Clifford E Carnicom
June 17 2011
Note: I am not offering any medical advice or diagnosis with the presentation of this information. I am acting solely as an independent researcher providing the results of extended observation and analysis of unusual biological conditions that are evident. Each individual must work with their own health professional to establish any appropriate course of action and any health related comments in this paper are solely for informational purposes and they are from my own perspective.
Analysis shows that the primary organism (or pathogen) characteristic of the "Morgellons" condition, as isolated and identified by this researcher, causes a signficant biochemical change in the nature of human blood in which it resides. The dramatic change in the character of the blood has also presented through visible observation for several years, but this change is now objectively and directly measurable through the use of spectral analysis. This change in the general character of human blood, as it has been measured from several individiuals, is regarded as highly significant and expressive of a potential fundamental change in the human condition. The representative change in the character of the spectrum is shown immediately below:
The above shows the nature of the change and of the problem. All matter reacts in a unique fashion to electromagnetic energy which, in this case, is visible light. Hemoglobin, (the primary protein in human blood cells), has such a unique and characteristic spectrum over the visible light range. This expected, normal, or reference spectrum of hemoglobin is shown with the black line in the graph above1. This spectrum shows how a substance or element reacts to energy, and the locations of the peaks in the graph are where the hemoglobin absorbs the most energy in the visible range. In this case, this should be at approximately 414, 542 and 576 nanometers respectively. There are important variations to this expectation, and they pose serious problems that are to be confronted.
The red line in the graph shows the average hemoglobin spectrum as measured within a set of nine essentially random individuals, ranging from approximately 23 to 70 years of age. The sample size may be increased further in the future but statistical significance is nevertheless already attained. Such a monumental change in the basic nature and character of a fundamental and crucial protein within the human body is a manifestation of significant biochemical changes within that same body. By no measure of a "normal" state of health would such a change be regarded as within "acceptable" or "expected" boundaries. The fundamental nature of the protein, i.e., blood, has been changed in the case presented. This researcher continues to contend that state of the blood of an individual is one of the most reliable, if not the most reliable, indicators of the existence and severity of the so-called "Morgellons" condition.
Future work and papers will focus on the interpretation of the nature of this change, and the development of a spectral method to indicate those individuals that may be subject to greater risk of existence of the condition or of more dramatic changes in the blood of the individual. No medical inferences are to be made from this research, and it is considered to be of analytical utility only. The medical community is invited to share in the collaboration or examination of this research as it perceived to be of benefit or not. The spectral methods under development are anticipated to be of value in the monitoring or measurement of change of the condition in a non-invasive manner.
Full analysis HERE
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