Guest guest Posted March 5, 2000 Report Share Posted March 5, 2000 > > > > ____________________________________________________________________________ ___ > ____________________________________________________________________________ ___ > > Message: 21 > Date: Sat, 4 Mar 2000 21:48:14 -0800 > From: " Ken Lassesen " <KenL@...> > Subject: Re: Berberine, Coag Effect, Natural Abx > > The mutual benefit of this list is the ability (and openess) of people cross checking things. " Natural Antibiotics " for CFS is good in theory, but as has been pointed out by research: > * antibiotics that causes coagulation are bad because ~90+% of us have thick blood (hypercoagulation) per Dr. Berg research > > Furthermore, the antibiotics must be effective against cell wall deficient bacteria (mycoplasma, lyme, rickettsia) - some antibiotics (natural or man-made) actually encourages the growth of cell wall deficient bacteria (like penicillin see http://www.folkarts.com/idef/pencillin.htm for more information). > > For some people the statement that " Antibiotics did not help my CFIDS, but made it worst " is correct - for those prescribed the wrong class of antibiotics. When we look for 'natural antibiotics', we must be careful to select one that are research have found to be effective against cell wall deficient bacteria -- if not, we are likely playing russian roulette with our lives. > > OK... the stuff on Hawthorn... (from http://nutritionfocus.com/nutrition_supplementation/herbs/Hawthorn_Berries.h tm ) - I'm very glad that Laurie found this site, it is very well done. it is > antithrombotic (i.e. an anticoagulant!) > For INDICATIONS (use for): blood clotting ... Raynaud's syndrome (temperature sensistivity that is very common with CFIDS) > > -- there is a lot of warnings on it (so before getting the mixture of Olive Leaf Extract and Hawthorn - make sure you read the list) > > Another description of it is at http://pacific.telebyte.com/~brtaylor/hawthorn.html ( hmmm " are high in chromium and selenium " - a good thing) > > OK - the 2nd qualification hurdle: Is it effective against mycoplasma? This can be a little hard... I usually search for any literature about a herb and WALKING PNEUMONIA (because it is technically mycoplasma pneumonia) - the most common form of mycoplasma infection. > > " Crataegus will maintain the heart in a healthy condition, preventing the development of coronary disease.Heart weakness following infectious disease such as pneumonia or diptheria.Cardiac arrhythmias. " from http://www.bryrus.net/essence/education/herbal_extracts.htm is the best that I could find (similar statement on other sites) ... it is used to prevent complications after pneumonia -- which implies that it does not foster the growth of mycoplasma. > > Conclusion: Hawthorn has some definite advantages against Hypercoagulation CFIDS (i.e. 90% of CFIDS patients), and appears to have no significant risks for cell wall deficient CFIDS patients. (please correct me if I'm wrong or if you have other sources) > > Ken Lassesen > 2 @ 2 ft PWC, 2 @ 4ft PWC > 2 ft PWC: http://www.folkarts.com/idef/ > 4 ft PWC: http://corgi.folkarts.com/ > Fax: (520) 832-6836 ICQ #: 2122097 (Netmeeting too) > Undenatured whey - for > > , you asked " what's the deal with: neurontin, whey (what's the theory behind using it, and what is it?), mycoplasma?, hhv6?, blood thining, herxing (really keen to find out what herxing is :-), nadh, and anything else I'm missing. " > > I can help with the whey info. I'm updating Cheney's Treatment Protocol for our support group's website and I've added a section on whey. (www.virtualhometown.com/dfwcfids). I've pasted it below. Take care. Carol > > Undenatured Whey: detox and antimicrobial benefits > > > I believe that the glutathione deficiency found in virtually all patients is the key problem, particularly over time. Nothing we tried significantly increasing its functionality. The consistent low to low normal levels of glutathione in whole blood, and particularly the abnormal functional markers of glutathione (elevated lipid peroxides, elevated citrate, depressed alpha ketogluterate) indicated that neither supplementation, injections, nor other interventions seemed to be addressing intracellular levels, which is where 90% of the body's glutathione is needed. The deficiency was extremely treatment resistant. > > > There are two major implications of glutathione deficiency: detox failure and viral/microbial activation. Glutathione plays a major role in the detoxification pathways of the body, and this deficiency makes these patients very difficult to manage from a detoxification standpoint. Using a good detox program that has worked on a lot of other people can actually put some of these patients in the hospital. The cellular detox failure this deficiency causes can make these patients canaries to their environment. Therefore the glutathione deficiency needs to be addressed before any