Posts Tagged ‘Helminthic Therapy’

Boston trial of TSO for allergies

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Doctors at two Boston hospitals are seeking patients with food allergies – particularly those with a moderately serious peanut allergy – to take part in a clinical trial to assess the therapeutic value of ingesting the eggs of the pig whipworm, Trichuris suis (TSO).

The eggs, which are microscopic, have no discernible smell or taste and are invisible to the naked eye, are taken in a drink every other week.

The researchers believe that this treatment has the potential to change the lives of millions of allergy sufferers, no matter what type of allergy they have.

This is one of a number of trials taking place around the world to gauge the effects of replacing some of the parasites that we in the Western world have lost in recent times, due to lifestyle changes.

The reintroduction of some of these lost microorganisms, by means of Helminthic Therapy, has already proved to be of great benefit in ameliorating allergy and anaphylaxis and suitable organisms can already be purchased privately by individuals – TSO from Ovamed (five year cost approximately $55,000.00) and the human hookworm, Necator americanus (which produces the same beneficial effects in cases of allergy, yet costs only $2,900.00 over five years) from Autoimmune Therapies.

One particular question that the researchers of the Boston study hope to answer is exactly how long people would have to ingest regular doses of TSO to keep food allergies at bay. The need for this particular regimen is, however, peculiar to treatment with TSO. The human whipworm, Trichuris trichiura only needs to be taken every two years, and the human hookworm, Necator americanus, every five years. For further discussion on the selection of helminths, see Return of the Lost Worms.

Anyone interested in joining the Boston study should contact Marie-Helene Jouvin at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (617-667-2816)

Crohn’s disease needlessly claims another victim

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

An article in a Scottish newspaper recently revealed that a thirty nine-year-old Crohn’s patient had died of starvation after doctors had said there was nothing more they could do for her.

Wendy Ritchie’s case is reminiscent of that of Annabel Senior, an M.E. (CFIDS) sufferer who also found there was nothing left that she could eat without suffering unacceptably severe symptoms, so bravely chose to stop eating.

As someone with both Crohn’s disease and M.E., and very severe food intolerance, I was fortunate to discover Helminthic Therapy before I began to react to the last remaining item of food that I could tolerate.

Sadly, this treatment was not available when Annabel was alive, but I can’t help wondering what the outcome might have been for Wendy, had she been offered this option.

Helminthic therapy has been exhaustively tested in countless humans over millions of years, and optimised by evolution. There is already clear scientific evidence for its beneficial effect on Crohn’s and other autoimmune diseases, and, unlike the majority of drug treatments, helminthic therapy is safe and free from any long-term side effects.

While doctors continue to turn a blind eye to this treatment, and incorrectly advise some patients that ‘nothing more can be done’, the media are fortunately beginning to publicise helminthic therapy.

An education in evolution

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

Visitors to this blog may be more interested than most in evolutionary biology, and may wish to know that the complete course in evolutionary biology, as taught by Stephen Stearns at Yale, is now available on the web.

Setting an example that should be emulated by all academics and, hopefully, one day, will be, all of Stearns’ 36 lectures can be accessed, free of charge, by anyone.

The course presents the principles of evolution, ecology and behavior in a form that is accessible to all undergraduates, and should arguably form part of the toolkit of not only all would-be biologists but also all educated citizens.

Evolution, Ecology and Behavior (36 lectures)

Lecture 21 (Evolutionary Medicine) will be of particular interest to anyone exploring the ‘old friends’ hypothesis, ‘hygiene hypothesis’, or helminthic therapy.

The erosion of choice in healthcare

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Those who frequent the Yahoo Helminthic Therapy forum will know that, in early November, 2009, the US Food and Drug Administrtation moved against Autoimmune Therapies, the company that supplies therapeutic doses of hookworm and whipworm to individuals who wish to use these organisms as a treatment for allergy and autoimmune disorders.

