Guest guest Posted July 12, 2006 Report Share Posted July 12, 2006 , Yeah, my sleep is fractured most nights - wake up after not enough and the day is hopelss - still " working " but barely. The latest way to " cope " is to go to bed so early that if this happens there's time to take more pills and crash again. And caffeine and ephedrine are necessities now too - byut they are just another way to " push " and I need to stop them soon - i'm getting sicker by the day. We had a fire-drill today - even going *down* the stairs winds me and leaves me feeling rubbery - 3 months agao this was not an issue. This Noni Juice sounds pretty good - may give it a shot. I'm trying so many new things all at once though - time to get a *real* CFS doc - if I can find one - and a diagnosis and some sort of real testing. BTW, the website mentioned in that radio show - http://microwavenews.com - had some good stuff on it. I'm tempted to get an EMF field strength meter to see what I'm dealing with, but I am definitely trying to keep my cell phone farther away from me on average after seeing the RBC clumping fotos from somewhere. - Bob Niederman On 7/11/06, Doyon <prd34@...> wrote: > > Bob, yeah, and it's even worse when you are exhausted but cannot > sleep. I think I had fatigue for years - which I masked by drinking > lots of coffee - before I actually came down with this syndrome. If I > felt tired but needed to do some work or study, I would just have a > cup of java to keep me going. After I got sick, I stopped drinking > the stuff because I noticed that my testicular and lymph node pain > only worsened when I drank the stuff - the opposite effect of > drinking Noni Juice, btw. > > peace, > > paul > > -- In <%40>, > " bob niederman " < > bobn1955@...> wrote: > > > > I'd settle for Chronic Exhaustion Syndrome. > > > > Plugging define:exhastion into gogole yields: > > > > > > " > > > > Definitions of *exhaustion* on the Web: > > extreme fatigue > > debilitation: serious weakening and loss of energy > > the act of exhausting something entirely > > wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn<http://www.google.com/url?sa=X & > start=0 & oi=define & q=http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/ > webwn%3Fs%3Dexhaustion> > > a marked diminution in capacities that are usually taken for > granted; the > > result of failing to create a pocket for the two-dimensional > component of > > the personality, which failure causes " creativity poisoning. " > > www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/5179/Glossary.htm<http:// > www.google.com/url?sa=X & start=4 & oi=define & q=http://www.geocities.com/ > Athens/Delphi/5179/Glossary.htm> > > " > > > > and, perhaps most significantly > > > > " > > The point at which the athlete cannot maintain a high level of > physical > > activity in spite of an adequate blood glucose supply. It is > related to a > > change in the muscle itself. > > www.cptips.com/glosary.htm<http://www.google.com/url?sa=X & start=6 & > oi=define & q=http://www.cptips.com/glosary.htm> > > " > > > > which perfectly captures the idea that we go from aerobic to > anaerobic in > > nothing flat - which is much of the reason for our intolerance to > exercise > > > > - Bob Niederman > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 12, 2006 Report Share Posted July 12, 2006 " bob niederman " <bobn1955@...> wrote: > , Yeah, my sleep is fractured most nights - wake up after not enough and the day is hopelss - still " working " but barely. < What scared Dr enough to call the CDC was the dramatic cluster at Truckee High school. There were nine teachers using the teachers lounge who all got sick, along with half the girls basketball team. (There was actually a tenth who escaped illness - but that's another story) Of those teachers, Gerald and Janice Kennedy had quite different onsets. As I recall, Janice was sudden, and Gerry was slow, over several months. And his description sounded like yours. Just slowly fell apart until he had all the symptoms that some of us got overnight - including the killer sore throat and " crimson crescents " : Inflamed Anterior Pharyngeal Pillars. Looks and feels like gargling with battery acid. We all had it. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Bob, This is originally what happened to me. I would wake up at around 5 AM, which was strange for a person who usually had a hard time getting up in the morning - and eventually I just couldn't sleep anymore. I think I went a week without sleeping - my eyes looked like those of the Evil Emperor on Star Wars. I finally had to take sleeping pills - which is something I resisted as a person who does not like to use pharmaceuticals. After I moved up in the mountains out of cell phone range, my sleep problems resolved after two months and I could sleep again without sleeping pills. I eventually went to see a QiGong healer and slept like a baby after one treatment - didn't wake up once during the night. If you think about it though, 42 million Americans are on sleeping pills, so everyone is being affected by this - whether they officially have CFS or not. And the pharmaceutical industry is raking it in big time. The anti-oxidents I mentioned before have all been shown in research studies to protect the body from the effects of microwave radiation. Melatonin would also probably be a good supplement to take for sleep while also acting as an anti-oxident and offering protection against the ill effects of microwave radiation: < http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed & cmd= Retrieve & dopt=Abstract & list_uids=9261542 & query_hl=1 & itool= pubmed_docsum > " _Melatonin and a spin-trap compound block radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation-induced