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Early biologists categorized all of
life as either plant or animal. Then they discovered fungi, which
sometimes look like tiny mushrooms under a microscope. Fungi neither
move for their food, like animals, nor do they gather energy from
the sun, like plants. Fungi generate an amazing array of enzymes
to dissolve dead or dying plant and animal material. Fungi digest
the fallen leaves in your backyard, the dead animal on the highway,
and much more.
Fungi generate so many spores that they make bacteria and rabbits
look infertile in comparison. Fungi that cause smut on corn can
generate 25 billion spores per ear of corn. Fungi that decay dead
wood (Ganoderma applanatum) can generate 5.4 trillion spores per
season (6 months) per dead tree. All of these fungal spores are
flying through the air with the greatest of ease for you to breathe
into your sinuses. In one study, Professor Christensen used a specially
colored fungus that was not found in this particular area. He merely
took off the lid of the fungus culture dish on the first floor of
a building and within 5 minutes the fungal spores moved through
the office building ventilation system and were found on the fourth
floor in the density of thousands of spores per square yard. Fungal
spores have been collected in the air north of the Arctic Circle,
thousands of miles from their source. (Hudler, GW, MAGICAL MUSHROOMS,
MISCHIEVOUS MOLDS, p.27, Princeton University Press, 1998). The
point is, fungi are plentiful and everywhere. Though we cannot escape
them, we can cleanse them from our sinuses and reduce the discomfort
they can cause.
There are over 400,000 species of fungi on earth, of which 400
different species can cause diseases in humans. According to the
prestigious textbook on fungi, PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES OF CLINICAL
MYCOLOGY, "The majority of exogenous fungi causing serious
invasive disease are acquired by inhalation. Large number of spores
of the pathogenic fungi may be released into the air in dusty conditions,
which are associated with increased incidence of infection."
(p.16) In other words, those pesky fungi that are causing itchy
swollen eyes, headache, and sinus congestion can also be causing
much more damage in the body. Common fungal infections in humans
include: Aspergillosis, Blastomycosis, Candidiasis, Chromomycosis,
Coccidioidomycosis, Cryptococcosis, Histoplasmosis, Sporotrichosis,
and Zygomycosis. Dandruff, athlete¹s foot, vulvovaginitis,
thrush (white coating on tongue), eczema, psoriasis, toenail fungus,
and ring worm are all common fungal infections that occur in Americans
on the surface. All the more reason to use SinusCleanser to flush
out the fungi on a daily basis. You probably take a shower once
a day to clean the outside of your body. Why not cleanse your sinuses
on a daily basis with SinusCleanser to keep the mold load in your
sinuses and your body at a manageable level. SICK BUILDINGS AND
STACHYBOTRIS. According to a Government Accounting Office report,
20% of the 80,000 schools in the U.S. have indoor air quality problems,
most of which centers around mold (fungi). Fungi grow best in an
environment that is dark, warm, wet, stagnant, and has some sugar
to grow on. This set of conditions is found in almost every school
in America throughout the summer, with books, drywall, and wood
being food for the common mold, Stachybotrys. The mold spores from
Stachybotrys are inhaled and become extremely toxic to the nervous
system, causing debilitation that looks like Parkinson¹s disease,
or may simulate Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. A common sequence of events
is that children go back to school in the fall, after the school
has been locked up throughout the hottest part of the year, and
the child begins to have bloody noses, or asthma, or behavioral
disorders. These health problems may be caused by mold in the schools,
especially if there is any standing water source, such as a leaky
roof. SinusCleanser can help these people, too. Although the real
answer with Stachybotrys is shut down the source of water and then
complete removal of the infected wood, books, drywall, and other
materials where this nasty persistent black mold grows.
YOUR LOCAL MOLD COUNT. Some areas of the world have more fungi
(mold) in the air than others. The greater the humidity, the higher
the temperature, the more plant life surrounding you, and the further
from the sea; all create mold levels that can overwhelm even a healthy
system. Mold grow poorly in higher elevations above one mile (5280
feet), which is why more people in Tulsa, Oklahoma have sinus problems
than Aspen, Colorado. Mold grow slowly in colder climates, but quite
well in the stagnant environment of indoor central heating. Don¹t
think you can run to where it is dry for complete relief. There
are mold that are native to the desert regions of the southwest
U.S., such as cocciodioides, also known as "Valley Fever".
Other mold that is common in bird droppings, cryptococcosis, can
infect people who work around bird dung. Since much of the population
explosion in the U.S. has occurred in the sunbelt, there are over
100 million Americans who live where the mold count outdoors for
much of the year can cause symptoms of sinusitis. |