H2O2 might work well on such wounds except for one problem...  When you are 
dealing with such a condition, the infection runs through the tissues.  The 
H2O2, and even colloidal silver might do well on the surface, but will not 
touch the deeper infection.  It's the deeper infection that will kill you.  
Theoretically, if you are able to surgically remove all of the infectious 
tissues so that one can apply colloidal silver and/or H2O2 to the remaining 
tissue, it might be effective.

I have some personal experience with flesh eating bacteria.  It is not a pretty 
condition.  By the grace of Divine Intervention and probably a set of very 
unique circumstances, the infection was handled successfully.  The individual 
is the only one ever recorded to have survived ( so far ) a flesh eating 
bacterial infection in the deep abdominal region ( this the surgeon and lawyers 
told us ).  To top it off, the infection was a hospital-only strain.

One's best bet is to FLOOD the body with colloidal silver used internally.  In 
the above case, the one lucky circumstance was the fact that the individual had 
not taken any substances in the stomach for about thirty days - therefore, the 
stomach had stopped producing acid.  I can only attribute recovery to the 
colloidal silver taken internally, because the medical staff had long since 
stopped IV antibiotics due to the fact that they had no effect.  I believe the 
colloidal silver was far more effective than would normally be due to the 
stomach's lack of acid.  One cannot amputate the abdomen - the choice was 
either recover or die.

Infections such as these become septic very rapidly.  One will notice that the 
standard choice these days to treat such infections is simply to briefly try to 
see if the infection can be controlled, and if not, rapidly amputate the area 
if possible.

If you or a loved one finds oneself in a position of developing a flesh eating 
bacterial condition and in the hospital, you need to be pre-educated and 
assertive.  Not every hospital doctor will know the best protocols to follow 
right off the bat.  If the infection is in an area of the body that is not 
amputatable, you need to strongly suggest that blood transfusions be prepared ( 
in some cases, as in rare blood types, this can take a bit of time ).  You 
might strongly consider Trovan as the first antibiotic choice, followed closely 
by the "Gorilla Three" ( instead of vice versa - hopefully, Trovan has been on 
the market long enough for most hospital MD's to have experience with it ).  
One might get lucky, and get a fast response from the Trovan ( hospital derived 
infections are developing a strong resistance to the "Gorilla Three" antibiotic 
protocol ).  You need to get alot of colloidal silver into the body, and I'd 
strongly suggest you not tell the medical staff you are doing so.

One probably would not be able to convince the medical staff to put the 
individual on oxygen, but if one is able to do so, this can be beneficial.  
Usually, they wait until the oxygen count in the blood drops - which is often 
too late.



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Marshall Dudley 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2001 9:19 AM
  Subject: Re: CS>Flesh eating bacteria


  I read somewhere that H2O2 is extremely effective against this bacteria.  CS 
is probably as well, but H2O2 is instantous in stopping it from a report I read 
some time back.  Unfortunately hospitals will not use it, but instead fill you 
with expensive drugs which have limited or no effectiveness.  H2O2 is too cheap 
to be an acceptable protocol. :< 
  Marshall 

  [email protected] wrote: 

    This is the 4th or 5th case of flesh eating bacteria in this area in a 
short 
    time.  Would CS, the hyperbaric system described by Brooks, or anything 
else 
    we have talked about, have worked for this guy?  He is the dad of a friend. 
    suzy 
    http://www.dmregister.com/news/stories/c4788996/14655842.html 

    Flesh-eating disease attacks Urbandale man 
      

      A sudden attack of "flesh-eating disease" leads to amputation.
    By KATE KOMPAS 
    Register Staff Writer 
    05/11/2001Joseph Rogers of Urbandale got out of bed about 6 a.m. on April 
21 
    and couldn't feel his toes.Doctors removed his leg before noon.Rogers, 76, 
    fell victim to necrotizing fasciitis, commonly known as the "flesh-eating 
    disease."The disease is caused by a variation of the bacteria that causes 
    strep throat and is as rare as it is deadly. The bacteria typically enter 
the 
    body through a wound and immediately begin to devour muscle and fat. It can 
    progress at a speed of three centimeters an hour, doctors say.The Centers 
for 
    Disease Control reports there are fewer than 2,000 people infected in the 
    United States each year. About 100 of them will die. Experts say the chance 
    of contracting necrotizing fasciitis from another person is near 
    nonexistent."I've got a disease I can't pronounce the name of," Rogers said 
    Thursday. "I don't understand why this happened to me."His was the second 
    case of necrotizing fasciitis reported in Iowa in the past month. Curtis 
    Benttine, a truck driver from St. Ansgar, was hospitalized earlier this 
week. 
    Twelve pounds of infected tissue was removed from Benttine's leg.Dr. Cort 
    Lohff of the state health department said statewide numbers on necrotizing 
    fasciitis aren't kept, but the disease has shown up before:* Randy 
Schabaker, 
    51, of Des Moines died of the flesh-eating disease in March 1993.* Bryan 
    Crawford, 12, of Independence lost part of his leg to the disease in 1994.* 
    Ryan Johnson, 14, of Independence died in 1995. He also had leukemia.* 
Stuart 
    Eliasen, a 34-year-old Plainfield farmer, died in 1997.* Matthew Potter, 6, 
    of Amana died in 1998 from a streptococcus infection that later was 
    determined not to be the "flesh-eating" form.When his toes went numb, 
Rogers 
    called to his wife, Mary, who thought he was having a stroke and called 
911.A 
    bruise appeared on his left leg by the time he arrived at the hospital, 
    Rogers said. The discoloration spread, inching up his leg within a few 
hours. 
    By 10 a.m., the doctors at Iowa Methodist Medical Center said they should 
    amputate.Doctors still are puzzled over how Rogers contracted the 
disease."I 
    cried for three days," Mary Rogers said Thursday. "But I've accepted 
    it."Mary, who's been married to Joseph for 53 years, has been reading 
    everything she can on the disease.The retired steel worker and World War II 
    veteran will start rehabilitation soon and will be fitted with a prosthetic 
    leg."There's no pain," he said. "The good leg feels good, and the bad leg's 
    not there." Rogers said. "I guess I'm lucky I got through it."