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They might sound gross, but intestinal worms can actually be good for you


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They might sound gross, but intestinal worms can actually be good for you

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    Mrs. Whaley Mrs. Whaley (Oct 05 2017 2:58PM) : Ethos-Dr. Parker is an associate professor at Duke University, therefore, the reader can trust what he is saying.
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    Bella Hudson Bella Hudson (Oct 05 2017 2:59PM) : Ethos- Dr. Parker is a professor at Duke university, therefore the reader can trust what he will say.
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    Hudson Williams Hudson Williams (Oct 05 2017 3:00PM) : ethos: Dr. Parker is a Professor at Duke University therefore the reader can trust what he will say [Edited]
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    Corinth Kershaw Corinth Kershaw (Oct 05 2017 3:02PM) : Ethos cause Dr.Parker is an associate professor at Duke University therefore the reader can trust what he is saying
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    Savannah French Savannah French (Oct 05 2017 3:06PM) : ethos: dr. parker is an associate professor at Duke University, therefore, the reader can trust what he is saying.
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    Ra-Juan Crawford Ra-Juan Crawford (Oct 05 2017 3:08PM) : Ethos- Dr. Parker is a professor at Duke so the reader is trust what he says
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    Michael McNeal Michael McNeal (Oct 05 2017 3:14PM) : Since the doctor went to Duke University and has his information in the document this shows that the information is reliable.
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Four rat tapeworms harvested from a single laboratory rat are shown in a six-well plate. The worms don’t harm the rats. Each worm, between two and three feet long, can produce more than 1,000 eggs per day.

William Parker, CC BY-NC-SA

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Oct 5
Bella Hudson Bella Hudson (Oct 05 2017 3:07PM) : Logos-Worms can produce 1000 eggs per day, with those numbers being born can help those with health problems.
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Oct 5
Hudson Williams Hudson Williams (Oct 05 2017 3:07PM) : logos: its logical appeal is it can lay a thousand eggs a day, with those numbers being born can help people with health problems.
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Intestinal worms have an incredibly bad reputation. The thought of them sneaking around inside our bodies and eating us from the inside is pretty unpleasant. But just 100 years ago, before toilets and running water were commonplace, everybody had regular exposure to intestinal worms. Thanks in part to modern plumbing, people in the industrialized world have now lost almost all of their worms, with the exception of occasional pinworms in some children.

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Oct 5
Bella Hudson Bella Hudson (Oct 05 2017 3:09PM) : Pathos- this could instill fear in those who worry about their bodies and how the worms could harm them.
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Intestinal worms are properly called “helminths,” which most dictionaries will tell you are parasites. Exploiting their hosts, draining resources, sucking the life out of the body – that’s what parasites do, by definition. Indeed, many helminths, including the porcine tapeworm and the human hookworm, are known to cause disease and even death in the human population. Parasitic worms are still a big problem in some parts of the world.

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Nate Killen

Oct 5
Little Ol' Man

Nate Killen

Little Ol' Man (Oct 05 2017 3:14PM) : It's pathos/logos more

They’re explaining all the bad things about them, using logos to reason with us and pathos to connect with us about our feelings on them.

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But for decades, results coming out of lab after lab have shown that some kinds of helminths can be extremely beneficial to their host, and aren’t parasites at all.

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Justin Gooding Justin Gooding (Oct 05 2017 3:11PM) : these is parallelism because this is two conjugating ideas. in one idea it says that the warms are helpful and in the other it says in other organism it is painful or bad.
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These helpful helminths are mutualists, a type of organism that receives benefits from its host, and also provides benefits to the host.

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For example, my lab, working with a Duke University colleague, Staci Bilbo, recently showed that the presence of helminths in pregnant rats protects the brains of the rat pups from inflammation. In other words, it seems that mom’s helminths can protect unborn babies. And that is just the tip of the iceberg for what these critters can do.

