THE POLIO
SCAM
The very first words of the
Nuremberg Principles issued following the Second World War and designed to
outlaw Nazi medical experiments for all time were: “The voluntary consent of the
human subject is absolutely essential”. We, the citizens of this State, are
human subjects involved in a medical experiment or clinical trial in an effort
to prove or to disprove the theory that an arsenic-containing pollutant prevents
tooth decay. We never gave our consent to be involved in this experiment.
Jane Jones,
Campaign
Director,
National Pure Water Association.
Tel: (UK) (0)1924
254433
http://www.npwa.freeserve.co.uk/
The above remarks were received via email, shortly after preparing this
document and were so apropos to the argument that I inserted them. It turns out
that the Nuremburg trials laid down rules that have been totally ignored by
political medicine and I thank Jane Jones for bringing that to my attention.
The following article appeared
in the pages of Pediatrics in the early 50s. The evidence was obvious that Polio
was NOT an infectious, transmissible disease. It was only after the criminal
elements in organized medicine and the vaccine industry conspired that Polio was
then presented as an infectious epidemic disease in order to sell vaccines.
One of the largely unknown
criminal acts committed by organized medicine immediately after Polio vaccines
were put in use, was to advise doctors not to report new cases of Polio until
tbirty days after the onset of symptoms. This of course helped make the vaccines
look good by eliminating the cases misdiagnosed early on. Doctors often labeled
every kid with a stiff neck and fever as a Polio statistic, waiting thirty days
eliminated those mistakes from the overall count. Another ruse was to rename
Polio and call it Aseptic Meningitis. It has been known by 200 names over the
years.
A very significant effect on the
early Polio numbers resulted from the efforts of Benjamin Sandler MD who
conclusively proved that sudden high doses of dietary sugar caused Polio. His
diet was widely published in every major newspaper in the country and summer
sales of high sugar junk foods were outlawed in his small North Carolina
community stopping new cases of Polio. He published a book entitled, “Diet
Prevents Polio” another proof of the poison cause of
Polio.
Australian medical doctors
killed half of the Polio-vaccinated Aborigine children until one MD tried using
vitamin C before the shots. The Book, “Every Other Child” tells the story. It
was vitamin C that eventually stopped the wholesale slaughter of Australian
Aborigine children by the medical quacks.
When the Japanese stopped
vaccinating their infants and waited until the children were two years old,
Japan immediately moved up into first place in infant mortality, proving
conclusively that vaccinations kill babies.
When Dr Vieara Scheibner of
Australia discovered that DPT shots were causing crib deaths, the medical
fraternity ignored her but the public demand for the DPT shots, which are
strictly voluntary in Australia, dropped by approximately 50% and the crib death
rate immediately dropped about the same amount, again proving that vaccination
kills babies.
It is my opinion, based upon my
knowledge, experience and historical proof, that any doctor who vaccinates an
infant belongs in jail not in practice.
In my opinion, vaccination is
the quintessential quackery of the 21st century and the fact that it is MANDATORY in
some areas is the most repulsive, unacceptable act that has ever been forced on
free peoples anywhere at any time in history.
Everyone must educate themselves
on the facts, often hard to find, and then make their own decisions on whether
or not to subject themselves, their children, and their loved ones to vaccination.
WARNING!
VIOXX causes
Aseptic Meningitis – the current euphemism under which POLIO masquerades these
days.
VIOXX is one of
the current poisons that cause
Polio.
Want
proof?
Check your
Physicians Desk Reference (PDR).
Other drugs
that can cause POLIO are IBUPROFEN, NAPROXEN, SULINDAC and
TOLMETIN.
(Polio was
renamed Aseptic Meningitis after the vaccines went into use, thereby effecting a
partial reduction in Polio by euphemistic
redefinition.)
In our age,
redefining 25 old diseases as AIDS helped create the fake AIDS epidemic of
today.
Before getting into the POISON CAUSE OF POLIO article one more comment to
help drive home the point. The following is from John at whale.to in answer to
an article I sent to one of the anti-vaccination websites – I added the bold
print and underline [DHD Sr].
Talking of various polio terms I came across some GBS (another polio one)
ones. Amazing really:
GBS is short for Guillain-Barré-Strohl syndrome which is long for just plain
Guillain-Barré.