By declaring these natural ‘probiotics’ to be pharmaceuticals, the FDA effectively ended AIT’s production and shipping of helminths from within the US but, with no other company anywhere in the world able to supply these particular organisms to the scores of very sick individuals who need them, Jasper Lawrence and his colleagues were determined to continue to meet their obligations to customers, so Jasper was left with no option but to abandon his home, and leave family and friends in order to relocate in haste to another country.

Shortly after this event, I heard of two somewhat similar cases in which small companies selling completely natural products have been prosecuted by government agencies.

A small US farmer selling unadulterated, raw milk – as drunk by humans since animals were first domesticated – was prosecuted after a sting operation by a local Health Department, and a small UK firm selling a sleep-aid made solely from common grasses was prosecuted by local Trading Standards officials in Wales.

Unfortunately, these are not isolated incidents, but just further examples of the steady – one might even say stealthy – erosion of the choices available to individuals who prefer alternative or natural approaches to healthcare. And, sadly, the vast majority of citizens in the US and Europe are blissfully unaware of what is taking place.

Those who are not already aware of the situation will find enlightenment in these two blogs by Jon Barron – Alternative Health – Now You See It, Now You Don’t and Nutritional Freedom, the Frog in the Water.

I feel sure that, one day, justice and common sense will prevail and consumers will assert their right to have whatever form of healing they choose for themselves, but it could be a long time yet before this happens and things may well get much more difficult in the meantime.

Those who ask what can be done about this situation might care to examine the work of Dr Joseph Mercola, whose website has been the most visited natural medicine site in the world for the last seven years, and is now also in the top ten most visited general health sites.

In the last year, mercola.com has been instrumental in educating the public about the truth behind the Swine Flu debacle. In partnership with the National Vaccine Information Centre, mercola.com helped avoid the use of squalene in the H1N1 vaccine in the US, as well as helping to prevent mandatory H1N1 vaccination, and saving the majority of US citizens from being duped by the massive PR media campaigns into accepting an unsafe and ineffective vaccine.

This is just one example of what can be achieved when individuals are appropriately informed and enabled by the internet to make a stand against scheming corporations and a clueless government, and I urge everyone who cares about maintaining freedom of choice in healthcare to join the Mercola online community and/or to bookmark the Mercola Natural Health Newsletter (or RSS link) and the Mercola Vital Votes Blog (or RSS link).

This will keep you up to date with the latest news on health and provide sound, impartial advice on how to maintain your well-being by the most natural means possible. It will also keep you abreast of the activities of those who would sacrifice your health for dubious motives. The latter are clearly stealing some of the skirmishes but, if they go on to win the war, it will be because we have let them!

As for the three companies mentioned above, the prosecution of the Bechard family by the Missouri State Milk Board and Attorney General for selling raw milk in contravention of state regulations is ongoing. The Welsh sleep-aid manufacturer is now getting back on its feet following its prosecution, and has already picked up an award for its reformulated product, Asphalia, which I can personally vouch for as a remarkably effective and side effect-free sleep-aid. Autoimmune Therapies, meanwhile, have completed the relocation of their production department and should begin shipping hookworm again this week, with whipworm to follow in a few weeks time.

Gut bacteria play a crucial role in food intolerance

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

Medicine still has no ready solution for the problem of food intolerance and, in general, doctors have shown little interest in finding one. In the absence of medical help and with no test for the condition, most patients are left to search alone, often in vain, for answers, and for whatever scant relief they can find.

A few doctors, such as allergist Prof. Jonathan Brostoff and gastroenterologist Prof. John Hunter, have taken more of an interest in this condition, and published very helpful books (The Complete Guide to Food Allergy and Intolerance and Solve your Food Intolerance respectively), but these doctors are very much the exception.

For those who don’t want to have to purchase and read their way through a book, Prof. Hunter, and agri-food scientist Karen Huntley, have recently condensed the wisdom gained from many years of clinical practice and research at the Gastroenterology Research Unit, Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge, into an online article (The Management of Multiple Food Intolerances).

