Guest guest Posted August 7, 2012 Report Share Posted August 7, 2012 Hi Adam i have tried it and still have it..They say its very good for lyme and bartonella .Did i have any success using it i dunno.I am taking samento and banderol right now when i take allimed aka allimax i would get real bad head pain so i am assuming it was doing something just to intense for me i wonder if it is a cyst buster or has those capabilities..I also have a doug coil machine but thats on hold for me at the moment as i am way to symptomatic and the coil is a wee bit strong.. Subject: Anyone Using "Allimed"?To: Lyme_and_Rife Date: Monday, August 6, 2012, 4:51 PM Hi All,I'm the moderator of a Lyme Support Group at a local hospital in PA.One of the attendees has a daughter who had been fighting severe Lyme and some coinfections for 6 years, and was still not well enough. She had been on various Lyme and coinfection treatments for years.Her doctor, a well-known LLMD, suggested, about a year ago, a relatively new supplement called Allimed (contains stabilized allicin, through a patented process). This is not normal allicin, which apparently is not stable enough for effective treatment. After carefully taking it for about a year (with the normal added nutrients, detoxers, etc. suggested by the LLMD, etc.)and now slowly winding down, she gained her health well enough to take a job as a ranch hand out west on a cattle ranch! Along the way, she experienced the normal herxes, etc. and had to pace herself towards healing.I was wondering if anyone has heard of Allimed, or has tried it, and the results experienced. There is research info on their website: www.allimax.us I have no financial interest in Allimed, etc.; just trying to take advantage of any new developments for Lyme healing, for sharing at our Lyme Group meetings.Adam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2012 Report Share Posted August 7, 2012 Hi Adam Thank you very much for sharing your experience , Every ting that cann get us our faster is well come . I know allicin but not allimed I know it is one of the big hit for cancer too Is this expensive and does this needs a presscritpiton please . Thank you a lot KIndly Marie To: Lyme_and_Rife Sent: Monday, August 6, 2012 4:51 PMSubject: Anyone Using "Allimed"? Hi All,I'm the moderator of a Lyme Support Group at a local hospital in PA.One of the attendees has a daughter who had been fighting severe Lyme and some coinfections for 6 years, and was still not well enough. She had been on various Lyme and coinfection treatments for years.Her doctor, a well-known LLMD, suggested, about a year ago, a relatively new supplement called Allimed (contains stabilized allicin, through a patented process). This is not normal allicin, which apparently is not stable enough for effective treatment. After carefully taking it for about a year (with the normal added nutrients, detoxers, etc. suggested by the LLMD, etc.)and now slowly winding down, she gained her health well enough to take a job as a ranch hand out west on a cattle ranch! Along the way, she experienced the normal herxes, etc. and had to pace herself towards healing.I was wondering if anyone has heard of Allimed, or has tried it, and the results experienced. There is research info on their website: www.allimax.us I have no financial interest in Allimed, etc.; just trying to take advantage of any new developments for Lyme healing, for sharing at our Lyme Group meetings.Adam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2012 Report Share Posted August 7, 2012 maria it doesnt need a script it also goes by allimax there the same thing just different potency.You can buy it online Subject: Re: Anyone Using "Allimed"?To: "Lyme_and_Rife " <Lyme_and_Rife >Date: Monday, August 6, 2012, 11:05 PM Hi Adam Thank you very much for sharing your experience , Every ting that cann get us our faster is well come . I know allicin but not allimed I know it is one of the big hit for cancer too Is this expensive and does this needs a presscritpiton please . Thank you a lot KIndly Marie To: Lyme_and_Rife Sent: Monday, August 6, 2012 4:51 PMSubject: Anyone Using "Allimed"? Hi All,I'm the moderator of a Lyme Support Group at a local hospital in PA.One of the attendees has a daughter who had been fighting severe Lyme and some coinfections for 6 years, and was still not well enough. She had been on various Lyme and coinfection treatments for years.Her doctor, a well-known LLMD, suggested, about a year ago, a relatively new supplement called Allimed (contains stabilized allicin, through a patented process). This is