DNA strand breaks in rat brain cells. Lai H, Singh NP. Bioelectromagnetics Research Laboratory, University of Washington, Seattle 98195, USA. Effects of in vivo microwave exposure on DNA strand breaks, a form of DNA damage, were investigated in rat brain cells. In previous research, we have found that acute (2 hours) exposure to pulsed (2 microseconds pulses, 500 pps) 2450-MHz radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation (RFR) (power density 2 mW/cm2, average whole body specific absorption rate 1.2 W/kg) caused an increase in DNA single- and double-strand breaks in brain cells of the rat when assayed 4 hours post exposure using a microgel electrophoresis assay. In the present study, we found that treatment of rats immediately before and after RFR exposure with either melatonin (1 mg/kg/injection, SC) or the spin-trap compound N-tert-butyl-alpha-phenylnitrone (PBN) (100 mg/kg/ injection, i.p.) blocks this effects of RFR. Since both melatonin and PBN are efficient free radical scavengers it is hypothesized that free radicals are involved in RFR-induced DNA damage in the brain cells of rats. Since cumulated DNA strand breaks in brain cells can lead to neurodegenerative diseases and cancer and an excess of free radicals in cells has been suggested to be the cause of various human diseases, data from this study could have important implications for the health effects of RFR exposure._ " > > > > > > I'd settle for Chronic Exhaustion Syndrome. > > > > > > Plugging define:exhastion into gogole yields: > > > > > > > > > " > > > > > > Definitions of *exhaustion* on the Web: > > > extreme fatigue > > > debilitation: serious weakening and loss of energy > > > the act of exhausting something entirely > > > wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn<http://www.google.com/url?sa= X & > > start=0 & oi=define & q=http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/ > > webwn%3Fs%3Dexhaustion> > > > a marked diminution in capacities that are usually taken for > > granted; the > > > result of failing to create a pocket for the two-dimensional > > component of > > > the personality, which failure causes " creativity poisoning. " > > > www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/5179/Glossary.htm<http:// > > www.google.com/url?sa=X & start=4 & oi=define & q=http:// www.geocities.com/ > > Athens/Delphi/5179/Glossary.htm> > > > " > > > > > > and, perhaps most significantly > > > > > > " > > > The point at which the athlete cannot maintain a high level of > > physical > > > activity in spite of an adequate blood glucose supply. It is > > related to a > > > change in the muscle itself. > > > www.cptips.com/glosary.htm<http://www.google.com/url?sa=X & start=6 & > > oi=define & q=http://www.cptips.com/glosary.htm> > > > " > > > > > > which perfectly captures the idea that we go from aerobic to > > anaerobic in > > > nothing flat - which is much of the reason for our intolerance to > > exercise > > > > > > - Bob Niederman > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Injection of 1 mg/kg means I would have to inject almost 100mgs for equal dose - god knows what you'd have to eat to get the same effect. And they did it before and after.... I already take melatonin pills - 3mg which is a typical or larger than average size from the drugstore - they do help some. - Bob Niederman On 7/13/06, Doyon <prd34@...> wrote: > > Bob, > > > After I moved up in the mountains out of cell phone range, my sleep > problems resolved after two months and I could sleep again without > sleeping pills. I eventually went to see a QiGong healer and slept > like a baby after one treatment - didn't wake up once during the > night. > > < http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed & cmd= > Retrieve & dopt=Abstract & list_uids=9261542 & query_hl=1 & itool= > pubmed_docsum > > > ...treatment of rats immediately before and after > RFR exposure with either melatonin (1 mg/kg/injection, SC) ... > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 I remember that I had a horrible sore throat that lasted about 10 days and then just overwhelming fatigue. paul > > , Yeah, my sleep is fractured most nights - wake up after not > enough and the day is hopelss - still " working " but barely. < > > > What scared Dr enough to call the CDC was the dramatic > cluster at Truckee High school. > There were nine teachers using the teachers lounge who all got sick, > along with half the girls basketball team. (There was actually a tenth > who escaped illness - but that's another story) > Of those teachers, Gerald and Janice Kennedy had quite different > onsets. As I recall, Janice was sudden, and Gerry was slow, over > several months. > And his description sounded like yours. > Just slowly fell apart until he had all the symptoms that some of us > got overnight - including the killer sore throat and " crimson > crescents " : Inflamed Anterior Pharyngeal Pillars. > > Looks and feels like gargling with battery acid. > We all had it. > - > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 [How does this topic on sleep relate to Dr. and the cluster at Truckee HS and sore throats? Is everything about Incline Village. People do try to follow threads and respond appropriately but this becomes a time waster. Or be considerate and change the subject line.] Sleep is important but often difficult to approach. Most sleep advice focuses on simple sleep hygiene approaches. Although a pathological lack of restful sleep is common to many neurological organic diseases, most sleep info belies the underlying assumption that the insomnia is primarily caused by psychiatric disorders such as mood and anxiety disorders instead of biological malfunction such as central fatigue. Would try the