Not a MD. But I HOPE the reason it also appears to work on both bacteria and virus bases is because it paralyzes worms. Does it also paralyze bacteria?
My working theory is that it strictly targets worms, but by relieving the massive stress on the body by no longer having to fight a two front war against parasites and whatever other ailment someone may have, the body can focus solely on the other issue and be much more successful. In a sense, removing parasites from the body will help most conditions to an extent.
The body has a remarkable ability to heal, but it can only do so much at a time. Anyone who’s had pets, multiple sexual partners, or regularly eats pork or fish will likely have one, if not many types of parasites. With virtually all treatment for parasites removed from medical teachings and denied to the human population, the parasite issue will continue to compound. The good part is once the issue is addressed, things will quickly start to improve.
Info is out there. Several mechanisms, of which this is one:
"Ivermectin's primary mechanism of action involves binding selectively and with high affinity to glutamate-gated chloride ion channels found in invertebrate nerve and muscle cells, leading to increased chloride permeability, hyperpolarization, and ultimately paralysis and death of parasites.[1][2] This mechanism is highly selective for invertebrates, which explains the drug's favorable safety profile in mammals. "
Here's another :
" its antiviral mechanisms primarily involve disrupting importin-mediated nuclear transport of viral proteins and inhibiting host cell pathways that viruses exploit for replication, rather than targeting viral energy processes directly.[1][2][3]
The primary antiviral mechanism of ivermectin centers on inhibiting the importin α/β1 heterodimer complex, which viruses use to shuttle viral proteins into the nucleus for replication.[1][2][3] Ivermectin binds directly to importin-α, causing conformational changes that prevent recognition of nuclear localization sequences on viral proteins, thereby blocking their nuclear import.[2][4] This mechanism has been demonstrated against multiple RNA viruses including HIV-1, dengue, Zika, West Nile virus, and SARS-CoV-2 in vitro.[2]
Additional proposed mechanisms include blocking viral protease (3CLpro) and spike protein active sites, which disrupts viral replication and attachment machinery.[3] More recently, ivermectin has been identified as an inhibitor of inositol monophosphatase (IMPase), which reduces cellular myo-inositol and phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate levels—lipids crucial for RNA virus replication.[5]
While ivermectin does affect cellular energy metabolism in cancer cells (inhibiting glycolysis and reducing ATP production through GLUT4/JAK/STAT pathway blockade), this represents an effect on[6] host cell metabolism rather than viral energy utilization per se. The antiviral effects appear to result from disrupting host cellular machinery that viruses co-opt, rather than directly targeting viral metabolic processes."
Not a MD. But I HOPE the reason it also appears to work on both bacteria and virus bases is because it paralyzes worms. Does it also paralyze bacteria?
My working theory is that it strictly targets worms, but by relieving the massive stress on the body by no longer having to fight a two front war against parasites and whatever other ailment someone may have, the body can focus solely on the other issue and be much more successful. In a sense, removing parasites from the body will help most conditions to an extent.
The body has a remarkable ability to heal, but it can only do so much at a time. Anyone who’s had pets, multiple sexual partners, or regularly eats pork or fish will likely have one, if not many types of parasites. With virtually all treatment for parasites removed from medical teachings and denied to the human population, the parasite issue will continue to compound. The good part is once the issue is addressed, things will quickly start to improve.
List out some great natural cures for parasites and worms if you get a chance.
Info is out there. Several mechanisms, of which this is one: "Ivermectin's primary mechanism of action involves binding selectively and with high affinity to glutamate-gated chloride ion channels found in invertebrate nerve and muscle cells, leading to increased chloride permeability, hyperpolarization, and ultimately paralysis and death of parasites.[1][2] This mechanism is highly selective for invertebrates, which explains the drug's favorable safety profile in mammals. "
Here's another : " its antiviral mechanisms primarily involve disrupting importin-mediated nuclear transport of viral proteins and inhibiting host cell pathways that viruses exploit for replication, rather than targeting viral energy processes directly.[1][2][3]
The primary antiviral mechanism of ivermectin centers on inhibiting the importin α/β1 heterodimer complex, which viruses use to shuttle viral proteins into the nucleus for replication.[1][2][3] Ivermectin binds directly to importin-α, causing conformational changes that prevent recognition of nuclear localization sequences on viral proteins, thereby blocking their nuclear import.[2][4] This mechanism has been demonstrated against multiple RNA viruses including HIV-1, dengue, Zika, West Nile virus, and SARS-CoV-2 in vitro.[2]
Additional proposed mechanisms include blocking viral protease (3CLpro) and spike protein active sites, which disrupts viral replication and attachment machinery.[3] More recently, ivermectin has been identified as an inhibitor of inositol monophosphatase (IMPase), which reduces cellular myo-inositol and phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate levels—lipids crucial for RNA virus replication.[5]
While ivermectin does affect cellular energy metabolism in cancer cells (inhibiting glycolysis and reducing ATP production through GLUT4/JAK/STAT pathway blockade), this represents an effect on[6] host cell metabolism rather than viral energy utilization per se. The antiviral effects appear to result from disrupting host cellular machinery that viruses co-opt, rather than directly targeting viral metabolic processes."
Just look up IVM mechanism of action.