Guest guest Posted December 3, 2011 Report Share Posted December 3, 2011 The link you provided is not a valid document.T Actually Ruggerio is not a doctor but professor in some University in Firenze and he developed the MAF 314, so No - you don't need to be his patient. From my understanding this probotic is without prescription in Europe, but I might be wrong. Simply they teach them for few days how to make the yogurt using milk, colostrum and then the probiotic cultures. They leave it for 48 hours to grow and then it's ready. This is one of the links that I learned about: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/38793300/GFM...JAE%202011.pdf I just don't understand why this probiotic is not more popular and all over all the autism forums, because it sounds so good to get the benefits of GcMAF from real cultured food, probably I am missing something > > > > > > Has anyone else here run the Nagalese test? My son recently had it run and on a range of normal being 0.32-0.95 his is 0.97. Since we cannot afford GcMAF is anyone familiar with alternatives to this in order to reduce the Nagalese level? Is it just a matter of chipping away at the viral load? Is anyone working with DrK using GcMAF yet? Or using GcMAF on their own without a doctor? It seems to be a very promising treatment. A very smart member of LIA told me that before even being able to try GcMAF you would need to make sure the vitamin D level is adequate. Since most people with Lyme have low D levels, I have increased supplementing this to the whole family. I wonder if there can be a toxic level of D3 of if high doses of it are relatively harmless much like high doses of vitamin C? > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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