The point is that GBS is Also known by the following names:
Landry’s
paralysis
Kussmaul-Landry syndrome
Landry's
syndrome
Landry-Guillain-Barré syndrome
Landry-Kussmaul
syndrome
Glanzmann-Saland syndrome (misnomer)
Synonyms for the above
named:
Acute ascending polyradiculoneuritis, acute polyneuritis, acute
febrile polyneuritis, acute idiopathic polyneuritis, acute infectious
polyneuritis, acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, acute
plexitis, acute polyneuritis with facial diplegia, acute polyneuronitis, acute
polyneuropathy, acute polyradiculitis, ascending paralysis, acute postinfectious
polyneuropathy, celluloradiculoneuritis, encephalomyeloradiculoneuritis, febrile
polyneuritis, idiopathic polyradiculoneuritis, infectious neuronitis, infectious
polyneuritis, infectious polyneuronitis, inflammatory polyneuropathy,
myeloradiculitis, neuritis with albuminocytologic dissociation, neuromyelitis
hyperalbumenotica, neuronitis, paralysis spinalis ascendens acuta, polyneuritis
with facial diplegia, polyradiculitis, polyradiculoneuritis, polyradiculonévrite
inflammatoire (aiguê), postinfectious radiculoneuropathy, radiculoneuritis,
schwannosis. All are believed to be the same syndrome. This disturbance
has been described by various eponymic terms, which are now all believed to be
the same disease. The term Glanzmann-Saland syndrome (severe
polyneuritis following diphteriae) has also been used, but that is a misnomer –
for more information along these lines go to - http://www.whonamedit.com/synd.cfm/1766.html
The Poison
Cause of Poliomyelitis
And Obstructions
To Its
Investigation
Statement
prepared for the Select Committee
to Investigate the Use of Chemicals in
Food Products,
United States House of Representatives, Washington,
D.C.
Archives of Pediatrics,
April 1952
Ralph R. Scobey,
M.D.
Syracuse, N.Y.
The disease that we now know
as poliomyelitis was not designated as such until about the middle of the 19th
Century. Prior to that, it was designated by many different names at various
times and in different localities.1,2 The simple designations,
paralysis, palsy and apoplexy, were some of the earliest names applied to what
is now called poliomyelitis.
Paralysis, resulting from
poisoning, has probably been known since the time of Hippocrates (460-437 B.C.),
Boerhaave,3 Germany, (1765) stated: "We frequently find persons
rendered paralytic by exposing themselves imprudently to quicksilver, dispersed
into vapors by the fire, as gilders, chemists, miners, etc., and perhaps there
are other poisons, which may produce the same disease, even externally applied."
In 1824, Cooke,4 England, stated: "Among the exciting causes of the
partial palsies we may reckon the poison of certain mineral substances,
particularly of quick silver, arsenic, and lead. The fumes of these metals or
the receptance of them in solution into the stomach, have often causes
paralysis."
Colton5 (1850)
mentions the case of a patient who swallowed some arsenic accidently and was
admitted to the hospital. The primary effects of the poison had been
successfully combatted with proper remedies, but seven days afterward he became
paralyzed. It is significant to note that there was a latent period of several
days before the paralysis appeared since this delayed reaction is comparable to
the incubation period in infectious diseases.
Vulpian6 (1879)
experimentally produced paralysis of the extensor muscles of a dog by lead
poisoning. The lesions, consisting in colloid degeneration and cell atrophy of
the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord were pronounced by Vulpian as
poliomyelitis. Adamkiewitz7 (1879) reported two parallel cases, one
of poliomyelitis and one of lead poisoning.
In
1881, Popow8 of St. Petersburg, published an essay upon the
pathological anatomy of arsenical paralysis as produced artificially in animals.
The work of Popow was carried out under the guidance of the distinguished
neurologist and microscopist, Professor Mierzeyeski. Popow concluded that
arsenic, even in a few hours after its ingestion, may cause acute central
myelitis or acute poliomyelitis.
During an epidemic of
poliomyelitis in Australia in 1897, Altman9 pointed out that
phosphorus had been widely used by farmers for fertilizing that year. This
observation may be of significance since in recent years organic phosphorus
insecticides, such as parathion, have been suspected as possible causes of
poliomyelitis.
Onuff10 (1900)
reported a case of a painter with flaccid paralysis of both legs, in whom the
autopsy showed lesions characteristic of poliomyelitis.
Obsrastoff11
(1902) reported a case of acute poliomyelitis resulting from arsenic poisoning.
Phillippe and Gauthard12 (1903) reported a case of anterior
poliomyelitis from lead poisoning.
Gossage13 (1902),
writing on infantile paralysis, says: "The nerve cells or fiber may be acutely
disabled by the action of some poison circulating in the blood, and it is
possible that such poison would only temporarily impair their functions or so
seriously affect them that recovery would be impossible."
Dr. David E.
