Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: Crash on Glutathione then increased energy

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

In teeny tiny doses, yes. You can't really know unless you try again. It

certainly could've kicked your immune system into action against some infection

and made you feel so bad. But no reason to do it so drastically. But really,

Rich is the glutathione expert.

Adrienne

Crash on Glutathione then increased energy

I wrote earlier about my attempt to take liposomal glutathione. I

crashed harder than I have in a long time. For a couple of weeks I

thought I had taken a major step backward.

Here's the weird part: Now that I've recovered for a few days, I feel

more energy than usual. I've been a lurker on this list for 7-8 years

with few posts of my own because I usually don't have the energy to

join in on the conversation. I have so much energ that this is

probably my 5th post in two days. I'm typing like a mad woman.

Does anybody think that it could be a longer term effect of the

glutathione? I'm wondering if I should start taking it again?

Lynn

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.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Question: Is trying new therapies and/or processes comparable to

macrobiotics in that when switching over to a " good " , supportive behavior

that it's possible you'll get sick in the short-term as you are either

detoxing and/or the toxins are being pushed out of your body? Would that

be a possible scenario of the below?

I've been wondering this as I start to integrate some suggestion in to my

life. And wondering if I need to prepare for some added " down time " ?

Thanks,

Laurel

Re: Crash on Glutathione then increased energy

In teeny tiny doses, yes. You can't really know unless you try again. It

certainly could've kicked your immune system into action against some

infection and made you feel so bad. But no reason to do it so drastically.

But really, Rich is the glutathione expert.

Adrienne

Crash on Glutathione then increased energy

I wrote earlier about my attempt to take liposomal glutathione. I

crashed harder than I have in a long time. For a couple of weeks I

thought I had taken a major step backward.

Here's the weird part: Now that I've recovered for a few days, I feel

more energy than usual. I've been a lurker on this list for 7-8 years

with few posts of my own because I usually don't have the energy to

join in on the conversation. I have so much energ that this is

probably my 5th post in two days. I'm typing like a mad woman.

Does anybody think that it could be a longer term effect of the

glutathione? I'm wondering if I should start taking it again?

Lynn

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.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

On Jul 26, 2006, at 8:30 PM, tloyd61275 wrote:

> I wrote earlier about my attempt to take liposomal glutathione. I

> crashed harder than I have in a long time. For a couple of weeks I

> thought I had taken a major step backward.

>

> Here's the weird part: Now that I've recovered for a few days, I feel

> more energy than usual. I've been a lurker on this list for 7-8 years

> with few posts of my own because I usually don't have the energy to

> join in on the conversation. I have so much energ that this is

> probably my 5th post in two days. I'm typing like a mad woman.

>

> Does anybody think that it could be a longer term effect of the

> glutathione? I'm wondering if I should start taking it again?

I had similar experiences when I went on lipo. You probably just took

more than your body could handle. If you've been sick a long time,

and have a high tox load to clear, it can be really awful when it all

starts to come down.

The fact that you feel significantly better now suggests that it was

probably doing a good job of it, though. But you need to start a lot

smaller, and work into it.

Sara

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

On Jul 26, 2006, at 9:35 PM, Laurel Ley wrote:

> Question: Is trying new therapies and/or processes comparable to

> macrobiotics in that when switching over to a " good " , supportive

> behavior

> that it's possible you'll get sick in the short-term as you are either

> detoxing and/or the toxins are being pushed out of your body?

> Would that

> be a possible scenario of the below?

My experience is that yes, with some things, this does happen.

Glutathione, being the body's number one detoxer, is particularly

likely to create this in people with high tox loads. Likewise, I have

medical proof that I carry a large heavy metal burden, so a recent

FIR sauna (which is known to move metal) also wiped me out for

several days. (GSH actually helped speed healing in that case.) But

in both those cases, it was pretty clear on reflection that my

symptoms were because these treatments were creating known reactions

against known toxins. Importantly: when I stopped, the symptoms ended

in a few days.

