Is it the possible estrogenic effects that have kept you from trying it until now?
You can apparently get some slight breast development in males from the estrogenic effects of extremely high genistein doses, though I am not too concerned with that (assuming it is reversible).
I should really try genistein, but there are several reasons why I haven't so far:
First I am a little skeptical that even at these high doses of 2 grams daily, genistein might not be powerful enough, because it is weak compared to Valcyte.
Although increasing the genistein dosage further should proportionally increase its Potency Factor. So for example, doubling the genistein dose from 2 to 4 grams will double its Potency Factor. And an extremely high genistein dose of 12 grams daily should in theory have the about the same antiviral potency as 900 mg of Valcyte daily.
I found a
study where they used extremely high doses of genistein, 12 grams daily for 2 years, and there were some non-serious adverse effects in some people (including slight breast development in 2 males), but otherwise the trial went OK, and genistein was deemed safe at this high dosage.
But it would be expensive, as the Swanson genistein source I mentioned works out to around £1 per gram. You can get it cheaper on Aliexpress.com, though, with bulk genistein powder at around $0.40 per gram.
Of course this is all theory, as nobody has tested high dose genistein as a cytomegalovirus antiviral in vivo. My calculations suggest it would work, but the proof is in the pudding.
Second, I have two active viruses: coxsackievirus B4 and cytomegalovirus. Targeting just cytomegalovirus may not do much unless I can also target CVB4. But the usual treatment for coxsackievirus B used by Dr Chia, oxymatrine, unfortunately did not work for me. CVB4 I am pretty sure was the virus that triggered my ME/CFS, so this virus may be the main problem for me.
Thirdly, unfortunately I tend to lose interest in treatments unless I see benefits within a month or two at the most. And with antiviral treatment for herpesviruses in ME/CFS, clinical experience shows you really need to commit for a year, and will probably will not even begin to see benefits for 3 or 4 months. If I knew beforehand that taking high dose genistein would result in major improvements, then sure I would commit to it. But when it's just a speculative theoretical idea that it might help, then it's harder to keep faith.
Also, even with Valcyte, it's touch and go whether it will work for you; it works for some patients but not others. So even if genistein were an effective antiviral in vivo, you still have to be luck for it to work for you, because the infections in ME/CFS are very resistant to treatment, it seems. There are theories as to why this is, such as Dr Lerner's abortive herpesvirus infection theory.
I keep meaning to post a thread about this possible genistein treatment for cytomegalovirus ME/CFS, to alert other forum members about it. But really need to write up all my antiviral calculations first, so that my analysis is well documented for scrutiny by others.
Do you know the antiviral potency factor of Famvir and Acyclovir against Cytomegalovirus?
Yes, they both have a pretty poor performance for cytomegalovirus:
Famvir 1000 mg four times daily, Potency Factor =
10
Valtrex 1000 mg three times daily, Potency Factor =
108
Note that Valtrex converts into acyclovir in the body, and Valtrex 1000 mg four times daily is equivalent in efficacy to acyclovir 800 mg five times daily. Ref:
here
Given this poor performance, it's not clear why some in vivo studies (like the ones I referenced above as
1 2 3 4 5) found Valtrex and Famvir effective for cytomegalovirus. Although those studies were actually about CMV infection prevention, rather than treating active CMV infection. Maybe that makes a difference.
It could also be that the in vitro studies that I used to calculate the Potency Factor used a strain of cytomegalovirus which was more resistant to Valtrex and Famvir. Sometimes you find an antiviral is potent for one strain of a virus, but weak for another strain of the same virus. So it can depend on which strains they use in the in vitro studies.
I ended up with a chronic sinus inffection in my maxillary sinus. I've been told I need surgery to clear it becuase of scar tissue and inflammation stopping it leaving. Steroids and all other sinus sprays can't touch it because its blocked off by scare tissue.
There are accounts of fatigue improving after sinus surgery; see this article:
New Study Shows Sinus Surgery Can Improve Chronic Fatigue
Don't know if it will help (given your maxillary sinus is blocked), but I devised an "advanced" method of nasal irrigation that gets more saline into the sinuses, in order to clean out infections/toxins: see
this post.