The authors assert that food intolerance is caused by undigested food residues being wrongly metabolised by gut bacteria, and explain how this situation can best be managed by using means such as an elimination and/or rotation diet, a liquid elemental diet, fibre reduction, small, frequent meals, careful chewing or blending of foods and taking pancreatic enzymes and probiotics while avoiding prebiotics and antibiotics. Also discussed are the benefits of breath retraining, psychotherapy, EFT and meditation, and the merits of using laxatives and bowel washouts.

In spite of the remarkable breadth of the authors’ approach to food intolerance, this does not yet extend to the use of helminths, about which they were apparently unaware until their attention was drawn recently to my own very successful experience of using helminthic therapy for this condition (Wriggling out of food intolerance and fatigue).

Unfortunately, when doctors are made aware of this option, many tend to be extremely resistant to the idea of replacing even small, controlled doses of organisms which their training has conditioned them to perceive only in an extremely negative light. However, given Prof Hunter’s demonstration, over many years, of the critical importance of gut fauna in the development and management of food intolerance, the idea of using a few additional organisms that have a glowing therapeutic track record should not present too great a leap of imagination.

It is possible that the success of helminthic therapy in treating my own severe food intolerance may be due not just to the effect of the worms on my immune system but also to their effect on the composition and integrity of my gut microbiota, and it seems to me that the use of helminths may be a much more straightforward, powerful and elegant solution to the problem than the collection of measures which Prof. Hunter and his colleague advocate.

What happens when the good guys disappear?

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Appearing at the same time as the United Nations climate change conference is meeting in Copenhagen to try to avert impending global catastrophe, this cogent essay considers the peril that threatens each individual from within, as the human microbiome reacts to changes in sanitation, lifestyle and medicine that have taken place during the last century and are continuing apace.

This piece looks not only at the implications of losses already being sustained by sections of the human microbiome, but also considers new and hopeful developments in the drive to address this trend, such as the borrowing of models from outside medical science – taking the concept of extinction from the field of ecology, for example – and the possibility of one day screening infants for native microbiota and giving ‘immunizations’ to fill in important missing niches, in much the same way that users of helminthic therapy are already doing by reintroducing lost helminths in order to treat the allergy or autoimmune disease that has developed as a result of their absence.

Wriggling out of food intolerance and fatigue

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Taking part in the Hookworms for Crohn’s Disease trial at Nottingham University in 2007 had provided me with a brief but tantalising glimpse of how my health might be improved by hosting a small colony of benign intestinal worms, and I was determined to acquire a long-term infection as soon as possible.

To this end, I had secured the agreement of my gastroenterologist, who referred me back to the trial team for reinfection. However, in spite of an earlier indication that they would be willing to provide me with a further dose of hookworm, the trial coordinator then told me that this would not be possible until the study was complete.

This was a considerable disappointment because the trial was taking an inordinately long time – probably due to difficulty finding sufficient volunteers willing to host a small worm colony – and it became clear that the trial would not be complete until the middle of 2009.

In the meantime, I had required further bowel surgery, to repair yet more Crohn’s-related intestinal strictures, and I was still unable to eat any normal foods due to multiple allergies and overwhelming food intolerance, not to mention having a number of other long-term health problems, including M.E., a subgroup of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome characterised by inordinately exaggerated exhaustion following any activity, either physical or mental.

I was becoming impatient… (continued)

Asthma treatments – ancient and modern

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

All that is required to effect significant improvement in asthma is a small dose of benign intestinal worms.

Helminthic Therapy‘, as it is called, is entirely safe, and one dose is effective for an average of five years.

However, medicine is going through a period of parasite paranoia at the present time, so doctors are ignoring the evidence and denying patients this very simple and natural preventive/treatment option, offering, instead, a range of pharmaceuticals which, in many cases, have devastating long term consequences; surgery; and, now, an electrical stimulation technique in which an electrode is inserted under the skin of the neck into the tissue surrounding the carotid artery and vagus nerve and used to deliver electric shocks of up to 12 volts.

