MNKYPOX Monkeypox - Consolidated Thread.

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Yes there are pox vaccines for some livestock!

Not sure about dogs yet, just looking into this.

When I talked to my boss last week he didn’t mention it about dogs. But he was super busy and preoccupied and said he has not read the alert sent out to veterinarians.
I even said, they’re starting to watch household pets.
 

Marseydoats

Veteran Member
Translate: Cows are dying of monkeypox. At least that's what I get.

I don't think cows died from the original cowpox. They get painful lesions on their udders that may make them unmanageable, because dairy cows have to be milked. The smallpox vaccine was developed from cowpox. And there was a James Herriott story that was supposed to be true, where the milk maid's kid had just gotten vaccinated for smallpox. The Mom gave the cow cowpox because she hadn't washed her hands thoroughly enough.
Who knows what this weaponized stuff is though...
 

Tennessee gal

Veteran Member
I've got one coming up on the 10th. Can't get out of mine, either. A possible extraction and filling.
I’m in a similar boat as others on this thread. Heading to the dentist tomorrow for the first time since I’ve had septicemia. I have an antibiotic to take before the appointment because I’m prone to infections. I have two teeth that are bothering me. I’m guessing I’ll need a couple of root canals. I have a mouth full of crowns.
I appreciate your prayers that all goes well.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I’m in a similar boat as others on this thread. Heading to the dentist tomorrow for the first time since I’ve had septicemia. I have an antibiotic to take before the appointment because I’m prone to infections. I have two teeth that are bothering me. I’m guessing I’ll need a couple of root canals. I have a mouth full of crowns.
I appreciate your prayers that all goes well.
Praying it goes well for you!
 

greysage

On The Level
So what is the word on precautions with monkey-pox? Can we breathe it in and get monkey-lung-pox? Will masks help?
Seems like gloves may help in this situation.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Annnnd again, our local radio guys on WIBC are giving the report but snickering, making fun.
They’ve made a monkeypox “theme song” to the tune of “Lollipop”….complete, with a pop sound at the end and a monkey screech.

I “normally love” listening to Hammer and Nigel. Huge conservatives, local news/funny guys, also do serious reporting.

It’s very frustrating even though I do, see, that they’re trying not to get into another disease frenzy… but they need to stop this silliness.
They have young kids!
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
25,544 world cases this morning

6326 United States
58 Cases in Indiana now.





***I always mention Indiana due to being a good marker for how a neighboring state can spill over. While not proven, I firmly suspect Chicago cases are coming into Indiana.
(And yeah, I live here lol)
 

meandk0610

Veteran Member
The cattle in India are dying from lumpy virus, which is in the same family as monkey pox, but which was already known in cattle. They have a vaccine for it, but I guess most aren’t yet vaccinated.

Also, according to links on the below page, they are also getting hit with swine flu.

Lumpy skin disease kills 999 cattle in Gujarat — find out monkeypox link

Lumpy skin disease kills 999 cattle in Gujarat — find out monkeypox link

By CNBCTV18.com | Jul 26, 2022, 05:34 PM IST (Published)
Mini
The viral disease has spread to over 37,000 animals and is now present in 14 districts in Gujarat. Young calves are most susceptible to severe symptoms.

Nearly 1,000 cattle, predominantly buffaloes and cows, have died across the western state of Gujarat. A total of 999 cattle have so far died from lumpy skin disease, the state’s Agriculture and Animal Husbandry Minister Raghavji Patel said on July 26. The viral disease has spread to over 37,000 animals and is now present in 14 districts in the state.

What's the disease?

Lumpy skin disease is a viral bovine disease caused by a virus belonging to the same family of viruses that causes smallpox and monkeypox. The disease results in fever, enlarged superficial lymph nodes and multiple nodules across the surface of the skin. These nodules also form on mucous membranes inside the body and as on organs like the eyes, nose, mouth, rectum, udder and genitalia.

The virus spreads through blood-feeding insects like ticks, mosquitoes, flies, lice, wasps and more. The disease can also spread through bodily fluids like blood, nasal discharge, lacrimal secretions, semen and saliva, and through infected milk to suckling calves.

As a result, young calves are most susceptible to severe symptoms but the disease spreads through all age groups easily. Along with fever during the onset of symptoms, the cattle also experience a swelling of limbs. The disease also causes chronic debility, reduced milk production, poor growth, infertility, abortion, and sometimes death, leading to severe economic implications.

Where has it spread

The disease has already spread to Gujarat's 14 districts — Kutch, Jamnagar, Devbhumi Dwarka, Rajkot, Porbandar, Morbi, Surendranagar, Amreli, Bhavnagar, Botad, Junagadh, Gir Somnath, Banaskantha and Surat. "The disease has been observed in 880 villages, with 37,121 animals treated for it," Patel added.

