Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing some but not all). I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " and some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking preventive cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; die off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, except I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you feel somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 They know from experience that you never ever undermedicate a heart infection and you don't use bacteriostatic antibiotics.When you do the doxy or mino and respond it's just the bacteria being annoyed or the genetics of the bacteria responding to the chemical agent, even responding to a high CO2 environment. Allergies herxes all that stuff is a response. I took away my response by killing off a hell of a lot of bugs and I no longer respond.If your work environment is making you sick and no-one else, there's something your harbouring that's creating the problem. Allergy means nothing, it's a term that also gets you knowhere. Just experiencing things and working thru them is also a way of understanding that it's all pathogen related- this whole puzzle. Another thing is going into musky places no longer gives me an allergic response. I don't flare, and even if I did I know how to get out of it.These are at the heart of autoimmune diseases and I just don't care for them- they are completely wrong, basically because this line of thinking is also the catalyst for a lifetime of ill health.That last quote is probably why I really went to town on what is happening.By the way there's this thing called antimicrobial resistance that has a mechanism for degrading antibiotics as they try to kill bacteria. This chemical agent is genetically coded into bacteria and needs to be understood before any attempt at understanding what makes you herx is undertaken. If I have a trillion resistant bacteria I'm expecting all sorts of party tricks whenever anything around me changes let alone taking antibiotics and chemicals even herbs and weeds could meet some requirement for the ball to start rolling. > Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm > confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing some but > not all). > I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " and > some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking preventive > cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side > effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; die > off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or > lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, except > I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you feel > somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 Doing antibiotics wrong means you can end up with a bigger infection than you started out with.I think you'll notice on many forums people bitch about just that, the drugs actually made them worse. tony > Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm > confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing some but > not all). > I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " and > some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking preventive > cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side > effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; die > off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or > lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, except > I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you feel > somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 Tony, My experience has been that Zithromax always made me better but not completely well. I always relapsed off it, but then again it seemed to work just as well later at the same dose. Over time I had less and less problem with fungal infections. I think whatever the Z. was controling was an infection that was knocking down my natural immune system ability to fight infection. My ONLY experience of harm from antibiotics was from quinolones. I continue to suspect that quinolones are extremely dangerous antibiotics, especially for people who are low in magnesium which is most of us. I have never been so sick as since taking a couple of months of Levaquin and Avalox. I developed symptoms on these which I NEVER had before, and they continue now for over two years. I am now taking high doses of magnesium asporotate. That is the first thing that has even touched the tendon pain. I am not sure anything will relieve the anxiety attacks. As for dose level, I remain convinced that low dose, pulsed minocycline and Zithromax are both safe and effective against stealth infections or intracellular infections - whatever you want to call what we have. a Carnes > > Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm > > confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing some > but > > not all). > > I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " and > > some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking preventive > > cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side > > effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; die > > off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or > > lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, > except > > I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you > feel > > somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 Jill asked: " If you kill some shouldn't you feel somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? TIA. " scha replies: I'm going to give a fairly Lyme specific answer, but there are plenty of other gram neg bacteria that this might apply to. Antibiotics do us the fine service of killing some number of the spirochetes. That's fine, now we need to get the bugs and their toxins out of our bodies. If you kill a lot of bugs at once, the immune system gets a big wake up call, and sends in a hazmat crew of phagocytes to clean up the mess. That becomes it's priority task. And when people talk about the classic version of JHS, that's really what they're describing - a die- off large enough to trigger this systemic immune reaction that is self- resolving, lasts only 4 days or so because what needs to happen - clearance of the dead bugs and their endotoxins - DOES happen. When you take low doses and achieve low levels of die off, the hazmat crew may well never get the message. After all the immune system is busy about many things, and a number of antibiotics actually slow it down, and also increase its workload by depopulating the intestinal and mucosal flora of friendly organisms, giving lurking unfriendly microbes a wider field to cause mischief. So the endotoxins, which in Lyme do much of the damage, attracted as they are to the fatty tissues surrounding nerve cells, simply accumulate in greater quantities and cause greater distress. Let that proceed long enough