Guest guest Posted June 5, 2001 Report Share Posted June 5, 2001 Kanjane Mike Mike, I can't stand it anymore - what does that mean up there above your name? (Kanjane) Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2001 Report Share Posted June 5, 2001 At 10:39 AM +0100 6/5/01, m.jarman wrote: > I have had IV glutathione from Dr Kingsley, with really good results, >although after a week or so the effects wore off. What about im injections, which you can administer yourself, as opposed to iv, which can be a bit iffy, if indeed you are allowed to do it at all? Kanjane Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2001 Report Share Posted June 5, 2001 >Mike, >I can't stand it anymore - what does that mean up there above your name? >(Kanjane) >Carol Sorry Carol For my sins I am an unreconstructed ian. " Kanjane " is but a Shona greeting. I still want to find out how to acquire a diy glutathione fix. I see that Merlin Corp has resurrected Sriram's hitherto unbelieved work on the rôle of Chlamydia. I recall putting myself on a fairly brutal regime of Bactrim and other antibiotcs, the only result of which was a knackered liver, requiring sillamarin restoration! Kanjane Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 6, 2001 Report Share Posted June 6, 2001 Mireille, I'm sorry, but I'm ignorant of the detail of Dr Pelmutter's protocol, although I do know that Dr Kingsley is aware of and an admirer of Dr P. The infusions are a fairly relaxed affair, which take place in his quite idyllic rural surgery. A line is put in your arm (or with some people their hand) and the contents of a bottle put into the vein. It's almost entirely painless, and believe me I am very squeamish - if I'm ok about it then almost anyone would be! The infusion takes between one and three hours to go through - it varies from person to person, depending on how quickly you can tolerate the rate of flow being, and I guess how elastic your veins are. If the weather is warmer then things go through quicker, I've found. I'm usually done in a couple of hours. He charges about £80 for an infusion. Mark Re: Re: Dr. Perlmutter's Glutathione Therapy > > > > > > In a message dated 6/4/01 12:01:44 PM Pacific Daylight Time, > > mgen27@e... writes: > > > > > > > > Carol, > > > > I had heard about Glutathione Therapy on one of the autism > lists that > > I'm on. One researcher who lives in Florida mentioned that it > was > > being used for MS as well as Parkinson's disease. I called the > > Perlmutter Health Center today and spoke with a nurse. I > didn't know > > this, but she said that they started using this treatment on MS > > patients (about 6 people so far) just about a year ago, and > that it > > is the same protocol as for Parkinson's. The MS patients, > however, > > don't see an improvement right away; it takes much longer. I > didn't > > realize that the treatment was tried on a just a few people > when I > > wrote in. Now I know it's still very new. > > > > Thanks for responding. > > > > Mireille > > > > > > > > Mireille, > > This doesn't surprise me much, because I've read about the > benefits of > > glutathione. I read that it's better to take the nutrients that > are the > > building blocks for it rather than glutathione itself. It is > very unstable > > and loses it's anti-oxidant properties when exposed to air, so > how it is > > processed is very important too. It also has a short shelf > life. > > Intravenously is the best way. This is all per " Dr. Atkins Vita- > Nutrient > > Solution " . He uses the following nutrients to create glutathione > within the > > body: NAC, lipoic acid, selenium, riboflavin, pyrodoxine and l- > glutamine. > > I've been taking l-glutamine for about a year to try and heal > leaky gut. > > Carol > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 6, 2001 Report Share Posted June 6, 2001 Mike, I'm not sure about intra-muscular injections. It's certsinly not something that was suggested to me, but I'll ask him next time I go. I'd be quite happy to give myself these though, as I do inject Rebif three times a week. IV is a bit different though! The only way I could have got regular IV injections would have been to get a friendly nurse or doctor to do them. I actually did find a nurse who would have done it, but she had to get clearance from the health authority, and they weren't too happy about it. Mark Re: Re: Dr. Perlmutter's Glutathione Therapy > At 10:39 AM +0100 6/5/01, m.jarman wrote: > > I have had IV glutathione from Dr Kingsley, with really good results, > >although after a week or so the effects wore off. > > What about im injections, which you can administer yourself, as opposed to > iv, which can be a bit iffy, if indeed you are allowed to do it at all? > > Kanjane > > Mike > > > > . > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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