Poll: When do you brutally honestly think there will be a cure for ME?

When will ME really be cured?


  • Total voters
    130
Messages
84
Location
Indiana, US
would a follow up opportunity develop later, after we hear of your great success and that of the other members?

Yes, there will be but it will be more expensive. The initial group gets special treatment, and it will always be the discounted price for all original members in the first buy, this was something we worked out with them in the "contract" from day 1. The first batch they are actually lossing money initially... Or at least breaking even. But it's an investment for them, so they're doing it.
 
Messages
84
Location
Indiana, US
Extreme speculation.

I wouldn't call it that, I would call it extreme scientific and deductive reasoning based on many things:

1) 82% positive EV vs 15% controls.
2) IFN Alpha (much weaker, not targeted at gut) sending on average 40% into temporary remission.
3) Already seeing many people improve on Gs4, which is an RdRp inhibitor.
4) Ampligen helps a lot, but has to be sustained.
5) Long COVID being helped by antivirals, like paxlovid.
6) Countless studies on the drug clearing persistent infections like rotavirus, norovirus.
7) Studies showing EV can cleave IFN signaling and production.
8) Recent studies showing genetic deficiency in IFN lambda can lead to worsened infections.
9) Studies showing weakened epithelial barrier allowing viruses to create a home in the gut.
10) Recent study showing IFN lambda was 91% effective with a SINGLE DOSE of reducing severe COVID cases and hospitalizations.
 

GlassCannonLife

Senior Member
Messages
819
I wouldn't call it that, I would call it extreme scientific and deductive reasoning based on many things:

1) 82% positive EV vs 15% controls.
2) IFN Alpha (much weaker, not targeted at gut) sending on average 40% into temporary remission.
3) Already seeing many people improve on Gs4, which is an RdRp inhibitor.
4) Ampligen helps a lot, but has to be sustained.
5) Long COVID being helped by antivirals, like paxlovid.
6) Countless studies on the drug clearing persistent infections like rotavirus, norovirus.
7) Studies showing EV can cleave IFN signaling and production.
8) Recent studies showing genetic deficiency in IFN lambda can lead to worsened infections.
9) Studies showing weakened epithelial barrier allowing viruses to create a home in the gut.
10) Recent study showing IFN lambda was 91% effective with a SINGLE DOSE of reducing severe COVID cases and hospitalizations.

Fingers crossed mate.
 
Messages
38
Fair point, I meant cure as in an actual cure, but if there is a treatment that is in essence as effective as a cure then that would be good enough I guess!

The word cure is extremely misleading to me, was there ever a cure to something? Is what we define as a 'cure' simply a 'single dose' treatment?
 
Messages
84
Location
Indiana, US
I’m not expecting a cure. What diseases have ever been cured?


Scurvey, Hepatitis C, etc.


Also note after hep c got a cure, magically mental institutions lost 35% of their business. I really do think a lot of chronic illnesses are all viral induced. Just recently ata 188 cured an MS patient, by transplanting t cells to remove chronic ebv.
 
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Rufous McKinney

Senior Member
Messages
14,502
Also note after hep c got a cure, magically mental institutions lost 35% of their business. I really do think a lot of chronic illnesses are all viral induced. Just recently ata 188 cured an MS patient, by transplanting t cells to remove chronic ebv.

Oprah and Prince Harry just did a mental health feature.

Its a bit frustrating to think of folks with that power and notoriety- if they put their weigh behind comprehensive viral research: maybe we'd have very little mental illness and many fewer chronic illnesses which are so depreciating and degrading.

So Darn It.
 
Messages
84
Location
Indiana, US
that has a treatment? My friend...got treated for that about ten years ago but it was, I seem to recall, a very dangerous medication, interferon or something.

I hope we can get TREATMENTS that help us function and feel better. A cure would be great, but TREATMENTS are more realistic.

Apheresis, perhaps.

They used interferon alpha which is far more dangerous than other IFNS. Regardless there is treatments. And again look at MS being cured with t cell transplants. We have ampligen for a treatment althought expensive, and that's been around awhile.

Regarding HELP, I wouldn't bother. Recent community poll showed only 20% got helped by it. 40% no change. 20% got hurt by it and the other 20% couldn't tolerate.... I don't see HELP being a treatment outside of early onset long haulers, and it'll probably have to be sustained regularly as well.

[GROUP=][/GROUP]
 
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