Cyterbacter Freudii Infection - Please Suggest Remedies

Posted By Lola (Uk) on 08/16/2024

Hiw can I treat Cyterbacter Freudii gram negative bacteria.

i have mouth sores/ulcers and a sweet taste in the mouth. My tongue is so thickly coated yellow

I am drooling and excessive saliva.
also have Coxsackie Virus B1 and A7.

palpitations and burning up inside though temperature normal?

can anyone suggest what I can do. Trying everything?

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Replied by Lisa (FL) on 08/17/2024

Hi Lola,

I think for both the virus and infection you should use chlorine dioxide. It is an oxidant so don't take antioxidants with it (see MMS page on earth clinic or look up universal antidote). Since C. Freundii is an antioxidant, maybe it would work great against it. I used it recently for a virus I picked up and it shortened the duration. It is inexpensive. You need to take something long-term. I took Chlorine dioxide for a year due to a 5 year infection of sinus and ear and the ear completely cleared up. This is a long time to take something but I knew I had a lot of infection. For biofilm (see wikipidea below) take serrepeptase or Nattokinase. Or there is a product on amazon that has both together. According to the web, Coxsackie goes away on its own, but apparently yours has not. But C. Dioxide would be good for that too. I found that I had tremendous energy while on it.

Wikipedia on C. Freundii:

Exopolysaccharides from C. freundii target the hydroxyl radical, demonstrating antioxidant activity.[2] These antioxidant properties are related to many different physical and chemical properties.[2]

C. freundii has an aggressive adherence pattern that has been found in the cells of goats, which has been shown to play a role in its pathogenicity; although, this is not a guarantee of infection.[3]

Biofilm formation plays a major role in the infection rates of C. freundii demonstrating different modes of infection that include not only adherence, but also biofilm formation at room temperature.[3] Strong biofilm adherence can also lead to a reservoir for resistance in antimicrobial genes, meaning that even though adherence is not directly causing infection in these cases, adherence is creating resistance.[3]

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