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Sunday, 02/17/2019 10:30:41 AM

Sunday, February 17, 2019 10:30:41 AM

Post# of 523
This neurological condition is reportedly found in deer, elk, and moose. You have to wonder if it might be related to ticks (Plum Island) like Lyme disease.

It's been pretty well established that the source of Lyme disease was the US bio weapon facility on Plum Island, near Long Island. Lyme disease first appeared in Lyme Connecticut, which is located a few miles from Plum Island, just across the Long Island Sound. They were reportedly developing insect vectored bio weapons (spirochetes, the type of bacteria that cause Syphilis) at the Plum Island facility. Lyme disease is endemic on Long Island, and over the decades has gradually spread across the eastern US. They think it spread to the mainland via the birds that inhabit Plum Island.

They're saying this new deer/elk 'chronic wasting disease' is related to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, which involves prions or misfolded proteins, so it sounds similar to Mad Cow disease. Alzheimer's is another neurological condition involving misfolded proteins which then clump together into tangles and plaques of Amyloid protein. But unlike Alzheimers, the Deer disease appears to be infectious/transmissible. In some types of infectious prion diseases, the infectious prion cannot be deactivated by normal sterilzation techniques -


>>> Such amyloids have been associated with (but not necessarily as the cause of) more than 50[1] human diseases, known as amyloidoses, and may play a role in some neurodegenerative disorders.[2] Some amyloid proteins are infectious; these are called prions in which the infectious form can act as a template to convert other non-infectious proteins into infectious form.[3] Amyloids may also have normal biological functions; for example, in the formation of fimbriae in some genera of bacteria, transmission of epigenetic traits in fungi, as well as pigment deposition and hormone release in humans.[4] <<<


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amyloid


Prions -

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prion


Amyloidosis -

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amyloidosis








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