not normal allicin, which apparently is not stable enough for effective treatment. After carefully taking it for about a year (with the normal added nutrients, detoxers, etc. suggested by the LLMD, etc.)and now slowly winding down, she gained her health well enough to take a job as a ranch hand out west on a cattle ranch! Along the way, she experienced the normal herxes, etc. and had to pace herself towards healing.I was wondering if anyone has heard of Allimed, or has tried it, and the results experienced. There is research info on their website: www.allimax.us I have no financial interest in Allimed, etc.; just trying to take advantage of any new developments for Lyme healing, for sharing at our Lyme Group meetings.Adam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2012 Report Share Posted August 7, 2012 Hi T.B, Marie, and Jan, and all, To answer some of your questions: The woman with Lyme and coinfections who took the Alllimed had to start ultra slowly (it is strong); e.g. say 1 capsule a day, or every other day, or else the herxes were overwhelming. The final dosage she took after one year of treatment was 6 capsules per day, at which point she was well enough to work as a ranch hand out West, where she is presently. It appears to me that the reason one must start very slowly is from what I'm looking at in one of the company's several literature pieces as I type; some excerpts: Premier Biofilm Buster, Broad-Spectrum, Anti-Infective Properties: Antibacterial, antifungal, larvicidal (antiparasitic, I assume), and antiviral. (Each property is explained in detail in a 2 page document titled " Stabilized Allicin " .) Allimed's cost is not cheap; I assume discounts would be available in larger quantities if a patient decides to go long term on it. No prescription is necessary. On the site (under " Contact Us " ), they say to contact them if you want to obtain the numerous scientific papers and information they have available on Allimed's effectiveness. The daughter I mentioned in my original Post is the first person I know of going through the full treatment time; her increasing improvements as she went along were the incentive, her mother said, to keep going. Anyway, this is what I have learned so far; I hope to hear from anyone else having experience with Allimed. Take care, Adam > > > > Subject: Anyone Using " Allimed " ? > To: Lyme_and_Rife > Date: Monday, August 6, 2012, 4:51 PM > Â > > Hi All, > > I'm the moderator of a Lyme Support Group at a local hospital in PA. > One of the attendees has a daughter who had been fighting severe Lyme and some coinfections for 6 years, and was still not well enough. She had been on various Lyme and coinfection treatments for years. > > Her doctor, a well-known LLMD, suggested, about a year ago, a relatively new supplement called Allimed (contains stabilized allicin, through a patented process). This is not normal allicin, which apparently is not stable enough for effective treatment. > > After carefully taking it for about a year (with the normal added nutrients, detoxers, etc. suggested by the LLMD, etc.)and now slowly winding down, she gained her health well enough to take a job as a ranch hand out west on a cattle ranch! Along the way, she experienced the normal herxes, etc. and had to pace herself towards healing. > > I was wondering if anyone has heard of Allimed, or has tried it, and the results experienced. There is research info on their website: www.allimax.us > > I have no financial interest in Allimed, etc.; just trying to take advantage of any new developments for Lyme healing, for sharing at our Lyme Group meetings. > > Adam > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2012 Report Share Posted August 7, 2012 ok its the same company as i mentioned in my previous response same ingredients only what i have home is 360mg of allicin and allimed i believe is 450 so its a bit stronger but still the same product . Subject: Re: Anyone Using "Allimed"?To: Lyme_and_Rife Date: Tuesday, August 7, 2012, 3:46 PM Hi T.B, Marie, and Jan, and all,To answer some of your questions:The woman with Lyme and coinfections who took the Alllimed had to start ultra slowly (it is strong); e.g. say 1 capsule a day, or every other day, or else the herxes were overwhelming. The final dosage she took after one year of treatment was 6 capsules per day, at which point she was well enough to work as a ranch hand out West, where she is presently. It appears to me that the reason one must start very slowly is from what I'm looking at in one of the company's several literature pieces as I type; some