Guest guest Posted November 22, 2010 Report Share Posted November 22, 2010 The more I read one can't help but become discouraged with the long term prognosis of treating Lymes and Bartonella. It sounds like it's a life long battle and no one ever really cures it. I'm trying to listen to the optimistic side of my brain and be patient with results and believe that we will all cure this. It gets so frustrating at times. Is there anyone on this board that can share a full success story with the Bruhner Protocol? Cassano VT PBiS Coach 802-236-6637 snowgirlvt@... PRIVACY & Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2010 Report Share Posted November 22, 2010 Knotweed, Have you been studying Byron White protocols? Jazzman [ ] cowden 70% effective > P.S. regarding the Cowden protocol being 70% effective: I think this is similar to what Buhner says for his protocol, and probably to what many ILADs docs state for their ABX protocols. You often hear that about 25% has a total cure or nearly full recovery, 50% or so has significant improvement and maybe 25% has no improvement or continues to get worse. Even some very alternative protocols (where IMHO it is very unlikely that they could do anything against Borrelia) make such claims. Of course, some protocols claim even 100% recovery but I won't comment furter on those here This suggests to me that none of the protocols may be very effective (in general, they could still be effective for individual cases). If you don't do anything and wait long enough, maybe you get similar percentages of 'cured', 'improved' or 'no benefit'. We don't know, because almost every patient tries something... Maybe the group that sees full recovery were less ill, or had a less persistent Bb strain. Maybe the group that sees no benefit has multiple infections or an extra-naughty Bb strain, or an additional medical problem. We simply don't know and unfortunately, the same goes for almost all the research on treating LD with ABX Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2010 Report Share Posted November 22, 2010 My observation: we're all different. The treatment(s) that work for us, work for us. If they're good enough, they are our own successful treatments. That's what each of us have to find. Some find it with IV rocephin, some with oxygen dives, some with stem cell injections. Etc. Me, I'm doing well on clindamycin abx right now. Plus mangosteen juice for my eyes, noni juice and grapeseed extract to successfully stop lipoma tumors - yes, we're rather interesting frontline medical experiments here. - Robin Re: [ ] cowden 70% effective Knotweed, Have you been studying Byron White protocols? Jazzman [ ] cowden 70% effective > P.S. regarding the Cowden protocol being 70% effective: I think this is similar to what Buhner says for his protocol, and probably to what many ILADs docs state for their ABX protocols. You often hear that about 25% has a total cure or nearly full recovery, 50% or so has significant improvement and maybe 25% has no improvement or continues to get worse. Even some very alternative protocols (where IMHO it is very unlikely that they could do anything against Borrelia) make such claims. Of course, some protocols claim even 100% recovery but I won't comment furter on those here This suggests to me that none of the protocols may be very effective (in general, they could still be effective for individual cases). If you don't do anything and wait long enough, maybe you get similar percentages of 'cured', 'improved' or 'no benefit'. We don't know, because almost every patient tries something... Maybe the group that sees full recovery were less ill, or had a less persistent Bb strain. Maybe the group that sees no benefit has multiple infections or an extra-naughty Bb strain, or an additional medical problem. We simply don't know and unfortunately, the same goes for almost all the research on treating LD with ABX Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2010 Report Share Posted November 22, 2010 On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 1:03 PM, knot_weed <tek0nik@...> wrote: > > > > > > > > > P.S. regarding the Cowden protocol being 70% effective: I think this is > similar to what Buhner says for his protocol, and probably to what many > ILADs docs state for their ABX protocols. You often hear that about 25% has > a total cure or nearly full recovery, 50% or so has significant improvement > and maybe 25% has no improvement or continues to get worse. > > Even some very alternative protocols (where IMHO it is very unlikely that > they could do anything against Borrelia) make such claims. Of course, some > protocols claim even 100% recovery but I won't comment furter on those here > > > This suggests to me that none of the protocols may be very effective (in > general, they could still be effective for individual cases). If you don't > do anything and wait long enough, maybe you get similar percentages of > 'cured', 'improved' or 'no benefit'. i would have to highly disagree with > this statement considering most lyme patients decline and in my case almost > deteriorate while waiting just for a diagnoses which for some can and has > taken years and they do not get better by doing nothing but get worse. We > don't know, because almost every patient tries something... > > Maybe the group that sees full recovery were less ill, or had a less > persistent Bb strain. Maybe the group that sees no benefit has multiple > infections or an extra-naughty Bb strain, or an additional medical problem. > We simply don't know and unfortunately, the same goes for almost all the > research on treating LD with ABX > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2010 Report Share Posted November 22, 2010 I was on the Cowden Modified Protocol (alternating samento and cumanda and put some banderol in at the end), for 8 months. It was the treatment that made my lyme go into remission. Before the CP, I had an IV port put into my arm that emptied into my top heart valve. I pumped 2 grams of rocephin through this port for 28 days and 3 weeks after the treatment was over, the lyme arthritis and fever returned. This " treatment " also cost $19,000.00, while the CP was very reasonably priced. After only 3 weeks on the Cowden Modified Protocol, all my bones including my heel bones stopped hurting. I began to feel alive again, run and wear fashionable shoes. May all of you find a treatment that works for you. Take care, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 23, 2010 Report Share Posted November 23, 2010 > > Knotweed, > > Have you been studying Byron White protocols? no, never heard of it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 23, 2010 Report Share Posted November 23, 2010 > > > My observation: we're all different. The treatment(s) that work for us, work for us. If they're good enough, they are our own successful treatments. That's what each of us have