Guest guest Posted October 9, 2005 Report Share Posted October 9, 2005 On Sunday, October 9, 2005, at 11:29 AM, dumbaussie2000 wrote: > > Love the dosages for the antifungals. I think this is getting > realistic about tackling infections properly. Actually that's the > first I heard anyone say triple antifungal therapy anywhere. I > actually don't know anyone that has recommended 8 million units of > nystatin either. My best for the day was 25 million.loved that drug. So Tony, if i remember correctly, Nystatin doesn't help you anymore? How do I avoid this? By taking it with other drugs? By taking large doses and then going on to something else? Or is it just inevitable that I am going to go down the path that others have talked about where something helps at first and then doesn't and the # of helpful drugs gets smaller as one progresses? - Kate Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2005 Report Share Posted October 10, 2005 On Sunday, October 9, 2005, at 04:44 PM, wrote: > I read it with a grain of Schardt eh? > For me tini is a big offender re amping up the yeast on my tongue, > contra the hopes expressed at the end of the Brorson tini paper. Ahah. I thought maybe it was the Ketek, but interesting to know that Tini could be guilty as well. > All thru my year of abx, I am seeing some really discommoding > fungitudeinousness in the south polar latitudes anytime I wear pants > or underwear which are not 100% cotton. I think most long underwear > comprises synth fibers in part so I am gonna have to buy some all- > cotton ones when it gets cold. That's a good way of putting it. Unfortunately, I am already a cotton person and can't make that an improvement. Well, assuming a couple of percent lycra in the long underwear is okay.... > In all cases above, my microbe was self-ID'd as yeast by its scent of > unbaked bread dough. I am assuming that is probably a good criterion. That sounds reasonable. My ID is based on the fact that the irritation goes away with over-the-counter yeast treatment. Unfortunately it comes back as long as I am taking the abx. - Kate Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2005 Report Share Posted October 10, 2005 On Sunday, October 9, 2005, at 09:46 PM, dumbaussie2000 wrote re NYSTATIN: > The good thing was that it really didn't turn easily. I just > monitored it's antibacterial properties and noticed that after using > it initially and feeling great then stopping- thinking I did enough- > my second round with the drug was positive, but after a long while > without a gameplan it just doesn't cut it anymore. Although I will > still notice benefits from it's ability in the sinus to keep > pseudonomas at bay. Sounds good. That's all a bonus then to using it for fungus then. I did read Cranton, as suggested. He says Nystatin works simply by coating the stomach, so it doesn't sound to me like that type of action would stop being effective -- unless a fungal infection just got so big that it overwhelmed it. About the GAMEPLAN. Yah, I am trying to come up with one of those. So far I like the Tini thing, although I'm not sure that using it continuously like I am is the best way to use it. I also like what Barb did with HCQ. I don't know if I can keep paying for Ketek, or whether it's doing its job. I'll just have to see. > Your mission should be focused on the head, sinus, getting it > sterilised whatever it takes. Well, I'm one of those stubborn people that doesn't see any obvious head symptoms and thinks I mainly have Lyme! Although I do suspect at one point I accumulated something else because things deteriorated five years into my undiagnosed, untreated illness (the condition my doc told me probably would not get worse). > So > regardless of the drug make sure your doing enough of everything to > keep this getting better and the drug and it's use won't be up in > the air only scrapping the surface of the problem. I'm definitely starting to see the merit of this approach. - Kate Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2005 Report Share Posted October 10, 2005 On Sunday, October 9, 2005, at 10:57 PM, wrote: > > > > I read it with a grain of Schardt > > > > eh? > > He of the fluconazole anti-Bb protocol. His findings make it harder > to interpret whats dying in Crantons patients when they take combos > which include fluc. I knew about Schardt but didn't try to put his data together with Cranton's in my head because it was beyond me. Well, I guess I just didn't want to have to think that hard right now. Sometimes I get lazy and want somebody else to give me the answer. > I guess the question is, persisters or new infection? If its > persisters, and they dont become resistant, they must be the non- > mutant, Kim kinda persisters that ride out the drugs via > torpor. Or perhaps mutants who are rapidly outcompeted by revertants > when the drug is withdrawn (revertants are mutants that mutate back > to the wild type.. and if a mutant cell replicates in 1 hours and a > wild type in 57 mintues, it adds up to a big difference before too > long). > > C. albicans is definitely ubiquitous so it prolly also is plenty easy > to get reinfected. Yah, I'm worried about mutants. Since it so thoroughly goes away with local treatment though, I was thinking maybe it's just coming back because it's elsewhere in my body too. > Anyway you might want to dredge some colossal database like the > lymenet archives to see whats worked long-term for someone/anyone. I'll have to see if the search engine works for me now. It didn't in the past but maybe they fixed it? Thanks for the suggestions, - Kate Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2005 Report Share Posted October 10, 2005 I thought it sounded weird that it could just work by coating the stomach. He ought to rewrite that sentence. I dunno why, I just assumed that yeast resistance would turn out to be a problem. 's Law, you know! Gee, that would be nice if it's not a problem, 'cause if one is taking long-term abx, one can't just treat it and beat it. - Kate On Sunday, October 9, 2005, at 11:41 PM, wrote: > > > Having a specific action doesnt guaruntee that resistance occurs, > but I would guess it probably does. > > I mean in the lab, at least. Maybe pubmed could tell you whether yeast > resistance is a clinical problem (for people not semi-permanently on > abx, anyway). >> By that Cranton just means (I hope) that its affinity for the mucosa >> helps get/stay concentrated where its needed. It does have a specific >> molecular action against the yeast, which is membrane permeabilization >> according to _Biochem. of Antimicrob. Action._ >> >> > read Cranton, as suggested. He says Nystatin works simply by >> > coating the stomach, so it doesn't sound to me like that type of >> action >> > would stop being effective Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2005 Report Share Posted October 10, 2005 Okay, I had this bookmarked and forgot about it. Probably J. or somebody posted it once and I actually was paying attention. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/412677_5 Antifungal Resistance Among Candida Species It talks about resistance to fluconazole, but doesn't talk about non-systemics. - Kate On Monday, October 10, 2005, at 12:05 AM, Kate wrote: > I dunno why, I just assumed that yeast resistance would turn out to be > a problem. 's Law, you know! Gee, that would be nice if it's not > a problem, 'cause if one is taking long-term abx, one can't just treat > it and beat it. > > - Kate Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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