A small but growing number of asthma sufferers are turning their backs on these modern medical options and choosing to place their health in the hands of a few of the gut worms which had effectively protected humans from asthma for millennia, until we interrupted their life cycle by donning shoes and deffaecating in toilets.

The first group of pioneers who obtained their worms from Autoimmune Therapies have reported an average response rate of 83 per cent, and an average degree of improvement of 4 on a 5-point scale – a significant reduction in symptoms, which became evident from an average 4.8 months after the worms were reintroduced.

I don’t have asthma myself, but have acquired a small colony of hookworm to treat overwhelming food intolerance and chronic fatigue, both of which are responding remarkably well to this approach. Having had my worms for several months I am now completely unaware of their presence, except for the huge improvement in my health, for which I am constantly thankful. If I did have asthma, there is no way that I would subject myself to any of the medical treatments currently on offer, when such a simple, natural and safe option is available.

Doctors blame patients for asthma treatment failure

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

And, as this article explains, they do have a point, because medication non-compliance is a considerable problem, especially as many drugs need to be taken continuously, or for a specified period of time in order to be effective.

Interrupting, or failing to complete a course of treatment can have serious consequences for the patient and can have other effects, such as encouraging the development of drug-resistant bacteria.

However, many people lead very full and busy lives, and remembering to take medication is something that may easily slip the mind in the course of a hectic day, and this is one of several reasons why I like the idea of helminthic therapy so much.

Once you have got your dose of ‘medicine’, that’s it for the lifetime of the organism employed – five years in the case of hookworm. You can then literally forget about your treatment and get on with living your life.

It can take several months for the helminths to become established and start to do whatever it is that they do, but, from then on, the benefits are none-stop, 24/7, and, in the case of asthma, this approach is proving to be over 80 per cent effective.

These personal accounts demonstrate the success of using this approach to treat asthma.

‘Friendly’ bacteria: side-lined healers

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Of the 100 trillion ‘friendly’ bacteria, from hundreds of different species, that we each carry around in our gut, only a few may have a special role in shaping our immune responses, but one of this select group involved in immune regulation may have been found recently, in the form of a little-known bacterial species called segmented filamentous bacterium.

This ‘master’ bacterium is the first example to be found of a commensal bacterium that can simultaneously orchestrate a large spectrum of intestinal immune responses – both innate and adaptive, pro-inflammatory and regulatory – to create an immune barrier in the gut.

It can single-handedly initiate immune cell responses in mice that normally require the concerted efforts of the entire mouse microbiota and, by so doing, effectively protect mice from illness caused by an intestinal pathogen.

There is also now further evidence of the ability of ‘friendly’ gut bacteria to not only help fight infection, but also do so while maintaining a fine balance between over- and under-stimulating the immune system.

Research is also ongoing into the development of modified probiotics that can divert gut pathogens away from vulnerable intestinal cells. By adding to harmless gut bacteria molecular mimics of the sugar receptors displayed on the walls of intestinal cells, the researchers have succeeded in duping the infamous E. coli O157 pathogen into attaching to the bacteria rather than the cells, to provide 100% protection against this otherwise fatal disease.

Recent evidence to support the therapeutic use of simpler, unmodified probiotics includes Dutch research which found that treating pregnant mothers, and then their infants, with particular strains of probiotics may help prevent eczema in children with a family history of allergies.

Research conducted in China has also recently found that probiotic dietary supplementation during the winter months was a safe and effective prophylaxis against colds and influenza in children, reducing fever, rhinorrhoea and cough incidence, as well as the need for antibiotics and the number of missed school days attributable to illness. When children in the study who were taking probiotics did get fevers, coughs or runny noses, they recovered significantly faster than untreated peers.