natural remedies first. Calcium and magnesium, melatonin and serotonin inducers like tryptophan and 5 HTP are very useful. If not, then go to prescription meds. It is important to preserve stage 4 deep or Œslow wave sleep¹ - lack of stage 4 is the non-restorative sleep that leaves you groggy in the morning. Tricyclic antidepressants are also good sleep inducers and enhance stage 4 sleep (helps stay asleep rather than just get to sleep). Most GP's can provide sleep meds effectively but if not would request a sleep study. Again, beware as suggestions for so-called " sleep hygiene " are often inapplicable and just plain not helpful, even harmful. Most above all warn people not to take naps. If you are able, it is best to nap or rest as much as possible and get what you can when you can. Lack of sleep causes more than daytime drowsiness but affects bodily systems as well and can impair endocrine and immune system function. Jill _____________________________ Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? Posted by: " erikmoldwarrior " erikmoldwarrior@... <mailto:erikmoldwarrior@...?Subject= erikmoldwarrior <erikmoldwarrior> (PST) Wed Jul 12, 2006 8:52 pm (PST) " bob niederman " <bobn1955@...> wrote: > , Yeah, my sleep is fractured most nights - wake up after not enough and the day is hopelss - still " working " but barely. < What scared Dr enough to call the CDC was the dramatic cluster at Truckee High school. There were nine teachers using the teachers lounge who all got sick, along with half the girls basketball team. (There was actually a tenth who escaped illness - but that's another story) Of those teachers, Gerald and Janice Kennedy had quite different onsets. As I recall, Janice was sudden, and Gerry was slow, over several months. And his description sounded like yours. Just slowly fell apart until he had all the symptoms that some of us got overnight - including the killer sore throat and " crimson crescents " : Inflamed Anterior Pharyngeal Pillars. Looks and feels like gargling with battery acid. We all had it. - ____________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 - the tenth that escaped the illness at Truckee - now he or she may really be a clue. . . can you tell us more about this person? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 " H. Wish " wrote: > > - the tenth that escaped the illness at Truckee - now he or she > may really be a clue. . . can you tell us more about this person? > I have waited YEARS for someone to notice that - and ask me about it, because it is an anomaly! Congratulations. You are the first. The tenth teacher was growing so ill in that teachers lounge that he took his lunch out to Donner Lake and sat there in his truck. He connected his progressive illness to that lounge and got out. He was the one who recovered. That was a clue that made me consider that mold was the mediating factor in whatever illness it was that passed through: the difference between those who got better and those who did not. Those other nine who stayed under the influence of Stachybotrys in Truckee High School got worse. - It was only this one teacher who recognized that the burning eyes, coughing, inability to breath, rashes, fatigue, headaches, and all the other crap that was happening in that mold ridden teachers lounge was having a deleterious effect on him. And he bailed out. And he escaped CFS while those of us who stayed in moldy places while the " Yuppie Flu " was going through town did not. The specific cluster of illness that initiated the process which resulted in the creation of CFS had Stachybotrys Chartarum exposure as the common denominator. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Fascinating. This is huge. erikmoldwarrior <erikmoldwarrior@...> wrote: " H. Wish " wrote: > > - the tenth that escaped the illness at Truckee - now he or she > may really be a clue. . . can you tell us more about this person? > I have waited YEARS for someone to notice that - and ask me about it, because it is an anomaly! Congratulations. You are the first. The tenth teacher was growing so ill in that teachers lounge that he took his lunch out to Donner Lake and sat there in his truck. He connected his progressive illness to that lounge and got out. He was the one who recovered. That was a clue that made me consider that mold was the mediating factor in whatever illness it was that passed through: the difference between those who got better and those who did not. Those other nine who stayed under the influence of Stachybotrys in Truckee High School got worse. - It was only this one teacher who recognized that the burning eyes, coughing, inability to breath, rashes, fatigue, headaches, and all the other crap that was happening in that mold ridden teachers lounge was having a deleterious effect on him. And he bailed out. And he escaped CFS while those of us who stayed in moldy places while the " Yuppie Flu " was going through town did not. The specific cluster of illness that initiated the process which resulted in the creation of CFS had Stachybotrys Chartarum exposure as the common denominator. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Eeik, Well, since Myalgic Encephomyelitis was first reported in 1955, this may not be what created CFS, at least not all types of it. On the other hand, sounds like it's definitely time to clean up the mold at the top of the walls in my bathroom, though...... - Bob Niederman On 7/13/06, erikmoldwarrior <erikmoldwarrior@...