Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 i like all these glutathione posts...especially how short the half life is in the blood, my goodness... when i was first getting it, i'd feel " happy " , or rather, my body would feel " glad. " I don't notice that anymore.... I wonder if I should try more. I think I'm getting 1000 mg, once a week, in a chaser. I think I'll try that nasal spray or sublingual. Have to do more research on that. I really didn't like the whey products...I wonder if the nasal spray is actually effective. > > Hi, all. > > O.K., I've talked about why the Herpes family of viruses acts up in > CFS (Epstein--Barr, HHV-6, cytomegalovirus, etc.), and why the > mycoplasma get into the act, too, so now what about the other major > pathogen, chlamydiae? Why does it become active in CFS? > > Well, if you've been reading my recent messages, you already know > that the answer is always the same: glutathione depletion! > > But what are the specifics? How does glutathione impact chlamydia? > Well, I've just spent a few hours getting to know the chlamydia a > little better, and I think I have a clue. I've learned that the > chlamydia have kind of a unique life cycle. As you may know, > chlamydia live and reproduce inside our cells. They exist in two > forms, called the " elementary body " and the " reticulate body, " and > they cycle between them. When a chlamyidiae is leaving a cell to go > and invade another one, it is in the form of the elementary body, > which is smaller and is wrapped up tightly in a protein coat that is > heavily cross-linked by (you guessed it!) disulfide bonds! When it > enters a new host cell, these bonds are broken and it expands into > the larger reticulate body. In this form, it multiplies, and then > the progeny convert back to the elementary body form for their > departure from the new cell. It is known that in many cases the > chlamydia just sit inside one of our cells and don't complete their > life cycle and spread to other cells. It doesn't seem to be > understood why this occurs, but I have a hunch that if glutathione > is high enough in the cells, the disulfide bonds can't form, and the > chlamydiae can't convert to elementary bodies for the trip out. > They get stuck, and they wait until the local glutathione gets > depleted enough that the disulfide bonds will form, and then off > they go! > > Old-timers on the list may recall that back in 1999 Dr. Cheney was > giving talks in which he told about his testing of undenatured whey > protein on his patients. He had only about 7 and 9 patients or so > on the two products he tried at that time, but he found that several > had positive results. In the ones who were helped, he found that > their active infections with Herpes family viruses, mycoplasma and > chlamydia just vanished! Well, now this makes more sense to me. > These three types of pathogens all need to have the glutathione > depleted in order to do their thing, but by three different > mechanisms! If the glutathione concentration is up where it should > normally be, they are frozen in place and can't carry on active > infections. > > The other interesting wrinkle here is that all these guys have their > own favorites among our cells to live in, and they don't all favor > the same cell types. Furthermore, glutathione is compartmentalized, > so that different cell types have different normal glutathione > concentrations. Some cell types will drop in glutathione before > others, so some of these pathogens will probably become active > before others as the CFS develops and progresses. The lower the > overall glutathione status goes, the more these miserable creatures > wake up and start causing trouble. Epstein--Barr likes to live in B > lymphocytes. HHV-6 seems to like several kinds of cells, including > NK cells, T cells, cells in the nervous system, and endothelial > cells (on the inner surface of blood vessels). That's probably why > HHV-6 so commonly activates in CFS. It's like putting some money on > several numbers at the roulette wheel. The more places you have > your chips sitting, the more likely the ball will drop into one of > your slots. > > Well, I find all this very fascinating. If you're wondering what > the message from all of this is to PWCs, it's that if you are > plagued by any of these critters I've been talking about, getting > your glutathione back up would be a very good way to put them in > back into hibernation! > > Rich Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 Hi, Jill. I think it would be helpful if you could get a measurement of your blood glutathione level. Then you would have a better idea where it is relative to normal, and would have a better basis for deciding whether to try getting more. Rich > > i like all these glutathione posts...especially how short the half > life is in the blood, my goodness... > > when i was first getting it, i'd feel " happy " , or rather, my body > would feel " glad. " I don't notice that anymore.... > > I wonder if I should try more. I think I'm getting 1000 mg, once a > week, in a chaser. I think I'll try that nasal spray or sublingual. > Have to do more research on that. > > I really didn't like the whey products...I wonder if the nasal spray > is actually effective. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 That's true, Rich, but the fact is, my alternative health costs are already high and I'm not rich. That means, I am not you, no, just kidding. Anyway, I avoid testing and try clinical measures as that cuts down on costs and it seems like people have all kinds of things to recommend to test, that can run into hundreds and thousands of $. But if I try more and notice an improvement, well, that is an answer in itself. > > > > i like all these glutathione posts...especially how short the half > > life is in the blood, my goodness... > > > > when i was first getting it, i'd feel " happy " , or rather, my body > > would feel " glad. " I don't notice that anymore.... > > > > I wonder if I should try more. I think I'm getting 1000 mg, once > a > > week, in a chaser. I think I'll try that nasal spray or > sublingual. > > Have to do more research on that. > > > > I really didn't like the whey products...I wonder if the nasal > spray > > is actually effective. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 You want to cover staph next? Doris ----- Original Message ----- O.K., I've talked about why the Herpes family of viruses acts up in CFS (Epstein--Barr, HHV-6, cytomegalovirus, etc.), and why the mycoplasma get into the act, too, so now what about the other major pathogen, chlamydiae? Why does it become active in CFS? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 Hi, Doris. I'd love to, and hopefully will be able to, once this conference paper is delivered. Time is running out on me right now, so I'm going to have to stop having so much fun and do the work! Rich > You want to cover staph next? > Doris > ----- Original Message ----- > O.K., I've talked about why the Herpes family of viruses acts up in > CFS (Epstein--Barr, HHV-6, cytomegalovirus, etc.), and why the > mycoplasma get into the act, too, so now what about the other major > pathogen, chlamydiae? Why does it become active in CFS? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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