Alternative
names back to top
Variola, Smallpox
Organism
Variola virus
Overview
Smallpox is highly contagious, disfiguring and deadly. Vaccines
are credited with eradicating the natural infection. The last
vaccines were given in 1972. The last infection of smallpox
was recorded in 1977. It is perhaps the most feared biological
threat because it can be spread from person to person like the
flu and there is no treatment. About 30% of the people who get
the disease die. Currently the only confirmed sources of small
pox are languishing in two laboratories, one in the U.S. and
one in Russia. However, U.S. intelligence officials believe
that Russians,Iraqis, and North Koreans have undisclosed stores
of smallpox for weapons purposes. Russian Biopreparat defector,
Ken Alibek acknowledged that the Soviets built up large stockpiles
of smallpox in the 1980's for use in bioweapons, and terrorism
experts worry that some of these stockpiles may have been sold
to rogue governments and terrorists around the world.
Smallpox
begins with a high fever, fatigue, malaise, head and backache.
A characteristic rash, most prominent on the face, arms, and
legs, follows in 2-3 days. The rash starts with flat red lesions
that evolve at the same rate into raised lesions (1-4 days),
then vesicles or blisters (1-4 days) and finally become pus-filled
(2-6 days). The pustules then rupture and begin to crust early
in the second week yielding scabs that fall off after about
3-4 weeks leaving scars or "pox". The majority of patients with
smallpox recover, but death occurs in up to 30% of cases.
Carriers
back to top
Smallpox is carried by airborne distribution like the common
cold or flu virus. It can be transmitted through human-to-human
contact by droplets spread when an infected individual breathes
or coughs.
Biological
Weapons Use
Smallpox has been made into an aerosolized powder that can be
deployed as a biological weapon. If deployed in the air conditioning
or ventilation system of a domed sports stadium it could expose
50,000 to 70,000 spectators within 3 hours. If deployed in a
large international airport such as La Guardia or O'Hare it
could easily spread around the entire world before being detected.
The former Soviet Union's Biopreparat stockpiled large quantities
of the powder (never less than twenty tons of weapons-grade
dry smallpox was stockpiled in bunkers). According to Russian
defector, Ken Alibek and others, it is possible that smallpox
has left Russia for parts unknown, travelling in the pockets
of mercenary biologists. "Iran, Iraq, probably Libya, probably
Syria, and North Korea could have smallpox."
Toxicity
back to top
Smallpox is an extremely lethal virus, and it is highly contagious
in the air. When a child with chicken pox appears in a school
classroom, many or most of the children in the class may go
on to catch chicken pox. Smallpox is as contagious as chicken
pox. One case of smallpox can give rise to twenty new cases.
Each of those cases can start twenty more. In Yugoslavia, in
1972, a man with a severe case of smallpox visited several hospitals
before dying in an intensive-care unit. To stop the resulting
outbreak, twenty thousand people went into isolation and Yugoslav
health authorities had to vaccinate virtually the entire population
of the country within three weeks. Smallpox can start the biological
equivalent of a runaway chain reaction. About a third of the
people who are infected with smallpox will die from it. The
skin puffs up with blisters the size of hazelnuts, especially
over the face. A severe case of smallpox can essentially burn
the skin off one's body.
Contagiousness
Smallpox is extremely contagious. It is spread from one person
to another by infected saliva droplets that expose a susceptible
person who comes into direct face-to-face contact with the ill
person. The virus can also be spread through contaminated clothing,
sheets, pillowcases or other bed linen. Persons with smallpox
are most infectious late in the incubation period before any
symptoms have appeared and during the first week of symptoms,
because that is when the largest amount of virus is present
in saliva. However, some risk of transmission lasts until all
scabs have fallen off (about 4 weeks). One person with smallpox
will typically infect twenty additional individuals before symptoms
ever appear. This chain of contagiousness and replication can
infect more than a million people in just a few short weeks.
Incubation
back to top
The incubation period is about 12 days, with a range of 7 to
17 days.
- Fever
- Severe headache
- Backache,
joint pains
- Malaise
- Fatigue,
weakness, prostration
- Rash on the
skin, starting on the face and trunk and spreading outwards
- Vomiting
and diarrhea
- Excessive
bleeding
Signs
and tests back to top
- Low white
blood cell count initially, that increases later in the disease
- Low platelet
count
- DIC panel
can be positive in cases of hemorrhage
- Virus can
be seen by electron microscope and by culture
- Antibodies
turn positive soon after the infection is complete
Complications
- Bacterial
infections at the skin at the sites of the lesions
- Arthritis
and bone infections
- Pneumonia
- Severe bleeding
- Eye infections
- Brain inflammation
(encephalitis)
- Death
Prognosis
The majority of patients with smallpox recover, but death occurs
in up to 30% of cases.
