Back in 87, the year I first had dermal diagnosis with the Interro computer 
assisted homeopathic remedy program, the above was my second result.
As you can see, I was given the homeopathic remedy Tularemia 60C, and it 
never showed up again.  :
6 March 1987  Streptococcinum B Hemolyticus 60C; Tularemia 60C; Vaccininum 
60C;  Formica Rufa 4x; Carduus Marianus 4x; Solidago (Virga Aurea) 4x.


Some paragraphs from a document I saved when doing research a while back 
follow:

 The disease was first described in Japan in 1837. Its name relates to the 
description in 1911 of a plague-like illness in ground squirrels in Tulare 
county, California (hence the name tularemia) and the subsequent work done 
by Dr. Edward Francis. Tularemia occurs throughout North America and in many 
parts of Europe and Asia. Francisella tularensis is found worldwide in over 
a hundred species of wild animals, birds and insects. Some examples of 
animals, other than rabbits, that carry tularemia are meadow mice, ground 
hogs (woodchucks), ground squirrels, tree squirrels, beavers, coyotes, 
muskrats, opossums, sheep, and various game birds.  ...... . Cook all rabbit 
meat thoroughly before eating. This doesn't mean you have to over cook the 
meat, simply make sure it is not bloody in the middle which is a sign that 
the meat is still raw or uncooked. Bacteria that cause tularemia can live 
for weeks in water, soil, carcasses, and hides, and for years in frozen 
rabbit meat.  .... ... The frequency of tularemia has dropped markedly over 
the last 50 years and there has been a shift from winter disease (usually 
from rabbits) to summer disease (more likely from ticks). The bacteria F. 
tularensis is a hazard to laboratory staff that work closely with rabbits. 
Matter of fact, nearly all cases reported each year are by people that 
receive the bacterial disease from a tick bite rather than from cleaning 
rabbits. Note: as few as 5-10 bacteria can result in disease. Others at risk 
may include timber industry personnel, outdoor enthusiasts, as well as those 
who work, play, or live in tick-infested regions during summer months. ... . 
Rubber, plastic, or latex gloves should be worn while skinning or handling 
rabbits, especially if you have open cuts or abrasions. Wild rabbit and 
rodent meat should be cooked thoroughly before eating ........ Also, conduct 
"tick checks" every two to three hours if spending a lot of time outdoors 
where ticks are plentiful. All ticks attached to the body should be removed 
immediately. Using a pair of tweezers, slowly pull the tick straight out, no 
twisting, then wash hands thoroughly after removal  ...
http://www.beaglesunlimited.net/rabbithunting_tularemia.htm
see pictures of tularemia infection at 
http://www.beaglesunlimited.net/rabbithunting_tularemia.htm

Tularemia is not known to be spread from person to person, so people who 
have tularemia do not need to be isolated. People who have been exposed to 
F. tularensis should be treated as soon as possible. The disease can be 
fatal if it is not treated with the appropriate antibiotics.
http://www.canlyme.com/coinf.html

More recently:
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=516809
Historically, F. tularensis attracted attention as a biological weapon and 
was a subject of military research in the United States, the former Soviet 
Union, and Japan (8). In the post-Cold War era, however, F. tularensis is 
included among the top six agents showing potential for great adverse public 
health impact if used as a bioterrorism agent
... This suggests that there is still a great deal of unsampled F. 
tularensis diversity to be discovered.  .........  When used as a biological 
threat agent, F. tularensis poses a serious public health risk (8). Its 
effective development and use by State-sponsored bioweapons programs (8) may 
be a harbinger of future terrorist activities, much as was recently 
illustrated with the anthrax letter attacks. Detailed information about 
natural populations will greatly assist in distinguishing what is natural 
from events that are not. Rapid high-resolution subtyping provides a crucial 
tool in understanding natural population structure, while filling a forensic 
role in the event of a biological attack. This is illustrated by the 
characterization of F. tularensis subsp. tularensis recently isolated in 
Slovakia. In this highly diverse subspecies, the great similarity between a 
laboratory strain (SCHU S4) and a Slovakian isolate was unexpected and 
merits further investigation. The ongoing genome sequencing of one of the 
Slovakian type A isolates will likely further explain their origin.

 http://jmm.sgmjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/52/9/839   The isolation 
and identification is reported of a novicida-like subspecies of F. 
tularensis from a foot wound sustained in brackish water in the Northern 
Territory of Australia.

http://www.broad.mit.edu/annotation/genome/francisella_tularensis_group/Info.html
 
Interestingly, tularemia has been known to occur only in the Northern 
Hemisphere, although recently, a case has been reported in Australia and a 
Francisella novicida-like strain has been implicated (2).   (Well, looks as 
if I predated this one somewhat!)

http://www.health.nsw.gov.au/factsheets/guideline/tularemia.html    Due to 
the low index of suspicion for tularaemia in Australia by clinicians, and 
the lack of specialised diagnostic testing techniques such as NAT, direct 
fluorescent antibody (DFA), and immunohistochemistry tests, diagnosis of 
early cases is likely to be delayed. Suspicion may be triggered by the 
identification of a cluster of cases of atypical pneumonia.

http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,1607,7-153-10370_12150_12220-27293--,00.html 
The disease has also been reported from Japan, Russia, Turkey, Israel, 
Scandinavia, central and western Europe, Italy, Thailand and Tunisia. It has 
not been detected in Australia or in the British Isle .. In general, the 
gross and histopathologic lesions of tularemia in mammals resemble those of 
bubonic plague, or paratuberculosis, in rodents. . Sportsmen should be 
cautioned against drinking from streams in enzootic areas. Hunters should be 
very suspicious of "lazy" rabbits which are killed easily, and rubber gloves 
should probably be worn when dressing rabbits. The meat of these animals 
should be thoroughly cooked.

http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/book.asp?ref=9781573316910
Francisella tularensis: Biology, Pathogenicity, Epidemiology, and Biodefense 
This is the first book on tularemia. With the biodefense initiative, there 
has been a major boost by the NIH to fund studies on bioterrorism agents, 
including Francisella, which is classified as a class A bioterrorism agent.


Francisella tularensis
A Gram Negative bacteria.
Carried on deer flies and ticks.
Live mostly in rabbits.

Causes tularaemia, also called Rabbit fever.
Have 6 different ways of hurting you
1) Ulceroglandular type gets lymph nodes gives you an ulcer around the bite.
2) Glandular type causes fever and lymph problems, without the ulcer.
3) Get conjunctivitis with oculoglandular type.
4) Oropharyngeal type gives you a sore throat.
5) Get into your lungs with my pleuropulmonary type.
6) Typhoidal type infects your whole body.

Found the above if it's of any interest.

If the above is correct, could I assume the following?  Dr. Beck's blood 
zapper should work on the lymph nodes in conjuction with the blood cleaner, 
EICS could fix the ulcer at the wound site as well as the conjunctivitis and 
sore throat maybe, nebuliser for lungs even?, and EICS has been noted as 
fixing Typhoid.  Just speculation of course, not wild, but speculation 
nevertheless.  I also wonder what effect h2o2 would have in combination with 
CS as a treatment?  Food for thought anyway unless I'm way off track.  I'm a 
bit curious about the aforesaid 'rabbit fever' though as the only thing I 
know of is myxomatosis, (introduced by man), in rabbits, is there a 
connection there?
 



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