Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 Marcie, I was really glad to hear you finally got on SSD. Years ago when I had my apt. tested and the results didn't show any Stachy, I couldn't understand why I was so sick, but now I do, because there is Aspergillus, Penicillium, Fusarium, Cladosporium, and numerous others in the building. You mentioned you just had your 21st IVIG. Could you please tell me what that is. I've never heard of that. Best of luck to you. Barb E. --- Marcie McGovern <marcie1029@...> wrote: > To everyone, > > I got the test results back from the second sample > of mold from my office. The results showed > Stachybotrys( which I knew about ) but it also had > Aspergillius and Penicillium. Now I know why my body > is so riddled with fungi and why I just found out > my spinal cord is degenerating. I just had my 21st > IVIG and lab work....so I will find out in 4 weeks > if they have to increase the dose.( up to 60 grams > already) My Immune system is not responding. > My granddaughter just gave me some of her clothes > and I got into a size 5. I am 5'9 " tall and look > awful. HELP!!!!! > I will be trying to go to see Dr. Alfred > soon. Got approved for SSD. Finally!!! > Marcie __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 Marcie, Congratulations. As for your weight, if Candida and fungi are compromising your GI tract, it can cause inflamation in GI tract. An inflamed gut does not absorb nutritients well and may cause 'wasting' due to lack of nutrients no matter how well you eat. You may try liquid nutrients and things that are easy for your gi system to digest. (Maybe look into Specific Carbohydrate Diet by Elaine G-something) I'm trying a product from Kirkman Labs called amino support, amino acids in powder form that I dissolve in juice and going to cut out meats since I am not digesting meats or proteins. I got that reference to Kirkman's from an autism group. Autistic kids have alot of gut problems and so do I. Also from same source Brainchild Nutritionals, something like that, tell me if you can't find, have liquid vitamins and minerals formulated for hypoallergic people. I'm trying those also. I have leaky gut due to fungus and candida and tests show I have very little amino acids which is the foundation of building and maintaining muscle (your body tone and strenth) even though I was trying to eat a high protein diet. Other blood tests showed I had undigested protein in my blood, so I was eating it but not digesting it (due to gut lining being sore and inflamed). Inflamation makes your gut lining very poroused too and undigested particles of food that have not been broken down enough for your body to use as nutrion gets into blood stream and your immune system goes after it like it is a virus or bacteria entering your body, so it drains your immune system energy, wasted energy attacking food particles that shouldn't be there at all, making you weaker. Dr told me to take pancreatic enzymes whenever I eat a protein meals but I'm getting stomach aches from the whole thing so I'm going to go with easy to digest food for awhile and take amino acids dissolved in liquid like this for protein and stop eating meat for awhile. I hope this helps. Write me offline if you have any questions. I could have explained this better. Doctor said your immune system will not go after undigested fruit and vegetables since it doesn't identify those as a possible virus or bacteria, so I probably will eat a lot of fruits and vegetables and cut out meat and get the protein from this amino acid powder and there are incomplete proteins in fruits and vegetables that will be adequate I think. > --- Marcie McGovern <marcie1029@...> > wrote: > > > To everyone, > > > > I got the test results back from the second > sample > > of mold from my office. The results showed > > Stachybotrys( which I knew about ) but it > also had > > Aspergillius and Penicillium. Now I know why > my Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2006 Report Share Posted July 28, 2006 Barb, I have Immuno Gobblin Infusions every 4 weeks because my IGg levels are so low. The other antibody levels are close behind it. My IGg was only 307 when first tested. Thanks, Marcie Barbara <floridabound03200@...> wrote: Marcie, I was really glad to hear you finally got on SSD. Years ago when I had my apt. tested and the results didn't show any Stachy, I couldn't understand why I was so sick, but now I do, because there is Aspergillus, Penicillium, Fusarium, Cladosporium, and numerous others in the building. You mentioned you just had your 21st IVIG. Could you please tell me what that is. I've never heard of that. Best of luck to you. Barb E. --- Marcie McGovern <marcie1029@...> wrote: > To everyone, > > I got the test results back from the second sample > of mold from my office. The results showed > Stachybotrys( which I knew about ) but it also had > Aspergillius and Penicillium. Now I know why my body > is so riddled with fungi and why I just found out > my spinal cord is degenerating. I just had my 21st > IVIG and lab work....so I will find out in 4 weeks > if they have to increase the dose.( up to 60 grams > already) My Immune system is not responding. > My granddaughter just gave me some of her clothes > and I got into a size 5. I am 5'9 " tall and look > awful. HELP!!!!! > I will be trying to go to see Dr. Alfred > soon. Got approved for SSD. Finally!!! > Marcie __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2006 Report Share Posted July 28, 2006 Marcie, Can you explain this thing about IgG levels. I had a MAST test that included IgG. IgG's that were high meant I had an infection of that agent or was in my environment. IgG's that were low just meant I wasn't infected or sick. So how can they figure you are sick even though you have low IgG's?? Did they give you a diagnosis or say what is making you ill? --- In , Marcie McGovern <marcie1029@...