The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: Gordon (NZ)
Date: 2002-02-04 13:04
Most of the nasties may be in our mouths most of the time anyway, especially the toughies that the likes of mouthwash hasn't a show of killing.
Is it not (at least partly) true that we get sick when our resistance is down and these omnipresent germs find a way to invade. After the sickness the resistance for that particular nasty must surely be at an all time high because the imune system has built vast numbers of specialized antibodies.
I wouldn't throw a good reed away for that reason.
Is there a virobacteriologist in the house?
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Michael |
2002-02-03 23:32 |
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Mindy |
2002-02-04 00:18 |
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Joe O'Kelly |
2002-02-04 01:09 |
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MsRoboto |
2002-02-04 02:35 |
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werner |
2002-02-04 04:06 |
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Gordon (NZ) |
2002-02-04 13:04 |
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Mark Charette |
2002-02-04 13:23 |
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werner |
2002-02-04 20:03 |
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Emms |
2002-02-05 13:44 |
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Emms |
2002-02-05 13:45 |
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