> wrote: > > " H. Wish " wrote: > > > > - the tenth that escaped the illness at Truckee - now he or she > > may really be a clue. . . can you tell us more about this person? > > > > I have waited YEARS for someone to notice that - and ask me about it, > because it is an anomaly! > Congratulations. You are the first. > > The tenth teacher was growing so ill in that teachers lounge that he > took his lunch out to Donner Lake and sat there in his truck. > He connected his progressive illness to that lounge and got out. > He was the one who recovered. > > That was a clue that made me consider that mold was the mediating > factor in whatever illness it was that passed through: the difference > between those who got better and those who did not. > Those other nine who stayed under the influence of Stachybotrys in > Truckee High School got worse. - It was only this one teacher who > recognized that the burning eyes, coughing, inability to breath, > rashes, fatigue, headaches, and all the other crap that was happening > in that mold ridden teachers lounge was having a deleterious effect on > him. And he bailed out. > And he escaped CFS while those of us who stayed in moldy places while > the " Yuppie Flu " was going through town did not. > > The specific cluster of illness that initiated the process which > resulted in the creation of CFS had Stachybotrys Chartarum exposure as > the common denominator. > - > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 I hope you will get someone to help you with that and not tackle it yourself! Adrienne ----- Original Message ----- From: bob niederman CF - a precurser to CFS? On the other hand, sounds like it's definitely time to clean up the mold at the top of the walls in my bathroom, though...... - Bob Niederman On 7/13/06, erikmoldwarrior <erikmoldwarrior@...> wrote: > > " H. Wish " wrote: > > > > - the tenth that escaped the illness at Truckee - now he or she > > may really be a clue. . . can you tell us more about this person? > > > > I have waited YEARS for someone to notice that - and ask me about it, > because it is an anomaly! > Congratulations. You are the first. > > The tenth teacher was growing so ill in that teachers lounge that he > took his lunch out to Donner Lake and sat there in his truck. > He connected his progressive illness to that lounge and got out. > He was the one who recovered. > > That was a clue that made me consider that mold was the mediating > factor in whatever illness it was that passed through: the difference > between those who got better and those who did not. > Those other nine who stayed under the influence of Stachybotrys in > Truckee High School got worse. - It was only this one teacher who > recognized that the burning eyes, coughing, inability to breath, > rashes, fatigue, headaches, and all the other crap that was happening > in that mold ridden teachers lounge was having a deleterious effect on > him. And he bailed out. > And he escaped CFS while those of us who stayed in moldy places while > the " Yuppie Flu " was going through town did not. > > The specific cluster of illness that initiated the process which > resulted in the creation of CFS had Stachybotrys Chartarum exposure as > the common denominator. > - > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Adrienne, who do you get for that (cleaning mold in the bathroom)? On 7/13/06, Adrienne G. <duckblossm@...> wrote: > > I hope you will get someone to help you with that and not tackle it > yourself! > Adrienne > > -- > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Dear Bob How much mold is there? Are you talking about mold in the grout between ceramic tiles? Or mold actually growing on the painted? wall adjacent to the shower/bathtub? (I managed apts for several years and I had tenants that covered their windows with foil and created a horrible mold problem that spread to the painted walls and covered several sq ft.) A product like Clorox Clean-up that contains bleach should be effective. Are you sensitive to chemicals yet? If so, wear rubber gloves and try to avoid breathing the fumes - or - open a window and have a fan running to draw the fumes out of the bathroom. Or you can use plain bleach diluted with water - I'm not sure if hydrogen peroxide will kill mold, but some people clean with hydrogen peroxide if they are sensitive to chemicals. Can you hire a cleaning lady for a 1 time visit - probably cost $50-$100 for the whole house, depending on how much needs to be done. Kendra On 7/13/06, bob niederman <bobn1955@...> wrote: > Adrienne, who do you get for that (cleaning mold in the bathroom)? > On 7/13/06, Adrienne G. <duckblossm@...> wrote: > > > > I hope you will get someone to help you with that and not tackle it > > yourself! > > Adrienne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Wow - - thanks for telling us about the 'near miss' in the Truckee cohort. Sounds a lot like mold is at the core of that. You list the six main symptoms of that group as " burning eyes, coughing, inability to breath, rashes, fatigue, headaches " ; were those yours as well as his? What about those of us who may have experienced 1-4 only intermittently if at all, 5 and 6 a great deal and a lot more of the swollen glands, sleep problems, muscle pain, joint pain, and post-exertional crashes ('malaise' is a bit of an understatement isn't it), especially if we look at the first year or first few months? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Jill McLaughlin <jillmclaughlin@...