> wrote: > > Barb, > I have Immuno Gobblin Infusions every 4 weeks because my IGg levels are so low. The other antibody levels are close behind it. My IGg was only 307 when first tested. > Thanks, > Marcie > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2006 Report Share Posted July 29, 2006 " IgG's that were high meant I had an infection of that agent or was in my environment. IgG's that were low just meant I wasn't infected or sick. " A while back, I had an IgG food test done, and the same goes for what you said above: foods I cannot tolerate, I had high IgG levels. I don't understand how IgG levels can be too low. IgA levels can be low or absent, and that isn't a good thing, although I don't remember why. IgA are gut Ig's though. -Olif Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2006 Report Share Posted July 29, 2006 Olif, It was explained to me that high IgG's to *foods* indicate hyperpermability of gut due to inflamation. This condition is coined leaky gut but can be very serious to your health, as it means inflamation of gi tract. When gi tract is inflamed, it is impaired and cannot digest your food properly. This can lead to nutrional deficients which weaken you. The damaged lining of gi can allow undigested particles of food into blood stream, not digested enough for body to use them. If these are PROTEIN substances the body can confuse them for a foreign invader and send out IgGs to protect body from them. This leads to high IgG's to certain food, usually protein foods. The high IgG keeps your immune system busy which can make you feel sick. So high IgG's aren't food allergies but sign you aren't digesting food well enough for nutrients to be absorbed normally and food particles leaking into your blood stream but gi tract. High IgG's to molds indicate a fungal infection somewhere or lots of mold in your environment currently. I'm sure someone who is immune compromised may not make enough antibodies but how can you tell if someone has low IgG because they aren't sick versus someone who has low IgG due to being sick but immune compromised? I wish I understood that. I'm interested since I think I'm too weak to fight what I have but how can one tell? ly you can Google for everything. No need to ask anything then but input from others who have have experienced this is more helpful. > > Olif <OVanPelt@...> > > A while back, I had an IgG food test done, and the same goes for what you said above: foods I cannot tolerate, I had high IgG levels. I don't understand how IgG levels can be too low. IgA levels can be low or absent, and that isn't a good thing, although I don't remember why. IgA are gut Ig's though. > > -Olif > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2006 Report Share Posted July 29, 2006 " Olif--Not to be flippant but I would suggest that you google IGG, IGA, etc. I personally have low iga levels which means more upper respiratory infections, etc. If you have low iga, it is not recommended to take gamma globulins due to the risk of a bad reaction. I hope this helps. Leigh " I don't think you mean me, Leigh. There was someone else who is getting shots for low IgG, not IgA. It still doesn't make sense to me though, because high IgG's mean your body is reacting. I know low IgA's aren't good. I always see it mentioned in connection with gluten intolerance. I don't know enough about IgA's to know if this has anything to do with your condition. -Olif Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2006 Report Share Posted July 29, 2006 " It was explained to me that high IgG's to *foods* indicate hyperpermability of gut due to inflamation. " Hi, Barb and thanks. I do know that I have a leaky gut. The more I read though, the more I run into the chicken and egg scenario. Gluten can do a lot of damage to a gut and possibly cause the gut permeability. I am also learning that a Candida infection can do the same to the gut as they branch out looking for more food. I don't know what my cause is, but my immune system seems compromised, even after tremendous cleanup of my diet for almost a year now. My ND is suspecting toxins to be my problem. I am suspecting specifically mold toxins. Is it possible for mold to break your system down enough to cause a leaky gut? Are low IgG's ever a bad thing? I thought only low IgA was bad. Also, if I am understanding this correctly, an IgG isn't permanent, because it is a result of a damaged gut, like you said, Barb. An IgA to a food is permanent, right? Don't they test IgA for celiac (I don't think allopathic doctors do). It is possible to have an IgA and IgG to the same food. I haven't been tested for IgA's. I couldn't tolerate milk as a baby and my IgG for milk was through the roof. I strongly suspect I have an IgA to dairy and possibly gluten. (Actually my IgG for gluten was fine, but I can't eat it.) I believe my other IgG's are temporary. I really do wonder if this is all possibly related to mold though... Thanks, Olif Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2006 Report Share Posted July 29, 2006 Well, IgG is an antibody and I have to/you have to figure out what it's role is to answer questions. Doctor said it comes first to meet a foreign substance in blood stream. All he said was food particles should not be in your blood stream so the fact I had IgG in my blood for foods indicated I had food in blood stream, where