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Nate Killen

Oct 5
Little Ol' Man

Nate Killen

Little Ol' Man (Oct 05 2017 3:17PM) : They use logos to explain to us why they said "also provides benefits to the host/"
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Worms may help with allergies and multiple sclerosis

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Having worms isn’t necessarily bad for you. The largest randomized trialever performed in human history – involving two million children in India – looked at how helminths affect health in places where humans naturally have them. The study showed that mass treatment with an effective deworming drug did not increase body weight or survival. Shockingly, the helminths didn’t seem to be doing any harm, since getting rid of them didn’t improve health.

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Oct 5
Corinth Kershaw Corinth Kershaw (Oct 05 2017 3:07PM) : Pathos cause it basically saying that worms not bad for you they are also good things that some worms can do.
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Oct 5
Amy Robba Amy Robba (Oct 05 2017 3:19PM) : The largest randomized trialever performed in human history – involving two million children in India – looked at how helminths affect health in places where humans naturally have them. more

they saying how humans had it before and they naturally had them

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So that study seemed to show the absence of harm; could these helminths actively be doing good?

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Mrs. Whaley Mrs. Whaley (Oct 05 2017 3:00PM) : Rhetorical Question.............
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Corinth Kershaw Corinth Kershaw (Oct 05 2017 3:00PM) : It's a rhetorical question cause it was a question that was ask but not meant to be answered [Edited]
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Halie Hunt Halie Hunt (Oct 05 2017 3:02PM) : Rhetorical Question: it makes you think about the article and what the worms can do for our bodies. [Edited]
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Savannah French Savannah French (Oct 05 2017 3:04PM) : retorical questions: it makes you think about the article and what the worms are doing. [Edited]
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Michael McNeal Michael McNeal (Oct 05 2017 3:09PM) : This a rhetorical question its making you think about the document and why helminths could be good for you. [Edited]
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Oct 5
Hudson Williams Hudson Williams (Oct 05 2017 3:10PM) : rhetorical Question: because he is asking if these worms could possibly help but he has already hinting that they can so there wouldn't be an answer for it
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Bella Hudson Bella Hudson (Oct 05 2017 3:11PM) : Rhetorical question: Hes asking if the worms could help but he has already hinted at that they can, so there wouldnt be an answer for it.
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Ra-Juan Crawford Ra-Juan Crawford (Oct 05 2017 3:12PM) : It is a rhetorical question: It's making you think and it's not necessarily wanting an answer
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Justin Gooding Justin Gooding (Oct 05 2017 3:14PM) : this is a rhetorical question because there are not looking for an answer because they already gave use the answer
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In the past, scientists thought that increases in inflammatory diseases such as hay fever and multiple sclerosis in industrialized societies were due to keeping our created environments too clean. Thus the name “hygiene hypothesis.”

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However, the true problem for our health is the loss of biodiversity from our body’s own ecosystem, a condition called “biome depletion.”

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Missing mutualistic helminths is a key factor in this, and is apparently a major contributing factor to a very large swath of disease, including allergies and autoimmune conditions.

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For instance, helminths have been found to protect laboratory animalsfrom a wide range of allergies and autoimmune conditions. And recent findings suggest that many types of cancer can be reduced by helminths. The idea has been demonstrated by preventing colon cancer in rodents, and it is hoped that it will reduce the burden of cancer in humans by decreasing chronic inflammation, a condition that can give rise to cancer.

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Hudson Williams Hudson Williams (Oct 05 2017 3:05PM) : pathos: this is an emotional appeal, because it could possibly help reduce or prevent cancer cells from forming
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Ra-Juan Crawford Ra-Juan Crawford (Oct 05 2017 3:19PM) : Pathos- Because this can appeal to people who know someone who suffers from colon cancer, and it could possibly save them
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In controlled studies in humans, helminths were shown to halt the progression of relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis and effectively treat many individuals with inflammatory bowel disease without report of adverse side effects.

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How do worms work with our immune system?

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The idea that helminths can help us with a wide range of inflammatory diseases that plague modern society makes a lot of sense when considering the science behind how helminths interact with our immune system.

