Thu-24-01-2019, 12:27 PM
I dont know exactly how it is in the Netherlands. Should have to do a search on internet for that or ask some contact, but I am not sure if I am better than ArteMie in that...
Can you transfer P to somebody else? I would not know. P is not visible in the blood, but the blood contains triggers that do work on a P sufferer, but why would that work on someone without P? Theoretically yes, but only if that person is already vulnerable. Otherwise his immune system will deal with it.
Can you send a cure for P to someone else through transfusion ? Good question Fred.
Maybe, but only if the transfused blood contains something that fights the P. This might be so if the real cause of P is detectable in your blood.
If it has a DNA relation and perhaps a bacterial cause/trigger. Is there something in the donated blood that kills that bacteria, you may be lucky.
And what if you have e.g. been bitten by a tick? Is it possible to transfer the borellia bacteria to someone else? I think so.
According to the theories and reseach on CWDB’s, there is another publication coming from mr. Claessen from the Universiy of Leiden, I can imagine that CWDB’s also pass with a transfusion. If that is a real problem? Imagine you get blood from a former Q-fever patient, who now again are allowed to give blood, your will also get his/hers CWDB’s with this blood. Will your get sick of that? I don’t know, there is no reseach or proof in that direction. Nobody picked up the idea yet to connect the dots on that point.
Can you transfer P to somebody else? I would not know. P is not visible in the blood, but the blood contains triggers that do work on a P sufferer, but why would that work on someone without P? Theoretically yes, but only if that person is already vulnerable. Otherwise his immune system will deal with it.
Can you send a cure for P to someone else through transfusion ? Good question Fred.
Maybe, but only if the transfused blood contains something that fights the P. This might be so if the real cause of P is detectable in your blood.
If it has a DNA relation and perhaps a bacterial cause/trigger. Is there something in the donated blood that kills that bacteria, you may be lucky.
And what if you have e.g. been bitten by a tick? Is it possible to transfer the borellia bacteria to someone else? I think so.
According to the theories and reseach on CWDB’s, there is another publication coming from mr. Claessen from the Universiy of Leiden, I can imagine that CWDB’s also pass with a transfusion. If that is a real problem? Imagine you get blood from a former Q-fever patient, who now again are allowed to give blood, your will also get his/hers CWDB’s with this blood. Will your get sick of that? I don’t know, there is no reseach or proof in that direction. Nobody picked up the idea yet to connect the dots on that point.