> wrote: > [How does this topic on sleep relate to Dr. and the cluster at Truckee HS and sore throats? Is everything about Incline Village. People do try to follow threads and respond appropriately but this becomes a time waster. Or be considerate and change the subject line.] > Gerald Kennedy, Truckee teacher cluster member and Incline Village epidemic survivor described a precursor fatigue state exactly this way. Since this particular group was the event that led to calling the CDC and eventually to creation of CFS; " The Syndrome " , this is how CF acted as a precursor to CFS in an unbroken sequence in this case. Some people hate the word " fatigue " so much that they will attempt to rule out a persons fatigue experience by saying that it doesn't apply and that they probably don't have " true CFS " . In Mr. Kennedy's case, that would be impossible, because his illness goes in a chain of events directly to creation of CFS. We don't have to defend ourselves by using the argument that we have the " correct " symptoms and so we are true cases of CFS. We are the ones CFS was based on and patterned after, so " CFS " itself is a comparison against our personal experience. We cannot be dismissed as " not having real CFS " . So far, that's the only advantage to being an Incline survivor. It's a rock solid way of over-ruling those who attempt to make their theory fit the facts by dismissing any individual whose experience conflicts with their concepts. And there's a lot of fact-dismissalists out there! - > > " bob niederman " <bobn1955@> wrote: > > , Yeah, my sleep is fractured most nights - wake up after not > enough and the day is hopelss - still " working " but barely. < > > > What scared Dr enough to call the CDC was the dramatic > cluster at Truckee High school. > There were nine teachers using the teachers lounge who all got sick, > along with half the girls basketball team. (There was actually a tenth > who escaped illness - but that's another story) > Of those teachers, Gerald and Janice Kennedy had quite different > onsets. As I recall, Janice was sudden, and Gerry was slow, over > several months. > And his description sounded like yours. > Just slowly fell apart until he had all the symptoms that some of us > got overnight - including the killer sore throat and " crimson > crescents " : Inflamed Anterior Pharyngeal Pillars. > > Looks and feels like gargling with battery acid. > We all had it. > - > > ____________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Kendra, Thanks for your response. Comments below On 7/13/06, Kendra <KCuyler@...> wrote: > > > Dear Bob > > How much mold is there? Are you talking about mold in the grout > between ceramic tiles? Or mold actually growing on the painted? wall > adjacent to the shower/bathtub? I feel like such a moron. It's actually growing in spots, some 1/2 " most much smaller, on the wallpaper adjacent to the ceiling around much of the perihery of the bathroom, in a band about 1 " high, except at one end where the spots are in an area more like 2 - 3 " . And the ceiling, painted plaster adjacent to the walls in the same areas has a very narrow band. I don;t see than any of it looks moist. It's only at the top of the room. The room has an exhaust fan, but stupid me never left the solid door open so that it could do anything, so the mirrors were always covered with vapor when I got out of the shower - clearly a lot of moisture got trapped in the borners formed by the walls and ceilings. The showers stall itself is fiberglass. The rest of the ceiling and wals are unaffected. > A product like Clorox Clean-up that contains bleach should be > effective. Are you sensitive to chemicals yet? If so, wear rubber > gloves and try to avoid breathing the fumes - or - open a window and > have a fan running to draw the fumes out of the bathroom. I may have started having MCS - I had some new furniture delivered in Feb, treated with something called Stainsafe - and it had a smell that bothered hell out of me and maybe gave me headaches. My brother could smell nothing. (That seems t be gone now.) In any event, if I have a fan blowig out the window in the bthrrom and other fans blowing in the windows from other rooms I think I'll be OK. I will use the gloves and probably get a mask of some sort, as advised by some websites to prevent inhalation of spores stirred up in the porcess. > Can you hire a cleaning lady for a 1 time visit - probably cost > $50-$100 for the whole house, depending on how much needs to be done. I don't know - I think I'm gonna want this done a specific way. Although I am tempted.... - Bob, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 " H. Wish " wrote: > > Wow - - thanks for telling us about the 'near miss' in the > Truckee cohort. Sounds a lot like mold is at the core of that. You > list the six main symptoms of that group as " burning eyes, coughing, > inability to breath, > rashes, fatigue, headaches " ; were those yours as well as his? What > about those of us who may have experienced 1-4 only intermittently if > at all, 5 and 6 a great deal and a lot more of the swollen glands, > sleep problems, muscle pain, joint pain, and post-exertional crashes > ('malaise' is a bit of an understatement isn't it), especially if we > look at the first year or first few months? Yes, had all that, including the vascular abnormalities described by Dr Ryll AND the " loss of fingerprints " by Dr Cheney. We had a repeat of Truckee HS at North Tahoe High School with two teachers who just fell apart and didn't recover in the classic CFS way. When they found the Stachy in the wall adjacent to their desks, it was a small colony. Only the diameter of a baseball. And because it only slammed the two teachers directly next to the colony into permanent disability, none of the other teachers believes them. They've been accused of " Living the Life of Luxury " and taking advantage of the system for sitting at home and collecting disability pay. My old biology teacher at Truckee HS, Mr. Nick Santa accused the Truckee teachers lounge CFSers of all being fakers and hypochondriacs. Not very " scientific " of him, all things considered. This broke up a lot of " friendships " . Now, isn't it amazing that we could see repeated examples of this phenomenon and absolutely no CFS doctors or researchers would talk to me about it? They all turn and run from me as fast as possible. Dr Shoemaker was the ONLY doctor, who not only wanted this information, but went far out of his way to get it, on his own time. Now THAT's how doctors are supposed to be. