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UBI UltraViolet Blood Irradiation - Antibiotic Resistance

 

UBI in the Treatment of Antibiotic Resistant Super Bugs

IVbloodIrradiation.jpg


Photo(link is external) by Robert Weber, ©2006 / CC BY-SA 3.0

Ultraviolet Blood Irradiation (UBI) therapy prevents surgical infections, speeds healing of wounds and reduces the need for drugs.

I've discussed superbugs in these pages quite a bit lately. The threat is growing rapidly and conventional medicine has nothing to offer. But this month, I wanted to show you the one treatment that has yet to meet a bug it can't kill. It's so effective at treating antibiotic resistant bugs that it might be the only thing that saves you should you contract one of these bugs.

I first learned about antibiotic-resistance in medical school in the 1970s. By that time, the sexually transmitted disease gonorrhea had "learned" to resist penicillin. Then came derivatives of penicillin and cousins like the cephalosporins. But gonorrhea outwitted them as well. The drug companies came up with newer generations of cephalosporins in a desperate attempt to think faster than a germ. By just tweaking the molecular structure of the chemical, scientists hoped they could tame the germ.


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