Books

A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 94

arteriosclerosis, Alzheimer’s dementia and other chronic degenerative diseases are a few examples of the consequences of such violations of the body’s ecology.
13. The power of the stimulus (or information) is directly proportional to the organism’s degree of susceptibility (or vulnerability) to it.
Different organisms have varied degrees of sensitivity or vulnerability to different stresses. For instance, an organism with a great sensitivity to a specific bacterium or virus will, upon coming into contact with that microorganism, react immediately and dramatically with severe symptomatology. The more susceptible the organism is, the more drastic and immediate is the reaction, and therefore the more dangerous the outcome of the disease. Another person who is not susceptible to the same virus can literally consume it without any effect. This is perfectly exemplified in the incident involving Professor Petenkoffer, M.D., and Dr. Koch, who discovered the Tb bacillus. Professor Petenkoffer, in order to prove to his colleagues and Koch that it was not only a microbe that was needed to initiate a certain disease but also the organism’s susceptibility or predisposition, drank a vial containing the Tb bacillus. He literally ingested the microbe but suffered no ill effects from it.
A man receives an emotional shock when a friend informs him that his wife is having an extramarital affair. Because of a similar previous experience during his first marriage, the man has been sensitized to such information. He therefore has a predisposition to be greatly affected by such negative stress, and his organism undergoes devastating consequences: he develops depression, a heart attack, diabetes or a terrible skin reaction, the exact nature of the reaction depending upon the predispo¬sitions inherent in his genetic make-up.
A person who is sensitive to rose pollen will have devastating effects when coming in contact with it, while others will enjoy the roses’ fragrance.
Patient A is very sensitive to a certain antibiotic and literally falls apart upon contact with a small quantity of it. The allergic reactions (hypersensitivity) provoked by even an infinitesimal amount of penicillin and its derivatives are already well