In article <48e4fa0b$0$504$ec3e2dad@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>, katy
<katysails@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> I was just diagnosed with celiac disease at the age of 56 after a bad
> case of ****ngles. After a endoscopy's, endoscopy and blood work for
> every parasitical condition in the world, they did the celiac blood test
> and then cross referenced to the results of the endoscopy and
> colonoscopy. Said the results were at the high end of the table and that
> the celiac disease caused microscopic colitis. I took the herpes
> medication but it had no effect on the ****ngles, diarrhea, or anything
> else that I could tell. Neither my gastroenterologist or the internist
> made any correlation between the celiac disease and the ****ngles, so I
> am going to bring that to their attention. Turns out that over the years
> I have been misdiagnosed with various other food allergies and
> conditions when all along I had celiac disease. At least now I know
"Welcome to the party, pal."
Say... Bruce Willis vs. American medicine? I think American medicine
would kick his ass every time. He might be able to take on the Death
Star, but not Joe Dentist, DDS. (Too many radioactive isotopes?)
Seriously, look for metals poisoning. It's a factor in reawakened
varicella zoster infections and try Chlorella for starters. If you've
got metals poisoning, it will really make treating the virus difficult.
I thought at the time I was in the most pain, "Wow. This has got to be
as bad as the ****ngles at least." It felt like every bone in my body
was constantly being broken. I was even in pain when I was asleep,
which I didn't know was possible. I'd read what mothers had said about
childbirth and the ****ngles and how they described it and I thought what
I had was in the same order. Seven years later my test results are in
and I finally know.
What did you do for the pain? Do you still have it? I've gotten good
relief from magnesium, methyl-B12, low-dose naltrexone and - you might
find this hard to believe - green tea extract topically applied in a 50%
distilled water/50% DMSO mixture. Turns out it's a PPARalpha agonist,
which helps with pain and carnitine uptake. It's also an antioxidant
and it helps inhibit viral replication. Also trips HIF-1a which I wrote
about recently. Anyway, as long as the skin is clean and the
ingredients pure, there's little downside risk in it (as long as you
don't mind waking up looking like Kermit with green sheets and pillows).
Famous last words, of course...
You might have these food allergies, you know. Just because you're
making antibodies to gliaden, you're not off the hook for antibodies to
other foods. In fact, the Celiac may have given you other problems like
those seen in IBD. To weed this out, you'll need to pursue an allergy
elimination diet. Did you get a full viral panel? Is varicella all
you've got? Did they give you Valcyte or some sort of immunoglobulin
product or a vaccine for the ****ngles infection?
As long as you have that infection, you'll want to avoid leukotriene
blockers. A lot of allergy medicines block LTB4, which is vital for
fighting the virus [PMID 17931111]. You should probably pick through
everything you take and see how it might affect the virus or even your
Celiac. There are so many ingredients in pills that cause problems for
Celiacs.


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