Everyone still remembers the joy and laughter Robin Williams brought us for decades. The world was shocked to have lost him so suddenly to what may have actually been a rare disease that was completely treatable.
What is often being under-reported and diagnosed or passed off as another disease is actually an infectious agent, an opportunistic hyper malignant disease, known as Cryptococcus.
These fungal cells, capable of adapting to the melanin in the skin and the transitional neuromelanin that interacts with the neurons in your brain, spread by sexual reproduction and contain photonic crystals capable of simulating harmful radiation from the sun. Literally feeding off the sun's energy that's received by the eye and the skin, they respond by emitting ionizing radiation that interferes with the action potential and voltage regulation in the brain which has been long known to be responsible for determining which thought process happens.
Most people do not notice the infection as it creates sub-acute symptoms – but the radiation toxicity becomes apparent when there may become an over population of the fungi in the brain. This leads to complex immune system reactions as the radiation mimics multiple diseases that cause memory deficit, permanent drops in intelligence, multiple sclerosis, non-hodgkins lymphoma, and many others.
Has the medical community become drowned in creating untreatable diseases because its unaware of its cause? It is estimated that 600,000 people die a year as a direct result of this fungi while the cause of death goes completely unrecognized.
Treatment options are opportunistic meaning there is a limited window of time to treat it effectively. Active investigation has led to the ultimate conclusion that medical professionals are refusing to treat the disease or order special tests unless it is accidentally discovered through regular procedure. After interviewing several technicians on whether or not they were trained to recognize the disease, it was found that many were found ultimately dismissive or were incapable of recognizing the radiological signs found through MRI that could actually be used to diagnose the disease.
Very often those infected with the disease feel as Robin Williams did, that they may have the inability to concentrate, that their life plays out like a movie, or symptoms of arthritis.
Will the medical system ever be forced to recognize this illness? Only time will tell. If simple changes were made or better education was made available to professionals about the mechanics of this disease, perhaps we would still have Robin Williams with us today.
people.com