But, also in my experience, I don't think this " herx " happens nearly

as often as other people seem to think it does. I've seen it used to

justify treatments that later turned out to be genuinely harmful, or

at least highly inappropriate. Apart from the two examples above,

when something new makes me feel wretched, it's almost always because

it's a Bad Thing and I need to not do it. Recent abortive experiments

along this line include Cortef (which I learned the hard way that I

don't have the enzymes to clear), testosterone (ditto), and SAMe

(ditto ditto). Fortunately, I learned something important from these

events, though. Rich was able to piece it together that these three,

along with several other problematic drugs, are all cleared by the

same enzyme. Obviously, I'm not making that enzyme. Which means that

from now on, I'll know to avoid the whole damn family and spare

myself future grief. So even wrong turns can be educational, if

you're paying attention for the lesson.

Then there was salt/c, for which my bad reaction prompted quite a

debate here about whether I was in a natural cleansing cycle or

unnatural congestive heart failure. (It is a difference worth noting,

yes.) I'm still not sure, but you bet I'm gonna be damn careful with

this stuff in the future.

Moral of the long story: Yes, herxing happens. But I'd tend to assume

that most bad reactions are NOT herxes, unless 1) you know for sure

that you've got the relevant toxins on board and 2) you know for sure

that the new treatment does tend to move those exact toxins. Mostly,

pain is still the body's way of saying, " Don't DO that! " Ignoring or

enduring it, in the absence of a sound medical reason to do so, has

on occasion created massive setbacks that took me weeks or months to

heal my way back out of.

Sara

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

I personally don't think a whole lot has to be that way. Perhaps with the

exception of just the situation you may be in w. the lipo glut.

An awful lot seems to be dose-related. For example, the physical therapy I have

recently begun. At first it wiped me out profoundly. The wipe out only lasted a

few hrs., so I risked going forward. It has been a process of learning not to

reach for more than a tiny bit of accomplishment, while at the same time

increasing, in tiny increments my ability to accomplish. Voila; after a month,

one day I was already in a low place when my p.t. arrived, but I made a tiny

effort to do it anyhow- and to my surprise, the d*** exercise energized me. I

didn't accomplish much, but I didn't crash big-time either, just a droop about

1/2 hr later.

The neat thing is that the prescription my doc wrote is for a whole year, so I

don't have to hurry!

(I observe a great deal of inclination to hurry and get well on this forum, and

I don't think that works with this disease. But I am older than most of the

people here, I believe. I still really want a life, but so much has already been

consumed by this disease it is not as urgent and I have less time ahead to have

great hopes for, so I can afford to be laid back.)

At this point I take a whole slew of things for energy, strength and cognition.

When I recently added some new things, my response to all the old things started

changing. and not in simple ways, because the effects of some of the stuff is

cumulative, so that I may find myself in trouble a few days after I quit

something altogether and then have to figure out how often to take that thing,

not just how much.

Right now I am trying to figure out how to get through the evening without

either crashing into withdrawals of some sort or another, nor being too

energized to sleep.

This does not answer your question so directly, I guess, but unless I think the

risk is manageable, as with the p.t. or unless I have a good idea of what I am

doing, I don't keep up with treatments or processes that make me feel worse.

Adrienne

Crash on Glutathione then increased energy

I wrote earlier about my attempt to take liposomal glutathione. I

crashed harder than I have in a long time. For a couple of weeks I

thought I had taken a major step backward.

Here's the weird part: Now that I've recovered for a few days, I feel

more energy than usual. I've been a lurker on this list for 7-8 years

with few posts of my own because I usually don't have the energy to

join in on the conversation. I have so much energ that this is

probably my 5th post in two days. I'm typing like a mad woman.

Does anybody think that it could be a longer term effect of the

glutathione? I'm wondering if I should start taking it again?

Lynn

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.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Thank you Mercuria. for the answer below

TO THOSE IN THE KNOW: Okay, I am struggling over putting what glutathione

is, in " english " . I start reading the links and Wikipedia and my eyes glaze

over.

