The immune system is especially ineffective against an oxygen sensitive germ called a mycoplasma. According to one doctor, 70% of his Fibromyalgia patients have mycoplasmal infections.  They are also common among those with Rheumatoid Arthritis, lupus, MS, ALS, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, Sjögren’s, Hashimoto’s, Graves’, Reiter’s, Crohn’s and other autoimmune disorders. These organisms have no cell wall, so they can’t be “seen” by the immune system. They are the smallest free-living bacteria and are capable of living as parasites on our cells. As they poison and disrupt the cells they have invaded, mycoplasmas cause symptoms such as fatigue, pain, and over-toxicity. This small germ also renders the liver’s detoxifying enzymes helpless, further poisoning the body.  To add insult to injury, mycoplasmas are able to disable the immune system by taking over white blood cells.