to find. Some find it with IV rocephin, some with oxygen dives, some with stem cell injections. Etc. Me, I'm doing well on clindamycin abx right now. Plus mangosteen juice for my eyes, noni juice and grapeseed extract to successfully stop lipoma tumors - yes, we're rather interesting frontline medical experiments here. - Robin I agree when it comes to Lyme, but this is pretty contrary to normal (western) medical thought, and suggests that we don't understand the disease, or that LD is not a normal disease but instead a collection of many somewhat similar disease processes. Finding what works for you is impractical and expensive, many lymies have to go through countless treatments before they find something that works. An additional problem is that there is a time windows of maybe 6-24 months after infection where you still have good chances to get rid of the disease completely. It would be very helpful if people could start the treatment that suits them within this period ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 23, 2010 Report Share Posted November 23, 2010 Knotweed - of course it's contrary to normal Western medical thought that segments everything into body parts, with medical tests for each. We are a zebra, not the horse! So it involves a paradigm shift in thinking for the medical field, and we unfortunately happen to be ahead of them at this point, altho I don't see why they couldn't be following the medical research that's going on now with all the bugs to see how they work and could be treated - that's very scientific ongoing work. when you say it suggests we don't understand the disease, well, no one does exactly - they're still finding out how all the bugs work, their various strains, etc. They've just gotten the complete DNA for 13 Lyme strains, I think. Finding treatments - I didn't know I had Lyme for 25 years - what do you think all us fibros were doing? Throwing treatments at ourselves to see if anything would help. I can report that flower pollen really picked up my energy and mental clarity. Malic acid and mg picked up my energy. Certain pain alleviation tools helped. So when I found out what I had, it was no big deal to me when I heard we'd just have to see what works. Albeit with some bloodwork - that can be done to see our blood chemistries, like how low we are in Vit D, or how well we genetically detox. Exactly re the window of time to treat. We have one doctor here whose office is offering to get newly bit people in for a low fee to get them on prophylactic antibiotics. One of the stumbling blocks has been the doctor fees, and alot of new people don't have the money to go or take a wait and see attitude because of the expense. This doctor may be the only one I've heard of so far to offer this. I wish they all would, so we could stop the immediate Lyme infections. Not sure what they're doing about coinfections. Would be nice if they're stopping those too right away. We are this unique universe and we have to find our way through it, learn about it, educate about it, advocate about it. - Robin [ ] Re: cowden 70% effective > > > My observation: we're all different. The treatment(s) that work for us, work for us. If they're good enough, they are our own successful treatments. That's what each of us have to find. Some find it with IV rocephin, some with oxygen dives, some with stem cell injections. Etc. Me, I'm doing well on clindamycin abx right now. Plus mangosteen juice for my eyes, noni juice and grapeseed extract to successfully stop lipoma tumors - yes, we're rather interesting frontline medical experiments here. - Robin I agree when it comes to Lyme, but this is pretty contrary to normal (western) medical thought, and suggests that we don't understand the disease, or that LD is not a normal disease but instead a collection of many somewhat similar disease processes. Finding what works for you is impractical and expensive, many lymies have to go through countless treatments before they find something that works. An additional problem is that there is a time windows of maybe 6-24 months after infection where you still have good chances to get rid of the disease completely. It would be very helpful if people could start the treatment that suits them within this period ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 23, 2010 Report Share Posted November 23, 2010 > > So it involves a paradigm shift in thinking for the medical field, and we unfortunately happen to be ahead of them at this point, altho I don't see why they couldn't be following the medical research that's going on now with all the bugs to see how they work and could be treated - that's very scientific ongoing work. when you say it suggests we don't understand the disease, well, no one does exactly - they're still finding out how all the bugs work, their various strains, etc. They've just gotten the complete DNA for 13 Lyme strains, I think. Yes, I think we need a paradigm shift here. I don't think LD research will get much further with just Borrelia genetics or biochemistry (just like knowing your own genetic code will tell you very little about your personal health). IMHO Borrelia genetics is just one part of the big puzzle. Maybe quorum sensing is going to bring new concepts of disease and treatment, but for now it is a new universe where we now very little. But it's interesting for me to see that some of the Buhner herbs seem to rely on quorum sensing for their medical benefit. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 23, 2010 Report Share Posted November 23, 2010 To all my Lymies Friends, It is a combination protocol. I use Buhner protocol with Dr Burascano and after 9 months of treatment i started feeling better but not until I started detox with Welcholl and Cholastarmine. I switch every two hours before I take Buhner Protocol from antibiotics. But what really help me the most is after my detox, I started treatment for my Neuro with Neurofeedback. Im looking forward to return to work not 100% but functional. I have Neuroborroloisis and Bartonella. I follow Dr Buhners protocol religiously alternating Dr Burascano and antibiotics. It really depends to your system. ________________________________ From: Blanchard <snowgirlvt@...> Sent: Mon, November 22, 2010 4:19:44 PM Subject: Re: [ ] cowden 70% effective The more I read one can't help but become discouraged with the long term prognosis of treating Lymes and Bartonella. It sounds like it's a life long battle and no one ever really cures it. I'm trying to listen to the optimistic side of my brain and be patient with results and believe that we will all cure this. It gets so frustrating at times. Is there anyone on this board that can share a full success story with the Bruhner Protocol? Cassano VT PBiS Coach 802-236-6637 snowgirlvt@... PRIVACY & Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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