So here's my shot at " english " -- glutathione is a naturally occurring

antioxidant. As an antioxidant, the purpose of glutathione is to help

protect and/or rid the body of toxins, such as free radicals. For example,

glutathione is needed for the detoxification of

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methylglyoxal> methylglyoxal, a toxin produced

as a by-product of metabolism. When the body has low levels of

glutathione, it means that your body's ability to fend off toxins is

decreased and as a result, your body's various systems may become overly

toxic, thus reducing your natural healing process. Also, when you begin

to increase your body's glutathione levels, it may result in a high level of

detoxification quickly and you may find your energy and immune system

lowered in teh short-term.

???? Am I remotely in the ballpark at a layman's definition?

THANK YOU,

Laurel

Re: Crash on Glutathione then increased energy

On Jul 26, 2006, at 9:35 PM, Laurel Ley wrote:

> Question: Is trying new therapies and/or processes comparable to

> macrobiotics in that when switching over to a " good " , supportive

> behavior

> that it's possible you'll get sick in the short-term as you are either

> detoxing and/or the toxins are being pushed out of your body?

> Would that

> be a possible scenario of the below?

My experience is that yes, with some things, this does happen.

Glutathione, being the body's number one detoxer, is particularly

likely to create this in people with high tox loads. Likewise, I have

medical proof that I carry a large heavy metal burden, so a recent

FIR sauna (which is known to move metal) also wiped me out for

several days. (GSH actually helped speed healing in that case.) But

in both those cases, it was pretty clear on reflection that my

symptoms were because these treatments were creating known reactions

against known toxins. Importantly: when I stopped, the symptoms ended

in a few days.

But, also in my experience, I don't think this " herx " happens nearly

as often as other people seem to think it does. I've seen it used to

justify treatments that later turned out to be genuinely harmful, or

at least highly inappropriate. Apart from the two examples above,

when something new makes me feel wretched, it's almost always because

it's a Bad Thing and I need to not do it. Recent abortive experiments

along this line include Cortef (which I learned the hard way that I

don't have the enzymes to clear), testosterone (ditto), and SAMe

(ditto ditto). Fortunately, I learned something important from these

events, though. Rich was able to piece it together that these three,

along with several other problematic drugs, are all cleared by the

same enzyme. Obviously, I'm not making that enzyme. Which means that

from now on, I'll know to avoid the whole damn family and spare

myself future grief. So even wrong turns can be educational, if

you're paying attention for the lesson.

Then there was salt/c, for which my bad reaction prompted quite a

debate here about whether I was in a natural cleansing cycle or

unnatural congestive heart failure. (It is a difference worth noting,

yes.) I'm still not sure, but you bet I'm gonna be damn careful with

this stuff in the future.

Moral of the long story: Yes, herxing happens. But I'd tend to assume

that most bad reactions are NOT herxes, unless 1) you know for sure

that you've got the relevant toxins on board and 2) you know for sure

that the new treatment does tend to move those exact toxins. Mostly,

pain is still the body's way of saying, " Don't DO that! " Ignoring or

enduring it, in the absence of a sound medical reason to do so, has

on occasion created massive setbacks that took me weeks or months to

heal my way back out of.

Sara

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Dear Mad Woman, (:-)

I think that's possible. The raised glutathione could have helped

your detox system and/or your immune system to clear out some

things. That may have produced a Herxheimer reaction, which made you

feel badly and took some time to clear. As you probably know,

historically we have had a difficult time on this list interpreting

people's responses to glutathione. Was it a herx? or was it a toxic

reaction from too much sulfite or cysteine or mobilization of a

toxin, or what? It's difficult to know. But your experiment may be

telling you that it did you some good.

Rich

>

> I wrote earlier about my attempt to take liposomal glutathione. I

> crashed harder than I have in a long time. For a couple of weeks

I

> thought I had taken a major step backward.

