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(回答先: マイコ生物兵器は、エイズ発症メカニズムにも関係あるらしい 投稿者 すみちゃん 日時 2003 年 10 月 29 日 10:00:34)
すみちゃん、
モンタニエ氏と書けばいいんですね。どーもフランス人の名前を表記するのは苦労します。モンタニエール?モンタニュー?よくわからなかったのです。
この人のカウンターパートがロバート・ギャロで、彼が「手柄」を独占したのは不審に思っていました。最近のエイズ学会でもモンタニエ氏は「末席」に甘んじているという話も聞きます。ということは、この人の主張は真実に近いのかもと思います。
そうでなくても、マイコとエイズの関連に関する資料は莫大にありますね。
世界はエイズや突発疫病について夢をみているとしか思えません。
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ウォールストリート・ジャーナルの記事(たしか2002年、テキストのみ)
Subject: AIDS Researcher Believes Virus Needs Second Microbe Before Becoming Lethal Date: Published: 6/22/90 (70 lines) Source: Wall Street Journal. Copyright Dow Jones & Co. Inc. Technology and Health: AIDS Researcher Believes Virus Needs Second Microbe Before Becoming Lethal ---- By Marilyn Chase Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal SAN FRANCISCO -- Luc Montagnier of the Pasteur Institute, widely considered to be the discoverer of the AIDS virus, now believes the virus needs an accomplice to become deadly. His theory may prove to be the loneliest scientific battle of the French researcher's career. Dr. Montagnier believes a second infection by a microbe called mycoplasma may turn the AIDS virus from a lazy organism into a voracious killer of human cells. At a news conference at the Sixth International Conference on AIDS here, he said he hasn't performed certain tests that may be important in proving his theory. The scientist suggests that mycoplasma can be treated with tetracycline-type drugs, perhaps allaying the effects of acquired immune deficiency syndrome. He has published test-tube studies supporting his theory. Mycoplasma is a tiny bacterium that oozes around without cell walls and causes one of the most common forms of pneumonia. More than a year ago, Dr. Shyh-Ching Lo of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington said he had discovered a second virus implicated in AIDS. It turned out not to be a virus but a novel strain of mycoplasma. Dr. Montagnier has cast his lot with Dr. Lo. He said he thinks the accomplice mycoplasma acts directly to turn on and rev up the virus, transforming infected people into people with AIDS. "We think the difference between the slow, low-reproducing virus we've isolated in {symptom-free} patients, and the fast, high-reproducing virus in AIDS patients, may be due to mycoplasma," he said. At a question-and-answer session, Dr. Montagnier was asked to suggest a dose of the antibiotic tetracycline. He said it was "too complicated" to discuss. Laurie Garrett, a reporter for Newsday, asked whether Dr. Montagnier had checked his experiments to rule out the possibility that mycoplasma wasn't directly accelerating the AIDS virus, but only nudging the immune system to churn out cell-growth factors long known to gear up AIDS infection. "I haven't done that test," he said. Dr. Montagnier's assertions about mycoplasma were met with skepticism by one U. S. government official in an interview. "It's hard for me to believe in it as a serious primary pathogen.... I can't see it as the necessary co-factor" for making AIDS a killer, said Dr. James Curran, head of AIDS activities at Atlanta's U. S. Centers for Disease Control. Though all hypotheses are still open, Dr. Curran said he rather sees mycoplasma as a fellow traveler, "the equivalent of a maggot." At the AIDS conference, Dr. Montagnier received a relatively minor speaking slot. The American Medical Association stepped in to co-sponsor his news conference, which drew AIDS activists, journalists, scientists and community physicians. Dr. Curran said, "Dr. Montagnier and Dr. Lo are approaching each other on a limb. Dr. Lo was out there, but Dr. Montagnier is crawling out to meet him." [This article is made available here by Dow Jones Co. for the personal and non-commercial use of callers to this bbs, in the hope that it will be of some help to those who are suffering from the disease and others who are seeking to help them.