How about a tetanus shot?
After reading up on the tetanus symptoms (lock jaw, muscle tensions, eXotoxins, difficulty swallowing etc.) I am strongly considering this. I was born with a long lasting navel infection.
There are two shots possible, I understand:
a) normal vaccination with tetanus toxins or something
b) an IGG shot.
When someone already has tetanus, an IGG-Shot with tetanus-antibodies is done.
The IGG-shot-ingredients seem: Sodium chloride, Glycine and Sodium acetate
https://www.medicines.org.uk/emc/medicine/14702
...means, no metal.. sounds reasonable?
It is said not to last long, and it has to be repeated.
very interestingly...
Medically nothing can be done about the tetanus exotoxins produced.
Or once you are infected with tetanus bacteria - you just are. antibiotics dont seem to help much (i understood), nothing homeopathic either. no herbs - just for the side effects a little.
Heat may destroy the exotoxins, but its about 80-90C, around boiling temperatur. Bit too much?
but then...
H2O2 destroys exotoxins !?
Did i understand that right?
That would be breaking news to me, as this oxygene h2o2 stuff did do some miracle.
effective antibiotics against tetanus (best one first):
- sparfloxacin,
- erythromycin,
- tetracycline,
- gentamycin,
- chloramphenicol,
- metronidazole and
- ciprofloxacin
A 2008 study in Kano, Nigeria sought to determine the susceptibility of
Clostridium tetani to various antibiotics. Soil was collected from five different locations and cultured under anaerobic conditions to observe the number of samples which contained
Clostridium tetani spores. The bacteria was observed in 60% of the soil samples. The samples were treated with amoxicillin, chloramphenicol, tetracycline, erythromycin, augmentin, co–trimoxazole, metronidazol, penicillin V, gentamycin, cloxacillin, sparfloxacin and ciprofloxacin to determine antibiotic susceptibility. The most effective antibiotic in preventing colony growth was observed to be sparfloxacin, with erythromycin, tetracycline, gentamycin, chloramphenicol, metronidazole and ciprofloxacin also preventing growth. The remaining antibiotics appeared to be inaffective against
Clostridium tetani. [Bukar et al.]