Guest guest Posted May 11, 2006 Report Share Posted May 11, 2006 HI , I hope that some of the other more educate people will respond to your post, but I did want to point you to a resource in the meantime. I am being treated at a place here in the US called the fibro and fatigue center. They believe that the mitochondria is one of the key issues. There is a lot information regarding that at their website, you just need to hunt around a little. www.fibroandfatigue.com If you have trouble, let me know and I will see if I can find it and give you a link. I want to encourage to keep hoping and tell you that you are in the right place. The people here are great and I am confident that they will be able to help your daughter improve the quality of her life. It may take time, patience, and money, but eventually, you will get there. In the mean time, you will have support, which everyone needs. Take care, Dawn M Our questions are - has she got Borreliosis or not; is her problem > mercury poisoning, or not; can Mitochondria (the powerhouse) be at > the root of her problems. It would be great to understand what is > going on and have sound advice on how to address it. Any offers?> > Enter the Windows Live Mail beta sweepstakes http://www.imagine-msn.com/minisites/sweepstakes/mail/register.aspx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2006 Report Share Posted May 11, 2006 On May 11, 2006, at 3:35 AM, eric078000 wrote: > Our questions are - has she got Borreliosis or not; is her problem > mercury poisoning, or not; can Mitochondria (the powerhouse) be at > the root of her problems. It would be great to understand what is > going on and have sound advice on how to address it. Any offers? , have you had her glutathione levels checked? The good news is that you're about to get a world-class introduction to the role sulfur metabolism plays in the way mitochondria process energy. This is a very hot area of inquiry in the autism community; now, some researchers (including some on this list) are exploring the role that problems with the methylation (sulfur) system may play in CFS/ME as well. It's a very new theory, but there are quite a few people here who've worked with it and found good success. Glutathione, one of the end products of the methylation process, is the body's main detoxifier and antioxidant. When the body is fighting infections like borrellia, EBV, and all the other various possible contributors to CFS, it uses a whole lot more of it. Unfortunately, i's suspected that these same illnesses may, directly or indirectly, also inhibit the body's ability to make it. When glutathione levels are too low, the body can neither effectively fight infection nor adequately cleanse the body of everyday toxins like heavy metals and such. This stuff builds up in the tissues and organs, causing many of the symptoms (pain, brain fog, etc.) that are hallmarks of CFS. Many of us on this list have had dramatic success with various strategies that build glutathione -- through diet, through IV or IM supplementation, and through taking other supplements that open the blocked methylation pathways and enable the body to raise production on its own. As glutathione increases (by whatever means), the body begins to detox and repair itself, and may even become more effective at fighting off the underlying infections. Over time, this can result in strong health gains and significant recovery. I've been on high-dose injected B12/glutathione/AMP since early October. Over many years of work and research -- and seeing dozens of doctors --I had already made a pretty good recovery, coming from a state only slightly better than your daughter's to the point where I could drive, shop, and take on some light volunteer work. Seven months on the glutathione has put me up to around 90% recovered: I'm well enough now that I returned to university in January to begin work on my masters in science. I've just come through two straight months of travel and schoolwork without a break -- and without a crash. There is no point in the past 20 years when I could have done this. I'm still looking for my underlying disease causes, and making good headway. But, in the meantime, life actually does go on. I don't have to wait to live it. I hope we can help point you toward resources that will do your girl some good. It sounds like you've been a real fighter for her -- gotten good information, done all the right things. She is blessed to have a father like you to look out for her. Too many of us know first- hand that many parents cannot rise to the challenge the way you have. Welcome to the list -- you and our other new folks today! Sara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2006 Report Share Posted May 11, 2006 Hi Sara, It is good to hear that you are recovering!!!! Did you ever do clelation therapy to remove mercury??? I see so much conflicting information on how to do this, I am SOOOO confused! I don't want a challenge to put me back. I realize if I go this route I would need to build up glutathione. Can you tell me your experience in getting well. Thank you for your help, Janet in San Diego Mercuria <mercuria@...