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Kobe Robinson Kobe Robinson (Oct 05 2017 3:08PM) : paths more

he uses an emotional appeal

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Amy Robba Amy Robba (Oct 05 2017 3:21PM) : The idea that helminths can help us with a wide range of inflammatory diseases that plague modern society makes a lot of sense when considering the science behind how helminths interact with our immune system. more

saying how they interact with your immune system considering the science behind em

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Helminths have been a part of the ecosystem of the body for so many millions of years that they have become an integral part of that system. Mutualistic helminths help regulate immune function, stimulating our body to build regulatory networks of immune cells that decrease general inflammation without hurting our immune system’s ability to respond to danger. In addition, these helminths produce their own array of anti-inflammatory molecules and give our immune systems much needed exercise, all of which decreases inflammation.

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Corinth Kershaw Corinth Kershaw (Oct 05 2017 3:09PM) : Logos cause is stating facts about how it well help our immune system
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Nate Killen

Oct 5
Little Ol' Man

Nate Killen

Little Ol' Man (Oct 05 2017 3:19PM) : It's Logos because it's using facts about how they help us to convince us that they are actually helpful.
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Justin Gooding Justin Gooding (Oct 05 2017 3:20PM) : this is ethos because this shows that the worms can be used for good and not just for bad
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Cassidy Elder Cassidy Elder (Oct 05 2017 3:20PM) : Ethos
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And a recent study showed that the addition of helminths to laboratory rodents dramatically changed the balance of the gut ecosystem, shifting the bacteria in the gut toward a much healthier balance.

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With these factors in mind, it would be hard to understand if missing our helminths did not cause health problems.

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The humble rat tapeworm. William Parker, CC BY-NC-SA
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Therapeutic worms?

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My laboratory began work a few years ago looking at the sociology of “helminthic therapy,” the use of helminths to treat disease. Working with Janet Wilson, a sociologist at the University of Central Arkansas, we found that thousands of people are using helminths to self-treat a vast array of inflammation-related conditions, from inflammatory bowel disease to hay fever to multiple sclerosis to migraine headaches.

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Oct 5
Savannah French Savannah French (Oct 05 2017 3:10PM) : ethos: janet wilson, a sociologist at the university of central arkansas, so you can trust what he is saying.
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Corinth Kershaw Corinth Kershaw (Oct 05 2017 3:11PM) : Logos cause it shows how the worms help with disease and migraine headaches
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Michael McNeal Michael McNeal (Oct 05 2017 3:23PM) : Ethos: Janet Wilson is a sociologist at Arkansas which proves the information is valid. [Edited]
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Oct 5
Amy Robba Amy Robba (Oct 05 2017 3:24PM) : My laboratory began work a few years ago looking at the sociology of “helminthic therapy,” the use of helminths to treat disease. Working with Janet Wilson, a sociologist at the University of Central Arkansas, we found that thousands of people are using more

that there are worms people use for therapy and thousands of people use em

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Halie Hunt Halie Hunt (Oct 05 2017 3:06PM) : Ethos: Janet Wilson, a sociologist at the University of Central Arkansas, so you can trust what he is saying.
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Oct 5
Halie Hunt Halie Hunt (Oct 05 2017 3:08PM) : Logos: it's logos because it is telling facts about how thousands of people are using helminths to self-treat a vast array of inflammation-related conditions.
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Oct 5
Autumn Devenport Autumn Devenport (Oct 05 2017 3:10PM) : Ethos, saying some worms(gross or not) can be helpful and calming and beneficial to yourself
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Savannah French Savannah French (Oct 05 2017 3:12PM) : logos: its logos bc its telling facts about how thousands of people are using helminths to self-treat a vast array of inflammation-relationed conditions.

At the moment, there is no helminth approved for medical use by the FDA, and we found that people generally obtain their organisms from one of a few companies that sell expensive and often unregulated products, which can be risky.