Edsall14 (1907), writing on the pathology of carbon monoxide
poisoning in Osler's System of Medicine, states: "Peripheral neuritis had
repeatedly been described and poliomyelitis and disseminated encephalitis have
been seen."
Collins and
Martland15 (1908) reported a case of poliomyelitis in a man, 38 years
of age, which resulted from the use of cyanide as a silver polish. The illness
began with diarrhea, followed by headache and pain and stiffness in the back fo
the neck. About eight days after the onset of the illness, he became paralyzed.
In discussing collins and Martland's paper, Larkin stated that he had seen one
instance of this disease following potassium cyanide
poisoning.
In
the spring of 1930, there occurred in Ohio, Kentucky, Alabama, Missippi and
other states an epidemic of paralysis.16,17 The patients gave a
history of drinking commercial extract of giner. It is estimated that at the
height of the epidemic there were 500 cases in Cincinnati district alone. The
cause of the paralysis was subsequently shown to be triorthocresyl phosphate in
a spurious Jamaica ginger. Death resulted not infrequently from respiratory
paralysis similar to the bulbar paralysis deaths in poliomyelitis. On
pathological examination, the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord in these
cases showed lesions similar to those of poliomyelitis.
These incidents show that
epidemics of poisoning occur and furthermore, that epidemic diseases do not
always indicate that they are caused by infectious agents. Moreover, following
the ingestion of the spurious Jamaica giner, the symptoms appeared two to ten
days later. In some cases a longer time elapsed. This latent peior is comparable
to the incubation period of infections diseases. As a matter of fact, the
incubation period of poliomyelitis is commonly stated to be seven to 10 days on
the average with considerable variation in either direction. The so-called
incubation period in poliomyelitis and the latent period in these cases of
poisoning, therefore, are strikingly similar in length.
Leenhardt et
al.18 (1951) described acrodynia in the course of three cases of
acute poliomyelitis. Some authorities have considered acrodynia to be caused by
a poison. Elmore19 (1948) reported two cases of this disease
following the ingestion of mercury and Warkany and Hubbard20 (1951)
found mercury in the urines of 38 (92.7 per cent) of 40 acrodynia patients.
Meyerhofer21 (1939) reported that infantile acrodynia may
immeidiately follow certain forms at atypical poliomyelitis, especially
encephalomyelitis. Mercury is used as an insecticide and a fungicide and the
above clinical observations indicate that it might be a factor in producing some
cases of poliomyelitis.
Gougerot22 (1935)
reported that during arsenical therapy for syphilis, poliomyelitis developed in
two patients, and lethargic encephalitis followed by Parkinson's disease in
one.
In
1936, during a campaign to eliminate yaws in Western Samoa by the injection of
arsenicals, an epidemic of poliomyelitis appeared simultaneously.23
In one community all of the patients developed payalysis in the same lower limbs
and buttocks in which they had received the injections and this pattern was
repeated in 37 other villages, whereas there was no paralysis in uninoculated
districts. The natives accused the injections as the cause of the epidemic of
poliomyelitis. Most of the cases of paralysis occurred one to tow weeks after
the injection of the arsenic.
The foregoing reports
indicate that poisons can cause poliomyelitis. It would appear that not any one
poison in particular would be responsible for all cases of poliomyelitis but the
effect of any one of several could produce the same ultimate result. When a
disease is known to be caused by a poison, it is obvious that a search for a
germ or virus in relation to it would not be made. Conversely, if a so-called
virus is believed to be associated with the disease, then the possibility of
poisoning as the cause of the disease would not be considered. It will be shown,
moreover, that some so-called virus diseases and virus inclusions can be caused
by poisons.
Dr. Robert W.
Lovett24 of the Massachusetts State Board of health (1908),
describing the epidemic of poliomyelitis in Massachusetts in 1907, and after
reviewing the medical literature on experimental poliomyelitis, states: "The
injection experiments prove that certain metallic poisons, bacteria and toxins
have a selective action on the motor cells of the anterior cornua when present
in the general circulation; that the paralysis of this type may be largely
unilateral; that the posterior limbs are always more affected than the anterior;
and that the lesions in the cord in such cases do not differ from those in
anterior poliomyelitis." It appears to be of great importance that various
poisons, lead, arsenic, mercury, cyanide, etc., found capable of causing
paralysis are employed in relation to articles of food that are used for human
consumption.
There are two abnormal
findings in cases of poliomyelitis that point strongly to poisoning as the cause
of this disease. One consists in the appearance of increased amounts of
porphyrin in the urine; the other is the presence of increased amounts of
guanidine in the blood. It is a well-known fact that porphyria can follow
poisoning by a number of chemicals. Guanidine has been found in increased
amounts in the blood in arsenic, chloroform, and carbon tetrachloride
poisonings.
