Guest guest Posted January 12, 2004 Report Share Posted January 12, 2004 Hi, I had an open bite before surgery & my doctors told me it will most likely open up again, not much but some, because I tounge thrust & mouth breathe. I was just wondering, how long after surgery do you normally relapse if you do? or is it just whenever it happens? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 8, 2008 Report Share Posted January 8, 2008 Hi yankeeexile, thanks for your words. I think the trigger was my father-in-law, because he was very sniffy etc. I also am/was thinking about the dumping phase: I am 4 months amalgam-free and can " feel " my brain (and low back) sometimes. I have never had a headache (also not after drinking alcohol in my younger days) and sometimes my brain is hurting just a little bit. For me very noticable because I never had something before. Do you think this can possible too ? I have been 30 hours paralysed in my legs (I just could not move them), but this morning everything is working again !!. So it was a short relapse (like years ago: just twice a year for 24 hours). Maybe a good sign, because my last relapses (2-3 years ago) were lasting 3-6 weeks long. Although I have to see if it is all over yet. Saterday I " ll start chelating again; in the meantime I stopped with 6 supplements; probably I can/will take them again in the futere, one by one ! Greetings and again a good/healthy new year. Simon ________________________________ > To: frequent-dose-chelation > From: yankeeexile@... > Date: Mon, 7 Jan 2008 16:59:48 +0000 > Subject: Re: Relapse > > > Hi Simon, > > I'm sorry to hear about your relapse... hang in there! > > I would also suggest that you carefully consider whether or not you > may have suffered an accidental/unknown exposure. I think many of us > are so vigilant about our own environments that we feel too confident > that we are not being exposed, without considering the places we go > and what could have happened there that we don't know about. I'm > specifically thinking about broken fluorescent lights in public > places, but I'm sure that's not the only possibility. > > I think the flu can be a trigger, but I also think it's prudent to > make a careful review when something like this happens. If there's > any possibility that you may have inadvertently been exposed to > mercury, then you would want to hold off on re-introducing the ALA for > another 3 months. > > Meanwhile, take care of yourself. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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