Guest guest Posted January 10, 2010 Report Share Posted January 10, 2010 Hi How much C did you take? Steve On Jan 10, 2010, at 11:07 PM, jprutty wrote: > Hi , sorry so long but hopefully helpful... > > To add to Marti's suggestion, the sub group Salt & C focuses on > Lyme, but that protocol is what started purging my parasites. > > First I treated viruses, then the methylation cycle with the GD-MCB > simplified protocol and finally Lyme. Salt & C was the core of my > Lyme treatment. After about 6 weeks of slow increases of pure sea > salt and calcium ascorbate in water or tomato juice throughout the > day, I increased my daily dose from around 12 grams each to 20 grams > or so. That's when the parasites started flying out in my stool and > skin. I found at least 10 visible variants in my stool, the only > colonies I could identify were flukes. After a few months at that > dose, they stopped appearing so I scaled back to a maintenance dose > of 7 to 12 grams of salt & c a day. > > As the group advised, I did see an elevation in blood pressure > during that treatment, but my blood pressure normalized after about > 6 months, which is typical on the protocol. Someone mentioned the > salt is cleansing the arteries and when it's done, the blood > pressure regulates. > > Somewhere during that time I added a few tablespoons of cayenne (1st > @ 30k btu then 120k btu) to the mix and noticed an increase in > parasite expulsions. I maintain at 1 tbsp of cayenne and 1 tbsp of > paprika daily to suppress any remaining parasites and any new > passengers I might pick up. I must have had a few thousand mosquito > and flea bites this summer, along with 2 more tick bites, but the > maintenance dose prevented any noticeable proliferation or infection. > > Prior to starting on salt & c, I had been on 35 cycles of > antibiotics in 18 months to keep away pneumonia. Since gaining > momentum with the salt & c I have been on zero antibiotics in 10 > months and the Lyme week every month isn't noticeable anymore. Also, > getting the body hot, over 101.5 kills borrelia and probably a lot > more. I just worked out in the yard, as a I could, then my neighbors > yards an on until I could get on a bike and then eventually in the > gym. 5 days a week seemed like the magic number for me to keep > balance. > > Here's the part I'm sure will get some laughs, whatever. If you > suddenly crave sweets during a full moon, you likely have parasites, > they want their food & to get frisky. I don't care if you're in a > developed country, the critters are everywhere. For me it would > start when the moon hit 80-90% full and continue until the day after > lunar peak. Another member here noted watching babesia under a > microscope become very active during a full moon. I assume this: > Many organisms have a monthly replication cycle. Some organisms have > a replication cycle that fluctuates with their environment, other's > cycles revolve around their host. Some host-dependent organisms have > a replication cycle independent of their host, some of which seem to > replicate during peak lunar phases. The Vietnamese's 2nd most > important holiday is during the 5th lunar peak. It's a festival > called Doan Ngo which translates roughly to " Parasite Killing " . The > link in the last sentence has some recipes they eat to whoop some > parasites, fruits and corn stuff. Personally, I try to avoid all > carbs during the 3-5 peak lunar days every month. > > When my back blew in Nov., I fell off my supplement maintenance > schedule, wound up on 4 immune suppressing Rx meds and started > feeling all the infections come back. At the end of November, during > the lunar peak week, I went nuts for ice cream and cookies. I > checked here, saw the moon was near full and ate the garbage > anyways. Through December I started addressing the infections. First > I ramped up on salt & c, and hot red peppers. Then I started brewing > cut sweet wormwood in the coffee pot (no filter, cut pot off and on > 3 times during brew) and drank it fresh four times a day. Then I > added a ParaCleanse, mostly because GNC gave me 1/2 off because > they're discontinuing it. It has an AM cleanser and a PM probiotic > pack. Not sure if it's worth a darn, but I was able to cut back on > the disgusting wormwood juice without regression. Something in that > mix finally pulled out some pinworms as well, which I hadn't noticed > before. There were some other treatments, but focusing on parasites, > I hardly noticed a sweet craving during this last full moon. > > I feel bad for you , I know this is painful and disgusting to go > through. Do what you can to keep comfortable while you go through > this, start slow but push yourself as you can, hopefully it'll be > better soon. If you start seeing viral flares, gradually introducing > lysine and inosine may be helpful to keep viruses from worsening > matters. > > Lemon in water & Benadryl helped me through the die off. Showering > right after waking was very helpful also, to clean off loose > critters and toxins (use fresh towel every time if possible). A tbsp > of 1st pressed extra virgin olive oil first thing in the morning is > usually an anti-herx remedy also, BUT it may coat some of the > parasites and prevent the treatments from reaching them. If possible > during this, get disposable enemas from walgreens (3 for $3) to use > as you feel needed. Kefir from the health food or grocery