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2006 Report Share Posted July 13, 2006 Dear Bob It doesn't sound too bad..... BTW - not all mold is the kind that can make you seriously ill. The bad one is stachybotrys a few others. The bathroom shower mold that you are describing is probably not the really bad stuff. Though I think there are mold test kits if you are really worried. But if you have a leak that remains undetected for months or years under the tub, or behind the walls, etc -- that's when it can get serious. Kendra PS: Did you get the short list of docs that I sent you? PS#2: If you hire someone to clean - I wouldn't emphasize that it is to clean mold - just say general house cleaning, including the bathroom - if you emphasize the mold then you might get an inflated quote. On 7/13/06, bob niederman <bobn1955@...> wrote: > Kendra, > > Thanks for your response. > > Comments below > > On 7/13/06, Kendra <KCuyler@...> wrote: > > > > Dear Bob > > > > How much mold is there? Are you talking about mold in the grout > > between ceramic tiles? Or mold actually growing on the painted? wall > > adjacent to the shower/bathtub? > > I feel like such a moron. > > It's actually growing in spots, some 1/2 " most much smaller, on the > wallpaper adjacent to the ceiling around much of the perihery of the > bathroom, in a band about 1 " high, except at one end where the spots > are in an area more like 2 - 3 " . And the ceiling, painted plaster > adjacent to the walls in the same areas has a very narrow band. I > don;t see than any of it looks moist. It's only at the top of the > room. The room has an exhaust fan, but stupid me never left the solid > door open so that it could do anything, so the mirrors were always > covered with vapor when I got out of the shower - clearly a lot of > moisture got trapped in the borners formed by the walls and ceilings. > > The showers stall itself is fiberglass. The rest of the ceiling and > wals are unaffected. > > > A product like Clorox Clean-up that contains bleach should be > > effective. Are you sensitive to chemicals yet? If so, wear rubber > > gloves and try to avoid breathing the fumes - or - open a window and > > have a fan running to draw the fumes out of the bathroom. > > I may have started having MCS - I had some new furniture delivered in > Feb, treated with something called Stainsafe - and it had a smell that > bothered hell out of me and maybe gave me headaches. My brother could smell nothing. (That seems t be gone now.) > > In any event, if I have a fan blowig out the window in the bthrrom and > other fans blowing in the windows from other rooms I think I'll be OK. > I will use the gloves and probably get a mask of some sort, as > advised by some websites to prevent inhalation of spores stirred up in > the porcess. > > > Can you hire a cleaning lady for a 1 time visit - probably cost > > $50-$100 for the whole house, depending on how much needs to be done. > > I don't know - I think I'm gonna want this done a specific way. > Although I am tempted.... > > - Bob, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 You can supervise whomever you hire! I was just reading it could be BEHIND the wallpaper. And if you strip off the paper, which you probably should do, if it IS back there, spores will be released into the air. Ponder this a bit. Adrienne Re: Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? Kendra, Thanks for your response. Comments below On 7/13/06, Kendra <KCuyler@...> wrote: > > > Dear Bob > > How much mold is there? Are you talking about mold in the grout > between ceramic tiles? Or mold actually growing on the painted? wall > adjacent to the shower/bathtub? I feel like such a moron. It's actually growing in spots, some 1/2 " most much smaller, on the wallpaper adjacent to the ceiling around much of the perihery of the bathroom, in a band about 1 " high, except at one end where the spots are in an area more like 2 - 3 " . And the ceiling, painted plaster adjacent to the walls in the same areas has a very narrow band. I don;t see than any of it looks moist. It's only at the top of the room. The room has an exhaust fan, but stupid me never left the solid door open so that it could do anything, so the mirrors were always covered with vapor when I got out of the shower - clearly a lot of moisture got trapped in the borners formed by the walls and ceilings. The showers stall itself is fiberglass. The rest of the ceiling and wals are unaffected. > A product like Clorox Clean-up that contains bleach should be > effective. Are you sensitive to chemicals yet? If so, wear rubber > gloves and try to avoid breathing the fumes - or - open a window and > have a fan running to draw the fumes out of the bathroom. I may have started having MCS - I had some new furniture delivered in Feb, treated with something called Stainsafe - and it had a smell that bothered hell out of me and maybe gave me headaches. My brother could smell nothing. (That seems t be gone now.) In any event, if I have a fan blowig out the window in the bthrrom and other fans blowing in the windows from other rooms I think I'll be OK. I will use the gloves and probably get a mask of some sort, as advised by some websites to prevent inhalation of spores stirred up in the porcess. > Can you hire a cleaning lady for a 1 time visit - probably cost > $50-$100 for the whole house, depending on how much needs to be done. I don't know - I think I'm gonna want this done a specific way. Although I am