Hi Sam,

As I understand it, viruses and virons enter the hosts cells and
corrupt the cells DNA and RNA with their own, turning the host cells
into replicating factories. So to kill viruses at this stage requires
agents that will kill host cells, as Marshall mentioned, or are able
to differentiate between infected and normal cells.

Eventually the infected cells burst and release hordes of viruses into
the blood steam on a quest to infect more host cells. It is at this
stage where agents would be most effective in controlling the
infection, and this is probably when CS and other therapies (enzyme,
oxygen etc.) have the greatest effect.

Ivan.

----- Original Message -----
From: Sam Earle <[email protected]>

Since we're discussing vaccines and bacteria on another thread, a
question occurs to me for any and all to tackle:

If scientists can identify, isolate and kill or disable specific
viruses in the lab for the purpose of making vaccines, why can't they
identify, isolate and kill viruses in the human body?

Any takers?

Sam



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