and we have very good evidence that Lyme can become a demyelinating disease - virtually impossible to distinguish in terms of symptoms and objective pathologies from conditions like MS, ALS, etc. I believe this is why a review of Lyme treatment strategies in a recent Lyme Times notes that 'one very attractive approach would be to BEGIN treatment with IV antibiotics and then follow up with IM or oral administration.' (I'm quoting from memory, but that's definitely the gist of it). As it is now, in the normal course of things IV treatment is too often the last resort, administered only when a patient is either a) obviously deteriorating after prolonged courses of oral antibiotics or crippled by athritic and neurological symptoms. This is nothing like a global description of what goes on in the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease. I differ a bit with Tony on this subject, because it is more obvious to me than it is to him that the primary cause of treatment failure and chronic/progressive disease is late diagnosis and absurd insurance co./HMO guidelines that offer only truncated treatment. Remedy those two problems and virtually all treatment strategies will have much higher success rates. I'm just focusing in on the question Jill asked, and suggesting one key mechanism that can make cautious, graded oral antibiotic treatment a recipe for progression rather than improvement: the failure to kill enough bugs at once to mobilize the immune system's cleanup crew and make clearance of bugs and their toxins a priority mission. There are other possibilities, less well documented but well worth considering: Lyme spirochetes have a mechanism, as do certain other bacterial pathogens, called " quorum sensing " that they use to communicate to each other about changes in the host environment. Killing bugs a few at a time allows this mechanism to function optimally, so that each course of antibiotics sets off a flurry of intra-pathogen communications directing the bugs to migrate deeper into poorly perfused tissues, where the inflammatory effects of their surface proteins will generate increased inflammation that might easily be confused with " herx. " Recent studies have made it clear that the outer surface proteins (OSPs) on Lyme spirochetes act directly on macrophages, triggering secretion of Th1 cytokines like IL-12 that in turn force naive T cells into the Th1 phenotype. This has two effects: inflammation increases, and formation of effective antibodies, which requires the presence of Th2 cells, is blocked. This is what one needs to picture happening every time these highly motile organisms burrow into some new haven in the body. The process has no natural resolution, and it is this which makes high-dose antibiotic treatment, administered for maximum penetration of poorly perfused tissues, a necessity if most Lyme patients are going to recover. I use the word " most " deliberately - a disease with this degree of variation does not support global generalizations. There may be patients who really can and should proceed with pulsed oral antibiotics, using the intervals between courses to detoxify by whatever methods seem most effective in their particular cases. What I'm fairly certain is true, though, is this: There are far more patients would benefit from sustained, high-dose IV treatment than are now receiving it, and along with all the other obstacles to such treatment, misconceptions surrounding the word " herx " contribute to this problem. S. > Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm > confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing some but > not all). > I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " and > some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking preventive > cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side > effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; die > off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or > lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, except > I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you feel > somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 I don't agree with most of this. First of all, Tony is talking about all bacteria not just lyme. Secondly, its speculative that borrelia will " migrate " to poorly perfused tissues as a response to " low dose " antibiotic, or medium dose or whatever. Just as the idea that antibiotics create cysts, I think is pretty speculative. Thirdly, you can give high dose orals. I think you should use orals unless there are obvious CNS manifestations (which you've obviously had, and reading btw the lines, are finally improving on IV). IV should not be used routinely in early lyme, as uncomplicated cases of early lyme usually do resolve with orals. Maybe oral doses should be higher and longer than recommended, but IV carries lots of risks, sepsis in the picc line, and expense of infusing, etc. Knowing now that the mitigating factor in the last 5 years for me is babesia, I'm beginning to wonder how many bad lyme cases have both. I finally did just read Krause's study and in BLock Island, coastal Connecticut and othe rplaces the two are equally epidemic. Well I got bit in coastal Connecticut. I've heard too many cases where treating the coinfections, most of all babesia, secondarily bartonella, wasthe key to clearing up what we call " lyme. " A woman who has her own hyperbaric chamber now--she and hubby were landscaping in NJ and both got lyme/bartonella and both got horribly ill and both were put on IV rocephin for 3 months, which did help but was not curative and so its hyperbaric that she feels did the trick for them (longterm, in the home). She notes that in her new home--in a different suburb of NJ than where they got lyme/bartonella--one neighbor got lyme and a month of doxy cleared it up, the other neighbor on the other side got lyme with bells palsy. I forget what he did but his also cleared up. I said to her, the lyme you and hubby got--your old neighborhood had bartonella as a coinfection; the nieghborhood you're in now probably doesn't. That's why your neighbors got well much faster than you or hubby, and were not nearly as sick. She thought that was a good theory. Also--are we sure a herxheimer is identifiable as the response of the cleanup crew? I'm sorry but most of what you speculate on in this post does not really make good sense to me. > > Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm > > confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing some > but > > not all). > > I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " and > > some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking preventive > > cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side > > effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; die > > off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or > > lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, > except > > I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you > feel > > somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 a There's this strange vascular collapse that seems to occur with cipro. I basically think cipro and quinolones in general kill massive amounts of bacteria but they also kill them a strange way and as soon as the bacteria learn to beat the drug they tend to bring back to life the billions killed but somehow incompletely killed by these drugs. It's like you improve dramatically with quinolones but the key target in bacteria is somehow recoverable? or something like that...Just my experineces.. I also notice that when treating serious infections the doctors at the front lines don't value quinolones as a good succesfull drug most opting for early simple drugs that have the score on the board. So quinolones are sort of USELESS in real medicine they are just a trumpet drug for big pharmacy.I did notice them using them in bacterial meningitis in an african breakout on a documentary and the few that survived have bad knees and other problems which don't seem to bother the rest of the population that took the simple drugs and survived the epidemic. > > > Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm > > > confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing > some > > but > > > not all). > > > I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " > and > > > some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking > preventive > > > cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side > > > effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; > die > > > off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or > > > lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, > > except > > > I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you > > feel > > > somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? > TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 Some of what you write is good. The thing with you lymies and toxins is that you should get your lyme friendly labs to start supplying toxin detection kits. You see us sinus ilnesss and sinus bacteria types have the ability to grow and observe all the toxins making us sick.They have these unfortunately expensive toxin detection kits out of japan that are capable of hunting down our toxins. The other thing is that most autoimmune patients are capable of testing positive on toxic shock toxins and that is not even the bad one in the scheme of things. As far as herx reaction when you do the simple drugs at the right doses there's never any reactions unless the drugs themselves are highly toxic to the body as well as the bacteria.There's also the irony of the mess that is frequently discovered in the female reproduction system that is being overlooked.When you have an infection that causes endometreosis it makes one hell of a mess down there that harbours many pockets of infection that are walled off and basically interfering with it would make you sick -HERX.. There's a lot more to infections and killing them than a simple herx. Most on these forums have hidden abscesses, cysts. I saw an interesting medical doco on just children in the hospital ER and what they actually got diagnosed with. There was one infant diagnosed with asthma at six mmonths of age, being violently ill his mother took him to the ER and on closer examination he had a cyst that was drained in his lung and on follow up six months later this kid just glowed.I think the seriousness of his presentation at the ER made them search hard and this discovery possably in an adult would go undetected. tony > > Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm > > confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing some > but > > not all). > > I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " and > > some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking preventive > > cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side > > effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; die > > off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or > > lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, > except > > I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you > feel > > somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 Jill Rocephin is generally a crap drug.I know many doctors that are treating serious infections of the bone and joints never ever have rocephin in there mix. > > > Tony, what constitutes the bad reaction then if underdosing? I'm > > > confused. Why would you get sicker if underdosing (ie killing > some > > but > > > not all). > > > I tend to think there is a range of experiences called a " herx " > and > > > some is just drug toxicity (healthy postal workers taking > preventive > > > cipro during the anthrax scare often felt quite sick from side > > > effects), which varies according to the individual and the drug; > die > > > off in the case of certain organsims that shed neurotoxins or > > > lipoproteins as they degrade; and maybe what you're saying too, > > except > > > I'm confused as to the mechanism. If you kill some shouldn't you > > feel > > > somewhat better but not fully better? Why would you feel worse? > TIA. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 > They have these unfortunately expensive toxin detection kits > out of japan that are capable of hunting down our toxins. Hi Tony, Do you know who makes the kits? How to get them? Any leads? Sue , Upstate New York Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Sue These are special orders thru oxoid, but specifically look for common stuff. The stuff you guys generally chase no one can help you with because they basically don't exist in the mainstream.You can look for clostridia toxins, e-coli toxins and the nine staph toxins that I know of, some strep toxins as well. How can this help the lyme minded? I just recall my lab friend getting some info from her friendly oxoid sales rep. tony > > They have these unfortunately expensive toxin detection kits > > out of japan that are capable of hunting down our toxins. > > Hi Tony, > > Do you know who makes the kits? How to get them? Any leads? > > Sue , > Upstate New York > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 > Doing antibiotics wrong means you can end up with a bigger infection > than you started out with.I think you'll notice on many forums people > bitch about just that, the drugs actually made them worse. > tony > I've read that you can think of the analogy of a " flora/fauna ecosystem " in your body. Narrow that to a " pathogen ecosystem " . There is a " hierarchy of expression " in the pathogens. Say you have 7 pathogens, #1 is most predominant down to # 7, least predominant/expressive. These pathogens have interrelationships - #1 may suppress the numbers, reproductive rate, pathogenicity, whatever - of some of the others. You take an antibiotic that knocks out or lessens # 1, 4, 5 - this might make some of the others actually increase in number, pathogenicity, drug resistance. You got rid of some of your pathogens and their effects, but now you've created a new 'pathogen ecosystem' with some resistant ones, increasing rates of growth of others and maybe now conditions are right for even more pathogens to take hold. When I tried to learn about antibiotic therapy for complex infections, I was pretty daunted at what a Pandora's box it seems to be. Its tough when government policies limit access to testing, treatment, and the funds that could provide them privately. Jo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 Frau Vogel The thing about the cfs community that you don't have to worry about is- there bowel flora is absolutely screwed. The fact that people even talk about it when taking antibiotics is completely rediculous. You have filled up your intestinal tract with alpha haemolytic streptococci, enterococcus overgrowth, pseudonomads aeuriganosa overgrowths. These are found dripping with slime down your throat, your slime is a toxic mess and every effort should be made to elimenate it. So to even vaguely believe you've got something to hang onto is rediculous. The irony is that many people actually feed these monsters with bad beliefs.High levels of salts don't favour these things to flourish, you can see that the high salt /c is the leading protocol.The problem though is they can still tolerate and live thru a salt attack- they just don't grow the double the size colonies they could have. \ > > Doing antibiotics wrong means you can end up with a bigger infection > > than you started out with.I think you'll notice on many forums people > > bitch about just that, the drugs actually made them worse. > > tony > > > > I've read that you can think of the analogy of a " flora/fauna > ecosystem " in your body. Narrow that to a " pathogen ecosystem " . > > There is a " hierarchy of expression " in the pathogens. Say you have > 7 pathogens, #1 is most predominant down to # 7, least > predominant/expressive. > > These pathogens have interrelationships - #1 may suppress the numbers, > reproductive rate, pathogenicity, whatever - of some of the others. > You take an antibiotic that knocks out or lessens # 1, 4, 5 - this > might make some of the others actually increase in number, > pathogenicity, drug resistance. > > You got rid of some of your pathogens and their effects, but now you've > created a new 'pathogen ecosystem' with some resistant ones, increasing > rates of growth of others and maybe now conditions are right for even > more pathogens to take hold. > > When I tried to learn about antibiotic therapy for complex infections, > I was pretty daunted at what a Pandora's box it seems to be. > > Its tough when government policies limit access to testing, treatment, > and the funds that could provide them privately. > > Jo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2005 Report Share Posted August 7, 2005 Hi Tony, Thanks for your comments. If I understand you correctly, we are in agreement. I wasn't referring to " beneficial " bowel flora/fauna - I was talking solely about the collection of pathogens that someone with a complex infection may have. It is my current understanding that one should aim for a reasonable effort to try and identify, C & S your pathogens,and then target the antibiotic therapy to what you find. Repeat as necessary. Otherwise, if you just ingest the " wrong " antibiotics in the wrong concentrations, you run the risk of mucking up your infections worse. So, you don't think that the Salt/C protocol has long-tern potential? I haven't investigated that. At least it is cheap and available. Jo > Frau Vogel > The thing about the cfs community that you don't have to worry about > is- there bowel flora is absolutely screwed. The fact that people > even talk about it when taking antibiotics is completely rediculous. > You have filled up your intestinal tract with alpha haemolytic > streptococci, enterococcus overgrowth, pseudonomads aeuriganosa > overgrowths. These are found dripping with slime down your throat, > your slime is a toxic mess and every effort should be made to > elimenate it. > So to even vaguely believe you've got something to hang onto is > rediculous. The irony is that many people actually feed these > monsters with bad beliefs.High levels of salts don't favour these > things to flourish, you can see that the high salt /c is the leading > protocol.The problem though is they can still tolerate and live thru > a salt attack- they just don't grow the double the size colonies > they could have. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2005 Report Share Posted August 7, 2005 Jo People that know me know I was telling them to do 'HIGH LEVELS OF SALT' before anyone came out with a salt/c approach.I would use the observation of pathogenic bacteria don't thrive in salt and for many years people would salt there meat to stop it going off due to bacterial invasion.(before refrigeration) The rest of the observation is the same as yourself, yet I don't agree with people trying to hang on to what they no little about. most on trhese forums have some pretty screwed up bowel flora. And I have given people nausea by telling them to culture and attack correctly with therapy.I actually just about had my eye poked out by nelly for this in a few different forums. > > Frau Vogel > > The thing about the cfs community that you don't have to worry > about > > is- there bowel flora is absolutely screwed. The fact that people > > even talk about it when taking antibiotics is completely > rediculous. > > You have filled up your intestinal tract with alpha haemolytic > > streptococci, enterococcus overgrowth, pseudonomads aeuriganosa > > overgrowths. These are found dripping with slime down your throat, > > your slime is a toxic mess and every effort should be made to > > elimenate it. > > So to even vaguely believe you've got something to hang onto is > > rediculous. The irony is that many people actually feed these > > monsters with bad beliefs.High levels of salts don't favour these > > things to flourish, you can see that the high salt /c is the > leading > > protocol.The problem though is they can still tolerate and live > thru > > a salt attack- they just don't grow the double the size colonies > > they could have. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2005 Report Share Posted August 7, 2005 Hi Jo, I am new member. I wanted to ask what you meant by this: " Its tough when government policies limit access to testing, treatment, and the funds that could provide them privately. " I have had trouble with getting doctors to test me and would like to understand why. Thanks, Barb B > > Its tough when government policies limit access to testing, treatment, > and the funds that could provide them privately. > > Jo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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