Guest guest Posted February 16, 2012 Report Share Posted February 16, 2012 Can you do the nagalese test at breakspear ? regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2012 Report Share Posted February 18, 2012 Hi, GcMAF is actually available in Holland and I believe this is where he gets it. Last Tuesday I had my sons done the test from Biolab in London through the Autism Treatment Trust. I have originally contacted the centre in Holland and they said Buolab does the test in London for them, then I have ATT if the result can go to them and is all gone fine. I am now waiting for the result. NuraSent from my iPhone Hi Vicky,Much of this treatment comes from cancer research. Briefly, cancer cells send out an enzyme called nagalase to netralise the binding-protein for Vit D, GcMaf so that macrophages in the blood don't get message to attack them; immune system is suppressed & cancer cells can grow. In autism, the immune system is compromised by inflammation, bacterial & viral infections, etc cause by external agents such as mercury & other environmental toxins. In a sense Dr Bradstreet has seized upon this research to effect similar changes in autism, that the body has to heal but I imagine only after mercury & toxins are removed. So many factoes to account for, for success, so early days still & its very expensive, only available from himself!June>> Tried to post yesterday on this, can someone explain how this ties in with > mercury and/or any of the comorbids we see in autism?> Are they saying that if someone has been supplementing with Vit D and not > seen cognitive improvements then this enzyme will make the difference?> has been on D since the days of being under Dr D and he has done very > well on it but not cognitively, only in the area's of growth ie height, > teeth, etc.> I had actually reached the point of wondering if we had been giving this > for too long what with the strange bone growths we are seeing.> Would really like to see how everything comes together and how we would > know who would be a possible candidate as the story is very exciting, > especially as this is a severe 13yr old.> I wonder though why it isn't a main stream story.> Vicky> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2012 Report Share Posted February 18, 2012 Hi, GcMAF is actually available in Holland and I believe this is where he gets it. Last Tuesday I had my sons done the test from Biolab in London through the Autism Treatment Trust. I have originally contacted the centre in Holland and they said Buolab does the test in London for them, then I have ATT if the result can go to them and is all gone fine. I am now waiting for the result. NuraSent from my iPhone Hi Vicky,Much of this treatment comes from cancer research. Briefly, cancer cells send out an enzyme called nagalase to netralise the binding-protein for Vit D, GcMaf so that macrophages in the blood don't get message to attack them; immune system is suppressed & cancer cells can grow. In autism, the immune system is compromised by inflammation, bacterial & viral infections, etc cause by external agents such as mercury & other environmental toxins. In a sense Dr Bradstreet has seized upon this research to effect similar changes in autism, that the body has to heal but I imagine only after mercury & toxins are removed. So many factoes to account for, for success, so early days still & its very expensive, only available from himself!June>> Tried to post yesterday on this, can someone explain how this ties in with > mercury and/or any of the comorbids we see in autism?> Are they saying that if someone has been supplementing with Vit D and not > seen cognitive improvements then this enzyme will make the difference?> has been on D since the days of being under Dr D and he has done very > well on it but not cognitively, only in the area's of growth ie height, > teeth, etc.> I had actually reached the point of wondering if we had been giving this > for too long what with the strange bone growths we are seeing.> Would really like to see how everything comes together and how we would > know who would be a possible candidate as the story is very exciting, > especially as this is a severe 13yr old.> I wonder though why it isn't a main stream story.> Vicky> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2012 Report Share Posted February 18, 2012 Hi, GcMAF is actually available in Holland and I believe this is where he gets it. Last Tuesday I had my sons done the test from Biolab in London through the Autism Treatment Trust. I have originally contacted the centre in Holland and they said Buolab does the test in London for them, then I have ATT if the result can go to them and is all gone fine. I am now waiting for the result. NuraSent from my iPhone Hi Vicky,Much of this treatment comes from cancer research. Briefly, cancer cells send out an enzyme called nagalase to netralise the binding-protein for Vit D, GcMaf so that macrophages in the blood don't get message to attack them; immune system is suppressed & cancer cells can grow. In autism, the immune system is compromised by inflammation, bacterial & viral infections, etc cause by external agents such as mercury & other environmental toxins. In a sense Dr Bradstreet has seized upon this research to effect similar changes in autism, that the body has to heal but I imagine only after mercury & toxins are removed. So many factoes to account for, for success, so early days still & its very expensive, only available from himself!June>> Tried to post yesterday on this, can someone explain how this ties in with > mercury and/or any of the comorbids we see in autism?> Are they saying that if someone has been supplementing with Vit D and not > seen cognitive improvements then this enzyme will make the difference?> has been on D since the days of being under Dr D and he has done very > well on it but not cognitively, only in the area's of growth ie height, > teeth, etc.> I had actually reached the point of wondering if we had been giving this > for too long what with the strange bone growths we are seeing.> Would really like to see how everything comes together and how we would > know who would be a possible candidate as the story is very exciting, > especially as this is a severe 13yr old.> I wonder though why it isn't a main stream story.> Vicky> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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