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Re: BonelessCat post# 49569

Saturday, 04/16/2011 1:11:16 PM

Saturday, April 16, 2011 1:11:16 PM

Post# of 146240
There's absolutely no telling how many cells there are in the human body. Antivirals work by blocking replication processes. Most antivirals don't work completely because of latent non-replicating infected cells and other dynamics (BBB). I wonder what the size (molecular weight) of a nanoviricide molecule is? My understanding is this has not been disclosed but it could probably be estimated. Any help from the board would be appreciated. It would benefit us to know this so we can exactly estimate the number of 'particles' in a dose. Don't forget most nanoviricides would succumb to normal metabolic elimination and clearance. My guess is there is not enough efficiency to get anywhere near the number of viral particles to be overwhelmed enough not to infect normal cells. Viruses enter their targets in specific ways (read up) and flooding the body with 'decoy cells' is just a silly way to overwhelm a virus given what I've described.

I will do the board a favor and hire a virologist or two as a consultant and see what they think of the approach. I have a very open mind about this. If I discover I was incorrect, I may cover my short. I need to make sure that "nanoviricides" can access all tissues in the body. It is unlikely that this is the case given the BBB, limited information with respect to serum albumin binding, distribution trafficking, etc. Toxicity is important.
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