Guest guest Posted April 6, 2004 Report Share Posted April 6, 2004 It's a good thing if you're tired of life and want to move on, otherwise it's not such a good idea to overtax your alread overburdened liver. We need to take care of ourselves. I've found that the road to recovery is to clean up your body by uncongesting your liver, doing a series of kidney cleanses and cleaning your colon, not by adding to the problem that already exists. Eating the proper foods, and using other methods of detox, such as the sweating you mentioned are also part of it. Both Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda explain how our body works, you can find links to the using google. Some may find this interesting... http://www.itmonline.org/5organs/liver.htm Rick > Bottom line: could punishing the liver and showing it who's boss be a good > thing periodically for stimulating renewed detox? > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2004 Report Share Posted April 6, 2004 I quit the Tylenol. It made me feel a bit bad, and the whole idea made me nervous. I still wonder about it though from time to time. Esp. if you would " feed the machine " right after you get through challenging it. Zippy ========================================================= > Hey Rich or anyone else. I got drunk Sat night by drinking too many beers > and I was not really all that drunk at the time as I recall but the next morning > I really had the worst hangover in my life and was hating it. Despite > already having done sauna that morning I did have some pre-existing CFS symptoms at > the time I started drinking and so I was thinking that maybe I was > over-toxified to begin with and shouldn't have drank that much (maybe 8 beers is all I > had) but boy did it throw me for a loop. Well, Mon morning I was feeling very > good and felt about as good as I ever do and it reminded me of what Cheyenne > was doing with Tylenol when he gives patient Tylenol to tax the liver and then > the rebound effect maybe has the liver working better than before and the > patient might feel better. Do you think this has merit? I realize many here > cannot tolerate any alcohol at all so no need for you guys to respond as I am in a > different class with my alcohol tolerance (or so I thought up to Sat night). > Bottom line: could punishing the liver and showing it who's boss be a good > thing periodically for stimulating renewed detox? > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 7, 2004 Report Share Posted April 7, 2004 Yeah, but about 15 months ago is when I first began drinking a bit more and during this time I made dramatic steps of improvement, so I don't buy it. Following my drunken episode Sat night I feel so good Mon Tue and now today that I stopped taking even my Boswellin. I think I shocked my liver into responding. As for Adrienne's jocular response, I am not actually a frequent drinker--just drank quite a bit during Jan-Mar of 2003 during which time I got much more well and was making big strides in being able to workout w/o crashing for the first time in 3 years. I have never done worse after drinking except for the one day hangover which I've only had 4 of in my entire life (3 of which came from drinking too many different types of drinks I think and none from staying with the same drink until last Sat where all it took was beer). > It's a good thing if you're tired of life and want to move on, > otherwise it's not such a good idea to overtax your alread > overburdened liver. > > We need to take care of ourselves. > > I've found that the road to recovery is to clean up your body by > uncongesting your liver, doing a series of kidney cleanses and > cleaning your colon, not by adding to the problem that already > exists. Eating the proper foods, and using other methods of detox, > such as the sweating you mentioned are also part of it. > > Both Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda explain how our body > works, you can find links to the using google. > > Some may find this interesting... > http://www.itmonline.org/5organs/liver.htm > > Rick > > > Bottom line: could punishing the liver and showing it who's boss be > a good > > thing periodically for stimulating renewed detox? > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2004 Report Share Posted April 26, 2004 Hi, . Please forgive me for taking such a long time to respond to this message, which started a thread that is by now pretty cold! There's a lot that I don't understand about alcohol and CFS. You may know that Simon Wesseley and coauthors recently published a paper on this subject. They found that about two-thirds of people who met the UK criteria for CFS reported that they decreased their alcohol intake after becoming ill, the reasons given being increased tiredness after drinking (67%), increased nausea (33%), exacerbated hangovers (23%) and sleep disturbance (24%). One third said they stopped drinking because " it seemed sensible. " I don't know