How Can The Marshall Protocol Kill Bacteria It Hasn’t Identified?
Researchers on the Protocol are working to establish exactly which chronic pathogens cause inflammatory disease, the substances created by these pathogens that may lead to receptor blockage, and exactly which bacteria are killed by different antibiotic combinations. But instead of examining the genome of an individual bacterial strain that has been grown in a laboratory, the Marshall Protocol researchers follow a metagenomic approach – one that allows analysis of genetic material derived from complete microbial communities harvested from natural environments – such as a human body. The potential problem lies in how to kill the microbiome before the bacteria that comprise it have even been fully sequenced. But in fact all bacteria possess certain characteristics: every bacterial species has a 70S ribosome – a protein region that must be functioning if the pathogen is to survive. Whatever the type of bacteria, if its 70S ribosome is blocked (for instance by certain pulsed, low-dose antib