The minister stated that 2.68 lakh animals have been vaccinated to prevent the further spread of the disease. Other preventive measures, like fumigation with insecticides, have also been undertaken. A total of 152 veterinary officers and 438 livestock inspectors from the animal husbandry department have undertaken a campaign to survey, treat and vaccinate against the disease. A special control room has also been established at the GVK-Emergency Management and Research Institute (EMRI), Ahmedabad.
 

Cascadians

Leska Emerald Adams
So what is the word on precautions with monkey-pox? Can we breathe it in and get monkey-lung-pox? Will masks help?
Seems like gloves may help in this situation.
Greysage, it is hard to say definitely because this is obviously a "new" bioengineered warfare monkeypox.
So the "old" advice may not be accurate.

It is going to come down to this: Does getting monkeypox then confer immunity to it and all other poxes?

If so then getting this "mild" monkeypox may be better than later when it gets worse or taking the new vaccine which has who knows what horrors in it.

Those who got the old smallpox vaccine (which was and is dangerous on its own) may have some resistance or immunity.

Depends on how much ghoulish tinkering the Depopulators did with this new monkeypox and how much it is designed to mutate.

Basically the poxes are persistent and contagious. The virus is tough and is in all body liquids and tissues and secretions. It is also airborne. It stays in the air and on anything it touches and lasts a long time.

In the Red Book which is the "official bible" of smallpox "eradication," the scientists describe various culture's methods of preserving the smallpox virus. Some cultures were able to preserve the virus for CENTURIES using primitive means.

To effectively guard from getting a pox, you'd have to live in a bubble and be extremely anally strict about decontamination. And fatigue with that will set in. The virus likes moist mucus membranes so any openings or cuts are entry including breathing. Monkeypox, unlike smallpox, easily gets into a lot of different animals and then becomes entrenched.

Personally the way I deal with all these diseases is to have an array of anti-viral and anti-bacterial and immune system support supplements / substances and take them the instant I feel anything different in my body or mind. This way I can stop viral / bacterial replication. It also exposes my body to the pathogen so my immune system can start learning how to conquer it, but in a small load because the supplements stop replication and growth.

I basically hermit except for some grocery shopping, but have most things delivered to house. I kayak and do yard work and walk and train my Newf constantly. Have strict regimens and protocols for nutrition which I went off for too long and am getting back on.

I hate masks. Obviously they are going to lower the viral load, just personally cannot breathe w them. I use hand sanitizer and wash my hands when I get home. These marginal simple precautions are a joke with pox. imho there is no way to avoid pox long term.

Got Covid in December - Feb before it became "official" and shut-down in USA. Stopped it in its tracks with armory of supplements. Got monkeypox about 2 weeks ago, took supplements and very mild, just one day of huge lymph nodes and one barely there pustule on collarbone area. I know monkeypox is already everywhere and circulating. Not vaxxed w clotshot but did have old smallpox vax around 1965. Have never had sex, never will, so certainly for me not a STD.
 
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BenIan

Veteran Member
[QUOTE="Cascadians, post: 9275430, member: 50”]Got Covid in December - Feb before it became "official" and shut-down in USA. Stopped it in its tracks with armory of supplements. Got monkeypox about 2 weeks ago, took supplements and very mild, just one day of huge lymph nodes and one barely there pustule on collarbone area. I know monkeypox is already everywhere and circulating. Not vaxxed w clotshot but did have old smallpox vax around 1965. Have never had sex, never will, so certainly for me not a STD.
[/QUOTE]

If you don’t mind my asking, what specifically did you use to treat and how do you think you caught it?
 

Cascadians

Leska Emerald Adams
If you don’t mind my asking, what specifically did you use to treat and how do you think you caught it?
No idea how caught, but grocery shopped more than usual because had unexpected visitors.

Took 1 dose of: Elderberry, Andrographis, Olive Leaf, Liposomal Vitamin C, Vitamin D, Garlic.
That was enough to reduce in 12 hours the huge swollen lymph nodes under ears and neck which I've never experienced before. I was prepared for more doses with a lot more substances but that one dose was enough.
The pustule formed a day after the lymph nodes got huge. It was firmer and deeper seated than the usual bug bites.
It rose and collapsed and scabbed quickly. It was mildly painful and itchy but less itchy than a mosquito sting.
Even though it has since disappeared I can still feel it. Mild ache. Weird.
No "flu" type symptoms. No mental changes or unusual fatigue. So very mild case but the lymph nodes were so huge so fast I could not turn my head side to side and almost couldn't breathe. Bizarre.
 
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