I don't mind taking the risks. What is the best way to put cfs into complete remission?

wolves2626

Senior Member
Messages
103
Thank you for the detailed explanation!

I actually once had a big improvement with SNRI, but after about 2 months, it went back to normal

Also, Clonazepam was effective for me temporarily

I think that the right psychiatric medication can be effective not only for the psychiatric symptoms but also for the physical symptoms of CFS

I tried Pregabalin, and it did have some effect

However, Tricyclic antidepressants are the most effective for me, but I can't continue because of the cardiac side effects. It would be great for me if I could continue with Tricyclic antidepressants...

I've been looking for a creative doctor or therapist who uses a lot of psychiatric and off-label medications...
have you tried nortriptilin it is a version with little cardiac side effects i recall.
abilify may be then worth a try.
 
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75
Location
Amsterdam, NL
IMO after a massive amount of personal research, ME/Fibro is caused by a bacterial infection which changes the permeability of the digestive system causing inflammation and autoimmune reactions. There is also tissue destruction in two very important areas one of which has been fairly well indicated by people who have been found to have empty Sella and partially empty Sella. The hypothalamus is similarly affected. Add LipoPolySaccharides, highly inflammatory molecules from gram negative cell walls which are absorbed into the bloodstream in the colon where the gut wall is compromised. Doctors don't understand how the human body functions.
Are you a patient of professor KDM by any chance?

This is similar to his theory model.
 

Carl

Senior Member
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449
Location
United Kingdom
No the ideas are my own and I came to them in January 2014. In 2015 while I was looking for a solution I was hit by Lyme disease and it's complications which I have been trying to deal with ever since.....

KDM? Is that Dr. Kenny De Meirleir?
https://www.journalismfund.eu/supported-projects/chronically-tired-wallet-professor-de-meirleir
I have just read that he claimed/claims that he believes that mycoplasma bacteria play a part in CFS/ME/Fibro which is a very different idea to my theories because I don't believe that there is any pathogen in the blood which causes the illness. However the high level of inflammation can disrupt the immune system function which can make it difficult for the immune system to perform it's normal function. My ideas centre around the compromise of the digestive barrier by potentially various pathogens which promotes inflammation, allowing food molecules and proteins into the bloodstream which promote an autoimmune reaction. My ideas also explain the excessive urination, the blood pressure associated problems caused by damage to both the Hypothalamus and Pituitary gland. He appears to earn his money from selling expensive treatments based upon his ideas which I don't think I agree with, however I would need to read more about his ideas before I can say whether I disagree with all his ideas. Do you have any links?
A role for a leaky gut and the intestinal microbiota in the pathophysiology of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS)
The announcement of that research project lead me to working out what causes it just after the project was announced. It was announced in late 2013 if I remember correctly. I did that before Daniel Vipond finished his PhD and released his paper.
I read a book called "Increased Intestinal Permeability aka Leaky Gut Syndrome" by Case Adams PhD which I still have with me to hand. It has some interesting details about the formation of the digestive system and it's population beginning with the mother and the babies birth. However I disagree with the treatments that he proposes. Plus thousands of research papers courtesy of Sci-Hub.
 

Carl

Senior Member
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449
Location
United Kingdom
He does seem to put people on long term antibiotics but from what I see he does not treat the biofilm(s) and therefore the antibiotics will probably not have much success against the pathogens which cause CFS or Fibro. He seems to put people on expensive pig liver extracts which would have not effect against the pathogens. Our ideas are very very different and you are mistaken thinking that there is any connection.
 
Messages
75
Location
Amsterdam, NL
My ideas centre around the compromise of the digestive barrier by potentially various pathogens which promotes inflammation, allowing food molecules and proteins into the bloodstream which promote an autoimmune reaction
it still seems quite similar. His ideas change overtime, but he has always been focusing on the gut.

Inflammation in the gut (triggered by a certain infection) > bacterial overgrowth / permeability + translocation (SIBO) > chronic immune activation > dysimmune function > immunity out of balance (th1-th2), B cells affected, T cells not functioning properly …

this is example diagnosis:
Disturbed intestinal immunity due to Gram-negative sepsis, with increased lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from gram-negative intestinal bacteria (causing sepsis)
• stool examinations show Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth
S.I.B.O. are large intestinal bacteria that grow in the small intestine and enter the body there

NOTE: I’m not saying he’s correct, but just laying out his core theory
(next to persistent Lyme infection)
He does seem to put people on long term antibiotics but from what I see he does not treat the biofilm(s) and therefore the antibiotics will probably not have much success against the pathogens which cause CFS or Fibro
- his protocols vary through the years: It’s not that much antibiotics these days.
More stuff like, Lyme protocols and trials JAK-inhibitors etcetera etc.

explain the excessive urination
Is that common?
I haven’t heard that much.

Daniel Vipond
Interesting paper I’ll check it.


However I disagree with the treatments that he proposes.
What treatments do you propose?
– and have you been successful with it?
 

Daffodil

Senior Member
Messages
5,894
This is so promising, but feels like we don't know enough yet so it's random luck.
not that random. if you find a very healthy person, have them tested, and do DIY FMT for a prolonged period of time, the likelihood looks pretty high that you will get results. Only a few people have done this for 1-2 years. It takes a lot of fortitude to do this. Eventually, I think you will recover. Then, you can taper off. It is not a long shot at all.

Most who can do this, live with their donor. With minimal time after defecation and minimal processing, they probably get some good anaerobes to make it work.

You can try THAENABIOTIC for less risk. Its sterile and has the metabolites only. It is helping me but again, cost is an issue
 

Daffodil

Senior Member
Messages
5,894
He does seem to put people on long term antibiotics but from what I see he does not treat the biofilm(s) and therefore the antibiotics will probably not have much success against the pathogens which cause CFS or Fibro. He seems to put people on expensive pig liver extracts which would have not effect against the pathogens. Our ideas are very very different and you are mistaken thinking that there is any connection.
I was curious if Abilify, which is helping a lot of patients, had activity in the gut. Turns out the drug targets fungal? biofilm. I am beginning to have a sneaking suspicion that fungus is going to turn out to be v important
 

Daffodil

Senior Member
Messages
5,894
This may be emerging as an effective treatment option for a subset though the clinical trials are for Long Covid which seems to be a very similar condition. https://www.reversinglongcovid.org/ (no money for ME/CFS trials)

I personally know two people who have had impressive gains from Rinvoq (the gains came after stopping the drug with the theory being that taking it for a limited time might reset our immune function). I also know of two others who have gone into remission though I don’t know them personally. One person is the person whose story is linked above and the other (who is still experiencing a progression of post Rinvoq changes) has so far has found that orthostatic intolerance has disappeared (blood pressure dropping over 30 points when standing for 10 minutes leading to syncope), sleep much improved, mental energy improved, hormonal and metabolic abnormalities normalized, and immune system changes such as regaining the ability to get a sore throat. The changing are continuing to emerge though it is too early to know if there will be complete remission. This person has had ME/CFS for many years.

Though JAK 1 inhibitors will likely only work for a subset, they are very intriguing and deserve study.
Sushi!!!! my old friend!!
 
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