When I first looked at the subject line,
I saw *Helicopter Infection*
It was early in the morning before coffee
and it woke me up.  :)

On Thu, Mar 29, 2012 at 11:23 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

> There is a group on yahoo called silverpets..I give my cats CS all the
> time and they are really healthy.
>
> Sent via my Samsung Replenish from Boost Mobile
>
> Dan Nave <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >Heavens!  The cat may turn blue!
> >
> >Dan
> >
> >On Thu, Mar 29, 2012 at 8:57 AM, Lin <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> A friends cat has been diagnosed with a helicobacter infection in the
> >> stomach and small intestine.  Details are in her note below.
> >>
> >> Her vet, does much with natural remedies, but so far is not supportive
> of
> >> using colloidal silver.
> >>
> >> Anyone here have anything they can pass my way to help the vet
> understand
> >> that CS could be helpful here?
> >>
> >> Or, human experience treating  helicobacter?
> >>
> >> Thanks! Lin
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> As usual, our little angel is a medical mystery. The biopsies were all
> very
> >> abnormal, but in abnormal ways. So, not definitive.
> >>
> >> There were lots and lots and lots of lymphocyes in all samples, which
> isn't
> >> normal. If that were the only thing, she'd conclude it is small cell
> >> lymphoma. However, there was another bizarre finding: a massive
> Helicobacter
> >> infection! These are little spiral bacteria that occupy the stomach, the
> >> same ones found to be responsible for ulcers in people (the "H" in H.
> >> pylori). However, there were large numbers in the small intestine as
> >> well--THIS IS NEVER SEEN. Helicobacter can cause inflammation and
> gastritis.
> >> Recently, there are more and more that are appearing antibiotic
> resistant.
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> So the question is, are the lymphocytes there fighting a massive
> >> helicobacter infection, or, is there a massive H. infection because her
> >> lymphocytes are abnormal, as a result of cancer?
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> The pathologist wants to do some staining of the samples to determine
> the
> >> subtype of lymphocytes, which will help answer this. If all the lymphs
> are
> >> the same subtype, then it's most likely cancer (small cell lymphoma)...
> if
> >> they're all different, then it points more to a response to an
> infection. I
> >> gave her the thumb's up to do the tests.
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> So, this is very strange. Helicobacter is not supposed to be able to
> SURVIVE
> >> in the intestine... according to the textbooks. It's such a radically
> >> different environment than the stomach, which is highly acidic.
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
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