excerpts:Premier Biofilm Buster, Broad-Spectrum, Anti-Infective Properties: Antibacterial, antifungal, larvicidal (antiparasitic, I assume), and antiviral. (Each property is explained in detail in a 2 page document titled "Stabilized Allicin".)Allimed's cost is not cheap; I assume discounts would be available in larger quantities if a patient decides to go long term on it. No prescription is necessary.On the site (under "Contact Us"), they say to contact them if you want to obtain the numerous scientific papers and information they have available on Allimed's effectiveness.The daughter I mentioned in my original Post is the first person I know of going through the full treatment time; her increasing improvements as she went along were the incentive, her mother said, to keep going.Anyway, this is what I have learned so far; I hope to hear from anyone else having experience with Allimed.Take care,Adam > > > > Subject: Anyone Using "Allimed"?> To: Lyme_and_Rife > Date: Monday, August 6, 2012, 4:51 PM> > > Hi All,> > I'm the moderator of a Lyme Support Group at a local hospital in PA.> One of the attendees has a daughter who had been fighting severe Lyme and some coinfections for 6 years, and was still not well enough. She had been on various Lyme and coinfection treatments for years.> > Her doctor, a well-known LLMD, suggested, about a year ago, a relatively new supplement called Allimed (contains stabilized allicin, through a patented process). This is not normal allicin, which apparently is not stable enough for effective treatment. > > After carefully taking it for about a year (with the normal added nutrients, detoxers, etc. suggested by the LLMD, etc.)and now slowly winding down, she gained her health well enough to take a job as a ranch hand out west on a cattle ranch! Along the way, she experienced the normal herxes, etc. and had to pace herself towards healing.> > I was wondering if anyone has heard of Allimed, or has tried it, and the results experienced. There is research info on their website: www.allimax.us > > I have no financial interest in Allimed, etc.; just trying to take advantage of any new developments for Lyme healing, for sharing at our Lyme Group meetings.> > Adam> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2012 Report Share Posted August 7, 2012 ok one more time i just called tao of herbs the allimed they dont have from the company but they have allimax pro which is the same as the med and it is expensive 113 dollars for 100 caps the allimed which is the same if you research it is 130 dollars so if you decide to use it you can save a few dollars .they both have 450 mg of AC-23 allicin powder.. Subject: Re: Anyone Using "Allimed"?To: Lyme_and_Rife Date: Tuesday, August 7, 2012, 3:46 PM Hi T.B, Marie, and Jan, and all,To answer some of your questions:The woman with Lyme and coinfections who took the Alllimed had to start ultra slowly (it is strong); e.g. say 1 capsule a day, or every other day, or else the herxes were overwhelming. The final dosage she took after one year of treatment was 6 capsules per day, at which point she was well enough to work as a ranch hand out West, where she is presently. It appears to me that the reason one must start very slowly is from what I'm looking at in one of the company's several literature pieces as I type; some excerpts:Premier Biofilm Buster, Broad-Spectrum, Anti-Infective Properties: Antibacterial, antifungal, larvicidal (antiparasitic, I assume), and antiviral. (Each property is explained in detail in a 2 page document titled "Stabilized Allicin".)Allimed's cost is not cheap; I assume discounts would be available in larger quantities if a patient decides to go long term on it. No prescription is necessary.On the site (under "Contact Us"), they say to contact them if you want to obtain the numerous scientific papers and information they have available on Allimed's effectiveness.The daughter I mentioned in my original Post is the first person I know of going through the full treatment time; her increasing improvements as she went along were the incentive, her mother said, to keep going.Anyway, this is what I have learned so far; I hope to hear from anyone else having experience with Allimed.Take care,Adam > > > > Subject: Anyone Using "Allimed"?> To: Lyme_and_Rife > Date: Monday, August 6, 2012, 4:51 PM> > > Hi All,> > I'm the moderator of a Lyme Support Group at a local hospital in PA.> One of the attendees has a daughter who had been fighting severe Lyme and some coinfections for 6 years, and was still not well enough. She had been on various Lyme and coinfection treatments for years.