PRESENTS

Dr. Hilbert Seeger, MD PhD.

Pleomorphism and its clinical applications
Introducing Sanum’s potentised fungal isopathic and bacterial remedies
to regulate body microflora

Saturday 21st April 2007
10am-5pm

5.30pm-6.30pm Guided tour of Helios Homeopathic Pharmacy, Tunbridge Wells,
by Managing Director and Homeopath John Morgan, M.R.Pharm.S., R.S.Hom.

LOCATION
The Royal Wells Hotel, Tunbridge Wells, Kent.

Tunbridge Wells is situated South of London with easy access from the M25.
Alternatively, Tunbridge Wells station is 1 hour from Charing Cross, London.

COST
£160 including lunch, tea and coffee.


About the speaker

Dr. Hilbert Seeger, MD is a German medical doctor now working in Australia. He graduated from the Medical School of Heidelberg University in Germany where he also completed a doctoral thesis at the Forensic Institute. Specialising in orthopaedic surgery, he worked in hospitals and private practice in Germany, New Zealand and Australia.

Dr. Seeger’s interest turned to biological and regulative medicine over fifteen years ago and he now has a well-established clinic where darkfield microscopy, according to Professor Enderlein, is part of his health evaluation for every patient. He corrects the biological terrain which enables the development of the pathological microbial forms in the body and uses potentised Sanum-Kehlbeck fungal isopathic and bacterial remedies as the core of his treatment plans. He also works alongside a holistic dental practice where they have positive case studies using Sanum remedies in dentistry.

Dr. Seeger is an international lecturer and author of the Beginners Guide to Darkfield Microscopy according to Professor Enderlein and the Materia Medica for Sanum Therapy.


Symbiotic Seminars are designed primarily for doctors, dentists and veterinary surgeons. Also suitable for qualified natural health practitioners from accredited schools in the fields of acupuncture, chiropractice, herbalism, homeopathy, naturopathy, nutrition and osteopathy.


Symbiotic Health Resources provides information and education on Enderleinian microbiology, darkfield microscopy, Sanum potentised microbial remedies and symbiotic approaches to health.

Pleomorphism (pleo = many; morph = form) is the ability of microbes to change into many varied forms in a developmental cycle, depending on the conditions of the environment. This theory was primarily pioneered by the German microbiologist Prof. Dr. Günther Enderlein (1872-1968) who wrote ‘Bacteria Cyclogeny’, published in 1925, in addition to over 500 scientific papers. Pleomorphism provides a much more complete view than monomorphism, which is the foundation of modern medicine; the view that microorganisms are monomorphistic, i.e. as existing in one fixed and unchangeable form and, therefore, classifiable.

By using a darkfield microscope, Enderlein was able to observe, in a drop of live blood, the underlying microbial process at play in most of the chronic and degenerative diseases. Not only did Enderlein discover the pathogenic role of Candida albicans in its fungal phase but he also discovered other, even more fundamental microbes for the health of humans; Mucor racemosus and Aspergillus niger. This exploration of the inner terrain of the body connects with the theory of homotoxicolgy, described by Reckeweg, and miasmatic theory in homeopathy. As opposed to the short-term symptomatic and often suppressive medical interventions prevalent today, the symbiotic approach fosters long-term, deep and regenerative methods of increasing health.

Enderlein’s other major discovery was how to assist the body's natural self-healing process with potentised fungal isopathic remedies containing ‘symbionts’, which transform pathogenic microbial forms into harmless forms, which are then excreted by the body. These remedies, along with others, have now developed into a full system of biological healing practised today by practitioners throughout the world.

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