Can the Latent HPV Cause Disease?; polyDNA Answers Survey Question and Recommends Gene-Eden-VIR against the Latent HPV

Posted: March 22, 2014 at 11:40 am

Rochester, NY (PRWEB) March 22, 2014

polyDNAs most recent survey found that up to 90% of respondents were unaware that the human papillomavirus (HPV) may cause disease while in a latent state.

How can HPV cause disease while latent?

In one study, the HPV virus was found in the mouths of 7% of study participants. 5,600 people participated in that study. Oral HPV was found in men more than in women. The authors of the study wrote that, The prevalence of oral HPV infection among men and women aged 14 to 69 years in the United States is approximately 7%... Infection with HPV-16, (a specific type of HPV most associated with cancer) was detected in 1% of men and women, corresponding to an estimated 2.13 million infected individuals in the United States." (See JAMA, from February 15, 2012) (1). In essence, because HPV is able to establish a latent infection, and according to the study, 2.13 million people who don't have symptoms now, and don't even know they are infected, could develop cancer due to their HPV infection.

In fact, according to Dr. Hanan Polansky's highly acclaimed book entitled "Microcompetition with Foreign DNA and the Origin of Chronic Disease," latent viruses, like HPV, in high concentration, are the cause of many major diseases, such as cancer, heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, and many more.

polyDNA encourages biologists, virologists, physicians and those at the FDA and CDC to download and read Dr. Polansky's book in depth. The book can be downloaded here: http://www.cbcd.net.

Some scientists believe that if a virus is latent, then microcompetition is irrelevant. This belief is simply wrong. A latent virus is not dead. It continues to express some of its proteins and therefore microcompetes with human genes.

Consider the paper entitled "Human Cytomegalovirus Persistence" published February 13, 2012 in the journal Cellular Microbiology. "Both the chronic and latent states of infection contribute to HCMV persistence and to the high HCMV seroprevalence worldwide. The chronic infection is poorly defined molecularly, but clinically manifests as low-level virus shedding over extended periods of time and often in the absence of symptoms (2).

A virus is still shedding copies of itself during the latent state.

The same paper goes on to say: "Transcripts and proteins encoded from a region encompassing the major immediate early region are detected in hematopoietic cells following infection in vitro as well as in latently infected individuals." (Kondo et al., 1996; Landini et al., 2000) (2).

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Can the Latent HPV Cause Disease?; polyDNA Answers Survey Question and Recommends Gene-Eden-VIR against the Latent HPV

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