>

> Here's the weird part: Now that I've recovered for a few days, I

feel

> more energy than usual. I've been a lurker on this list for 7-8

years

> with few posts of my own because I usually don't have the energy

to

> join in on the conversation. I have so much energ that this is

> probably my 5th post in two days. I'm typing like a mad woman.

>

> Does anybody think that it could be a longer term effect of the

> glutathione? I'm wondering if I should start taking it again?

>

> Lynn

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi, Laurel.

I do think that's a possibility in this case, and yes, it does

happen. The herxheimer reaction seems to be a real phenomenon.

It's not always easy to tell whether that's what's going on when you

feel crummy, though.

Rich

>

> Question: Is trying new therapies and/or processes comparable to

> macrobiotics in that when switching over to a " good " , supportive

behavior

> that it's possible you'll get sick in the short-term as you are

either

> detoxing and/or the toxins are being pushed out of your body?

Would that

> be a possible scenario of the below?

>

> I've been wondering this as I start to integrate some suggestion

in to my

> life. And wondering if I need to prepare for some added " down

time " ?

>

> Thanks,

> Laurel

>

>

> Re: Crash on Glutathione then

increased energy

>

>

>

> In teeny tiny doses, yes. You can't really know unless you try

again. It

> certainly could've kicked your immune system into action against

some

> infection and made you feel so bad. But no reason to do it so

drastically.

> But really, Rich is the glutathione expert.

> Adrienne

> Crash on Glutathione then increased

energy

>

> I wrote earlier about my attempt to take liposomal glutathione. I

> crashed harder than I have in a long time. For a couple of weeks I

> thought I had taken a major step backward.

>

> Here's the weird part: Now that I've recovered for a few days, I

feel

> more energy than usual. I've been a lurker on this list for 7-8

years

> with few posts of my own because I usually don't have the energy

to

> join in on the conversation. I have so much energ that this is

> probably my 5th post in two days. I'm typing like a mad woman.

>

> Does anybody think that it could be a longer term effect of the

> glutathione? I'm wondering if I should start taking it again?

>

> Lynn

>

> 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.

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi, Laurel.

I'd say that's not too bad. I think you've captured the essence of

it. If you want to read my attempt at it, it can be found at this

website:

http://www.cfsresearch.org/cfs/research/treatment/15.htm

Pages 2 through 4 describe glutathione, what it does, and how it's

made in the body.

Rich

>

> > Question: Is trying new therapies and/or processes comparable to

> > macrobiotics in that when switching over to a " good " , supportive

> > behavior

> > that it's possible you'll get sick in the short-term as you are

either

> > detoxing and/or the toxins are being pushed out of your body?

> > Would that

> > be a possible scenario of the below?

>

> My experience is that yes, with some things, this does happen.

> Glutathione, being the body's number one detoxer, is particularly

> likely to create this in people with high tox loads. Likewise, I

have

> medical proof that I carry a large heavy metal burden, so a recent

> FIR sauna (which is known to move metal) also wiped me out for

> several days. (GSH actually helped speed healing in that case.)

But

> in both those cases, it was pretty clear on reflection that my

> symptoms were because these treatments were creating known

reactions

> against known toxins. Importantly: when I stopped, the symptoms

ended

> in a few days.

>

> But, also in my experience, I don't think this " herx " happens

nearly

> as often as other people seem to think it does. I've seen it used

to

> justify treatments that later turned out to be genuinely harmful,

or

> at least highly inappropriate. Apart from the two examples above,

> when something new makes me feel wretched, it's almost always

because

> it's a Bad Thing and I need to not do it. Recent abortive

experiments

> along this line include Cortef (which I learned the hard way that

I

> don't have the enzymes to clear), testosterone (ditto), and SAMe

> (ditto ditto). Fortunately, I learned something important from

these

> events, though. Rich was able to piece it together that these

three,

> along with several other problematic drugs, are all cleared by the

> same enzyme. Obviously, I'm not making that enzyme. Which means

that

> from now on, I'll know to avoid the whole damn family and spare

> myself future grief. So even wrong turns can be educational, if

> you're paying attention for the lesson.

