That's interesting. I'll definitely have to look into that more. I didn't realize they could do a quick screening of many phages like that.
Yes; it would seem that phages are pretty ubiquitous and responsible for the healing properties of certain rivers/healing waters etc.
It would seem that we would be up to our eyeballs in bacterial blooms if it was not for phages.
Phages are anathema for any business built on fermentation processes and they go to great lengths to guard against phage contamination.
This means that the largest phage varieties tend to congregate around the largest various sources of bacteria, like in hospital drains and cemeteries!
This is in fact the russian source of the wide range of phages added to the purified bacteria one wants to kill!
ie: in short; add hospital drain water to the isolated/purified bacteria/s, see what grows and isolate/purify that!
Gross, but there it is!
It's actually a very elegant, russian style, solution to a very difficult problem!
Do they flat out kill an entire species? Or is it concentration dependent so you can just dial it back to a healthy balance? I don't tend to think there are bad players so much as simple imbalances in the ecology
I have wondered about this myself.
My initial impression is that the phage will infect/kill all the bacteria and then die off itself, so one would need to reacquire another dose if one was re-infected. (Altogether possible when living in a family unit and a good reason to dose everyone..!?)
It would be nice if a bacteria/phage balance was reached with just a couple of bacteria surviving to keep the phages alive.
I don't know if this is the case, or would be the case in the gut..?
As always; more research required, but well worth it for dementia suffers and life extension in general IMHO.
@ "needs references"
Open Google; type in: 'M13 bacteriophage amyloid beta pubmed'
Magically, the following results appear!
https://www.google.c...loid betapubmed
Edited by Logic, 09 July 2016 - 01:27 PM.