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Re: Rapid regression on TTFD & transdermal glutathion

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He may have a sensitivity to TTFD. Also, you should apply it on

wrists, top of feet, back of knee (above vein/artery) so it is

quickly absorbed into blood and rotate the site of application so it

doesn't cause irritation. Hope this helps.

> Andy & listmates:

>

> Can any conclusions be drawn from rapid regression on TTFD and

> glutathion? My 4yo, nonverbal asd son appeared to be in a lot of

> pain - lots of crying and arching of the back and flopping

around.

> Some obsessive behaviors and climbing returned. Awake one night

from

> 1:30 am to 6:30 am. We stopped after a couple of days of putting

the

> creams on his back. We tried these same treatments a year ago and

he

> did not tolerate them well then.

>

> He is on sulfasalazine to heal his colitis and I am afraid to

start

> DMSA and ALA too soon.

>

> Do you think he could be allergic to the creams? Or were so many

> metals coming out that they threw him off? He did smell badly.

> I am thinking about doing a challenge test to see what metals are

a

> problem. Would you recommend testing urine, feces and/or blood?

>

> Thanks in advance.

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Hi,

I never tried TTFD, but my son tolerated DMSA better than any other

supplements. I think the bad reaction to TTFD does not mean that you

should not try chelation.

Margaret

> Andy & listmates:

>

> Can any conclusions be drawn from rapid regression on TTFD and

> glutathion? My 4yo, nonverbal asd son appeared to be in a lot of

> pain - lots of crying and arching of the back and flopping

around.

> Some obsessive behaviors and climbing returned. Awake one night

from

> 1:30 am to 6:30 am. We stopped after a couple of days of putting

the

> creams on his back. We tried these same treatments a year ago and

he

> did not tolerate them well then.

>

> He is on sulfasalazine to heal his colitis and I am afraid to

start

> DMSA and ALA too soon.

>

> Do you think he could be allergic to the creams? Or were so many

> metals coming out that they threw him off? He did smell badly.

> I am thinking about doing a challenge test to see what metals are

a

> problem. Would you recommend testing urine, feces and/or blood?

>

> Thanks in advance.

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> > Can any conclusions be drawn from rapid regression on TTFD and

> > glutathion?

Yes. You saw an incompetent physician who shouldn't be practicing

medicine.

There is never any excuse to prescribe TTFD for autistic chidlren given

its high toxicity, high adverse reaction rate, and proven (Lonsdale's

own data) lack of chelating ability.

>My 4yo, nonverbal asd son appeared to be in a lot of

> > pain - lots of crying and arching of the back and flopping

> around.

> > Some obsessive behaviors and climbing returned. Awake one night

> from

> > 1:30 am to 6:30 am. We stopped after a couple of days of putting

> the

> > creams on his back. We tried these same treatments a year ago and

> he

> > did not tolerate them well then.

> >

> > He is on sulfasalazine to heal his colitis and I am afraid to

> start

> > DMSA and ALA too soon.

You should be afraid of waiting. The sooner the better.

> > Do you think he could be allergic to the creams?

It is theoretically possible, but quite unlikely. He was probably just

poisoned by them like about half the people given this combination are.

>? > Or were so many

> > metals coming out that they threw him off?

No, since neither of these remove any metals.

> > He did smell badly.

> > I am thinking about doing a challenge test to see what metals are

> a

> > problem. Would you recommend testing urine, feces and/or blood?

None of the above. No challenge test, no fribolous testing. Just rely

on hair test results if you have an older Doctor's Data hair element

profile, otherwise try chelation with DMSA every 4 hours.

> > Thanks in advance.

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Guest guest

> He may have a sensitivity to TTFD. Also, you should apply it on

> wrists, top of feet, back of knee (above vein/artery) so it is

> quickly absorbed into blood and rotate the site of application so it

> doesn't cause irritation. Hope this helps.

It would help more to use apply it as a suppository for the doctor -

that way it wouldn't hurt the kid and the doctor might think twice

before prescribing it again.

Andy . . . . .. . . . . . . . .

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