Gingergrrl
Senior Member
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Thanks @justy and ITA and will keep all the IVIG stuff in this thread and not on the bench! Will post future updates in here. Headache not totally gone but greatly improved.
Hi GD, Honestly all of this is completely over my head but thank you for posting it in this IVIG thread vs. the burnout bench!
Both my ME/CFS and my MCAS doctors are absolutely certain that my headache was due to the infusion speed being too fast which will not happen again. My MCAS doc said that every brand has some kinds of additives but in his history of prescribing IVIG for patients with MCAS, Gamunex is the best tolerated.
I tolerated it well in the sense of no allergic reactions and at present, my MCAS is the best it has ever been with the last two weeks being able to eat foods that I literally never dreamed I would eat again in my lifetime! I wish I could give a better answer but it is above my knowledge level to even try.
It's way over my head too. Since you were not at the autoimmune dosage, how do you account for the temporary and ongoing improvements? I am now curious about the benefits receiving Glycine via IV.
I can't account for it at all and wish I understood it better. My thought is that b/c I typically do well with very small doses of meds (which is a question that @Strawberry asked me in the other thread) is it possible that the smaller dosage of IVIG is acting as if it is an autoimmune dose for me?
Regarding the Glycine IV, I was trying to think of a way to enhance the benefits of your future IVIG treatments, certainly not replace them. We are in unchartered territory here, but know there are smart people on PR that have a good understanding of the biology/physiology aspects.
I find you to be highly intelligent and value your opinion. You have exposed me to another angle of looking at this. Thank you!If you find someone super-smart let me know,.
What I can say about the above material without much in the way of smarts is that Gingergrrl's antibodies to GAD65 are related to an imbalance between glutamate and GABA. That enzyme, glutamic acid decarboxylase, is needed at an important step in the biosynthesis of GABA from glutamic acid. Generally glutamates are excitatory and produce sympathetic activation, while GABA is more likely to produce parasympathetic activation, and calm things down.
One toxin affecting both acetylcholine and glycine receptors is strychnine. You really don't want anything to do with that.
I find you to be highly intelligent and value your opinion. You have exposed me to another angle of looking at this. Thank you!
what was the pre med dose and what dose do you take daily? Yore probably right that its the IVIG - hope so!Thanks @justy and I don't think the improvement was from the steroid that I got as a pre-med before my one infusion of IVIG b/c it was just Solu Cortef and I've been taking (pill form) Cortef for over a year without these improvements. But I guess anything is possible!
@Gingergrrl If you have antibodies to beta adrenergic receptors one could expect this to affect response to steroids as well as beta blockers. Unfortunately, this is not a standard clinical test.
what was the pre med dose and what dose do you take daily? Yore probably right that its the IVIG - hope so!
I think all of us have problems with adrenal dysfunction as part of a dysregulated hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Unfortunately, this is not the same as simply a low level of adrenal hormones like those detected by beta adrenergic receptors. Many people who have had a 24-hour test of cortisol in urine have been considered "normal". The problem is that this would not detect transient responses that averaged out over a full daily cycle....
@anciendaze, when you have time could you explain what you meant re: that if I have antibodies to beta adrenergic receptors that we can expect this to affect my response to steroids? I had a disastrous 2nd attempt to taper off of Cortef and since I am assuming that I do have these antibodies (no proof yet but I assume I do), how do the two things relate? Does it make your brain more dependent on the steroid (Cortef) so it messes up the brain's natural production and ability to re-start creating hydrocortisone on it's own? Or did you mean something else?
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Hang in there! If a worm in a dauer state can re-emerge into health so can we.