The fact that ascorbic acid
has been effective in the treatment of poliomyelitis appears justly to imply
that this disease has a poison cause. Ascorbic acid has been used as a reducing
agent in the treatment of poisoning resulting from a number of toxic agents,
including coal tar antipyretics, nitro compounds, analine, cyanide, benzene,
lead, arsenic, etc.32-40 Paralleling these modern scientific
investigations is the observation over a century ago that lime juice and lemon
juice were protective against the poisoning by fish which sometimes resulted in
paralysis,41,42. This early observation is perhaps the principle
reason why lemon juice is customarily served today when fish are
eaten.
The fact that methylene
blue,43 another reducing agent, is effective in the treatment of
poliomyelitis also points to the poison cause of this disease. Methylene blue
has been used as an antidote in the treatment of nitrite, cyanide, carbon
monoxide and other poisonings.
Another fact that strongly
implies that human poliomyelitis is caused by a poison is found in the recent
report (1951) by Dr. Irwin S. Eskwith44 of Bridgeport, Conn., that
BAL (dimercaprol) was effective in bringing about complete recovery in a
moribund 4 1/2 year-old girl with bulbar poliomyelitis. BAL counteracts the
effects of poisons; it has been shown not to be effective in infectious
diseases.
RELATIONSHIP OF HARVEST TO
POLIOMYELITIS
[...]
In
1907, Dr. H. C. Emerson54, Massachusetts State Inspector of Health,
District 14, investigating an epidemic of poliomyelitis in that state, made a
careful inquiry regarding the diet. No infant who was fed exclusively on the
breast developed poliomyelitis. He found in six cases that fruit and berries had
been a large item of the diet. In the cases of two infants, bananas and berries
had been given in the diet in addition to breast milk. In three cases of
poliomyelitis, the illness was attributed to the eating of large amounts of
blackberries and blueberries. In one case the illness was credited to eating
heartily of English mulberries. In 39 instances it was stated that food supplied
were bought from fruit and vegetable peddlers in their localities.
Dingman55 (1916)
reported a milk-borne epidemic of poliomyelitis and several similar outbreaks
have been reported since then that were traceable to milk.
Chapman58, raised
the question of food poisoning to explain the epidemic of poliomyelitis in
England in 1947, when he stated: "Is it not possible that the present prevalence
of infantile paralysis may, in part at any rate, be due to some article in our
restricted and modified dietary?"
[...]
Toomey and
August59 (1932) pointed out that some authors thought that
poliomyelitis is a disease of gastrointestinal orgin which might follow the
ingestion of foodstuffs. In 193360, they noted that the epidemic peak
of poliomyelitis corresponds with the harvest peak of perishable fruits and
vegetables. They called attention to the fact that the disease occurs only in
those countries which raise the same type of agricultural products. Dr. C.W.
Burhans60, one of the colleagues of the authors, thought that green
apples might be a factor in the etiology of poliomyelitis. Toomey et
al61. (1943) points out that there is frequently a history of dietary
indeiscretions previous to an attack of poliomyelitis. They suspected that a
virus could be found on or in unwashed fruit or in well water during epidemics
of poliomyelitis. Every year for eight years, therefore, grapes, apples,
peaches, and pears were collected from the vineyards and trees in Northern Ohio
at the time of the ripening. In none of their studies was the so-called virus of
poliomyelitis demonstrated when the washings of the fruit or the well water were
injected into experimental animals. However, no chemical tests were made to
determine whether or not a chemical substance on or within the fruit or in the
well water, acting by oral ingestion top produce poliomyelitis, was
present.
Draper62 (1935)
recorded a series of cases of poliomyelitis which he postulated originated from
a Greek fruiterer. All of the cases were in contact with the Greek as business
associates, relatives or customers, and there was nothing in the evidence to
point to infection being carried by the Greek himself other than the fruit he
supplied.
[...]
Barber64 (1939)
reported four cases of poliomyelitis that developed simultaneously on the same
day from the eating of strawberries in a single house of a boarding school. He
says that the simultaneous onset of these cases resembled food poisoning. The
seasonal and climatic incidence of poliomyelitis, he points out, agree closely
with the seasonal increase in the consumption of fresh garden production. He
says that the epidemiological distribution of poliomyelitis resembles food
poisoning.