serious attempt is made at detoxification. > > > Glutathione is also a powerful antiviral and antimicrobial weapon. Falci, the top HIV researcher at the NIH has shown that HIV growth can be completely stopped by raising the glutathione in-vitro in the cell culture. Given the widespread activation of viruses like EBV, CMV, and HHV6, and the activation of microbes like mycoplasma, chlamydia pneumoniae and candida in CFIDS, finding a way to raise intracellular levels of glutathione has been a top priority. If you raise the glutathione levels you can stop the replication of most any intracellular pathogen. (All of the above are intracellular.) > > > We have found a way to do this - undenatured whey protein. We conducted a six month study using the first patented bioactive whey product, (editor's note: Immunocal), and discovered that it improved glutathione functionality significantly. Patients who had tested positive for mycoplasma and chlamydia pneumoniae before treatment were negative afterwards. It also wiped out HHV6, though only when 2 paks a day were taken, not just one. The traditional treatment for mycoplasma and chlamydia pneumoniae is 18 months of triple antibiotics, which can wipe out a patient's gut flora and leave them a gut ecology cripple for the rest of their lives. This is a much nicer treatment approach. > > > (Editor's note: Dr. Cheney found ImuPlus to be as effective as Immunocal. In December of 1999 a new undenatured whey called ImmunoPro appeared on the market after two years in development. It is two to six times more powerful than the former products. The latter two products are available from NEEDS, 1-800-634-1380. A 300 gm canister of ImmunoPro is $39.95. Six canisters are $36 each, 12 are $32 each. ImuPlus is $82.50 for sixty packets, 600 gms total. Dosage: 1 packet (10 gms) twice a day of Immunocal and ImuPlus on an empty stomach. Some may need to start with lower doses and advance slowly. Others need 4 to 6 packets a day to see improvement. With ImmunoPro start with 1 teaspoon twice daily and slowly advance to 20 to 40 grams. A 10 gram scoop is provided.) > > > > ____________________________________________________________________________ ___ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2000 Report Share Posted March 5, 2000 Ken I think a lot of folks who got no help from abxs used Doxy. I can't argue with those who say abxs help but I still have seen no evidence in terms of double blind trial. I did see a brief lit review looking at abxs and FM -- and there were some blinded trial and they did not demonstrate the efficacy of abxs. It seems so easy to do some good research in this area, I wish someone would do it. steve Joyce wrote: > From: " Joyce " <ayjoyzz@...> > > > > > > > > > > ____________________________________________________________________________ > ___ > > > ____________________________________________________________________________ > ___ > > > > Message: 21 > > Date: Sat, 4 Mar 2000 21:48:14 -0800 > > From: " Ken Lassesen " <KenL@...> > > Subject: Re: Berberine, Coag Effect, Natural Abx > > > > The mutual benefit of this list is the ability (and openess) of people > cross checking things. " Natural Antibiotics " for CFS is good in theory, but > as has been pointed out by research: > > * antibiotics that causes coagulation are bad because ~90+% of us have > thick blood (hypercoagulation) per Dr. Berg research > > > > Furthermore, the antibiotics must be effective against cell wall deficient > bacteria (mycoplasma, lyme, rickettsia) - some antibiotics (natural or > man-made) actually encourages the growth of cell wall deficient bacteria > (like penicillin see http://www.folkarts.com/idef/pencillin.htm for more > information). > > > > For some people the statement that " Antibiotics did not help my CFIDS, but > made it worst " is correct - for those prescribed the wrong class of > antibiotics. When we look for 'natural antibiotics', we must be careful to > select one that are research have found to be effective against cell wall > deficient bacteria -- if not, we are likely playing russian roulette with > our lives. > > > > OK... the stuff on Hawthorn... (from > http://nutritionfocus.com/nutrition_supplementation/herbs/Hawthorn_Berries.h > tm ) - I'm very glad that Laurie found this site, it is very well done. it > is > > antithrombotic (i.e. an anticoagulant!) > > For INDICATIONS (use for): blood clotting ... Raynaud's syndrome > (temperature sensistivity that is very common with CFIDS) > > > > -- there is a lot of warnings on it (so before getting the mixture of > Olive Leaf Extract and Hawthorn - make sure you read the list) > > > > Another description of it is at > http://pacific.telebyte.com/~brtaylor/hawthorn.html ( hmmm " are high in > chromium and selenium " - a good thing) > > > > OK - the 2nd qualification hurdle: Is it effective against mycoplasma? > This can be a little hard... I usually search for any