>

> Then there was salt/c, for which my bad reaction prompted quite a

> debate here about whether I was in a natural cleansing cycle or

> unnatural congestive heart failure. (It is a difference worth

noting,

> yes.) I'm still not sure, but you bet I'm gonna be damn careful

with

> this stuff in the future.

>

> Moral of the long story: Yes, herxing happens. But I'd tend to

assume

> that most bad reactions are NOT herxes, unless 1) you know for

sure

> that you've got the relevant toxins on board and 2) you know for

sure

> that the new treatment does tend to move those exact toxins.

Mostly,

> pain is still the body's way of saying, " Don't DO that! " Ignoring

or

> enduring it, in the absence of a sound medical reason to do so,

has

> on occasion created massive setbacks that took me weeks or months

to

> heal my way back out of.

>

> Sara

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Thanks Rich. I'm beaming that it was pretty close. On the link below, it

leads to a one-page site that I know i just accessed the other day and the

person who ran the site has become too ill to keep it up.

I think had given the URL below. And if i recall, it was a bit too

technical. i'll keep working my way towards the more comprehending the

more complex descriptions. But one thing I've noted about comprehension and

memory (probably for people in general but specifically for my illness) -- I

have to comprehend something in order to put it in the right place in the

file cabinet of my head. So I distill most everything in to layman's

terms. Then can start to add different levels of comprehension.

Probably speaks to the discussion on IQ and brain power.

Laurel

Re: Crash on Glutathione then increased energy

Hi, Laurel.

I'd say that's not too bad. I think you've captured the essence of

it. If you want to read my attempt at it, it can be found at this

website:

http://www.cfsresea

<http://www.cfsresearch.org/cfs/research/treatment/15.htm>

rch.org/cfs/research/treatment/15.htm

Pages 2 through 4 describe glutathione, what it does, and how it's

made in the body.

Rich

>

> > Question: Is trying new therapies and/or processes comparable to

> > macrobiotics in that when switching over to a " good " , supportive

> > behavior

> > that it's possible you'll get sick in the short-term as you are

either

> > detoxing and/or the toxins are being pushed out of your body?

> > Would that

> > be a possible scenario of the below?

>

> My experience is that yes, with some things, this does happen.

> Glutathione, being the body's number one detoxer, is particularly

> likely to create this in people with high tox loads. Likewise, I

have

> medical proof that I carry a large heavy metal burden, so a recent

> FIR sauna (which is known to move metal) also wiped me out for

> several days. (GSH actually helped speed healing in that case.)

But

> in both those cases, it was pretty clear on reflection that my

> symptoms were because these treatments were creating known

reactions

> against known toxins. Importantly: when I stopped, the symptoms

ended

> in a few days.

>

> But, also in my experience, I don't think this " herx " happens

nearly

> as often as other people seem to think it does. I've seen it used

to

> justify treatments that later turned out to be genuinely harmful,

or

> at least highly inappropriate. Apart from the two examples above,

> when something new makes me feel wretched, it's almost always

because

> it's a Bad Thing and I need to not do it. Recent abortive

experiments

> along this line include Cortef (which I learned the hard way that

I

> don't have the enzymes to clear), testosterone (ditto), and SAMe

> (ditto ditto). Fortunately, I learned something important from

these

> events, though. Rich was able to piece it together that these

three,

> along with several other problematic drugs, are all cleared by the

> same enzyme. Obviously, I'm not making that enzyme. Which means

that

> from now on, I'll know to avoid the whole damn family and spare

> myself future grief. So even wrong turns can be educational, if

> you're paying attention for the lesson.

>

> Then there was salt/c, for which my bad reaction prompted quite a

> debate here about whether I was in a natural cleansing cycle or

> unnatural congestive heart failure. (It is a difference worth

noting,

> yes.) I'm still not sure, but you bet I'm gonna be damn careful

with

> this stuff in the future.

