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Three parts carnation, two parts lavender, two parts rosemary, two

parts basil. Use when tired or depressed. Visualize the water sparkling

with fiery drops of energy that melt into your body, lending you

vitalituy and power.

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I'm wondering if you are herxing? That would be a good thing.I'm also considering doing DMSO with the MMS1 in the bath (somewhere in this group there are instructions) but I'm wondering if we'd be smarter to use Humble's protocol of mixing it then rubbing it onto the skin over a large muscle area.  I'm wondering this because DMSO will drive everything into your bloodstream - so if there are harmful things in your water when bathing (chlorine, harmful metals, etc.) this will be driven in as well.  Hmmm?

On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 7:53 AM, kathelee <kathelee@...> wrote:

 

Bathing nightly with 20 drops did not take any MMS 1 internally last night 

Am feeling very fatigued today and wondering if it has any bearing on bath

please  ?

Also ordered DMSO and wondering if there is a formula for mixing with 

mms1 for bath please  

 

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Medicine

In cryobiology DMSO has been used as a cryoprotectant and is still an important

constituent of cryoprotectant vitrification mixtures used to preserve organs,

tissues, and cell suspensions. Without it, up to 90 percent of frozen cells will

become inactive. It is particularly important in the freezing and long-term

storage of embryonic stem cells and hematopoietic stem cells, which are often

frozen in a mixture of 10% DMSO and 90% fetal bovine serum. In the cryogenic

freezing of heteroploid cell lines (MDCK, VIRO, etc) a mixture of 10% DMSO with

90% EMEM (70% EMEM + 30% fetal bovine serum + antibiotic mixture) is used. As

part of an autologous bone marrow transplant the DMSO is re-infused along with

the patient's own hematopoietic stem cells.

Use of DMSO in medicine dates from around 1963, when a University of Oregon

Medical School team, headed by Stanley , discovered it could penetrate the

skin and other membranes without damaging them and could carry other compounds

into a biological system.

In a 1978 study at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Cleveland, Ohio,

researchers concluded that DMSO brought significant relief to the majority of

the 213 patients with inflammatory genitourinary disorders that were

studied.[10] They recommended DMSO for all inflammatory conditions not caused by

infection or tumor in which symptoms were severe or patients failed to respond

to conventional therapy.

In the medical field DMSO is predominantly used as a topical analgesic,[11] a

vehicle for topical application of pharmaceuticals, as an anti-inflammatory[12]

and an antioxidant[citation needed]. Because DMSO increases the rate of

absorption of some compounds through organic tissues including skin, it can be

used as a drug delivery system. It is frequently compounded with antifungal

medications, enabling them to penetrate not just skin but also toe and

fingernails.

DMSO has been examined for the treatment of numerous conditions and ailments,

but the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved its use not only for the

palliative treatment of interstitial cystitis; but more recently has approved

it's use for arthritis of the knee.[citation needed] Some people report an

onion- or garlic-like taste after touching DMSO. (Onion and garlic also derive

their odor from sulfoxides syn-propanethial-S-oxide and allicin.)

Dimethyl sulfoxide dissolves a variety of organic substances, including

carbohydrates, polymers, peptides, as well as many inorganic salts and gases.

Loading levels of 50-60 wt.% are often observed vs 10-20 wt.% with typical

solvents. For this reason, DMSO plays a role in sample management and

high-throughput screening operations in drug design.[13]

DMSO is commonly used in veterinary medicine as a liniment for horses, alone or

in combination with other ingredients. In the latter case, often, the intended

function of the DMSO is as a solvent, to carry the other ingredients across the

skin. Also in horses, DMSO is used intravenously, again alone or in combination

with other drugs. It is used alone for the treatment of increased intracranial

pressure and/or cerebral edema in horses.

[edit] Side-effects

Taking DMSO internally is reported to cause a fish- or oyster-like taste or odor

in the mouth, likely due to the sulfoxide metabolites of DMSO.[14]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethyl_sulfoxide

>

> >

> >

> > Bathing nightly with 20 drops did not take any MMS 1 internally last night

> > Am feeling very fatigued today and wondering if it has any bearing on bath

> > please ?

> > Also ordered DMSO and wondering if there is a formula for mixing with

> > mms1 for bath please

> >

> >

> >

>

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please what is herxing ?

Re: [ ] bath

I'm wondering if you are herxing? That would be a good thing.I'm also considering doing DMSO with the MMS1 in the bath (somewhere in this group there are instructions) but I'm wondering if we'd be smarter to use Humble's protocol of mixing it then rubbing it onto the skin over a large muscle area. I'm wondering this because DMSO will drive everything into your bloodstream - so if there are harmful things in your water when bathing (chlorine, harmful metals, etc.) this will be driven in as well. Hmmm?

On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 7:53 AM, kathelee <kathelee@...> wrote:

Bathing nightly with 20 drops did not take any MMS 1 internally last night

Am feeling very fatigued today and wondering if it has any bearing on bath

please ?

