A new approach to eliminating coronavirus and preventing the second wave of infection
Joint Meet on 16th World Congress on INFECTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL & 5th International Conference on BACTERIOLOGY
September 16, 2020 | Webinar

Vladimir Zajac

Cancer Research Institute, Slovakia

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Bacteriol Parasitol

Abstract:

Every virus is a parasite. They cannot exist by themselves. He is envious of your wearer. This is the basic condition of its existence. What living cell carries viruses? Based on work with bovine leukosis virus (BLV) in the stables, we monitored the course of infection in healthy animals and concluded that a bacterial cell can be the host of the virus. We tested this assumption and confirmed the results. This idea was then tested on the HIV model. Even with this virus, we have been able to prove that its host may be bacteria, which was confirmed at the level of DNA as well as proteins. Based on these results and indications, we conclude that all viruses are transmitted by bacteria or by yeasts. If all, the colonavirus. By destroying the bacteria carrying the viruses, the virus ceases to exist. If this idea is confirmed, many, if not all viral infections can be stopped. The virus-containing bacteria are stored in the respiratory and intestinal tracts and under optimal conditions, they multiply, penetrate the body through the cardiovascular system and attack the recipient's cells. This reversal, called the second wave of infection, can be prevented by applying appropriate antibiotics, which eliminate coronaviruscontaining bacteria in the intestinal and respiratory tracts.

Biography :

Vladimir Zajac has completed his PhD. in 1982 at the Cancer Research Institute of Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava (Slovakia), where he worked as the Head of Department of Cancer Genetics from 1996 to 2010. He joined the Medical Faculty of the Comenius University as Associate Professor of Genetics in 2007. He has published 74 papers mostly in reputed journals and he was editor of the book „Bacteria, viruses and parasites in AIDS process“(In Tech, 2011).