tempted.... - Bob, 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 July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 But no one was discussing how those at Incline Village described their symptoms. One person asked a specific question having nothing to do with this scenario, yet you launch into the typical Incline Village tirade, apropos of nothing. Apparently you are very content to have the chronic fatigue label, which may be adequate for those with mold sensitivity, who can manage their symptoms by avoidance, yet most have found the chronic fatigue construct to be very inadequate and damaging. The fact is that CFS has not served most well and as described has failed both in its original attempt as a research def or its unintended use to dx patients - and has not played out successfully in any manner. That is the fact, not as it applies to you. We are not denying your experiences nor are we deniers or " dismissalists " for not accepting your version as reality, whether you were in Incline Village or not. Actually it is the other way around. Jill _______________________ 2c. Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? Thu Jul 13, 2006 7:19 pm (PST) Jill McLaughlin <jillmclaughlin@...> wrote: > [How does this topic on sleep relate to Dr. and the cluster at Truckee HS and sore throats? Is everything about Incline Village. People do try to follow threads and respond appropriately but this becomes a time waster. Or be considerate and change the subject line.] > Gerald Kennedy, Truckee teacher cluster member and Incline Village epidemic survivor described a precursor fatigue state exactly this way. Since this particular group was the event that led to calling the CDC and eventually to creation of CFS; " The Syndrome " , this is how CF acted as a precursor to CFS in an unbroken sequence in this case. Some people hate the word " fatigue " so much that they will attempt to rule out a persons fatigue experience by saying that it doesn't apply and that they probably don't have " true CFS " . In Mr. Kennedy's case, that would be impossible, because his illness goes in a chain of events directly to creation of CFS. We don't have to defend ourselves by using the argument that we have the " correct " symptoms and so we are true cases of CFS. We are the ones CFS was based on and patterned after, so " CFS " itself is a comparison against our personal experience. We cannot be dismissed as " not having real CFS " . So far, that's the only advantage to being an Incline survivor. It's a rock solid way of over-ruling those who attempt to make their theory fit the facts by dismissing any individual whose experience conflicts with their concepts. And there's a lot of fact-dismissalists out there! - > > " bob niederman " <bobn1955@> wrote: , Yeah, my sleep is fractured most > nights - wake up after not enough and the day is hopelss - still " working " but > barely. < > > > What scared Dr enough to call the CDC was the dramatic cluster at > Truckee High school. There were nine teachers using the teachers lounge who > all got sick, along with half the girls basketball team. (There was actually a > tenth who escaped illness - but that's another story) Of those teachers, > Gerald and Janice Kennedy had quite different onsets. As I recall, Janice was > sudden, and Gerry was slow, over several months. And his description sounded > like yours. Just slowly fell apart until he had all the symptoms that some of > us got overnight - including the killer sore throat and " crimson crescents " : > Inflamed Anterior Pharyngeal Pillars. > > Looks and feels like gargling with battery acid. We all had it. - > > ____________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 Dr. Cheney and have done extensive scientific and epidemiological investigations at Incline Village and beyond, and have aggressively continued to work on the illness. You hail them as heroes, yet with all their work and background, they hardy seem to share your views, never followed up on this or shared this mold approach. Dr. is currently very actively involved with the HHV-6 Foundation. Dr. Cheney is mainly working in the cardiology area, which has not been associated with mold to my knowledge. Lerner's cardiac findings have been mostly viral in nature. Jill ________________________ Reply | Forward Message #101570 of 101595 Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? " H. Wish " wrote: > > - the tenth that escaped the illness at Truckee - now he or she > may really be a clue. . . can you tell us more about this person? > I have waited YEARS for someone to notice that - and ask me about it, because it is an anomaly! Congratulations. You are the first. The tenth teacher was growing so ill in that teachers lounge that he took his lunch out to Donner Lake and sat there in his truck. He connected his progressive illness to that lounge and got out. He was the one who recovered. That was a clue that made me consider that mold was the mediating factor in whatever illness it was that passed through: the difference between those who got better and those who did not. Those other nine who stayed under the influence of Stachybotrys in Truckee High School got worse. - It was only this one teacher who recognized that the burning eyes, coughing, inability to breath, rashes, fatigue, headaches, and all the other crap that was happening in that mold ridden teachers lounge was having a deleterious effect on him. And he bailed out. And he escaped CFS while those of us who stayed in moldy places while the " Yuppie Flu " was going through town did not. The specific cluster of illness that initiated the process which resulted in the creation of CFS had Stachybotrys Chartarum exposure as the common denominator. