Then you can as a side note tell him about the Abilify tolerance. Regarding the poll in Facebook group it’s 1 out of 6I seem to recall Dr Ron Davis in one of his update stated that OMF would be examining the mould issue as well. I have not heard anything, but then I miss a good deal. Any updates?
And whether the Nystatin was bioavailable?
So this study has already been posted in the Research section of PR, but the thread has sort of died as it started back in 2013. I am reposting here because it's directly related to mould and mycotoxins and feel it's a useful area of discussion in this area of the site.
Here is the link
And this is the abstract:
So 93% of CFS patients were positive for at least one mycotoxin, whereas 0% of healthy patients tested positive!
Is this not completely groundbreaking?! Surely it provides a massive indication that mycotoxins are a direct cause of CFS in a huge number of patients? I guess perhaps it could also mean that whatever is causing the CFS in patients (say, bacterial dysbiosis) is also making the body more susceptible to mould infection, but the incidence of over 90% seems to me too high to be mere coincidence, no?
I'm particularly interested in this because I have severe CFS (grade 1 on the PR scale) and also tested positive for several mycotoxins back in January. Specifically my Ochratoxin A was very high (scored 18), as well as Citrinin (66), and Mycophenolic acid (110). Ochratoxin was mentioned in the report as being the most common, found in 83% of patients.
(From my own experience with CFS too, the most success I've had so far is in treating mould/fungus. Back when I first got CFS around 6 years ago I also had POTS and was basically bedbound the whole time, and it progressed very quickly. My first doctor's aim was to treat gut dysbiosis and prescribed antibiotics, but these didn't help. She then prescribed Nystatin powder which I slowly built up over the course of 9 months and gradually got better - both my mental fogginess and my CFS seemed to be on the wane. But in spite of these improvements my food sensitivities seemed to be getting worse, until a really bad episode with food sent me straight back to being largely bed-bound.
Since then my issues with food have completely dominated my health and my life, and I was formally diagnosed with Mast Cell Activation Syndrome (MCAS) earlier this year. But I am not nearly as bad as I was prior to treating for mould, and I no longer have POTS at all. My CFS now seems completely related to the MCAS (which itself is triggered by food) and if I fast for several days my CFS reduces considerably.
Clearly I have not gotten rid of all the mould in my body, and I have absolutely no doubt the mould is also directly contributing to my MCAS and my CFS. And I would love to get back to treating the mould but any treatments I now try seem to trigger my MCAS too much to make them manageable. My plan for now entails reducing my MCAS symptoms with mediators. Hopefully these work, after which I will get in touch with some mycotoxin specialists and attempt to get rid of my remaining mould.)
Overall though I had no idea though about the degree to which mycotoxin illness was prevalent in CFS patients. I mean, 93% just seems completely insane to me and way too high to be mere coincidence?! I feel I must be missing something, is this not groundbreaking info for CFS sufferers? Am I wrong here, what am I missing?
I'd also be interested to hear if anyone here's had success with treating for mould? And if so, which treatments? Purely gut related or also other treatments to remove mycotoxins?
And also, whether anyone has had any success with the MCAS route I am on right now, specifically treating the MCAS first with mediators and then following up with mould treatments.
Thanks, Hugo
Hi Hugo,
Thank you for opening up the thread and sharing the study.
1. Have you ever moved to a dry and/or mycotoxins-free place, and if so, did you improve?
2. Nystatin is not as far as I know a drug that usually improves people with CIRS, as it is not a binder. Yes. It can kill yeast, but only in the gut (and mold is normally in the sinuses and lungs--that if it indeed colonizes us, which is a hot topic of debate)
. So, could you actually have had a problem with yeast and not with mold? I mean, perhaps you had a high degree of the old "chronic candiasis" as past of the dysbiosis that is inherent to ME/CFS?
If your question to the last question is affirmative, I gues you could benefit from a low carb diet? Have you ever tried it? Actually not just low carb, but also free of mycotoxins-containing foods such as coffee, nuts, cereals, etc.? If you got MCAS after Nystatin it does point to food allergens, and a elimination diet could help (such as the Whals diet for MS or a complete carnivore diet as used for autoimmunity and brain cancer).
If your respond positively to the first question, then do treat it. I've seen a couple of close cases improve tremendously (and many on FB groups). And do research CIRS when energy allows. There's just too many things intertwined with ME/CFS to not be at least a subset (actually only a 7% of CIRS patients are caused by mycotoxins according to Shoemaker. The rest can be Lyme or any other infection or toxin).
I hope you figure out if this is a proper treatment for you!
Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is a life-threatening infection due to Aspergillus fumigatus and other Aspergillus spp. Drugs targeting the fungal cell membrane (triazoles, amphotericin B) or cell wall (echinocandins) are currently the sole therapeutic options against IA. Their limited efficacy and the emergence of resistance warrant the identification of new antifungal targets. Histone deacetylases (HDACs) are enzymes responsible of the deacetylation of lysine residues of core histones, thus controlling chromatin remodeling and transcriptional activation. HDACs also control the acetylation and activation status of multiple non-histone proteins, including the heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90), an essential molecular chaperone for fungal virulence and antifungal resistance. This review provides an overview of the different HDACs in Aspergillus spp. as well as their respective contribution to total HDAC activity, fungal growth, stress responses, and virulence. The potential of HDAC inhibitors, currently under development for cancer therapy, as novel alternative antifungal agents against IA is discussed.
But my symptoms first arose after a few days of taking it, suggesting the reaction was in fact due to (1) the Nystatin killing the yeast, (2) the yeast toxins entering the bloodstream (3) the toxic load increased to the point where it overloaded the immune system, causing a reaction.
Fact 1 is reasonable. Fact 2 is just guessing though. Killing yeast could do all sorts of alterations in the intestines (and elsewhere) without involving mycotoxins, so 'toxins entering the bloodstream' is just one of many possible mechanisms. I'm not saying that it's wrong; just that it's lacking in evidence that it's the right explanation. One possible test would be to have serum mycotoxins measured before taking nystatin, and then after taking if for a while.
Histone deacetylase inhibition as an alternative strategy against invasive aspergillosis
Lamoth F, Juvvadi PR and Steinbach WJ (2015) Histone deacetylase inhibition as an alternative strategy against invasive aspergillosis. Front. Microbiol. 6:96. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00096
That's a fascinating idea. The key question here is: what would be the side effects of histone deacetylase inhibitors on human cells?
https://www.biolab.co.uk/index.php/cmsid__biolab_test_kit_request_formWhat is the best test for mold and mycotoxins? Urine test? Would it be possible to ship it to another country if they dont test for this where I live?
Interesting!Dr. Syed Haider mentioned mold toxicity and claims that Ivermectin helped patients with mold toxicity. I'm not sure to which degree he clarified correlation vs. causality though and if the patients actually met the ME criteria. But it's interesting that this seems to happen more frequently after the COVID-19 pandemic, besides the LHS.
this seems to happen more frequently after the covid-19 pandemic, besides LHS