To HIP, June 19:
Dr Markov, you said in an earlier post that once an infection detected in the kidneys by means of a warm urine bacterial culture, in order to check whether this infection is actually causing nephrodysbacteriosis and CBIS,
additional lab tests are performed, including blood toxicology.
This is what you posted earlier:
ME/CFS - Mystery No More! Under ME/CFS hides CBIS said:
to be sure that the detected infection also is a cause for Nephrodysbacteriosis© and ME/CFS-CBIS, it’s necessary to provide (may be provided) additional laboratory confirmation (bacteriological & blood for toxicology)
I could you please explain more about these additional lab tests that are used to confirm nephrodysbacteriosis and CBIS? What blood analytes do you test for in the blood, to detect bacterial toxins? Do you test for blood LPS levels?
And when autovaccine treatment is complete (after 6 months to 2-3 years), do you test the blood again for bacterial toxins? And are these toxins no longer present in the blood after autovaccine treatment is complete?
Thanks very much.
Dr.-med.Igor Markov answers:
Toxicological tests are quite extensive and are detailed in Report 8 “CBIS. Toxicological diagnosis” of the study “Chronic Bacterial Intoxication Syndrome under the mask of CFS/ME”. In order not to re-tell or simplify this important information, we can send you this Report 8 in its entirety to your personal email address, if you inform us.
The LPS level in the blood was not specifically determined. Various variants of toxic proteomes of bacterial origin were determined. It is with "toxic proteomes" that the terms "endotoxin" or simply "toxin", which are widely used in the medical literature, can be related. As can be seen from Table 5 of Report 8, all tested indicators of the autoimmune activity of toxic proteomes under various variants of clinically dominant toxic effects on organs and systems (n = 779) were significantly higher than normal.
Perhaps this is why many CFS/ME researchers consider this disease to be autoimmune.
Physiological elimination of toxic proteomes in the body of patients, regardless of age, was carried out mainly through the cells of the reticuloendothelial system (RES) - in 614/818 or 75.06% of cases, less often - through the liver (189/818 or 23.11%) and only in some cases (15/818 or 1.83%) - through the kidneys.
Apparently, it is with this in patients with Nephrodysbacteriosis / CBIS that the rapid absorption and subsequent accumulation of bacterial toxins from the kidneys in the bloodstream are associated, which practically do not perform the detoxification function of elimination / excretion in this pathological state.
And then their very slow subsequent excretion in a completely different way through the macrophage system of cells of mesenchymal origin, united by a common functional property - the ability to phagocytosis.
In the vast majority of patients with CBIS (738/818 or 90.22%; in children - 93/96 or 96.88%, in adults - 645/722 or 89.34%, p> 0.05), there was determined the hyperergic type of reactogenicity of the systemic response to toxic proteomes.
The normalization of toxicological blood tests after treatment (at repeated determination), unfortunately, lags behind clinical improvement and recovery. We consider the conducted toxicological studies as preliminary.
A separate group of researchers should continue to study directly bacterial toxins, including LPS, in children and adults, taking into account the existing clinical differences in the course of CBIS in adults and children of different age groups (see Report 6 “CBIS. Clinical diagnosis” of the study “Chronic Bacterial Intoxication Syndrome under the mask of CFS/ME”).
To Cipher, June 20:
Have you performed kidney biopsies to confirm that the infection actually lies in the kidneys and not just in the bladder?
Dr.-med.Igor Markov answers:
We did not and do not plan to do it ourselves or recommend it to other researchers. With regard to our patients and diagnoses of CFS / ME and Nephrodysbacteriosis / CBIS, this is an unnecessary and simply barbaric study. A bladder infection does not cause CBIS: it is simply one of the gateways for an ascending kidney infection.
To Learner1, June 26, at 6:37 AM:
I have some questions.
- How does your treatment address oxidative and nitrosative stress, including formation of peroxynitrites, impairment of mito complex I and peroxynitrite damage mito membranes, which are known features of ME/CFS?
- How does your program address low in case cell function or low B cells?
- How does your program address nutrient deficiencies like B12, vitamin D, minerals like zinc, magnesium, molybdenum or iron, or amino acids?
- How does your program address PCR positive EBV, HHV6, and other herpes family viruses, cocksackie viruses, and atypical pneumonias like chlamydia and mycoplasma pneumoniae? Or Lyme disease and co-infections?
- How does your program address hormonal imbalances, particularly hypothyroidism, low or high cortisol production, and deficiencies of imbalances of sex hormones?
Thank you very much.
Dr.-med.Igor Markov answers:
In this logical series of questions, one could still ask how “our program” solves the problem of secondary infertility, impotence, global warming, environmental pollution, etc.
Some of the questions (immune response, herpes viruses and other infections) can be answered by reading our Reports 1-6 “CBIS. Clinical diagnosis”, a significant part - has nothing to do with the etiology and pathogenesis of Nephrodysbacteriosis / CBIS. Many named and unnamed questions are a program of subsequent special in-depth clinical and laboratory study of this problem for a separate center (centers) of Nephrodysbacteriosis / CBIS on the basis of existing ME / CFS centers.
To Haru, June 28, at 6:24 PM:
Can one develop CBIS without extensive use of antibiotics?
Also I watched your video on YouTube where you mentioned the second most common symptom were the patients feeling like they drank poison; a poisoned feeling yet you haven’t mentioned this symptom in any of the case studies you illustrated.
Dr.-med.Igor Markov answers:
Yes, it may be. In 5-10% of patients with Nephrodysbacteriosis / CBIS, when researching most carefully their anamnesis, it was not possible to establish a connection with the use of antibiotics: they either simply did not exist at all, or in a minimal amount and long time ago.
Complaint about the “feeling of poisoning” was usually immediately “decoded” by patients, naming such symptoms as headache, dizziness, sweating, lack of strength to get up from bed in the morning after a full sleep (“life in bed”), pain in joints or muscles, difficulties while walking and driving a car, etc. - the statistics of each are given in Table 1 "Clinical manifestations of CBIS in children and adults (n = 4500)" (see Report 2 “CBIS. Clinical diagnosis” of the study “Chronic Bacterial Intoxication Syndrome under the mask of CFS/ME”).
To Haru, June 29, at 6:46 AM:
Also there are some clinics in the US that treat with auto vaccines. Wold their treatment work in the same way you are proposing or is there an entirely different technique in your treatment?
Dr.-med.Igor Markov answers:
we don’t know such treatment in the USA with autovaccines and what it was related to. To answer you in details, please give us additional info. regading such treatments.