Current Research with transfer factors
Today  in the final decade of this century studies involving transfer factors are consistently  showing up worldwide. Several including those   from the National Academy of  Science of the United States of America   (15) have focused on the transmission  relationship between an HIV type I   infected mother and her unborn child.  Generally when the mother's   viral load is decreased so is the likelihood of  HIV-I being transmitted   to the baby. This was observed in 1995 from a group of  thirty HIV I   pregnant women.
Eight  of the ten women with the highest levels of HIV-I RNA   (above 50 000 copies per  milliliter) transmitted the disease at   delivery while none of the twenty women  with lower levels (below 20 000   HIV-I RNA copies per milliliter) passed HIV-I on  to their children.
Dr. H.  Hugh Fudenberg M.D. has greatly broadened  research   and treatment efforts using transfer factors. To  date he is the only one to have successfully   treated subsets of Alzheimer's  Disease Autism Chronic Fatigue Syndrome   and subsets of ALS (Louhig’s Disease).  Similar work by others points to   Myasthenia Gravis and Multiple Sclerosis as  having an immunological   base which can be altered or reversed through large  amounts of transfer factors(6 16   17).
Infected  patients who are tracked up to ten years show positive   residual effects from transfer factors.(6).  A large number of peer-reviewed scientific   papers testified to these facts as  well as transfer factors consistent track record   of partially or completely reversing  specific viral infections.   Immunological researchers continue to explore new  treatment   applications for transfer factors(6).
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