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 Jill McLaughlin < wrote: > Dr. Cheney and have done extensive scientific and epidemiological investigations at Incline Village and beyond, and have aggressively continued to work on the illness. You hail them as heroes, yet with all their work and background, they hardy seem to share your views, never followed up on this or shared this mold approach. Dr. is currently very actively involved with the HHV-6 Foundation. Dr. Cheney is mainly working in the cardiology area, which has not been associated with mold to my knowledge. Lerner's cardiac findings have been mostly viral in nature. > Jill Yes, they have done spectacular work. But they are not in my shoes. So, by your logic, the very fact that I found something that helps means that my experienced should be disregarded? - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 Jill McLaughlin wrote: We are not denying your experiences nor are we deniers or " dismissalists " for not accepting your version as reality, whether you were in Incline Village or not. Actually it is the other way around. > Jill What kind of a statement is this? " We are not denying your experiences nor are we deniers or " dismissalists " for not accepting your version as reality " How is " not accepting " different than dismissing and denying? Don't you see anything strange in these contradictions? - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 No, this is not my logic as I never said that and in fact just stated the opposite which you just reprinted in your next post. I stated: " We are not denying your experiences nor are we deniers or " dismissalists " for not accepting your version as reality, whether you were in Incline Village or not. Actually it is the other way around. " [Message #101638 Fri Jul 14, 2006 11:07 am] Why do you do this? These are rather simple straightforward statements and concepts so is difficult to see how anyone could misunderstand and distort to this degree. Jill ______________________________ Fri Jul 14, 2006 10:53 am " erikmoldwarrior " <erikmoldwarrior@...> erikmoldwarrior Reply | Forward Message #101637 Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? Jill McLaughlin < wrote: > Dr. Cheney and have done extensive scientific and epidemiological investigations at Incline Village and beyond, and have aggressively continued to work on the illness. You hail them as heroes, yet with all their work and background, they hardy seem to share your views, never followed up on this or shared this mold approach. Dr. is currently very actively involved with the HHV-6 Foundation. Dr. Cheney is mainly working in the cardiology area, which has not been associated with mold to my knowledge. Lerner's cardiac findings have been mostly viral in nature. > Jill Yes, they have done spectacular work. But they are not in my shoes. So, by your logic, the very fact that I found something that helps means that my experienced should be disregarded? - _____________________ Messages  Messages Help Message # Go Search: Search Advanced " erikmoldwarrior " <erikmoldwarrior@...> erikmoldwarrior Fri Jul 14, 2006 11:07 am Reply | Forward Message #101638 of 101650 < Prev | Next > Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? Jill McLaughlin wrote: We are not denying your experiences nor are we deniers or " dismissalists " for not accepting your version as reality, whether you were in Incline Village or not. Actually it is the other way around. > Jill What kind of a statement is this? " We are not denying your experiences nor are we deniers or " dismissalists " for not accepting your version as reality " How is " not accepting " different than dismissing and denying? Don't you see anything strange in these contradictions? - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 No it is not a contradiction to not accept your experiences as ours, which you foist on us ad nauseum while you try to pretend to be THE CFS prototype and attack anyone who does not go along with it - or just plain gets sick of hearing about it and Incline village - your version. Incline Village outbreak was significant and meticulously detailed in Oslers Web, which I would strongly recommend for historical perspective. However would respect that this list is mainly for treatment discussion and think that people who are sensitive to mold of course would be best to avoid it and think we realize that bleach is effective in eliminating it. Have no interest in engaging in or being sucked into your unrelenting nonsensical mind games and correcting your erroneous illogical statements. Of course we can all delete, but this is a huge time waster. Jill _________________ Message #101638 of 101639 < Prev | Next > Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? Jill McLaughlin wrote: We are not denying your experiences nor are we deniers or " dismissalists " for not accepting your version as reality, whether you were in Incline Village or not. Actually it is the other way around. > Jill What kind of a statement is this? " We are not denying your experiences nor are we deniers or " dismissalists " for not accepting your version as reality " How is " not accepting " different than dismissing and denying? Don't you see anything strange in these contradictions? - Expand Messages Author Sort by Date Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? I hope you will get someone to help you with that and not tackle it yourself! Adrienne ... From: bob niederman CF - a precurser to CFS? On the other hand,... Adrienne G. duckduck_87501 Jul 13, 2006 8:24 pm Re: CF - a precurser to CFS? Adrienne, who do you get for that (cleaning mold in the bathroom)? ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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