While the Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacterium animalis strains used in this latter study were both independently effective, the best results were obtained when the two types of bacterium were combined, hinting at the possibility that the use of multiple species of organism may be preferable in the case of bacterial therapy, as it appears to be in helminthic therapy.

All this recent work adds to a substantial body of existing evidence for the therapeutic effects of probiotics, just some of which is mentioned below.

Probiotics can help fight the stomach bug Helocobacter pylori, benefit the sickest young children on antibiotics, ease antibiotic diarrhoea, and may help reduce salmonella infection.

Probiotics have been shown to be active against inflammation in models of arthritis and salmonella infection, to ease colic in breastfed babies, normalise bowel frequency in IBS patients, improve health in patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, help reduce obesity, ease ulcerative colitis, and promote oral health.

Ultimately, it may be the case that many of the ills to which our own species falls prey could be amenable to the ministrations of commensal bacteria, and with less side effects than are associated with the isolated synthetic molecules which are the mainstay of medicine today.

Yet, however attractive this idea may be to those who are ill, and however encouraging the results above, the reality is that the latter constitute only a trickle when compared with the veritable torrent of research being conducted into patentable synthetic pharmaceuticals.

Currently, medicine appears to be rather less interested in pursuing probiotic research than is the food industry, for whom functional foods – including dairy products containing probiotics – are their fastest-growing product group.

Unfortunately, the dominance of the profit motive in medical research leaves little appetite for exploration of the lost world within us, so, at the present rate of progress, it could be many decades before we understand our own microbiome sufficiently to fully capitalize on the therapeutic potential of the organisms within it.

An approach which obviates the need to identify individual beneficial bacterial species is faecal bacteriotherapy, which employs the most complete mix of human-derived probiotic bacteria possible – the entire faecal flora of a healthy human being. Already shown to be successful against ulcerative colitis, this treatment should arguably be subject to further formal trials for this and other diseases.

This approach has been around for a number of years, but has failed to capture the attention of clinicians, perhaps due to the nature of the protocol (detailed here) which some may find repugnant. This is a great pity because the therapy is low-tech, low-cost, minimally invasive, and offers perhaps the ultimate bacterial probiotic.

Whilst we are forced to rely on manufacturers to provide us with probiotics in supplement form – which usually contain only one or two strains of a very limited number of bacterial species, and are invariably expensive – the all-in-one probiotic delivered by faecal bacteriotherapy is available free, and acquiring it is within the capability of any moderately adventurous and resourceful individual. Given a willing, healthy donor and some basic equipment, this procedure is ripe for self-administration, using the rectal delivery route. Anyone who can perform colonic irrigation, should be able to manage this.

This option is therefore something which those with ulcerative colitis may wish to consider, although helminthic therapy using whipworms remains the first choice for this condition, as there is already much preliminary scientific evidence supporting its use. It is also convenient and has produced excellent results in those who have tried it thus far.

Breathing technique eases asthma, but is outperformed by worms

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

A new study is to test the hypothesis that patients may be able to reduce both the severity and frequency of asthma attacks by doing nothing more than improving their breathing technique.

Researchers from Southern Methodist University in Dallas have developed a four-week program to teach asthmatics how to deal more effectively with the acute symptoms of their condition and reduce the risk of future attacks by improving their breathing technique.

Patients on the program will learn to normalize and reverse chronic over-breathing, which usually causes sufferers to hyperventilate during an attack as a result of breathing fast and deep against constricted airways in an attempt to fight the overwhelming feeling of oxygen deprivation.

The biofeedback-based Capnometry-Assisted Respiratory Training (CART) used in the program employs a hand-held device called a capnometer, to enable patients to see the amount of CO2 they exhale, and use this measure to learn how to breathe more slowly, shallowly and regularly.

