Well ...
From my first post on this topic, my doubt was the patent contradiction in attributing the responsibility, by RTN, to the protozoan
Philaster lucinda when, in all the work on this subject that I had read, and especially in experimental work with antibiotics (
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4083779/), which I had already brought to your appreciation, that even after the eradication of the
Philaster lucinda from the environment with metronidazole, RTN progressed.
In this same paper, quoted by at least 15 other authors so far (
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4083779/citedby/), the same authors note that RTN could be interrupted by 2 antibiotics, one of them experimental and of high cost and the other the ampicillin that, although it did not include in its action spectrum the mentioned protozoans, was in itself capable of interrupting the progress of RTN.
Therefore, based on these observations and considering the nosological conditions reported in this same experiment, it does not seem acceptable to me that the
Philaster lucinda is the cause or even the pillar of support for the RTN event, although it may be a beneficiary and a strong collaborator in the speed of its progress.
That said, if the product
@Prime Coral is indeed capable of delivering what its idealizer promises, what is clear is that it must have other effects beyond the control or eradication of the
Philaster lucinda, which, certainly, deserves more studies to elucidate how it works, and, even if it deserves, I would not hesitate to use it if I were surprised by this type of event (WBD) in my aquarium.
Regards