store, > drunk between treatments may help you stay a little stronger as > well. Lastly, but not of least importance, Sam's club has the best > deal on good toilet paper with their store brand. Huge twin-pack > peroxide bottles are cheap there too, they were helpful to keep tidy. > > Having a local health food store that sells most of what I take in > bulk was very helpful to me. Pure sea salt & calcium ascorbate run > me less than $15 a month this way. The other herbs and such run > about $10 a month. Although, sometimes questionable quality, walmart > suffices for another bit I take. Of course, if your up for some > punishment, run all this by your doctor first. Personally, I'd > rather see Marti's vet. The best thing that happened to me was the > Doctors taking my last dollar, because when I had to start treating > myself is when I really started healing. > > Good Luck, > R > > From: marti_zavala > Sent: Sunday, January 10, 2010 8:13 PM > > Subject: Re: parasite infection > > Hi , > Well, this is not all bad news as hookworm is easy to get rid of. I > would not classify it as an infection but more as a parasite. I > would guess that it is quite common as it is one of the parasites > that pass from dogs to humans. While common, it can be serious. > > I hope this doesn't offend - I used to be a dog breeder and I used > Safeguard (fenbendazole) for hookworms. I would treat once then > again in 10 days. Two treatments is all it took for either adults or > puppies. I would then follow up with probiotics. I had fat, chubby, > healthy puppies in no time. > > I know humans are not canines - so please don't take offense but > this drug is my only experience. As for harshness, my vet told me > that I could give a 4 week old puppy the whole bottle of Safeguard > and it would not harm him. I have taken it myself (I am not > squeamish about taking dog medications as it is all the same > chemical - usually!). The nice thing about fenbendazole is that is > handles roundworms, hookworms and whipworms so you cover your bases > as sometimes parasites can be hard to catch in a stool sample. Since > I am not familiar with the two medications you mentioned (I have > heard of them but not used them), I would think that they would do > the same. > > So, I don't think it will be a severe stress to your liver as other > drugs can be. I too have slow Phase II liver detoxification. The > hookworm is doing more damage than the medication would - but we are > all different so please follow your doctor's orders. > > I do not think that a healthy immune system would be able to > overcome a hookworm infestation. Maybe if the gut ph was normal > which of course ours usually isn't but it doesn't seem probable. It > is a very hardy parasite and can cause ill health easily. But > thankfully, can be easy to get rid of (again, in dogs, perhaps it is > more difficult in humans but I don't think it would be) > > May I also suggest that your family pets and family are also treated > so that there is no possibility of re-infestation. You may want to > have a family dog tested for parasites - it can be done without an > office visit and usually a reasonable cost ($15 in my area of Texas) > - I just bring in a stool sample). > > http://www.safe-guard-for-dogs.com/intestinal-Hookworms.asp > > " Dog hookworm infections are zoonotic - and can therefore be > transmitted to humans. > > Until recently, it was believed that canine hookworms did not pose a > zoonotic threat to humans. There have, however, been confirmed cases > of enteritis (inflammation of the small intestine) from hookworm > infections in young children. " > > Hope that helps a little and I hope that doesn't offend. > Marti > > > > > > hi all, > > > > im not in good shape. 2mths of intermittent diareha and other gut > issues. limited appetite for 2 mths and im aleady malnourished and > thin to begin with. dr. diagnosed hookworm infection based on > microscopic stool test done at a mainstream lab in canada. always > hard to know if this is the exact cause of latest gut flare and in > turn flaring many other fm and me/cfs symptoms...ie. pain, fatigue. > ect but would say odds are > 50% and why my dr. and me feel we > should treat it. i suppose a healthy immune system would be able to > take care of this oppotunistic infection but mine is weak. my cd4 is > 370 and I have low lympocyte count (lymphopenia) > > > > dr. says take just 1 pill of 500mg of mebendazole. i have read > some studies say albendazole is more effective but it is off label. > anyone treat a hookworm infection or other similar infection or take > any of those 2 drugs. I am quite sensitive to meds and have a weak > liver (slow phase 2 ) and feel quinalones could have damaged my > tendons in late 2004 and why i am more nervous than average person > about drugs. > > > > did some quick research on the mebendazole and albendazole and > they seem safe from what i can gather (believe mebendazole has been > around since the 1970's?) and im also not taking that much but if > anyone has any experience (good or bad) could you please let me > know. thanks ! > > > > cheers > > > > > > __________________________________________________________ > > Canada Toolbar: Search from anywhere on the web, and > bookmark your favourite sites. Download it now > > http://ca.toolbar.. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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