The findings in this article illustrate the notion that certain viruses, called "stealth viruses" can avoid immune elimination by deleting genes required for effective antigenic recognition by the cellular immune system. Comparisons made between the sequences of the stealth virus and the limited sequence data available on cytomegaloviruses from rhesus and from African green monkeys confirm unequivocally that the virus was derived from an African green monkey simian cytomegalovirus (SCMV). 2. Melanoma Growth Stimulatory Activity (MGSA/GRO-alpha) Chemokine Genes Incorporated into an African Green Monkey Simian Cytomegalovirus (SCMV)-Derived Stealth Virus" This article illustrates the capacity of stealth viruses to capture, amplify, and mutate genes with potential oncogenic activity. 3. Bacterial Sequences in a Stealth Virus The findings in this article illustrate the dynamic interface between viral and bacterial genomes and the potential of this interaction in the emergence and spread of novel pathogens. 4. Stealth Virus Epidemic in the Mohave Valley: Severe Vacuolating Encephalopathy in a Child Presenting with a Behavioral Disorder This article shows that one can be severely stealth virally infected yet not show clinical signs on regular neurological examination. This is demonstrated in utmost clarity by the case of an 8 year old child infected by the stealth virus and originally thought to have had a behavioral problem. The first three articles are available for viewing in their entirety by clicking here. The forth article will be available soon. |
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