it would really help my chance if success if they could put "dog medicine" or something else as the contents of the package maybe
Funny you should mention dog medicine...
A veterinary vaccine for dogs called
Staphage Lysate was mentioned briefly earlier in this thread. This vaccine contains
staphylococcal antigens, which are one of the components found in the original Staphypan.
From one of
Gottfries's studies:
Staphage Lysate (Delmont Laboratories, USA) has been shown in experiments to be a potent immune stimulant, especially on the T-lymphocytes.
The preparation has also been reported to induce cytokines, thereby promoting T-helper subclass 1 (Th1) cellular immunity.
This is of some interest, since the defence against infections is primarily said to be dependent on Th1-driven mechanisms. Furthermore, in laboratory animals, treatment with Staphage Lysate was found to provide nonspecific protection against other infectious agents.
Because these staphylococcal antigens are found in the original Staphypan vaccine, it's possible they are responsible (or partly responsible) for Staphypan's beneficial effects on ME/CFS.
ME/CFS doctor Ritchie Shoemaker was at one stage (and possibly still is) administering Staphage Lysate vaccine to humans, but he was sent a warning letter from the FDA, mainly though for not filling out the right paperwork (see
here). Apparently the manufacturer of Staphage Lysate, Delmont Laboratories, do hold a licence to sell a version of Staphage Lysate intended for humans, but they only offer a dog version.
Interestingly, Shoemaker got his ME/CFS patients to administer this Staphage Lysate vaccine not by injection, but
intranasally using a nasal spray (see
here). I could not find much online about what benefits Shoemaker's patients got from Staphage Lysate, but that would be very interesting to know.
There is also a
Russian Staphylococcus antifagin vaccine for humans made by
www.biomedm.ru (available for sale in Russia
here,
here and
here), which looks like this:
Russian Staphylococcus Antifagin Vaccine (front of box):
Russian Staphylococcus Antifagin Vaccine (back of box):
This Russian Staphylococcus antifagin vaccine is similar to Staphage Lysate: like Staphage Lysate, the Russian antifagin vaccine contains staphylococcal antigens, but does not contain any toxoids.
So if you want to try a staphylococcal antigen vaccine, there is a choice of Staphage Lysate (if you don't mind taking dog medicine), and the Russian Staphylococcus antifagin vaccine.
I have done nearly two months on the Russian
Staphylococcus alpha toxoid vaccine by Medgamal, without noticing any significant improvements (apart from often feeling my ME/CFS symptom are abating just on the day after injecting the vaccine).
So at this stage, it is beginning to look like: (1) either I am a non-responder to the alpha toxoid vaccine — and remember that only one third of Gottfries's clinical trial patients got major improvements from Staphypan, and one third had no response at all; so it would not be unusual to be a non-responder; (2) or alpha toxoid is not the component of Staphypan that works for ME/CFS. I guess we won't know whether Medgamal's Staphylococcus alpha toxoid vaccine has benefits for ME/CFS until others try it.
Anyway, I am going to keep taking the Staphylococcus alpha toxoid vaccine for another two months or so. I have nearly finished the introductory 8 week schedule which requires one vaccine injection per week for 8 weeks (at slowly increasing dose levels). So from now on, my schedule involves taking just one full vaccine injection (1.0 ml) every four weeks, which is very easy to follow.
However, I am also now thinking in terms of trying out one of the staphylococcal antigen vaccines like Staphage Lysate, or the Russian Staphylococcus antifagin vaccine.