Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Moderator for newgroup

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Dr. Peter W. Pappas

unread,
Feb 20, 1999, 3:00:00 AM2/20/99
to
In response to Kayes' question about the need for a moderator for this
group, and the follow-up question of why a moderator might be needed, just
look at recent messages from "datura" and similar messages posted in the
past. It seems that some people need a forum for their opinions about
parasites and parasitology, no matter how ridiculous they may be, and I say
let them use bionet.parasitology (freedom of speech and all that). Also,
such messages provide a great source of teaching material. More than
anything, they provide excellent examples of the old adage, "A little
information can be a dangerous thing." On more than one occasion I have
taken these messages to my parasitology class and we have all had a "good
laugh." Come on folks, keep posting ---- I need fresh material for my
lectures.

Cathy D

unread,
Feb 22, 1999, 3:00:00 AM2/22/99
to
I liked datura's post and found it to be very informative, especially the
links to Ohio State. I have personally found that the medical system in
general is not helpful at all in identifying parisitic infestations that
exist outside the bowel such as in tissue, blood, & in remote parts of the
body. I have never been to a physician who has ever once mentioned that
maybe I need to clean up my diet and that maybe some of my
problems are parasitic related. In order to find out about what to do or
to even know that a problem exists, we the general public who are truly
concerned must go to the
alternative "health professions". Getting out the good old garlic might
ignite a few of your students. I am not trying to be disrespectful to you
and hope you take this the way intended.

Dr. Peter W. Pappas <papp...@osu.edu> wrote in article
<7amkkh$ma2$1...@charm.magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>...

Bob/Judy Dilworth

unread,
Feb 22, 1999, 3:00:00 AM2/22/99
to
I am personally taken aback that you would say such a thing about the medical
professions' identification of parasites. We as medical technologists are
trained to look for blood parasites, e.g. trypanosomes, malarial parasites,
microfilariae, etc., and have to pass proficiency testing on these and
intestinal parasites on a regular basis. Pathologists are the people who look
at the tissue specimens, and any pathologist would get second opinions on any
slide he would find suspicious of any parasite that he/she couldn't identify.
There are specialists in tropical diseases both in pathology and in practice,
as well as infectious disease physicians who are trained to treat parasitic
diseases. If you would tell any physician that you had been out of the
country to an area known for parasitic infestations or tropical diseases, a
flag hopefully would go up. Here in the U.S. the most common parasite is
Giardia lamblia. Ascaris (round worms), Enterobius vermicularis (pinworms),
and hookworm can be found in stool specimens, but not in huge segments of the
population due to the simple fact that MOST people live in a clean environment
and don't ingest feces. This is how a huge amount of parasites are spread -
in bad water and living conditions. I am frankly getting tired of hearing
about parasites that questionably exist. Show them to me in formalin, on a
slide and/or under a microscope and then I'll believe, and hopefully I could
identify them using legitimate texts. If you are so insistent that you are
infested with these parasites, I want names, preps, travel history, and other
information to narrow down the field. Please don't mislead people that
everyone has parasites. Many people live with parasites in underdeveloped
countries, but not in the U.S. Our lab processes 8-10 O&P exams on a daily
basis, and we have a positive 2-3 times/month that is usually Giardia (Ohio).
Different parts of the country would come up with different numbers depending
on geographic location. Large coastal cities with more foreign travelers
would see far different numbers and a different parasite profile. This is
well documented in many texts.

As far as "cleaning up your diet" make sure fresh foods are well-washed.
Stay away from mosquito-infested tropical areas, and WASH YOUR HANDS and you
will cut down your chances of acquiring most parasites in the U.S.

Judy Dilworth, M.T. (ASCP)
Microbiology 22 years

Robert S. Lewis

unread,
Feb 22, 1999, 3:00:00 AM2/22/99
to

Hear, hear! It seems that delusional parasitosis is more of a problem in the US
than parasites, themselves. For many folks in Africa, Asia, and South America,
these parasites are real and just as frightening for them as they are for anyone
else.
On another note: One of the nastiest cases of parasites that I've suffered from
was the aforementioned Giardia. Got it from spring water in Jefferson County,
Ohio. Wicked stuff. Worse than the dysentary I picked up in Honduras.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert S. Lewis
e-mail: mac...@bigfoot.com ICQ#29568187
NEW!!! The Macaques of Lopburi, Thailand
(http://users.nye.net/~macaque/lopburi1.htm)
The Monkey Room Debacle (http://www.bigfoot.com/~macaque)
---Nifty Primate-related Websites
(http://users.nye.net/~macaque/primatewebsites1.htm
---Nasty human and non-human animal diseases, epidemics,
plagues, pestilence, poxes and parasites! (and some
organizations in the war against disease!)
(http://users.nye.net/~macaque/diseasewebsites1.htm
---Millie Macaque's Bookstore and Required Reading List
(http://users.nye.net/~macaque/bookstore.htm)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------


0 new messages