Chenault65 (1941)
noted that the history of poliomyelitis points to a "suggested parallelism
between a number of epidemics and the appearance of fresh fruits and
vegetables." [With regard to these numerous
statements regarding fruit and milk, note the high production of pesticides in
the form of lead and arsenic coumpounds during this pre-DDT period, graphed]
Goldstein et al66
(1946) reported an epidemic of polioencephalitis at a naval training school
among the cadets. The epidemic was explosive in character and involved over 100
persons. Epidemiological evidence suggested that some food served in the mess
hall was the cause of the disease.
[...]
Gebhardt and
McKay68 (1946) found during an epidemic of poliomyelitis in Utah that
of a total of 206 persons surveyed, 192 persons, or 93.2 per cent, had one to
two weeks prior to the onset of the disease eaten fresh fruits. The authors
found in Utah, New York and California, during 1943, that the cases of
poliomyelitis paralleled the harvest peaks. Most of the multiple cases in
families were found to have developed at the same time, suggesting means other
than contact as the mode of spread. Among the fruits more commonly eaten were
apples, peaches and pears; tomatoes headed the list of vegetables. The authors
stated that the data appeared to fit into the jigsaw puzzle of epidemic
poliomyelitis.
[...]
Abbott71 (1948),
of Auckland, New Zealand, stated: "The public has always been fully convinced
that they caught poliomyelitis from one another by direct infection. The 'germ'
idea is indeed deeply ingrained in both the profession and the public. It will
be many years before our prolific writers of medical textbooks attain the degree
of sophistication that would enable them to understand how and why poliomyelitis
would be more likely to be contacted from the flour-bag, or some homely article
of food, rather than from their neighbors."
[...]
Barondes72 (1949)
points out that a study of the epidemiology of poliomyelitis shows a definite
correlation with the harvesting of fruit and vegetable crops and to changes in
climate, weather and humidity. The harvesting of such fruits as cherries,
grapes, berries, apricots, etc. and the edible vegetables, as lettuce, radish,
cucumbers, etc. usually from June to September, corresponds with the period of
poliomyelitis epidemics, Barondes points out.
Toomey et al74
(1949) made some important experimental observations that appear to show a
correlation of the poison and virus theories of poliomyelitis. They considered
it possible that a food (fruit) which enters the gastrointestinal tract could in
some way act as a precursor of catalytic enzyme on a normal constituent of the
tract and accelerate the production of poliomyelitis. Varous materials, together
with fruit extracts, were tested.
When supernates of peach
skin mash were injected intracerebrally into cotton rats, followed at intervals
with intracerebral injections of the so-called poliomyelitis virus, accelerated
production of paralysis occurred. Because of the presence of cyanophore
glucosides in peach skins, a synthetic preparation, succinotrile, was injected
intracerebrally into the experimental animals. This chemical accelerated the
production of the disease similar to that produced with the peach supernates.
Toomey et al. emphasize that the injections of fruit supernates were made in a
manner that does not occur under natural circumstances.
Sabin75 (1951),
although insisting on the virus etiology of poliomyelitis, implicates food and
drink as important factors inthe cause of this disease. He points out that
measures which are often advocated to combat poliomyelitis epidemics are
not warranted, such as (a) avoidance of crowds, large gatherings or
sports events, (b) exclusion of children under 16 years of age from movies,
churches, or schools, and (c) exclusion of poliomyelitis patients and suspects
from general hospital wards.
[...]
The implications [of the foregoing] should be obvious that
investigations of foods eaten by the poliomyelitis victim prior to his or her
illness should be carefully considered.
THE PRODUCTION OF SO-CALLED
VIRUS DISEASES
AND "VIRUS"
INCLUSIONS BY POISONS
The public, as well as many
physicians, is under the impression that viruses are living organisms comparable
to a germ that enters the human, animal or plant to cause the disease. The
scientists, who are authorities on virus diseases, are in disagreement as to the
nature of a virus.
It
is not generally realized that some so-called virus diseases may result from the
effects of poisons on the human body, thus, herpes zoster may follow exposure to
carbon monoxide or the administration of arsenic, bismuth, lipiodol, gold,
mercury, tuberculin, alcohol, etc. An epidemic of herpes zoster and peripheral
neuritis, similar to the "jake" paralysis epidemic in this country, followed the
ingestion of arsenic in beer in Manchester, England in 1900.76-78 The
toxic agent was determined to be arsenic arising from dextrose made from starch
by the use of crude sulfuric acide containing this poisonous
substance.
Herpes simplex, another
so-called virus disease, has followed the ingestion of alcohol, benzol,
arsenobenzol, mercury, and the inhalation of either, among other poisons. Van
Rooyen79 noted its appearance after sulfapyridine therapy. Herpes
simplex has followed the injection of vaccines, milk and colloidal
metals.
