After I caught a nasty strain of coxsackievirus B4 that is in general circulation, I developed body-wide fine crêpe paper-like wrinkles on the skin, which I believe are the result of reduced elastin. Viral infection can increase the production of what are known as matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), which are a family of enzymes which break down elastin, collagen and other connective tissue components. I caught my virus via kissing on a date.
Other people who caught the virus from me also developed this crêpe paper-like skin wrinkling. You can see pictures of the wrinkling on my hands at the bottom of this page of my website about the virus. In addition to skin wrinkling, the virus also caused sudden onset gum recession (periodontitis) in me and other who caught the virus. Periodontitis also involves these MMP enzymes breaking down elastin and collagen in gum tissues. A picture of my virally-caused receded gums is found half way down this webpage of my site.
Coxsackievirus B is a virus from the enterovirus genus. Other enteroviruses include echovirus, poliovirus, enterovirus D68 (which is the chief suspect for causing paralysis of children in the US), coxsackievirus A, and rhinovirus, a common cold virus. In most cases, enterovirus only causes acute infections which are cleared from the body by the immune response in a matter of weeks. Enterovirus cannot normally cause chronic, lifelong infections.
But certain enteroviruses, which include coxsackievirus B and echovirus, are now understood to cause chronic intracellular infections that can last a lifetime. So once you catch coxsackievirus B and echovirus, you will likely have it in your tissues for life. These persistent lifelong enterovirus infections are called non-cytolytic enterovirus infections, and they are suspected of causing a number of diseases, including type 1 diabetes, dilated cardiomyopathy, mitral valve prolapse (a common heart valve disease), myalgic encephalomyelitis (chronic fatigue syndrome), and Parkinson's.
It's funny that people in the anti-aging longevity community think that the key to a long life is avoiding toxins and eating good food, along with taking beneficial supplements and drugs. Yet they usually don't make the link between nasty viral pathogens in common circulation and chronic disease and early death. But most of the common chronic diseases that reduce healthspan and lifespan have been linked to common pathogens that many of us already have in our bodies, having picked them up earlier in life.
Many of these disease-causing pathogens will be unsuspectingly picked up from kissing a new girlfriend or boyfriend. Often such viruses may cause no initial symptoms when we first catch them from other human beings, or may just cause minor symptoms like a sore throat or temporary gastrointestinal upset. But then a few years down the line, they may trigger a nasty chronic disease, like multiple sclerosis, heart disease, atherosclerosis, Crohn's disease, Alzheimer's disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and also mental heath diseases such as generalized anxiety disorder, bipolar, anorexia nervosa, OCD, etc.
One brilliant scientist who studies the connection between common pathogens and chronic diseases is Professor Paul W. Ewald. In this video, he discusses the link between common pathogens and cancer. He says that back in the 1970s, there were no cancers which had been linked to pathogens. But nowadays, we know that around 20% of cancers are caused by pathogens. Prof Ewald thinks that as we research the pathogen-cancer link, we will find that a lot more cancers are caused by infectious micro-organisms.
Edited by Hip, 28 December 2018 - 04:25 PM.