Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: Low Neutrophils

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Hi Patti

Do you think doing the test at the end of the round was why they were showing

low? I ask becasue we did Sam's bloods 2 weeks ago, waiting on results, they

were taken on day 3 of round. I managed to talk the Consultant Ped into doing

blood level also - just interested. Thanks

Mandi in UK

> we are chelating my son for lead and mercury with DMSA/ALA and we did

> testing for his neutrophils the day after our round stopped and he was

> below reference range for his neutrophils as well. We waited 2 weeks

> after the round and they came up on their own into the lowest end of

> the reference range.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

-,

we are chelating my son for lead and mercury with DMSA/ALA and we did

testing for his neutrophils the day after our round stopped and he was

below reference range for his neutrophils as well. We waited 2 weeks

after the round and they came up on their own into the lowest end of

the reference range. We then decided to only chelate once a month and

we give zinc 3 times a day. I use pure coconut butter in his foods

preperation as I believe the coconut butter helps raise neutrophil

levels. Since adopting this protocal his neutrophils have been fine

every time we test. Read in the files section under neutropenia for

more info.

Patti

-- In , " Griffiths " <rp46285@o...>

wrote:

> Lab tests just back.

>

> Both my daughter and I who have been doing chelation... DMSA/ALA

have below reference range for Neutrophils.

>

> I really want to continue as I want to get the lead out.

>

> Anybody have personal similar experience and what did you do to

raise the neutrophil count?

>

> Many thanks,

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

-Mandi,

Yes we thought his neutrophils showed up so low because it was right

after his round was finished that is why we re-tested 2 weeks later

and they were much better. I would suggest testing again 2 weeks after

the round to determine how they are rising.

Patti

-- In , Mum231ASD@a... wrote:

> Hi Patti

> Do you think doing the test at the end of the round was why they

were showing

> low? I ask becasue we did Sam's bloods 2 weeks ago, waiting on

results, they

> were taken on day 3 of round. I managed to talk the Consultant Ped

into doing

> blood level also - just interested. Thanks

> Mandi in UK

>

> > we are chelating my son for lead and mercury with DMSA/ALA and we did

> > testing for his neutrophils the day after our round stopped and he was

> > below reference range for his neutrophils as well. We waited 2 weeks

> > after the round and they came up on their own into the lowest end of

> > the reference range.

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 years later...

> >

> > Just looking back through some old lab work and reviewed our Natural

> > Killer cells lab. Our Neutrophils were markedly low, at 18% (ref

> > range 25 - 42%).

>

> I'm not sure what you are looking at. You want the absolute

> neutrophil count. A low percentage just means one of the other

> types of white cells is high.

Ah, didn't know that. It's just listed as " Neutrophils " on the lab

report, with the above percentage and range, and flagged as low. I

figured " low " and " neutrophils " was a bad combination! Further down

the page it does list absolute Neutrophils: 1.7 (ref range 1.5 - 7.1).

> We tried the Neutrophil Plus product last month but

> > my son reacted badly to it, and yeast actually got decidedly worse.

>

> This might just mean he was getting die-off effects (which can look

> like worsened yeast symptoms). Are you using probiotics? What

> about antifungals?

We have experienced tons of die-off, never anything like this. It

seemed to bring back old stims he hadn't done in many months, while

all of his usual yeasty behaviors remained or worsened. We have also

never had die-off last 4 days, nor did it respond to charcoal.

We are using 200 billion Custom Probiotics daily, Diflucan, Yeast-Aid

and tons of GSE (at the time). We are now using Oil of Oregano along

with Diflucan and finally getting control of the yeast.

> If you post the dose, frequency, and the nature of the reaction,

> folks may have suggestions about what the problem is.

I posted about this in Message #'s 190184 & 192397. Here's the short

overview version: 6 mg DMSA every 4 hours around the clock for 3 days

on, 4 days off. Did this for 2 weeks (2 rounds) & then quit because

behavior & gut had completely regressed; lots of details in those 2

posts.

It has taken 2 months to return him mostly to his previous condition,

though his gut has still not fully recovered. For example, we still

aren't back to the semi-formed poops we had finally achieved before

trying DMSA.