Inclusion bodies have been
defined as products of virus activity or the elementary virus bodies themselves.
Inclusion bodies have been found in poisoned humans and experimental
animals.
Dalldorf and
Williams80 (1945) found large acidophilic inclusion bodies in the
kidneys of rats poisoned by lead. Blackman81 (1936) found
intranuclear inclusion bodies in the tubular epithelium of the kidney and in the
liver cells of 21 children dying from the effects of acute lead poisoning and
lead encephalitis.
Cox and Olitsky82
(1934) found that the injection into animals of aluminum hydroxide produced
inclusion bodies similar to those seen in infectious
encephalitis.
Van Rooyen and
Rhodes83, in their textbook (1948), "Virus Diseases in Man," state:
"Histological changes similar to those seen in infectious encephalitis may be
produced by carbon monoxide poisoning, brain injury, arteriosclerosis, uremia,
pregnancy toxemia and toxic agents like alcohol and lead."
Olitsky and
Harford84 (1937) were able to produce inclusion bodies
indistinguishable from those observed in virus infections by the injections of
aluminum compounds, ferric hydroxide and carbon.
MISTAKES THAT HAVE BEEN MADE
IN THE PAST
Several commissions,
appointed during the first quarter of this century to investigate the cause of
pellagra, concluded from their studies that pellagra was an infectious,
contagious disease. Harris85 (1913) was able to inject Berkefeld
filtered tissue material from pellagra victims into monkeys to cause a
corresponding disease in these animals. He concluded from these experiments that
a virus was present in the injected material and that it was the cause of
pellagra. If the work of
Harris had been followed exclusively, various strains of this "virus" might
have been discovered and a vaccine, effective in experimental animals, might
have been developed, as in the case of poliomyelitis. Today, as a result of
unlimited research, however, we know conclusively that pellagra is not caused by
a virus but rather that it is a vitamin deficiency disease. It is obvious that
if the investigations of pellagra had been restricted to the virus theory, it
would still be a mystery.
[...]
The symptoms
of milksickenss in man resemble those of influenze or grippe, gastritis, and
so-called ptomaine poisoning. As a matter of fact, so-called summer grippe or
flu often occurs during epidemics of poliomyelitis. There were 10,000 cases in
Cincinnati in 194789-90, which were thought to be related to
poliomyelitis and were considered, therefore, virus infections. However,
Matson91 (1950), writing about poisonous plants, says that some
physicians have expressed the opinion that mysterious outbreaks of so-called
summer flu in the late summer are often due to milk contaminated with tremetol
[a poison
occuring in white snakeroot and rayless goldenrod].
The
observation that human and bovine outbreaks of tremetol poisoning occur
simultaneously corresponds with similar observations made during epidemics of
poliomyelitis. Medical reports have shown repeatedly that paralytic diseases in
horses, pigs, dogs, cats, ducks, chickens, etc. occur simultaneously in
districts where epidemics of poliomyelitis are prevalent,... [even though
"polio" affects only humans (except in laboratories), pesticide causality
resolves these conflicts of data.]
FACTORS
PRECLUDING INVESTIGATION
OF
THE POISON CAUSE OF POLIOMYELITIS
It
is obvious that in the study of poliomyelitis every possible cause, including
the possibility of poisoning, should be investigated.
Since 1908 -- for 44 years
-- poliomyelitis research has been predominantly directed along only one line of
investigation, i.e., the infectious theory. This single line of study,
precluding other possibilities, including the poison cause of the disease, has
resulted from two factors, (1) The Public Health Law93, and (2) the
insistence, based entirely on animal experiments, that poliomyelitis is caused
by a virus.
1.
The Public Health Law. The inclusion of poliomyelitis in the Public
Health Law as a communicable, infectious disease dates back to the early part of
the 20th Century. At that time many diseases, now known to be neither
communicable nor infectious, were considered to be caused by an infectious agent
simply because they occurred in epidemics. The general attitude of that period
is expressed by Sachs94 (1911) in his statement: "In general, the
epidemic occurrence of any disease is sufficient to prove its infectious or
contagious character." The vitamin deficiency diseases, beriberi and pellagra,
are outstanding examples of epidemic diseases that were formerly considered to
be infectious and communicable according to the logic employed by Sachs. In
fact, we find pellagra incorporated into the Public Health Law as a communicable
disease in the State of Pennsylvania in the following rule and regulation
adopted January 5, 1910: "That all physicians practicing within the limits of
the state shall make immediate report of each and every case of uncinariasis
duodenalis (hookworm disease) and pellagra and anterior poliomyelitis (infantile
paralysis) occurring in their practice in the same manner that other
communicable diseases are now by law and by rule and regulation of the State
Department of Health reported to the health authorities." A State Health
Officer95 recently wrote to me as follows: "I think all of us will
agree with you that in the past, as is still probably true, public health rules
and regulations and sometimes even public health laws, were influenced too much
by what we did not know rather than by what we did know. This was probably an
acceptable line of reasoning in the past, but with increasing public health
education and greater understanding and cooperation from citizens, this
justification becomes less acceptable."