> wrote: On May 11, 2006, at 3:35 AM, eric078000 wrote: > Our questions are - has she got Borreliosis or not; is her problem > mercury poisoning, or not; can Mitochondria (the powerhouse) be at > the root of her problems. It would be great to understand what is > going on and have sound advice on how to address it. Any offers? , have you had her glutathione levels checked? The good news is that you're about to get a world-class introduction to the role sulfur metabolism plays in the way mitochondria process energy. This is a very hot area of inquiry in the autism community; now, some researchers (including some on this list) are exploring the role that problems with the methylation (sulfur) system may play in CFS/ME as well. It's a very new theory, but there are quite a few people here who've worked with it and found good success. Glutathione, one of the end products of the methylation process, is the body's main detoxifier and antioxidant. When the body is fighting infections like borrellia, EBV, and all the other various possible contributors to CFS, it uses a whole lot more of it. Unfortunately, i's suspected that these same illnesses may, directly or indirectly, also inhibit the body's ability to make it. When glutathione levels are too low, the body can neither effectively fight infection nor adequately cleanse the body of everyday toxins like heavy metals and such. This stuff builds up in the tissues and organs, causing many of the symptoms (pain, brain fog, etc.) that are hallmarks of CFS. Many of us on this list have had dramatic success with various strategies that build glutathione -- through diet, through IV or IM supplementation, and through taking other supplements that open the blocked methylation pathways and enable the body to raise production on its own. As glutathione increases (by whatever means), the body begins to detox and repair itself, and may even become more effective at fighting off the underlying infections. Over time, this can result in strong health gains and significant recovery. I've been on high-dose injected B12/glutathione/AMP since early October. Over many years of work and research -- and seeing dozens of doctors --I had already made a pretty good recovery, coming from a state only slightly better than your daughter's to the point where I could drive, shop, and take on some light volunteer work. Seven months on the glutathione has put me up to around 90% recovered: I'm well enough now that I returned to university in January to begin work on my masters in science. I've just come through two straight months of travel and schoolwork without a break -- and without a crash. There is no point in the past 20 years when I could have done this. I'm still looking for my underlying disease causes, and making good headway. But, in the meantime, life actually does go on. I don't have to wait to live it. I hope we can help point you toward resources that will do your girl some good. It sounds like you've been a real fighter for her -- gotten good information, done all the right things. She is blessed to have a father like you to look out for her. Too many of us know first- hand that many parents cannot rise to the challenge the way you have. Welcome to the list -- you and our other new folks today! Sara This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2006 Report Share Posted May 11, 2006 On May 11, 2006, at 8:26 PM, Janet s wrote: > Hi Sara, > > It is good to hear that you are recovering!!!! Did you ever do > clelation therapy to remove mercury??? I see so much conflicting > information on how to do this, I am SOOOO confused! I don't want a > challenge to put me back. I realize if I go this route I would need > to build up glutathione. Can you tell me your experience in getting > well. No, I haven't, though I've got some mercury testing coming up that will tell whether this is needed. I'm still getting a lot of mileage out of the glutathione (am noticing that my thyroid -- which I've been on meds for for about four years now -- is starting to rev up in recent weeks, for example); mercury and several other things are still ahead of me. It's important to note that I've had this illness for over 20 years. For most of that time, nobody's had any real clue what to do for it. My hard years in bed began in 1989-90, and continued for the next decade. It was 1997 before I got an actual diagnosis, even. So my recovery has been a long wander, mostly via guesswork and serendipity. The highlights: 1999 -- Diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea, which was treated with CPAP and surgery. Getting a good night's sleep for the first time in decades helped my FM considerably, making life a lot less painful; and lifted my brain fog quite a bit as well. 2001 -- Discovered that I was allergic to soy, almost by accident. Eliminating this from my diet significantly reduced my asthma, and pretty much took care of the rest of my FM. The soy was creating inflammations from stem to stern; when I stopped eating it, many of these went away. 2002 -- While websurfing one night to find out more about living with soy allergies, I learned that soy can be very hard on the thyroid. This led to research on thyroid problems (which my doctor had suspected for years, tested for using standard tests, and then ignored). I finally went to a doctor who specialized in " silent hypothyroid, " which it turns out is an extremely common in CFS patients. He gave me Armour Thyroid, which created another huge gain. By this point, I was operating in the 70% functionality range again. 2003 -- Working with another doctor on the allergy front, I added NAC and some hormone support herbs, which were a nice boost. His tests found that I was high in mercury. I've been taking the NAC ever since, and suspect it's done a lot to gradually release much of my mercury over the years. 2005 -- Hooked up with the Fibro & Fatigue Center (FFC) in LA, which started me on the glutathione shots. They also added bromelian, quercetin, ENADA, and bioidentical hormones to my regime. This brought me to my present level. Not only do I not crash anymore; I've also found about 25 missing IQ points. Last fall was my own private " Flowers for Algernon " moment. 