Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 Regarding cautious vs enthusiastic personality types - it takes all kinds. Adherence to the principles of scholarship should keep us all on about about the same page; still, some will tend to be more enthusiastic about new treatment possibilites than others. Consider the potential benefits of this natural diversity - IMO there are some. I believe s fluc reports, tho more details are always welcome, but I also see several fluc zero-gainers believably attested on the internet, and no successes other than . There are a zillion sickies out there who dont post on any of the boards, so I dont consider the summed experiences of our communities to be an omniscient eye. But I certainly do consider it. Personally I remain kinda interested perhaps in large part because of my own experience - I herxed when I once happened to do a little fluc (essentially bed-ridden), whereas I have slooowly responded to, but never herxed on, any of several other antimicrobials. My conception of herx is adopted from Barb - you *unmistakably*, not maybe, feel like damn crap, probably multi-systemically, and after one or a few such experiences you feel somewhat better than you did before (boy did I feel nice). I do not consider my fluc herx to have been due to GI yeast, because nystatin kills my tongue fuzz faster than fluc without herx - this leaves systemic yeast and borrelia as prime contenders. Technically with yeast its not a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction, but like, whatever. Regarding safety, I most closely agree with s picture, tho I see some decent web sources out there claiming that a minority of the (rare) liver shutdowns *werent* reversible. Such sources like rxlist.com are generally pretty good - but still, there aint no reality till theres *numbers* and some sort of accountability. If someone wants to do the googlin, I am almost sure I read the clinical trials results last fall online somewhere - thats a document with numbers. I agree with Jaep that what you hear at many boards about the " general ominousness " of fluc (amongst other antifungals) is largely just dogma propagated by people who never look at original sources. The dangers do run all the way up to death but IMO the rarity of real danger is pretty well quantifiable by looking at some studies - and personally when I looked at those quantities I didnt find them hair-raising at all. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 Corrigendum to my post - I did hear reliably about about a patient on a german-language lyme groups who felt asymptomatic due to fluc. Dont know if she was one of Schardts patients or not, or whether she elected to attempt to cease tx. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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