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Rituximab sub study: assessment of Flow-Mediated Dilation and skin microcirculation

deleder2k

Senior Member
Messages
1,129
I'm so excited to try nitroglycerin. It is widely prescribed for heart diseases. Maybe someone has an old mom or grandmother who got it? :) It doesnt last long, but it would have been very interesting to try
 

Gingergrrl

Senior Member
Messages
16,171
Dr Goldstein had success with nitroglycerin in *some* patients.
http://www.cfstreatmentguide.com/dr-jay-goldstein-a-z-treatments.html I wish some serious doctor, researcher or government/country would just copy his whole treatment and do some proper trials on ALL his drugs and then make it available *if* they work.

@redrachel76 I have not read his book but did he say which patients nitroglycerin helped and why? Have you tried his protocol? My understanding is that nitroglycerin opens the blood vessels in someone with angina or ischemia (which I may have but still unclear) but on the flip side, if I have low blood volume and take Florinef, isn't this to tighten the blood vessels? It is all very confusing to me!
 
Messages
759
Location
Israel
I never understood his book. No I never tried Nitroglycerin. Maybe if I had been there longer.
I just thought to point out that it has been tried and it does work in *some*.

His theory was that he got a number of drugs that he used off label and they effected the brain and symptoms in CFS patients in a positive way. I never understood the medicine behind it.

@redrachel76 I have not read his book but did he say which patients nitroglycerin helped and why?
 

jimells

Senior Member
Messages
2,009
Location
northern Maine
@redrachel76 if I have low blood volume and take Florinef, isn't this to tighten the blood vessels?

No, Florinef is intended to increase blood volume by increasing blood sodium, which then requires more blood volume to "dilute" the sodium. I've been taking it for a few years at the smallest usual dose. It helps quite a bit. If I increase the dose I get bad daily headaches. Not good.

I also drink "sea water" to help increase blood volume. At least, that's the theory. My "seawater" is 1/2 tsp. table salt, 1/2 tsp. "No Salt" potassium, a liter of water, and a little lemon juice. It's similar to what Dr Cheney recommends. Florinef reduces potassium, and I guess it's supposed to be checked once in a while, but doctors aren't very good about following up on stuff like this, esp. since I avoid traveling to doctor's offices as much as possible.