Guest guest Posted August 10, 2006 Report Share Posted August 10, 2006 the skin biopsy can show how advanced the poisoning is ________ Trouble finding references. Any known? J [] Re: urine mycotoxin tests - ?? Hello again..It;s iris..i wrote the info about Dr. Croft's biospy after reading todays posts; in bad pain and I had many typos. I did speak with him today. He does urine or biopsy, the same price on his end. He stated the biopsy is the best route, for a urine test will reveal the trichothecene (he never said anything to me about the 40 hour thing, however he is the one to ask, I guess) I would want an actual Diagnosis, rather than recent exposre). He stated pathology is the best way to establish a diagnosis. He said the urine test could confrim it, but the skin biopsy can show how advanced the poisoning is: he can determine from different factors pretty much what stage of the illness one has. I was pretty sure I was advanced, and I was correct. He said a dermatologist is the best type of dr. to go to. tell them you need a punch skin biopsy to see if you have been poisoned by trichothecene. it should be somewhere on the leg, preferably a few inches above the outer ankle. If you happen to have a rash, have the biopsy taken from where the rash area is. The main thing is go well into the subdermis. this will give a better picture of uniform damage to the entire body.Trichothecene lays down fibrinous strands or exudates of inflammation. The outer layer shows a basketweave. It also shows narrowing of the arteries. It will show if you've had chronic exposure and if you are still being exposed. (recent exposure).. This is his advice. It must be overnighted to him. I would have it arrive on a weekday and check and make sure he will be in town. He's done a great job helping me, as have Dr. Vojdani at immunosciences lab with pcr testing, etc, A very dedicated, caring man has done so much to help people..and dr. in NC is absolutely wonderful. He is a brilliant dr. with 30 years practice, and genuinely cares for every patient. I am holding on to faith and hope and I, again, thank KC and each of you for support. hope I can repay you some day. I'm trying very hard to stay positive. take care all. Have to pull out at 3am..Be blest. Pray for tlee. He was also diagnosed positive.. KC, wearing our shirts, with sickbuilding site, I plan to during filming too. iris iris staff are the nicest people I've ever met. His patients are not statistics or numbers, but every life matters to him. - In , " erikmoldwarrior " <erikmoldwarrior@...> wrote: > > bbw < wrote: > He (Dr Croft) states that clothing is a good carrier to mold spores > and washing does is not very effective at removing, so recommends > getting rid of exposed items. > > > " her husband built her a brand new home from scratched, > specifically due to her mold problems and she practically travels > around in a bubble has high mycotoxins in spite > of all that effort!! " > > > , do you have any thoughts?? > > > > Controlling contamination was the basis for the protocol I proposed > to Dr when he told me that ampligen was my last hope - and > it was financially out of reach: To avoid mycotoxins carried on > contaminated clothing and in the hair. > I created a mobile " bubble " and trained myself to detect subtle > exposures instead of waiting for overt 'slams' before conducting > avoidance and decontamination. > When " hit " , I would take a shower and isolate my clothing in a > special compartment - consistently doing this as a pre-emptive > resolution of FUTURE upregulation instead of " toughing it out " as > the inflammatory response really gets going. > It was nothing less than acting " in advance " of immune upregulation > that allowed my MCS responses to abate. > > I cannot park my mobile " decon module " in a spore plume, but I can > pass through them without lasting effects. > In all the years that I have been doing this, my experience has been > that clothing which was only momentarily exposed can be isolated and > cleaned by conventional means, with no special treatment. > It was only long term exposure that made objects and clothing > acquire sufficient toxin load to be uncleanable. > I have lived a successful life for quite a while by relying on " mold > hits " as indicators of a toxic exposure which sets up a remediatable > scenario that can be resolved if action is taken quickly and pre- > emptively. > That is why Branislavs description of locating toxins in which > momentary exposure creates enduring contamination and cannot be > cleaned is so disturbing. > > Toxins that are stable enough and toxic enough to have the capacity > to create " bad zones " of permanence with such ease changes the > scenario entirely, and introduces an almost impossibly complex and > expensive variable to a lifestyle of avoidance. > If one encounters toxins of such potency, then clothing would have > to be automatically abandoned every time. > - > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2006 Report Share Posted August 10, 2006 OUCH! (re; punch biopsy) Dr.Schaller, *somewhere* I have a paper on trichothecenes that has a series of microscopic photos that shows these changes in cells. If nobody else comes up with it by tomorrow (its bedtime for me now) I'll try to find it and send it to you. (I think its i the same one that has the photos of the toxin blisters on the shaved rats..) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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