literature about a > herb and WALKING PNEUMONIA (because it is technically mycoplasma > pneumonia) - the most common form of mycoplasma infection. > > > > " Crataegus will maintain the heart in a healthy condition, preventing the > development of coronary disease.Heart weakness following infectious disease > such as pneumonia or diptheria.Cardiac arrhythmias. " from > http://www.bryrus.net/essence/education/herbal_extracts.htm is the best that > I could find (similar statement on other sites) ... it is used to prevent > complications after pneumonia -- which implies that it does not foster the > growth of mycoplasma. > > > > Conclusion: Hawthorn has some definite advantages against Hypercoagulation > CFIDS (i.e. 90% of CFIDS patients), and appears to have no significant risks > for cell wall deficient CFIDS patients. (please correct me if I'm wrong or > if you have other sources) > > > > Ken Lassesen > > 2 @ 2 ft PWC, 2 @ 4ft PWC > > 2 ft PWC: http://www.folkarts.com/idef/ > > 4 ft PWC: http://corgi.folkarts.com/ > > Fax: (520) 832-6836 ICQ #: 2122097 (Netmeeting too) > > Undenatured whey - for > > > > , you asked " what's the deal with: neurontin, whey (what's the theory > behind using it, and what is it?), mycoplasma?, hhv6?, blood thining, > herxing (really keen to find out what herxing is :-), nadh, and anything > else I'm missing. " > > > > I can help with the whey info. I'm updating Cheney's Treatment Protocol > for our support group's website and I've added a section on whey. > (www.virtualhometown.com/dfwcfids). I've pasted it below. Take care. > Carol > > > > Undenatured Whey: detox and antimicrobial benefits > > > > > > I believe that the glutathione deficiency found in virtually all patients > is the key problem, particularly over time. Nothing we tried significantly > increasing its functionality. The consistent low to low normal levels of > glutathione in whole blood, and particularly the abnormal functional markers > of glutathione (elevated lipid peroxides, elevated citrate, depressed alpha > ketogluterate) indicated that neither supplementation, injections, nor other > interventions seemed to be addressing intracellular levels, which is where > 90% of the body's glutathione is needed. The deficiency was extremely > treatment resistant. > > > > > > There are two major implications of glutathione deficiency: detox failure > and viral/microbial activation. Glutathione plays a major role in the > detoxification pathways of the body, and this deficiency makes these > patients very difficult to manage from a detoxification standpoint. Using a > good detox program that has worked on a lot of other people can actually put > some of these patients in the hospital. The cellular detox failure this > deficiency causes can make these patients canaries to their environment. > Therefore the glutathione deficiency needs to be addressed before any > serious attempt is made at detoxification. > > > > > > Glutathione is also a powerful antiviral and antimicrobial weapon. > Falci, the top HIV researcher at the NIH has shown that HIV growth can be > completely stopped by raising the glutathione in-vitro in the cell culture. > Given the widespread activation of viruses like EBV, CMV, and HHV6, and the > activation of microbes like mycoplasma, chlamydia pneumoniae and candida in > CFIDS, finding a way to raise intracellular levels of glutathione has been a > top priority. If you raise the glutathione levels you can stop the > replication of most any intracellular pathogen. (All of the above are > intracellular.) > > > > > > We have found a way to do this - undenatured whey protein. We conducted a > six month study using the first patented bioactive whey product, (editor's > note: Immunocal), and discovered that it improved glutathione functionality > significantly. Patients who had tested positive for mycoplasma and chlamydia > pneumoniae before treatment were negative afterwards. It also wiped out > HHV6, though only when 2 paks a day were taken, not just one. The > traditional treatment for mycoplasma and chlamydia pneumoniae is 18 months > of triple antibiotics, which can wipe out a patient's gut flora and leave > them a gut ecology cripple for the rest of their lives. This is a much nicer > treatment approach. > > > > > > (Editor's note: Dr. Cheney found ImuPlus to be as effective as Immunocal. > In December of 1999 a new undenatured whey called ImmunoPro appeared on the > market after two years in development. It is two to six times more powerful > than the former products. The latter two products are available from NEEDS, > 1-800-634-1380. A 300 gm canister of ImmunoPro is $39.95. Six canisters are > $36 each, 12 are $32 each. ImuPlus is $82.50 for sixty packets, 600 gms > total. Dosage: 1 packet (10 gms) twice a day of Immunocal and ImuPlus on an > empty stomach. Some may need to start with lower doses and advance slowly. > Others need 4 to 6 packets a day to see