Also ordered DMSO and wondering if there is a formula for mixing with

mms1 for bath please

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Share on other sites

[Hide]

A Thank You fromWikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales

Herxheimer reaction

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Herxheimer reaction

Classification and external resources

ICD-10

T78.2

ICD-9

995.0

The Herxheimer reaction (also known as Jarisch-Herxheimer or Herx)

occurs when large quantities of toxins are released into the body as

bacteria (typically Spirochetal bacteria) die, due to antibiotic

treatment or rapid detoxification.

Typically the death of these bacteria and the associated release of endotoxins occurs faster than the body can remove the toxins via the natural detoxification process performed by the kidneys and liver. It is manifested by fever, chills, headache, myalgia

(muscle pain), and exacerbation of skin lesions. Duration in syphilis

is normally only a few hours but can be much longer, up to months or

years, for other diseases, especially Lyme Disease. The intensity of the reaction reflects the intensity of inflammation present.

The Herxheimer reaction has shown an increase in inflammatory cytokines during the period of exacerbation, including tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin-6 and interleukin-8.[1][2]

The reaction is also seen in other diseases, such as borreliosis (Lyme disease[3][4] and tick-borne relapsing fever[5]), bartonellosis, brucellosis, typhoid fever, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, and trichinellosis, Q fever, and cat scratch disease.[6][7]

[edit] History

Both Adolf Jarisch,[8] an Austrian dermatologist, and Karl Herxheimer,[9]

a German dermatologist, are credited with the discovery of the

Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction. Both Jarisch and Herxheimer observed

reactions in patients with syphilis treated with mercury. The reaction was first seen following treatment in early and later stages of syphilis treated with Salvarsan, mercury, or antibiotics. It is seen in 50% of patients with primary syphilis and about 90% of patients with secondary syphilis.[citation needed]

[edit] References

^ Vidal V, Scragg IG, Cutler SJ, et al. (December 1998). "Variable major lipoprotein is a principal TNF-inducing factor of louse-borne relapsing fever". Nat. Med. 4 (12): 1416–20. doi:10.1038/4007. PMID 9846580. ^ Kaplanski

G, Granel B, Vaz T, Durand JM (July 1998). "Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction

complicating the treatment of chronic Q fever endocarditis: elevated

TNFalpha and IL-6 serum levels". J. Infect. 37 (1): 83–4. doi:10.1016/S0163-4453(98)91120-3. PMID 9733392. ^ Maloy A, Black R, Segurola R (1998). "Lyme disease complicated by the Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction.". J Emerg Med 16 (3): 437–8. doi:10.1016/S0736-4679(98)00011-0. PMID 9610974. ^ Lawrence C, Lipton R, Lowy F, Coyle P (1995). "Seronegative chronic relapsing neuroborreliosis.". Eur Neurol 35 (2): 113–7. doi:10.1159/000117104. PMID 7796837. ^ Dworkin

M, D, Schwan T, Shoemaker P, Banerjee S, Kassen B, Burgdorfer

W (1998). "Tick-borne relapsing fever in the northwestern United States

and southwestern Canada.". Clin Infect Dis 26 (1): 122–31. doi:10.1086/516273. PMID 9455520. ^ Koehler

JE; Quinn FD; Berger TG; LeBoit PE; Tappero JW (December 3, 1992).

"Isolation of Rochalimaea species from cutaneous and osseous lesions of

bacillary angiomatosis.". New England Journal of Medicine 327 (23). PMID 1435899. ^ Koehler

JE; Duncan LM (September 29, 2005). "Case records of the Massachusetts

General Hospital. Case 30-2005. A 56-year-old man with fever and

axillary lymphadenopathy.". New England Journal of Medicine 353 (13): 1387–94. PMID 16192484. ^ Jarisch A (1895). "Therepeutische Versuche bei Syphilis". Wien Med Wochenschr 45: 721–42. ^ Herxheimer K, Krause D (1902). "Ueber eine bei Syphilitischen vorkommende Quecksilberreaktion". Deutsch Med Wochenschr 28: 895–7.

[hide]

v • d • e

Consequences of external causes (T66-T88, 990-999)

Temperature/radiation

elevated: Hyperthermia · Heat syncope · Radiation poisoning

reduced: Hypothermia · Immersion foot · Chilblain

Air

Hypoxia/Asphyxia · Barotrauma (Aerosinusitis, Decompression sickness) · Altitude sickness/Chronic mountain sickness

Food

Starvation

Maltreatment

Physical abuse · Sexual abuse · Psychological abuse

Emesis

Motion sickness · Seasickness · Airsickness · Space adaptation syndrome

Other

Electric shock · Anaphylaxis · Angioedema

Hypersensitivity (Allergy, Arthus reaction)

Subcutaneous emphysema

Certain early complications of trauma

embolism (Air, Fat)

Crush syndrome/Rhabdomyolysis

Contracture/Volkmann's contracture/Compartment syndrome

Complications of surgical and medical care

transfusion reactions: Transfusion hemosiderosis · TRALI · TACO · TA-GvHD · FNHTR · Acute/Delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction

other: Serum sickness · Malignant hyperthermia · Herxheimer reaction · Graft-versus-host disease · Tumor lysis syndrome

