Guest guest Posted October 20, 2000 Report Share Posted October 20, 2000 Hi, our drs perform desenzibilization(sp?) by means of allergy shots, more sensitive people do not get shots but are given drops that they are supposed to take according to a special regimen (slowly increasing doses). However people who are too hypersensitive are not recommended to take them. Stania -----Pùvodní zpráva----- Od: Laeeth Is'Harc <laeeth@...> Komu: 'egroups' <egroups> Datum: 20. øíjna 2000 9:09 Pøedmìt: provocation/neutralisation >On Monday, October 16, 2000 at 8:57 AM, jane_doe_press@... wrote: > >> Allergy shots will also make allergies worse. They inject you with things >> to help " use up " what your body produces to fight the antigen, and as time >> goes by you have to get allergy shots more and more frequently, until >> eventually they quit working because the body attempts to up-regulate >>itself to compensate for the allergy shots. And you can end up with a body >> that so over-reacts to the antigens that it can become life-threatening. >> Or yourbody becomes drained from attempting to up-regulate itself, and you >> end upwith other health problems as a result. > >Jane, >Have you tried/do you have any comments on the modified technique for >provocation/neutralisation? This involves much lower doses than >conventional allergy shots, and they start off with the strongest dose and >work down (conventionally it is the opposite). Supposedly these can be >quite effective at bringing down IgE levels and stabilising mast cells in >the gut and lungs (so it works for food intolerance and chemical >sensitivities as well as strict IgE-mediated allergies). The major downside >is the cost of calibrating to each allergen. > >Regards, > > >Laeeth > > >This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2000 Report Share Posted October 21, 2000 Many very sick people do very well on provocation-neutralization shots. Its very time-consuming process to test but very safe. >From: " Stanislava Mužíková " <smuzik@...> >Reply-egroups ><egroups> >Subject: Re: provocation/neutralisation >Date: Fri, 20 Oct 2000 15:35:42 +0200 > >Hi, our drs perform desenzibilization(sp?) by means of allergy shots, more >sensitive people do not get shots but are given drops that they are >supposed >to take according to a special regimen (slowly increasing doses). However >people who are too hypersensitive are not recommended to take them. >Stania >-----Pùvodní zpráva----- >Od: Laeeth Is'Harc <laeeth@...> >Komu: 'egroups' <egroups> >Datum: 20. øíjna 2000 9:09 >Pøedmìt: provocation/neutralisation > > > >On Monday, October 16, 2000 at 8:57 AM, jane_doe_press@... wrote: > > > >> Allergy shots will also make allergies worse. They inject you with >things > >> to help " use up " what your body produces to fight the antigen, and as >time > >> goes by you have to get allergy shots more and more frequently, until > >> eventually they quit working because the body attempts to up-regulate > >>itself to compensate for the allergy shots. And you can end up with a >body > >> that so over-reacts to the antigens that it can become >life-threatening. > >> Or yourbody becomes drained from attempting to up-regulate itself, and >you > >> end upwith other health problems as a result. > > > >Jane, > >Have you tried/do you have any comments on the modified technique >for > >provocation/neutralisation? This involves much lower doses than > >conventional allergy shots, and they start off with the strongest dose >and > >work down (conventionally it is the opposite). Supposedly these can be > >quite effective at bringing down IgE levels and stabilising mast cells in > >the gut and lungs (so it works for food intolerance and chemical > >sensitivities as well as strict IgE-mediated allergies). The major >downside > >is the cost of calibrating to each allergen. > > > >Regards, > > > > > >Laeeth > > > > > >This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with >each >other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment >discussed here, please consult your doctor. > > > > > _________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com. Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at http://profiles.msn.com. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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