> > Her doctor, a well-known LLMD, suggested, about a year ago, a relatively new supplement called Allimed (contains stabilized allicin, through a patented process). This is not normal allicin, which apparently is not stable enough for effective treatment. > > After carefully taking it for about a year (with the normal added nutrients, detoxers, etc. suggested by the LLMD, etc.)and now slowly winding down, she gained her health well enough to take a job as a ranch hand out west on a cattle ranch! Along the way, she experienced the normal herxes, etc. and had to pace herself towards healing.> > I was wondering if anyone has heard of Allimed, or has tried it, and the results experienced. There is research info on their website: www.allimax.us > > I have no financial interest in Allimed, etc.; just trying to take advantage of any new developments for Lyme healing, for sharing at our Lyme Group meetings.> > Adam> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2012 Report Share Posted August 10, 2012 Tank you Adam , Kindly Marie To: Lyme_and_Rife Sent: Tuesday, August 7, 2012 5:02 PMSubject: Re: Re: Anyone Using "Allimed"? ok one more time i just called tao of herbs the allimed they dont have from the company but they have allimax pro which is the same as the med and it is expensive 113 dollars for 100 caps the allimed which is the same if you research it is 130 dollars so if you decide to use it you can save a few dollars .they both have 450 mg of AC-23 allicin powder.. Subject: Re: Anyone Using "Allimed"?To: Lyme_and_Rife Date: Tuesday, August 7, 2012, 3:46 PM Hi T.B, Marie, and Jan, and all,To answer some of your questions:The woman with Lyme and coinfections who took the Alllimed had to start ultra slowly (it is strong); e.g. say 1 capsule a day, or every other day, or else the herxes were overwhelming. The final dosage she took after one year of treatment was 6 capsules per day, at which point she was well enough to work as a ranch hand out West, where she is presently. It appears to me that the reason one must start very slowly is from what I'm looking at in one of the company's several literature pieces as I type; some excerpts:Premier Biofilm Buster, Broad-Spectrum, Anti-Infective Properties: Antibacterial, antifungal, larvicidal (antiparasitic, I assume), and antiviral. (Each property is explained in detail in a 2 page document titled "Stabilized Allicin".)Allimed's cost is not cheap; I assume discounts would be available in larger quantities if a patient decides to go long term on it. No prescription is necessary.On the site (under "Contact Us"), they say to contact them if you want to obtain the numerous scientific papers and information they have available on Allimed's effectiveness.The daughter I mentioned in my original Post is the first person I know of going through the full treatment time; her increasing improvements as she went along were the incentive, her mother said, to keep going.Anyway, this is what I have learned so far; I hope to hear from anyone else having experience with Allimed.Take care,Adam > > > > Subject: Anyone Using "Allimed"?> To: http://us.mc845.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=Lyme_and_Rife%40yahoogroups.com> Date: Monday, August 6, 2012, 4:51 PM> > > Hi All,> > I'm the moderator of a Lyme Support Group at a local hospital in PA.> One of the attendees has a daughter who had been fighting severe Lyme and some coinfections for 6 years, and was still not well enough. She had been on various Lyme and coinfection treatments for years.> > Her doctor, a well-known LLMD, suggested, about a year ago, a relatively new supplement called Allimed (contains stabilized allicin, through a patented process). This is not normal allicin, which apparently is not stable enough for effective treatment. > > After carefully taking it for about a year (with the normal added nutrients, detoxers, etc. suggested by the LLMD, etc.)and now slowly winding down, she gained her health well enough to take a job as a ranch hand out west on a cattle ranch! Along the way, she experienced the normal herxes, etc. and had to pace herself towards healing.> > I was wondering if anyone has heard of Allimed, or has tried it, and the results experienced. There is research info on their website: www.allimax.us > > I have no financial interest in Allimed, etc.; just trying to take advantage of any new developments for Lyme healing, for sharing at our Lyme Group meetings.> > Adam> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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