[edit] Sources

"Jarisch - Herxheimer"

"J-H Reaction and Lyme Disease"

"The Herxheimer Reaction"

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herxheimer_reaction"

Categories: Spirochaetes | Symptoms | Medicine stubs | Infectious disease stubsHidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from May 2008

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> > > > Bathing nightly with 20 drops did not take any MMS 1 internally last night > Am feeling very fatigued today and wondering if it has any bearing on bath> please ?> Also ordered DMSO and wondering if there is a formula for mixing with > mms1 for bath please>

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Great information!I'm wondering what everyone's consensus is regarding bathing in MMS1 with DMSO versus applying it to the skin?  I was taking a bath last night, in MMS1 and staring my bottle of DMSO and thinking - " this would be great if I had filtered water - not so sure on city water " .

My other, kinda funny, DMSO story is that I was using it over a year ago.  I can't remember (sorry Lyme fog) if I was taking it orally or topically at the time, but after three days of use I was in the car with my family going somewhere and everyone started complaining about some foul smell in the car.  Everyone was looking everywhere for some 'to go' container left in the car and gone bad.  We finally figured out it was me!  They said I smelled like three day old clam chowder! LOL  The not so funny part was that, although I have an awesome sense of smell, I could not smell it on me or in the car. Wierd!  DMSO is known to make people taste and smell of garlic - this was worse. 

I do plan on doing the MMS1 & DMSO topical application again towards the end of three weeks (on MMS1/2), but I will skip days and make sure my husband smells me before I go out ;-)

On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 9:24 AM, healinghope <mfrreman@...> wrote:

 

http://www.chronicillnessrecovery.org/index.php?option=com_content & view=article & id=161

> >

> >

> >

> > Bathing nightly with 20 drops did not take any MMS 1 internally

> last night

> > Am feeling very fatigued today and wondering if it has any bearing

> on bath

> > please ?

> > Also ordered DMSO and wondering if there is a formula for mixing

> with

> > mms1 for bath please

> >

>

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Share on other sites

The reason I'm thinking organic might be a good idea is because grapes are a heavily sprayed crop and it takes a lot of grapes (wine?) to get the sediment to make the c of t.  Thus, I'm thinking it would contain a high amount of pesticides.  ?

I did do a little research on the controversy (need to do more).  It seems like it's a similar wording misunderstanding like that of MsM being a sulfur so those who are alergic to sulfa drugs think they cannot take it.  Not true - different substance (at least my husband and friend who are allergic to sulfa are still alive and well on MsM)

And the Braggs is working well.  Starting to get used to it. Thank you!On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 7:23 AM, healinghope <mfrreman@...> wrote:

 

I would think perhaps any cream of tartar would be fine. Here is where cream of tartar is derived.

Cream of tartar is obtained when tartaric acid is half neutralized with potassium hydroxide, transforming it into a salt. Grapes are the only significant natural source of tartaric acid, and cream of tartar is obtained from sediment produced in the process of making wine. (The journal Nature reported some years ago that traces of calcium tartrate found in a pottery jar in the ruins of a village in northern Iran are evidence that wine was being made more than 7,000 years ago.)

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> > > > > > > > Bathing nightly with 20 drops did not take any MMS 1 internally

> > > > > > > last night

> > > > > > > > Am feeling very fatigued today and wondering if it has any

> > bearing

> > > > > > > on bath

> > > > > > > > please ?

> > > > > > > > Also ordered DMSO and wondering if there is a formula for

> > mixing

> > > > > > > with

> > > > > > > > mms1 for bath please

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if you find organic cream of tartar let me know please. Thanks

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> > > > > > > > > > Bathing nightly with 20 drops did not take any MMS 1

> > internally

> > > > > > > > > last night

> > > > > > > > > > Am feeling very fatigued today and wondering if it has any

> > > > bearing

> > > > > > > > > on bath

> > > > > > > > > > please ?

> > > > > > > > > > Also ordered DMSO and wondering if there is a formula for

> > > > mixing

> > > > > > > > > with

> > > > > > > > > > mms1 for bath please

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I'll check next time at my health food store.  They carry bulk organic spices and seasonings.  Maybe they will have it.  I have not googled it yet.  Might be way $$$$.On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 3:09 PM, healinghope <mfrreman@...> wrote:

 

if you find organic cream of tartar let me know please. Thanks

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> > > > > > > > > > Bathing nightly with 20 drops did not take any MMS 1

> > internally

> > > > > > > > > last night

> > > > > > > > > > Am feeling very fatigued today and wondering if it has any

> > > > bearing

> > > > > > > > > on bath

> > > > > > > > > > please ?

> > > > > > > > > > Also ordered DMSO and wondering if there is a formula for

> > > > mixing

> > > > > > > > > with

> > > > > > > > > > mms1 for bath please

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