Prevention
back
to top
The key to prevention is a healthy immune system. Since
it is known that 70% of the population recovers from Smallpox even
if untreated, a healthy immune response is your best defense. To
make certain that you keep your immune system at its peak, Dr. Hansen
recommends the following:
1. Take the
oral homeopathic vaccine: Influenzinum
9C annually (This homeopathic medicine is a broad spectrum
remedy that boosts immune responsiveness
against flu-like symptoms such as fever, chills, headache, muscle
pains, malaise, etc, which can be confused
with the initial symptoms of the Smallpox)
2. Take
a high potency multi-vitamin (Dr. Hansen recommends Peak
Advantage)
3. Avoid processed sugar (100 grams of Sugar suppresses the immune
system by 50% for 5 hours)
4. Get a minimum of 7 ½ hours of sleep per night.
5. If you develop flu symptoms take Flu
Solution (this is a very effective homeopathic medicine
for the initial phase of fever, headache, muscle aches,
general malaise, etc.)
6. If a Smallpox outbreak occurs anywhere in the world, or as
an advance precaution, take
Homeopathic Biological DefenseS: 1 tablet once per week
for 4 weeks.
7. For an exposure to Smallpox without symptoms: Take Homeopathic
Biological Defense S: 1 tablet once daily for 21 days as a precaution.
Vaccines
back to top
Vaccination against Smallpox is not recommended to prevent the disease
in the general public. It is associated with some risk for adverse
reactions; the two most serious include severe brain swelling (encephalitis),
which occurs in approximately one out of every 300,000 vaccine recipients,
is fatal in 40% of the cases, and causes permanent neurological
damage in others. Routine vaccination against smallpox ended in
1972. The level of immunity, if any, among persons who were vaccinated
before 1972 is uncertain at best, but it is presumed that these
persons are now susceptible since vaccine immunity is not permanent
and wears off within 1-2 decades.
At the present
time the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says it has
only a very limited emergency supply (15.4 million doses) of smallpox
vaccine. The vaccine is owned by the federal government and is managed
by Wyeth-Ayerst, which is the company that made it, twenty-five
to thirty years ago. It is stored in glass vials. The vials contain
freeze-dried nuggets of live vaccinia virus. Vaccinia is a virus
that causes symptoms similar to but milder than smallpox. When you
are infected with it by vaccination, it causes a pustule to appear,
and stimulates temporary immunity to smallpox that may last anywhere
from 3 to 20 years.
Treatment
There is no proven treatment for smallpox but research to evaluate
new antiviral agents is ongoing. Patients with smallpox can benefit
from supportive therapy (intravenous fluids, medicine to control
fever or pain, etc.) and antibiotics for any secondary bacterial
infections that occur. In people exposed to smallpox, the smallpox
vaccine can lessen the severity of, or even prevent illness if given
within 4 days after exposure. Additionally, Dr. Hansen recommends
taking Homeopathic Biological Defense S: 1 tablet 4 times daily,
every 4 hours. (Note: For an exposure without confirmed infection:
Dr. Hansen recommends taking Homeopathic Biological Defense S: 1
tablet once daily for 21 days as a precaution.)
Homeopathic
Biological Defense S back
to top
Homeopathic medicines are natural, over-the-counter (OTC) drugs
that work via amplification of the body's own healing response.
Homeopathic medicines have been used to treat the symptoms of Smallpox
for more than 100 years. Variolinum 30C is key homeopathic ingredient.
It is made from the smallpox pustule. It is homeopathically diluted
beyond the point of which any actual viral organisms are present
in the final preparation.
Indications
by Ingredient
The following is a list of indications for each Homeopathic medicine
included in the formula for Homeopathic Biological Defense S as
described in the approved Homeopathic Materia Medica recognized
by the FDA and the Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the United States.
| Variolinum |
Sarracenia
purpurea |
- "Used
for internal vaccination. Seems to be efficacious in protecting
against, modifying and aiding in the cure of smallpox"
- Headache
- High
Fever, Profuse Perspiration
- Skin
Eruption of Pustules
- Excruciating
backache
- Aching
in legs
- Tired
all over with restlessness
- Oppressed
breathing
- Cough
- Expectoration
of thick bloody mucous
|
- A
remedy for Variola, aborts the disease, arrests pustulation
- Congestion
of head; sick headache
- Photophobia
- Vomiting
- Backache
- Weakness
of limbs
- Bruised
pains
|
|
Thuja occidentalis 9C |
Antimonium
tartaricum |
- Variola,
aborts the pustule and prevents the suppurating fever
- Headache
- Heat
in face with burning redness
- Pustules-Smallpox-
eruptions burn violently after scratching
- Boenninghausen
"found Thuja both preventive and curative in an epidemic
of smallpox"
|
- Smallpox
- Headache
- Nausea,
retching and vomiting
- Diarrhea
- Cough
with great rattling of mucus
- Difficulty
breathing
- Edema
and impending paralysis of lungs
- Pustular
eruption, leaving a bluish-red mark
- Fever
with intense heat
- Copious
perspiration
- Lethargy,
great drowsiness, faintness
|
| Rhus
toxicodendron |
Lachesis |
- Headache
- Diarrhea
of blood, slime, and reddish mucous
- Backache
- Joint
pains
- Fever,
Adynamic
- Skin
red, swollen, vesicles, pustules
- Glands
swollen
|
- Headache
- Fever
with hot flushes and hot perspiration yet feet icy cold
- Profound
prostration
- Bluish,
purplish skin
- Boils,
carbuncles, ulcers
- Dark
blisters, blue-black swellings
- Easy
bleeding
|
|