The fact that an extensive
epidemic of poliomyelitis was prevailing in the states of New York and
Massachusetts in 1907, aroused the suspicion that the disease was infectious and
communicable; it was therefore incorporated into the Public Health Law as such.
However, conclusive evidence of contagiousness was not established during that
epidemic nor in subsequent ones. Moreover, during the greatest epidemic of
poliomyelitis in recorded history, as shown by the records of the U.S. Public
Health Service and the New York State Department of Health. Time Magazine,
commenting on these surveys, points out how, when and where people catch polio
remained a mystery. In addition to the failure to prove contagiousness of human
poliomyelitis, it has likewise been impossible to prove contagiousness of
poliomyelitis in experimental animals. This fact will be considered in detail
later.
As
a result of the inclusion of poliomyelitis in the Public Health Law as a
contagious, communicable or infectious disease, investigations regarding it are
almost exclusively in the hands of specialists in virology and public health.
The country doctor, general practitioner, and clinician have little or no
opportunity to participate in poliomyelitis research under these circumstances.
Yet, Dr. W. Ritchie Russell97 of the Department of Neurology, United
Oxford Hospitals, Oxford, England stated in 1950: "Clinical research into this
disease is so much neglected that there are exciting discoveries waiting for
anyone with time to give to this type of investigation."
Medical advances of the
utmost importance have been made in the past by general practicioners. An
outstanding example is the work of Dr. Edward Jenner, a general practioner in
Gloucestershire, England, whose observations and deductions brought about
vaccination against smallpox. All advances in medicine do not result from
laboratory experiments. Any doctor in any community, however, small, and however
limited his opportunities, may make a fundamental discovery, but he must be
given the opportunity to participate in the program and his observations and
deductions must be given adequate consideration.
2.
Virus Research. The more or less general acceptance of the idea that
poliomyelitis is caused by a virus arose from experimental animal studies by
Landsteiner98 (1908) in Austria, and Flexner and Lewis99
(1909) in the United States. These experiments showed that a substance obtained
from poliomyelitis victims could produce a paralytic disease when administered
to experimental animals. It has been assumed, as a result of these experiments
that an exogenous [originating from without] virus is the cause of human
poliomyelitis. Dr. Harold L. Amoss100 stated in 1928: "By reason of
the parrellelism of the human and experimental disease it is believed that
inferences drawn from experiments with monkeys may be accepted with a
certain degree of safety as applicable to the solution of problems in connection
with human cases." The portal of entry of the so-called virus of
poliomyelitis into the human body never has been established. The question of
the portal of entry is summed up in the published reports of the International
Poliomyelitis Congress that was held in New York City in 1948. The Modulator
stated: "We do not know too much about the portal of entry in human beings," and
Dr. John R. Paul, of Yale University, stated: "I would say we do not know the
portal of entry in human beings."
It
was mentioned in the foregoing that human poliomyelitis has not been shown
conclusively to be a contagious disease. Neither has the experimental animal
disease, produced by the so-called poliomyelitis virus, been shown to be
communicable. Rosenau102 (1921) stated: "Monkeys have so far never
been known to contract the disease "spontaneously" even though they are kept in
intimate association with infected monkeys." Twenty years later (1941), Dr. John
A. Toomey103, a poliomyelitis authority, stated: "No animal gets the
disease from another no matter how intimately exposed."
It
is extremely difficult to understand how a human can contract poliomyelitis from
another individual through dissemination of a virus by contact, carriers,
excrement, unclean hands, unwashed fruits and vegetables, flies, etc. when a
healthy animal in the same cage with an "infected" animal, exposed to all of
these natural factors, remains unaffected. It appears obvious, therefore, that
communicability should have been established conclusively both in humans and in
experimental animals before poliomyelitis was incorporated into the Public
Health Law as a communicable disease.
Some investigators have as a
matter of fact pointed out that human poliomyelitis and the disease produced in
experimental animals from human material, etc. are not the same disease.