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Part of our study included a survey of helminth users, and most people filling out the survey reported that helminths treated their inflammatory conditions more effectively and with fewer side effects than did pharmaceuticals.

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Halie Hunt Halie Hunt (Oct 05 2017 3:12PM) : Logos: it's logos because it states the facts about their study about how most people filling out the survey reported that helminths treated their inflammatory conditions more effectively and with fewer side effect than did pharmaceuticals.
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We also found that some “self-treaters” are the using a helminth called the rat tapeworm (Hymenolepis diminuta), which sounds truly disgusting. However, people are using this helminth because it is inexpensive and easy to produce, and may provide a very effective treatment for a range of inflammation-related diseases, including migraine headaches and depression. People eat them and report that about 30 worms per month does the job, although the number varies depending on the individual.

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After being swallowed and passed into the small intestine, the tiny worms almost certainly hatch out of their jelly-like capsule that has protected them since they first hatched from an egg. At that point, they begin to interact with the immune system, reducing inflammation like any other helminth.

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Ra-Juan Crawford Ra-Juan Crawford (Oct 05 2017 3:22PM) : Pathos- Because people are being helped out. It is reducing inflammation

But then, with rare exceptions, they vanish mysteriously, never maturing into adults and producing eggs. Because rat tapeworms don’t colonize our intestines the way that some other types of helminths do, an individual needs frequent exposure to have them in their bodies consistently.

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The rat tapeworm has been used in the laboratory for decades and blocks experimentally induced colitis in mice more effectively than daily immunosuppression with steroids. In fact, this is the same helminth we use in my lab to protect the developing brains of rat pups from inflammation. But no researchers have ever studied using rat tapeworms on humans to treat disease.

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Why aren’t helminths catching on?

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While work in labs, and our own research on people self-treating with helminths is promising, the safety and effectiveness of helminths needs to evaluated in more clinical trials. But perhaps the single greatest barrier to the widespread use of helminths as treatment in humans is the availability of an affordable and effective FDA-approved helminth to the medical community.

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Amy Robba Amy Robba (Oct 05 2017 3:25PM) : But perhaps the single greatest barrier to the widespread use of helminths as treatment in humans is the availability of an affordable and effective FDA-approved helminth to the medical community. more

that the helminths are fda approved to the medical community

We have FDA-approved live maggots and leeches, both of which are extremely effective, but we have no effective and safe helminth approved for use.

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Perhaps the horrible reputation of helminths has deterred us from taking helminths seriously as a treatment? But we can’t let the ick factor intestinal worms may initially inspire hold us back from further research. Intense and systematic effort needs to be focused on the production of quality helminths. We need to proceed with the domestication of helminths for the benefit of humankind.

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Cassidy Elder Cassidy Elder (Oct 05 2017 3:23PM) : Rhetorical Question
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Justin Gooding Justin Gooding (Oct 05 2017 3:25PM) : this is a rhetorical question because they don't need a answer because it was stating a theory
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DMU Timestamp: September 19, 2017 21:22

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Oct 5
Kobe Robinson Kobe Robinson (Oct 05 2017 3:01PM) : Rhetorical question more

he ask if the absence could harm you.

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Oct 5
Kobe Robinson Kobe Robinson (Oct 05 2017 3:03PM) : The doctor who studied about this more

It shows hes a professor so the reader can trust him and his observations.

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Kobe Robinson Kobe Robinson (Oct 05 2017 3:06PM) : logical more

He uses logic to explain something

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Kobe Robinson Kobe Robinson (Oct 05 2017 3:14PM) : image more

He used a picture

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Reginald Smiley Reginald Smiley (Oct 05 2017 3:19PM) : Polysyndenton
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Cassidy Elder Cassidy Elder (Oct 05 2017 3:19PM) : Polysyndenton
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Autumn Devenport Autumn Devenport (Oct 05 2017 3:21PM) : poly [Edited]
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Reginald Smiley Reginald Smiley (Oct 05 2017 3:23PM) : rhetorical questions
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