it shouldn't be. He said if properly digested down into nutrients, they wouldn't stimulate IgG because they would not be perceived as a foreign substance. He said if gi tract heals and digests food properly food will not get in and blood tests would show no IgG's to food. He said a person with healthy gi will not have any IgG's for food. He said IgG's for food is not a food allergy. I don't know anything about IgA since I was not tested for that and haven't read anything about them, so can't answer that. My allergist/immunologist just did IgE and IgG and he said IgE's are true allergies. They don't know how to rid your body reacting to IgE except by avoidance or some sort of treatment to help you to get used to these substances gradually, shots, drops, etc. He said I have only very mild and few allergies, a little to cat, and dog, and a particular type of grass. SKIN TESTS done by allergist here where I live said I was VERY allergic to practically EVERYTHING, and he suggested I take TWO 24 hour Rx allergies medicines every day, so that is why I went to this other person for more extensive testing. However he said he doesn't know why allergist rely on skin testing, because there are so many other things that will make skin react to test than the 'allergen'. That's the extent of my knowledge. Lots of things can compromise gi: a medicine I took that dried my throat up and compromised my immune system I think was my culprit. I've been sick ever since I took it, Candida certainly is big culprit, other infections of gi tract, and other things. Yes, I would thinking figuring out why gi is compromised would be best, or just doing things that are healing if one can't find the cause second best option. If you have leaky gut, most likely you would have high IgG's for whatever protein you are eating the most of. It wouldn't indicate allergy for that food, just that that food is more likely in blood if you are eating it. So if you are eating lots of ham with compromised gi, pork is going to have IgG. If you just had a large egg omelet, egg IgG's are going to be high. Whatever it is you are eating, that's what will be there. My doctor said it is protein foods only that stimulate IgG antibodies and inflamatory process since the body considers their protein structure more like a virus or bug of some sort...bugs are high in protein!! He said fruits and vegetables do not provoke this response, so I may go vegetarian for awhile and see if that helps. > > Hi, Barb and thanks. I do know that I have a leaky gut. The more I read though, the more I run into the chicken and egg scenario. Gluten can do a lot of damage to a gut and possibly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2006 Report Share Posted July 29, 2006 Olif, I forgot to mention doctor said to take pancreatic enzyme, you can buy over the counter, with every protein meal, to help digest the protein as a solution. I've been doing that but think it may just work better to go vegetarian. Even though veggies might not provoke reaction of immune system I notice I have trouble digesting fibrous food also, so may go vegetarian and also take digestive enzyme with the veggie meal to aid digestion. Just thought I would post the solution I was given and what I'm trying too. > Hi, Barb and thanks. I do know that I have a leaky gut. The more I read though, the more I run into the chicken and egg scenario. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2006 Report Share Posted July 29, 2006 " He said fruits and vegetables do not provoke this response, so I may go vegetarian for awhile and see if that helps. " Even fruits and veggies have some protein. I tested very high on cane sugar. I also tested positive ranging from low to high on lettuce, asparagus, blueberries, peaches, cucumbers and grapes. Some of these I was eating a lot of at one time. Some of them I rarely ate though. I think the best solution is a rotation diet, rotating your foods every 4 days. It is just difficult and you have to be very organized. I still haven't started one, but maybe one of these days... I do find that cutting grains out of my diet helps my digestion, as far as bloating goes. I just have a difficult time staying full. Cooked veggies are also easier to digest than raw. The reverse is true for meat, but I don't think many of us will start eating raw meat. I am not anyway. :-) My ND says that type A bloodtypes often have digestion problems. I don't know how true this...She also noticed they typically have problems with wheat and dairy, but these proteins are very difficult to digest anyway. Thanks, Olif Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2006 Report Share Posted July 29, 2006 " Olif, I forgot to mention doctor said to take pancreatic enzyme, you can buy over the counter, with every protein meal, to help digest the protein as a solution. " Thanks! I have noticed that betaine HCl helps me too. If you ever have any kind of indigestion it will help. It also makes sure the stomach contents are the right pH when they enter your small intestines. If it isn't the right pH, the food doesn't get digested correctly. The pH signals something...the pancrease to release the enzymes, I think. My ND has me taking MediClear. Anyone can buy it online. It is supposed to aide in digestion, detoxification, and inflammation. I have only been using it for 2 weeks, but I did get a detox reaction. My joints were aching for 3 days, starting about day 3. I never previously had any kind of joint pain, so I really think it must have been detox. -Olif Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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