Whilst this particular biofeedback approach may be new, the idea of using breathing training to ease asthma is not. Yogic breathing has long been claimed to be able to help asthma, and its value was found somewhat helpful in a clinical trial at Nottingham City Hospital where all aspects of lung function and symptoms were found to improve a little – though not significantly – as a result of combining a pranayama-like technique with the aid of a Pink City Lung Exerciser device.

A further study at Nottingham found no benefit from using the Pink City Lung Exerciser, but did conclude that the Buteyko breathing technique, with which the PCLE was compared, can improve symptoms and reduce bronchodilator use in patients with asthma, although even this did not change bronchial responsiveness or lung function.

Overall, there have been very few studies of the effect of breathing techniques on asthma, and none has proved conclusively that they have a direct physiological effect. It might be that what benefits breathing training does have are more the result of increased relaxation and improved psychological processes, than of any direct biological impact on the chronic underlying physiological causes of the asthma itself.

Moreover, it takes time to learn breathing techniques, and they then need to be practised regularly, raising the question whether the benefits justify the commitment and effort involved.

The fact that a treatment with a less-than-glowing track record is still being actively pursued by researchers, is a clear indication that, despite all the hype, medicine still lacks a satisfactory solution for asthma. It is therefore not surprising that a growing number of asthmatics are turning to Helminthic Therapy, for which there is already considerable evidence of effectiveness against this condition.

After an initial settling-in period, the tiny worms used in this form of treatment begin to exert an influence on the host’s immune system to prevent this from harming them. Their immune modification also reduces the inflammation which underlies asthma, causing a reduction or, more usually, a complete cessation of symptoms.

One of a number of arguments for this back-to-the-future treatment is that, once they have received the worms, the patient can then effectively forget about their treatment – and their asthma – for approximately five years, which is the average life span of hookworm, the organism usually employed for this purpose.

All that is required to maintain freedom from asthma is a further dose of hookworm every five years . There are no tablets to be taken, no long-term side effects to be suffered, and no daily breathing exercises to be done!

Can you worm your way out of depression?

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

The use of antidepressants in the US has nearly doubled since 1996, and over ten percent of the US population aged six and above now take an antidepressant – twenty seven million Americans using pharmaceutical drugs to help them get through the day, with very little, if any attempt to address or even consider possible underlying causes.

This pharmaceutical approach invariably produces additional problems ranging from increased depression and suicide to weight gain, insomnia, nausea, chest pain, stroke, congenital defects, and more. Thirty percent of those on antidepressants experience sexual dysfunction, and a recent report found that antidepressants blunt the ability to express and experience love.

It may be, however, that there is another form of treatment that might prove to be effective without any of the long-term side effects attached to pharmaceutical products.

It is known that the administration of neutralizing anti-TNF antibody to patients with Crohn’s disease not only alleviates the symptoms of their Crohn’s but also reduces any depressive symptoms, and treatment with anti-TNF and other anti-inflammatory drugs has also been shown to relieve symptoms of depression in other patient groups.

This may suggest that the immunoregulatory failure that is now known to be implicated in the increased incidence of chronic inflammatory disorders such as Crohn’s disease, as well as other autoimmune disorders and allergies, could also be involved in depression, and it might be that the effectiveness of some of the currently available antidepressant medications is actually due to inflammation-reducing properties.

New research in mice has in fact recently found a biological link between inflammation and depression, identifying an enzyme which appears to be connected with both chronic inflammation and depressive symptoms.

This research has therefore revealed both a new target for drug manufacturers to aim for, and also pointed to the possibility that depression – and perhaps other stress-related psychiatric disorders – may, like allergies and autoimmune diseases, be the result of a lack of the organisms now referred to as our ‘old friends’.

If this is so, then reintroducing some of these organisms by means of Helminthic Therapy – a practice which is highly effective against inflammation – may also relieve depression.