2006 -- Am now working with a local doctor to FINALLY get tests for Lyme, babesia, mycoplasma, CMV, etc. etc; as well as a new mercury workup to see what might be left. I'm also concerned by my jaw glands on the left side, which have been swollen for years and years, and am looking for the right practitioner to explore a possible infected socket with. Those the next frontiers. That's my journey, in a nutshell. There's also a long list of supplements that have been useful over time, and which I find indispensable; but they were added one at a time over the years, and now number in the dozens. Were I making suggestions for good ones to try, magnesium would be the first candidate. Glucosamine/MSM if you have joint pain. Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) and L-Carnitine seem to help my energy level. Sara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 12, 2006 Report Share Posted May 12, 2006 HI Sara, I see you have had a long journey too! I have also been sick for 25 years. I have had some years where I could function, but recently I have relapsed and that is why I am on this list. I just started on the glutathione pushes and I know mercury is an issue in there. When you get to that issue, how are you going to test for it?? I see conflicting theroys out there about doing a Hair analysis or maybe doing a challenge. (The challenge really worries me. ) Have you given this some thought or are you at a different place??? Janet Mercuria <mercuria@...> wrote: On May 11, 2006, at 8:26 PM, Janet s wrote: > Hi Sara, > > It is good to hear that you are recovering!!!! Did you ever do > clelation therapy to remove mercury??? I see so much conflicting > information on how to do this, I am SOOOO confused! I don't want a > challenge to put me back. I realize if I go this route I would need > to build up glutathione. Can you tell me your experience in getting > well. No, I haven't, though I've got some mercury testing coming up that will tell whether this is needed. I'm still getting a lot of mileage out of the glutathione (am noticing that my thyroid -- which I've been on meds for for about four years now -- is starting to rev up in recent weeks, for example); mercury and several other things are still ahead of me. It's important to note that I've had this illness for over 20 years. For most of that time, nobody's had any real clue what to do for it. My hard years in bed began in 1989-90, and continued for the next decade. It was 1997 before I got an actual diagnosis, even. So my recovery has been a long wander, mostly via guesswork and serendipity. The highlights: 1999 -- Diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea, which was treated with CPAP and surgery. Getting a good night's sleep for the first time in decades helped my FM considerably, making life a lot less painful; and lifted my brain fog quite a bit as well. 2001 -- Discovered that I was allergic to soy, almost by accident. Eliminating this from my diet significantly reduced my asthma, and pretty much took care of the rest of my FM. The soy was creating inflammations from stem to stern; when I stopped eating it, many of these went away. 2002 -- While websurfing one night to find out more about living with soy allergies, I learned that soy can be very hard on the thyroid. This led to research on thyroid problems (which my doctor had suspected for years, tested for using standard tests, and then ignored). I finally went to a doctor who specialized in " silent hypothyroid, " which it turns out is an extremely common in CFS patients. He gave me Armour Thyroid, which created another huge gain. By this point, I was operating in the 70% functionality range again. 2003 -- Working with another doctor on the allergy front, I added NAC and some hormone support herbs, which were a nice boost. His tests found that I was high in mercury. I've been taking the NAC ever since, and suspect it's done a lot to gradually release much of my mercury over the years. 2005 -- Hooked up with the Fibro & Fatigue Center (FFC) in LA, which started me on the glutathione shots. They also added bromelian, quercetin, ENADA, and bioidentical hormones to my regime. This brought me to my present level. Not only do I not crash anymore; I've also found about 25 missing IQ points. Last fall was my own private " Flowers for Algernon " moment. 2006 -- Am now working with a local doctor to FINALLY get tests for Lyme, babesia, mycoplasma, CMV, etc. etc; as well as a new mercury workup to see what might be left. I'm also concerned by my jaw glands on the left side, which have been swollen for years and years, and am looking for the right practitioner to explore a possible infected socket with. Those the next frontiers. That's my journey, in a nutshell. There's also a long list of supplements that have been useful over time, and which I find indispensable; but they were added one at a time over the years, and now number in the dozens. Were I making suggestions for good ones to try, magnesium would be the first candidate. Glucosamine/MSM if you have joint pain. Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) and L-Carnitine seem to help my energy level. Sara This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 12, 2006 Report Share Posted May 12, 2006 On May 12, 2006, at 12:29 PM, Janet s wrote: > HI Sara, > > I see you have had a long journey too! I have also been sick for > 25 years. I have had some years where I could function, but > recently I have relapsed and that is why I am on this list. > > I just started on the glutathione pushes and I know mercury is an > issue in there. > > When you get to that issue, how are you going to test for it?? I > see conflicting theroys out there about doing a Hair analysis or > maybe doing a challenge. (The challenge really worries me. ) Have > you given this some thought or are you at a different place??? > I've done hair analysis. At this point, any serious assay would involve chelation. Sara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 12, 2006 Report Share Posted May 12, 2006 HI Sara, Thanks for the info on the Coconut Oil. I went ahead and ordered it. Back to the mercury. Are you going to take a challenge?? Or just start clelating when you get to the place of wanting to do something about it??? Thank you for all your help, Janet in San Diego Mercuria <mercuria@...> wrote: On May 12, 2006, at 12:29 PM, Janet s wrote: > HI Sara, > > I see you have had a long journey too! I have also been sick for > 25 years. I have had some years where I could function, but > recently I have relapsed and that is why I am on this list. > > I just started on the glutathione pushes and I know mercury is an > issue in there. > > When you get to that issue, how are you going to test for it?? I > see conflicting theroys out there about doing a Hair analysis or > maybe doing a challenge. (The challenge really worries me. ) Have > you given this some thought or are you at a different place??? > I've done hair analysis. At this point, any serious assay would involve chelation. Sara This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 12, 2006 Report Share Posted May 12, 2006 On May 12, 2006, at 1:39 PM, Janet s wrote: > Thanks for the info on the Coconut Oil. I went ahead and ordered it. See how you like it. Like I said: a lot of us have done well with it. (I find it almost too much to bear, personally.) Other folks, nada. But you'll never know until you try; and as this stuff goes, it's not an expensive or risky experiment. > Back to the mercury. Are you going to take a challenge?? Or just > start clelating when you get to the place of wanting to do > something about it??? I'm not sure what you mean by " take a challenge. " The usual method is for the doctor or lab to administer a mercury chelating agent, and then track the amount of mercury that appears in the urine in the time that follows. If you start unloading Hg in your pee, it means there's mercury in your tissues. Yes, this has its risky side: mobilizing mercury is always risky. But I've been on NAC for five years, and gluthathione for seven months, both of which have almost certainly lowered my overall systemic mercury load over time; and will also confer some protective effects if more mercury starts to move. There are other protective measures one can take as well; and I'll read up on those in detail and use them when the time comes. But that's a bit out on the schedule -- probably August at the earliest. If there's one thing this illness has taught me, it's to be slow and systematic and take one thing at a time. Haste makes waste of time, energy, and money -- none of which are in abundant supply. So I've got a list, and am working through it, deliberately and methodically. The downside is that there always seems to be some new thing to work through. The upside is that, once in a while, one of them actually works. Sara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2006 Report Share Posted May 31, 2006 Hi Sara, Congratulations on your 90% recovery! Have you been tested for underlying infections? I'm still trying to get to the bottom of mine; I'm suspecting that's it's viral. Could you give me your source for AMP? thanks! Cheli > I've been on high-dose injected B12/glutathione/AMP since early > October. Over many years of work and research -- and seeing dozens of > doctors --I had already made a pretty good recovery, coming from a > state only slightly better than your daughter's to the point where I > could drive, shop, and take on some light volunteer work. Seven > months on the glutathione has put me up to around 90% recovered: I'm > well enough now that I returned to university in January to begin > work on my masters in science. I've just come through two straight > months of travel and schoolwork without a break -- and without a > crash. There is no point in the past 20 years when I could have done > this. > > I'm still looking for my underlying disease causes, and making good > headway. But, in the meantime, life actually does go on. I don't have > to wait to live it. > > I hope we can help point you toward resources that will do your girl > some good. It sounds like you've been a real fighter for her -- > gotten good information, done all the right things. She is blessed to > have a father like you to look out for her. Too many of us know first- > hand that many parents cannot rise to the challenge the way you have. > > Welcome to the list -- you and our other new folks today! > > Sara > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2006 Report Share Posted May 31, 2006 On May 31, 2006, at 6:26 AM, cheli_luxe wrote: > Hi Sara, > > Congratulations on your 90% recovery! > > Have you been tested for underlying infections? I'm still trying to > get to the bottom of mine; I'm suspecting that's it's viral. I just wrote about that: am getting these done next week (Tuesday or Wednesday). Finally. At long last. > > Could you give me your source for AMP? I don't know of a source, but my compounding pharmacy apparently found it with no problem. It seems logical to assume that most other experienced compounders would also know where to go. They didn't know where to turn for glutathione, though. I sent them to Wellness Pharmacy in Birmingham for that. It's supposedly on its way. Sara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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