improvement. With ImmunoPro start > with 1 teaspoon twice daily and slowly advance to 20 to 40 grams. A 10 gram > scoop is provided.) > > > > > > > > > ____________________________________________________________________________ > ___ > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > GET A NEXTCARD VISA, in 30 seconds! Get rates > as low as 0.0% Intro APR and no hidden fees. > Apply NOW! > 1/975/2/_/531724/_/952278400/ > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2000 Report Share Posted March 5, 2000 I agree. Gail may know of some. Do you have any URLs for the the abx and FM studies -- I would love to review the articles and see the exact constuction of the studies. A special area of interest is the selection criteria for the patients.... I recall one study that found that CFS & FM patients are generally far worst than CFS or FM alone ... so a second factor may be involved (like damage to the nervous systems) Ken Lassesen 2 @ 2 ft PWC, 2 @ 4ft PWC 2 ft PWC: http://www.folkarts.com/idef/ 4 ft PWC: http://corgi.folkarts.com/ Fax: (520) 832-6836 ICQ #: 2122097 (Netmeeting too) ----- Original Message ----- From: Dr. Steve Ken I think a lot of folks who got no help from abxs used Doxy. I can't argue with those who say abxs help but I still have seen no evidence in terms of double blind trial. I did see a brief lit review looking at abxs and FM -- and there were some blinded trial and they did not demonstrate the efficacy of abxs. It seems so easy to do some good research in this area, I wish someone would do it. steve Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 26, 2001 Report Share Posted January 26, 2001 I scanned and transcribed the article about CMT that Gretchen found in USC Health magazine. It's listed as one of the links on the links page at or you can go directly to the article at http://www.drscience.com/CMT/uscarticle.htm The page contains small pictures of the pages so it's kind of large (365kbytes) for modem users, but it's worth the wait. Happy reading! ---------- Rick Alber Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 26, 2001 Report Share Posted January 26, 2001 Hey Rick, that was a very interesting article. Thanks for sharing. Sam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2001 Report Share Posted March 31, 2001 At 08:35 PM 3/31/01 +0000, you wrote: >Also, do you think my FO will be ok? Or should I use EO instead? I'd not dream of using an FO on a baby...or in baby soap. the whole point of using lavender and/or chamomile is for their effects. you have no idea what the FO is made of. Your source for superb Essential Oils, Aromatherapy Accessories, Information, Books and more! Visit us at: <http://www.naturesgift.com> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 5, 2001 Report Share Posted November 5, 2001 Hi Tina, Welcome. I don't post often, but I love this list. I live 30 minutes south of Boston. We're practically neighbors. My daughter is 6 3/4 years old and has autism/ Landau-Kleffner Syndrome. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 6, 2001 Report Share Posted November 6, 2001 Hi , I know you from autismtalk.net My name is le dannilynn7002312AOL.COM . I 'am glad you found this group eveeryone is so much help. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 6, 2001 Report Share Posted November 6, 2001 Hi Judy,the medicaid waiver is based on the childs needs and income like if she gets s.s.i or something they don;t base it on the parents at all or we would never get anything.Take my advice on the 20 hours of therapy they said your daughter needs get as much as you can we don't do a.b.a or anything,but private speech an o.t. twice a week along with pre-school four days a week 2 hours a day is making such a difference for her i will get more private therapy as soon as the medicaid waiver comes through.What types of behaviors an things is your daughter doing or what are the traits that make her midly autisic if you don;t mind me asking sometimes people can give you better advice based on that information. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2002 Report Share Posted May 8, 2002 Original message: Subject: Re: Re: Re: Does anyone sell with/ without insurance RLI is not available in some states. Probably the most litigious ones. Anne http://www.annelees.com/oils/ -------------- I have RLI in NJ ($2 mil) and there ain't too many states more litigious than this one! (I'm not proud of that, btw) So be sure to check. I found that the website was not too user friendly. Be sure to start calling the agents listed there - you many have to make several phone calls before you find one that's right for you but it's worth the effort. I, for one, KNOW that my husband would be really, really, REALLY mad if I lost the house and his guitar collection (his stuff is still part of our assets) because someone used my facial scrub instead of oatmeal, got sick, and sued me and won! Rishar Rishar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 9, 2002 Report Share Posted May 9, 2002 What is RLI? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2002 Report Share Posted November 17, 2002 Hi Terry, Wow, you're almost there! How's it looking so far? How've you been feeling? I wasn't able to finish my treatment because I also have Sickle cell & my sickle acted up after 3 months, so it had to be stopped. I've just been lucky that my liver functions have been good so far. I'm hoping to be able to try again. It sure would be nice to get rid of this virus. Ada Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2005 Report Share Posted March 25, 2005 Armour comes from the Armour...(hot dogs)...Pig factory, it is pig thyroid hormone and I have been taking it for years. It is the closest T3/T4 combo to humans. I suggest finding doctors that do prescribe it as there are plenty. Look at Shomon's website about.com/thyroid for the top doctors that offer alternatives to Synthroid. Doctors who do not prescribe it are misinformed by the synthetic drug makers, who want to keep people on their prescription medication as opposed to actually helping people with thyroid feel well again. There are doctors who do prescribe it and even Costco carries it. You can also go to the armour website for more information. www.advancedbiofeedback.com for your health needs www.orenda.iact1.com/11239 for anti aging, immune modulation & easy weight loss http://soldiersangels.org Let no soldier go unloved May no soldier walk alone May no soldier be forgotten Until they all come home Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 29, 2005 Report Share Posted March 29, 2005 Good information, . I would like to refer you to wilsonsthyroidsyndrome.com. He believes in giving T3 directly or using Thyrocare, a herbal remedy designed to re-regulate the thyroid and get the body temp. back to normal. Often when the thyroid is disregulated it has difficulty converting t4 to t3. Phil Re: Digest Number 730 Armour comes from the Armour...(hot dogs)...Pig factory, it is pig thyroid hormone and I have been taking it for years. It is the closest T3/T4 combo to humans. I suggest finding doctors that do prescribe it as there are plenty. Look at Shomon's website about.com/thyroid for the top doctors that offer alternatives to Synthroid. Doctors who do not prescribe it are misinformed by the synthetic drug makers, who want to keep people on their prescription medication as opposed to actually helping people with thyroid feel well again. There are doctors who do prescribe it and even Costco carries it. You can also go to the armour website for more information. www.advancedbiofeedback.com for your health needs www.orenda.iact1.com/11239 for anti aging, immune modulation & easy weight loss http://soldiersangels.org Let no soldier go unloved May no soldier walk alone May no soldier be forgotten Until they all come home ............................................. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 30, 2005 Report Share Posted March 30, 2005 Selenium is required for proper thyroid function as well as Iodine and the amino acid tyrosine Re: Digest Number 730 > > > > > Armour comes from the Armour...(hot dogs)...Pig factory, it is pig thyroid > hormone and I have been taking it for years. It is the closest T3/T4 combo > to humans. I suggest finding doctors that do prescribe it as there are > plenty. Look at Shomon's website about.com/thyroid for the top > doctors > that offer alternatives to Synthroid. Doctors who do not prescribe it are > misinformed by the synthetic drug makers, who want to keep people on their > prescription medication as opposed to actually helping people with thyroid > feel well again. There are doctors who do prescribe it and even Costco > carries it. You can also go to the armour website for more information. > > www.advancedbiofeedback.com for your health needs > www.orenda.iact1.com/11239 for anti aging, immune modulation & easy weight > loss > http://soldiersangels.org Let no soldier go unloved > May no soldier walk alone > May no soldier be forgotten > Until they all come home > > > > > > > > > ............................................ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 30, 2005 Report Share Posted March 30, 2005 FYI~~~~ Just a quick addition...................the mercury in amalgam fillings inhibits the enzyme necessary for converting T4 into T3 which presents another realm of problems................. treating with T/R T3 is an excellent method for getting the T3 into the system, but Dr. goes on to say that eventually you may be able to come off thyroid supplementation all together. As long as you still have mercury flowing through your system, you will have to continue to take something for your thyroid health. Just food for thought~~~~~~~ Kim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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