Gingergrrl
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Hey @Gingergrrl, thank you for your thoughtful comments, I appreciate the words of caution. That's terrific that you can go to a mainstream doctor/clinic and get autonomic testing with a neurologist. Mine didn't seem interested. I'd be very interested to see what tests they run. Sorry to hear about the MCAS/anaphylaxis, that's terrific that most was covered by insurance.
@SpecialK82 I wanted to reply b/c I think my initial response was unclear the way I wrote it. I am going up to the Autonomic Disorders Clinic at Stanford and am not seeing a mainstream doctor in my city. It is the only clinic of it's kind on the west coast and I waited 5-6 months to get the appt and it is a seven hour drive for us each way. So I am making a similar trip to what you would be doing b/c I feel it is worth it.
What I was trying to express is that Stanford's Clinic involves seeing an autonomic neurologist and four hours of testing, blood tests, etc, and I know what all possible tests are- there is no secrecy. I will not be allowed to do all of the tests b/c of the medications that I am on so they will modify it to let me do whichever ones the doctor feels are appropriate.
The comparison to my hospitalization last year is that even when I was inpatient for a week for MCAS seeing various specialists, having tests, IV meds, food, etc, my portion after insurance was a fraction of $6600. So for an outpatient program run by two optometrists, I would be very cautious to spend that much money and want to know exactly what I would be getting.
I do believe, although I don't think I read it anywhere, that her answer to certain problems with the vagus nerve and underactive parasympathetic nervous system are the supplements that she has developed. She does say in the videos, that she does not take an income on the supplements, except for the 6% affiliate fees from Amazon. Of course this can be construed as still an income, lol.
Whether she takes an income from the supplements or not (which I suspect she does), it sounds like after all your testing is done, the treatment plan will be to take her supplements. Whereas if you go to a clinic like Stanford or Vanderbilt (as examples) they are not promoting their own supplements and the treatment plan will vary for each individual depending what they find. There is no guarantee that Stanford can help me but I am confident that they will do their best.
Her treatments are supposed to treat the root problem (vagus nerve and parasympathetic nervous system) instead of treating the symptoms. If that be the case, I'm all for it. I am still nervous about it all.
I guess I'd want to know how she assesses that is the root of the problem since any random person can buy the supplement on Amazon? I am not anti-supplements in any way and have taken plenty in the last few years. In my own case, I have had toxicity reactions to meds that affective the cholinergic system and would not tolerate her supplements so I'd want to know what other options she had prior to committing that much money.
Also agree with what @Sushi said above.
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