of a similar study using the Fukuda et al. criteria for CFS, but I suspect that even more than two-thirds would report cutting back on alcohol consumption, since I think these criteria are less inclusive and focus more tightly on people with a physiological basis for their illness, as opposed to including more of those with a more psychological basis. I think that a large majority of people with physiologically-based CFS are alcohol-intolerant, based on what I have heard from them. For those PWCs who find themselves negatively affected from drinking alcoholic beverages, I have offered the hypothesis (discussed last in message #62085) that it is shutting down their liver's ability to perform gluconeogenesis (this is a known effect of alcohol), on which PWCs depend more than other people, because their skeletal muscles are not able to carry the metabolism of carbohydrates completely to carbon dioxide and water, but instead produce lactate and pyruvate, which must either be burned by other tissues, such as heart muscle, or must be sent to the liver for processing back to glucose, thus completing the Cori cycle. When gluconeogenesis is blocked in these people, the results are hypoglycemia and lactic acidosis, which produce very unpleasant symptoms. For those PWCs who can tolerate alcoholic beverages, such as you can, I suggest that their livers have greater capacity to metabolize it. In some cases, this may result from their genetics. In other cases, it may result from higher alcohol consumption prior to becoming ill, which caused their livers to adapt. For example, one case I studied involved a diplomat who had repeatedly attended cocktail parties as part of his job prior to becoming ill. He was still able to tolerate alcohol well after developing CFS, and I think it was because he had developed greater capacity to break it down. You asked whether consumption of alcohol can boost the detox system in the liver. It is known that chronic consumption of alcohol will increase the activity of CYP2E1, one of the cytochrome P450 enzyme family that is responsible for Phase I detox. While this increases the ability of the liver to start the detox of alcohol, it can also cause the liver to generate increased reactive intermediates from drugs or environmental toxins that the person is exposed to, leading to increased generation of oxidizing free radicals, lipid peroxidation, and glutathione depletion. So my take on all this is that it would be better to build the liver's ability to cope with toxins by giving it the raw materials it needs, rather than shocking it with a lot of a toxic substance, such as alcohol. Things like milk thistle (or silymarin or silibinin), selenium, alpha lipoic acid, B vitamins, and glutathione precursors (or undenatured whey protein) seem to me to be better things to give the liver. I don't have an explanation for your experience. Perhaps you did stimulate your detox system by drinking a lot of alcohol. It may be that your liver also paid a price for this, though. On a personal note, I don't think that getting drunk is a very good idea for anyone for a host of reasons, some involving health, some involving responsibility to others, some involving affects on the judgment and the ability to think clearly, and some involving the lowering of inhibitions that really are in one's best interest to maintain. You probably recall that I'm a Christian, and my reading of the Bible on this issue suggests that moderate use of alcohol is permissible from God's point of view, and can even be beneficial (for healthy people, at least), but getting drunk is ruled out. So I can't explain what you experienced, but I also can't recommend that you repeat it. Cheers! Rich > Hey Rich or anyone else. I got drunk Sat night by drinking too many beers > and I was not really all that drunk at the time as I recall but the next morning > I really had the worst hangover in my life and was hating it. Despite > already having done sauna that morning I did have some pre- existing CFS symptoms at > the time I started drinking and so I was thinking that maybe I was > over-toxified to begin with and shouldn't have drank that much (maybe 8 beers is all I > had) but boy did it throw me for a loop. Well, Mon morning I was feeling very > good and felt about as good as I ever do and it reminded me of what Cheyenne > was doing with Tylenol when he gives patient Tylenol to tax the liver and then > the rebound effect maybe has the liver working better than before and the > patient might feel better. Do you think this has merit? I realize many here > cannot tolerate any alcohol at all so no need for you guys to respond as I am in a > different class with my alcohol tolerance (or so I thought up to Sat night). > Bottom line: could punishing the liver and showing it who's boss be a good > thing periodically for stimulating renewed detox? > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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