I got many good responses to my posts; I now know I should have

started at a lower dose, and I probably should have waited 11 days in

between rounds. I can't say for sure, but my guess is that he still

would have reacted. My intuition is bugging me on this. I am pretty

certain my son's awful reaction and the months of resulting cleanup

and repair are not just because of yeast. In some way that I can't

pinpoint yet, my son did not " tolerate " DMSA. I am digging and

learning more to determine why, and so far the likely candidates

appear to be sulphur and/or neutrophils. His high plasma cystine

worries me too and I'm trying to determine if that points to a sulphur

problem.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

> > >

> > > Just looking back through some old lab work and reviewed our Natural

> > > Killer cells lab. Our Neutrophils were markedly low, at 18% (ref

> > > range 25 - 42%).

> >

> > I'm not sure what you are looking at. You want the absolute

> > neutrophil count. A low percentage just means one of the other

> > types of white cells is high.

>

> Ah, didn't know that. It's just listed as " Neutrophils " on the lab

> report, with the above percentage and range, and flagged as low. I

> figured " low " and " neutrophils " was a bad combination! Further down

> the page it does list absolute Neutrophils: 1.7 (ref range 1.5 - 7.1).

1.7 absolute neutrophils is okay. If the absolute count goes below

1.0, that is a big concern and potentially dangerous. 1.0-1.5 is

questionable - you think about what might be going on and possibly

repeat the test in a couple of weeks. I think the danger threshold

of 1.0 is the same for children and adults, but I'm not positive.

I'm sure you can check this with a google search.

The percentage may have been low because another type, such as

lymphs, was elevated. Maybe something viral was going on at

the time of the blood test.

> > We tried the Neutrophil Plus product last month but

> > > my son reacted badly to it, and yeast actually got decidedly worse.

> >

> > This might just mean he was getting die-off effects (which can look

> > like worsened yeast symptoms). Are you using probiotics? What

> > about antifungals?

>

> We have experienced tons of die-off, never anything like this. It

> seemed to bring back old stims he hadn't done in many months, while

> all of his usual yeasty behaviors remained or worsened. We have also

> never had die-off last 4 days, nor did it respond to charcoal.

>

> We are using 200 billion Custom Probiotics daily, Diflucan, Yeast-Aid

> and tons of GSE (at the time). We are now using Oil of Oregano along

> with Diflucan and finally getting control of the yeast.

Sounds like the Neutrophil Plus product just isn't for you - maybe

he is sensitive to an ingredient. I checked and it contains

vitamin A, copper, and various other things that could possibly

cause problems. He sounds like a sensitive kid and you probably

want to stick to single ingredients so you know what is causing

problems.

If he needs neutrophil support (the 1.7 value is not bad, but

maybe it gets lower on rounds), check the neutrophils file in the

Files section and maybe you can find something that is tolerated.

> > If you post the dose, frequency, and the nature of the reaction,

> > folks may have suggestions about what the problem is.

>

> I posted about this in Message #'s 190184 & 192397. Here's the short

> overview version: 6 mg DMSA every 4 hours around the clock for 3 days

> on, 4 days off. Did this for 2 weeks (2 rounds) & then quit because

> behavior & gut had completely regressed; lots of details in those 2

> posts.

I read through some of the previous postings. I really agree with

the idea of using a lower dose of DMSA. I am a 135 lb adult and

I had to start at 10 mg. I have heard of adults starting even

lower than that. Once you find a tolerated dose, stick to it for

at least several rounds before you even think about increasing.

Does he still have yellow poop? That could mean not enough bile

and you might want to try taurine or other things to support bile

flow.

> It has taken 2 months to return him mostly to his previous condition,

> though his gut has still not fully recovered. For example, we still

> aren't back to the semi-formed poops we had finally achieved before

> trying DMSA.