>

> Moral of the long story: Yes, herxing happens. But I'd tend to

assume

> that most bad reactions are NOT herxes, unless 1) you know for

sure

> that you've got the relevant toxins on board and 2) you know for

sure

> that the new treatment does tend to move those exact toxins.

Mostly,

> pain is still the body's way of saying, " Don't DO that! " Ignoring

or

> enduring it, in the absence of a sound medical reason to do so,

has

> on occasion created massive setbacks that took me weeks or months

to

> heal my way back out of.

>

> Sara

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi I have tried liposomal glutathione from Wellness during the last

couple months.

I get very tired from it. I am only taking like 1/3 of a teaspoon. A

full teaspoon seems to give me some sort of crash.

I am not taking it regularly now, only occasionally and careful with

the dose.

I dont know, but I think it is important to take alot of Vit. C with

it. I started increasing to about 3 grams or more a day and have

noticed some improvements, etc I sweat more now. Its summer now

ofcourse but I used to never sweat, not even in summer if I remember

correctly :)

> I wrote earlier about my attempt to take liposomal glutathione. I

> crashed harder than I have in a long time. For a couple of weeks I

> thought I had taken a major step backward.

>

> Here's the weird part: Now that I've recovered for a few days, I feel

> more energy than usual. I've been a lurker on this list for 7-8 years

> with few posts of my own because I usually don't have the energy to

> join in on the conversation. I have so much energ that this is

> probably my 5th post in two days. I'm typing like a mad woman.

>

> Does anybody think that it could be a longer term effect of the

> glutathione? I'm wondering if I should start taking it again?

>

> Lynn

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Rich,

You should take any and all info you made available via the website noted

below and make it available some other way. (And if you've got an email

address for the guy, see if you can get him to repost the old info or send

it to someone else for reposting - I have several places where I can put

it.)

The owner of that ste not only has stopped updating it, he has apparently

taken down *ALL* the old content. In addition, he previously had the site

blocked for indexing by the http://archive.org people, so the " wayback

machine " will not bring it up - anything on that site is lost to us.

- Bob Niederman

On 7/27/06, rvankonynen <richvank@...> wrote:

>

> Hi, Laurel.

>

> I'd say that's not too bad. I think you've captured the essence of

> it. If you want to read my attempt at it, it can be found at this

> website:

>

> http://www.cfsresearch.org/cfs/research/treatment/15.htm

>

> Pages 2 through 4 describe glutathione, what it does, and how it's

> made in the body.

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

On Jul 26, 2006, at 11:25 PM, Laurel Ley wrote:

> Thank you Mercuria. for the answer below

>

> TO THOSE IN THE KNOW: Okay, I am struggling over putting what

> glutathione

> is, in " english " . I start reading the links and Wikipedia and my

> eyes glaze

> over.

>

> So here's my shot at " english " -- glutathione is a naturally occurring

> antioxidant. As an antioxidant, the purpose of glutathione is to

> help

> protect and/or rid the body of toxins, such as free radicals. For

> example,

> glutathione is needed for the detoxification of

> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methylglyoxal> methylglyoxal, a toxin

> produced

> as a by-product of metabolism. When the body has low levels of

> glutathione, it means that your body's ability to fend off toxins is

> decreased and as a result, your body's various systems may become

> overly

> toxic, thus reducing your natural healing process. Also, when

> you begin

> to increase your body's glutathione levels, it may result in a high

> level of

> detoxification quickly and you may find your energy and immune system

> lowered in teh short-term.

>

> ???? Am I remotely in the ballpark at a layman's definition?

You're not only in the ballpark -- you just hit a triple.

The only thing missing here is a sense of GSH's truly primary role in

detoxification and as an anti-oxidant. There's really nothing else

like it. And it doesn't point out how extremely dependent both our

energy manufacture (Krebs cycle) and and our immune function are on

having adequate quantities around.

Other than that, yeah, you're there. We've been known to discuss CFS

as " gluthathione deficiency syndrome. " It's a joke, but not too far

off the mark. Weird that our doctors know so little about it, isn't it?

Sara

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...