Toomey104 (1935), for example, stated that intranasal and
intracerebral inoculation of poliomyelitis virus in the monkey does not produce
the same disease that is seen in man. Dr. Claus W. Jungebut, a well-known
bacteriologist who has worked on the poliomyelitis problem for many years,
recently stated (1950): "Whatever the final answer may be, it seems a reasonable
statement at this time that the highly specialized, neurotropically fixed virus,
which has been maintained in the past by intracerebral passage in rhesus
monkeys, is more likely a laboratory artefact than the agent which
causes the natural disease in man." The logical conclusion appears to
be, therefore, that the laboratory experiments with the so-called virus of
poliomyelitis are merely of academic interest and have no practical application
to human poliomyelitis.
For almost half a century
poliomyelitis investigations have been directed towards a supposed exogenous
virus that enters the human body to cause the disease. The manner in which the
Public Health Law is now stated imposes only this type of investigation. No
intensive studies have been made, on the other hand, to determine whether or not
the so-called virus of poliomyelitis is an autochthonous chemical substance that
does not enter the human body at all, but simply results from an exogenous
factor or factors, for example, a food poison. Analogous reactions are
well-known as illustrated by the production of experimental sarcomas by indol,
arsenic, tar, etc. and which have been transmitted by Berkefeld
filtrates.
The discovery in recent
years of the so-called Coxsackie virus has tended to further confuse the entire
poliomyelitis problem. Hoyne107 (1951), for example, states that the
announcement of this discovery "is accompanied by some feeling of dismay... In
view of the foregoing announcement it seems that trained investigators have
added one more problem to the nebulous conditions enveloping poliomyelitis. One
might also be tempted to make the statement that the more we learn about
poliomyelitis, the less we know." Hoyne's statement applies obviously to the
confusion that has arisen from exclusive virus studies in poliomyelitis. A
Lancet editorial108 (1951) also indicates the complexity of the
problem brought about by the discovery of the Coxsackie virus, as follows: "A
crop of new snags is coming along as every week brings new tidings of the
Coxsackie viruses."
Many diseases have been
considered to be caused by viruses but virus studies constitute only a portion
of the investiations intended to determine the cause of the disease.
Poliomyelitis investigations, on the other hand, have been confined exclusively
to virus studies. Because of this situation and the Public Health Law, those who
maintain other opinions, including those concerned poisons as the cause of
poliomyelitis, can neither obtain funds from any sourrce for research nor
cooperation for investigating their ideas. Reappraisal and investigation of all
theories, infectious and non-infectious, are imperative.
To
epitomize, the following quotation from a talk on poliomyelitis given by Dr.
Ritchie Russell97, Department of Neurology, United Oxford Hospitals,
Oxford, England (1950) summarizes what has been pointed out in the foregoing:
"The time is ripe for a survey of our knowledge of the disease, of the methods
of treatment we are accustomed to use and our efforts to advance knowledge of
the condition... Surely if the Americans with all their millions of dollars for
research on poliomyelitis can do so little, we need not try... I do not intend
here to praise good work that has been done, but more to emphasize the gaps in
our knowledge of the disease in the hope that others may be encouraged to work
on the subject which sorely needs some extra attention. There are at present
several different groups of specialists working on the disease, including
virologists, infectious disease physicians, orthopedic surgeons,
physiotherapists and public health officers. This may be a reasonably adequate
state of affairs as far as handling the individual case is concerned; but as a
background for advancing knowledge of the disease it is not satisfactory for the
members of each of these groups have many other interests, and have neither the
time nor always the experience of other aspects of the disease to enable them to
fit their piece into the whole picture in such a way as to advance research...
Unfortunately, the disease gets worse as public health improves, and measures
which are designed simply to avoid infection seem to be singularly ineffective
in poliomyelitis."
The statement is reminiscent
of one made in 1938 by Dr. Carl C. Dauer109, Chief of the Bureau of
Preventable Diseases, District of Columbia health Department, viz: "It seems
rather remarkable in spite of all the time and effort spent in poliomyelitis
studies during the past 20 years so little information in the epidemiologiy of
the disease has been produced."
The urgent need for
cooperation between the clinician and laboratory worker, as well as an
unprejudiced attitude toward the poliomyelitis problem, is emphasized by
Jungeblut105 as follows: "The subject is of keen interest to
clinicians and laboratory workers alike and progress will be measured by the
extent of cooperation between the two. Until the final word has been said it is
hoped that, in the future, students of poliomyelitis will preserve an open mind
and maintain an open door in their efforts to unravel the mysteries of this
baffling disease." Jungeblut indicates the confusion that has been caused by the
virus theory when he states: "Actually, the history of this disease has been
marked by periods of violent disagreement among scientific workers and by sharp
dissension within the ranks of the medical profession."
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