>

> I got many good responses to my posts; I now know I should have

> started at a lower dose, and I probably should have waited 11 days in

> between rounds. I can't say for sure, but my guess is that he still

> would have reacted. My intuition is bugging me on this. I am pretty

> certain my son's awful reaction and the months of resulting cleanup

> and repair are not just because of yeast. In some way that I can't

> pinpoint yet, my son did not " tolerate " DMSA. I am digging and

> learning more to determine why, and so far the likely candidates

> appear to be sulphur and/or neutrophils. His high plasma cystine

> worries me too and I'm trying to determine if that points to a sulphur

> problem.

I think the best way to decide if he does not tolerate sulfur

is to eliminate it from diet/supps for about 2 weeks, then eat

a lot of it for a day. If he initially seems better ( " emotionally

bouncy " is Andy's term) and then gets a lot worse a few hours

later, I believe that is the classic sulfur food reaction.

Sulfury things are dairy, eggs, broccoli, cauliflower, turnips,

garlic, beans, whey, cabbage, kale, onions. Check the archives

to make sure I haven't missed anything, but I think that's a fairly

good list. MSM, NAC, cysteine should be excluded from supplements.

--

Link to comment
Share on other sites

>

> 1.7 absolute neutrophils is okay. If the absolute count goes below

> 1.0, that is a big concern and potentially dangerous. 1.0-1.5 is

> questionable - you think about what might be going on and possibly

> repeat the test in a couple of weeks. I think the danger threshold

> of 1.0 is the same for children and adults, but I'm not positive.

> I'm sure you can check this with a google search.

>

> The percentage may have been low because another type, such as

> lymphs, was elevated. Maybe something viral was going on at

> the time of the blood test.

Could be. His lymphs were average (6.3, ref rng 2.9 - 13.3). His

platelets were high, as was Eos (0.8, ref rng 0.0 - 0.9). No clue

what that means.

> Sounds like the Neutrophil Plus product just isn't for you - maybe

> he is sensitive to an ingredient. I checked and it contains

> vitamin A, copper, and various other things that could possibly

> cause problems. He sounds like a sensitive kid and you probably

> want to stick to single ingredients so you know what is causing

> problems.

>

> If he needs neutrophil support (the 1.7 value is not bad, but

> maybe it gets lower on rounds), check the neutrophils file in the

> Files section and maybe you can find something that is tolerated.

Thanks, will do.

> I read through some of the previous postings. I really agree with

> the idea of using a lower dose of DMSA. I am a 135 lb adult and

> I had to start at 10 mg. I have heard of adults starting even

> lower than that. Once you find a tolerated dose, stick to it for

> at least several rounds before you even think about increasing.

>

> Does he still have yellow poop? That could mean not enough bile

> and you might want to try taurine or other things to support bile

> flow.

The yellow poop was worst on rounds. It would usually improve to at

least a caramel color after that. The poop finally " browned " a bit

when I started OLE a few weeks ago. (Sorry so gross!!)

We've supplemented with taurine for months but never saw anything.

Went off it for a few weeks, saw no difference. His taurine levels

were right in the middle of the ref range when we tested plasma amino

acids a few months ago. So taurine might not be necessary for him. I

supplemented anyway because he has never shown any response to mB12

shots, and I read in the Pangborn/Baker book to try taurine. But we

still saw nothing (and folinic didn't help either). My kiddo just

doesn't seem to be a responder to much!

> I think the best way to decide if he does not tolerate sulfur

> is to eliminate it from diet/supps for about 2 weeks, then eat

> a lot of it for a day. If he initially seems better ( " emotionally

> bouncy " is Andy's term) and then gets a lot worse a few hours

> later, I believe that is the classic sulfur food reaction.

>

> Sulfury things are dairy, eggs, broccoli, cauliflower, turnips,

> garlic, beans, whey, cabbage, kale, onions. Check the archives

> to make sure I haven't missed anything, but I think that's a fairly

> good list. MSM, NAC, cysteine should be excluded from supplements.

Thanks , this sounds like a great plan. He does not

currently eat any " sulfur foods " , so I will try adding in some

broccoli or cauliflower. He unfortunately has a mild IgG reaction

(+1) to almost all of the sulfur foods you mentioned, so this will

definitely increase his diarrhea, but I think it's a worthwhile

sacrifice for one day if it solves the sulfur mystery once and for all.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...