Unlike drugs, the helminthic therapy approach, which uses low doses of carefully selected, benign intestinal worms, has no lasting side effects and is readily available from Autoimmune Therapies. This company offers a ‘no benefit, no fee’ program for those with illnesses previously not treated using Helminthic Therapy, which currently include depression. This program provides treatment free for a year, after which time the clients themselves decide whether the treatment has been successful or not. If they feel they have benefited, they pay for the treatment at that point but, if they are not satisfied with the results, the treatment is terminated and they owe nothing.

Tiny worms turn the tide on food allergy/intolerance

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

After having been unable to eat normal food for the last twenty five years, I am now once again able to enjoy the delights of a number of different foods, and this is entirely thanks to a few tiny hookworm now residing in my gut.

Most people with allergies who host hookworm find that their symptoms begin to abate between 11 and 13 weeks after their inoculation with hookworm larvae, so I waited until 12 weeks before trying a few normal foods again, and found, to my delight, that I could tolerate several of them without any difficulty.

After about six weeks of experimentation, I had found 20 foods, including proteins (white fish, goat’s milk products and eggs), starches (rice, potatoes, buckwheat and polenta), root vegetables (carrot, parsnip and sweet potato) and several fruits (apple, pear, peach and raspberries) that I could safely eat. After so many years on powdered semi-elemental formula, the humble spud tasted absolutely divine! And chocolate! Mmmmmmm! I really think I’m going to become addicted to this – again!

At 18 weeks post inoculation, I’m combining small amounts of normal foods with my medically prescribed formula feed and trying not to rush progress too quickly, and there are still days when my returning tolerance seems to waiver and my gut begins to get sore again, but it’s still early days, as hookworms take approximately six months to get into their stride.

There are also still days when I get diarrhoea, which is an inevitable consequence of acquiring 35 hookworm at the same time, and evidence of my body’s attempt to retake control of my immune system, which is now increasingly coming under the influence of my new little friends.

As my little gut buddies reestablish their ancient, symbiotic relationship with my body, these fluctuations will settle down. This process is not like taking a drug, which unilaterally imposes control on the body’s chemistry, but more a case of establishing a flexible, two-way relationship which eventually achieves an equilibrium that is mutually beneficial to both worms and host. And this process takes a while – usually about 11 months – so there is plenty of time yet for things to settle down and, hopefully, for further improvements to appear.

During these many years of having to watch others eat normally, while I could only have liquid semi-elemental infant feed, I never gave up hope that, one day, I would find a solution that would enable me to eat normally again. Helminthic Therapy, has proved to be that solution, and I’m just so pleased that, thanks to my little friends, I’m once again able to eat something with a real taste to it!

For a much more detailed account of this experiment, see: ‘Wriggling out of food intolerance and fatigue‘.

MS may respond to inexpensive hypertension drug

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

A new study using mice and human brain tissue has revealed a link between high blood pressure and multiple sclerosis, suggesting that an inexpensive drug already widely used for high blood pressure may also have therapeutic value in MS.

Lisinopril appears to have a lot going for it as a potential MS treatment. It reduces numerous molecular measures of inflammation that accompany the disease, without inhibiting overall immune competence, and it triggers the proliferation of regulatory T cells. Amazingly, when the drug was given to mice after they had already developed full-blown symptoms, lisinopril reversed their paralysis.

Meanwhile, another novel treatment for MS – Helminthic Therapy – is to be assessed in a study at Nottingham University in the UK, It is expected that this new study will add to the existing evidence for the effectiveness of this simple, natural and controllable therapy.

Another reason for Crohn’s patients to try helminths

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

The FDA has announced that it is to demand stronger warnings on TNF blockers – the drugs taken by many with Crohn’s disease and other inflammatory diseases – to reflect new information about the increased risk of cancer in children and adolescent patients.

TNF blockers in common use include Remicade (infliximab), Enbrel (etancercept), Humira (adalimumab), Cimzia (certolizumab pegol) and Simponi (golimumab).

This provides yet another reason to try Helminthic Therapy. There is compelling evidence for this treatment, in Crohn’s as well as other autoimmune diseases, and patients continue to report stunning improvement.