Guest guest Posted June 20, 2012 Report Share Posted June 20, 2012 Very interesting, . I am aware that histamime and histidine have an inverse proportional relationship, so during my recovery I included histidine. I just did a food tolerance/metabolic typing based on my bloodtype, and specific food allergies/sensitivities. I believe you are onto something here that could really help someone break off an attack/relapse, while they detox and learn what foods their body cannot tolerate. Perhaps posting this info under 'files' may be best. I am doing very very well, however fear of eating something that may cause a flare-up is a problem. I now know that diet and detox is the key, but what you are suggesting is perhaps a safe sane way to mitigate a relapse and the resultant neurological damage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2012 Report Share Posted June 20, 2012 " what you are suggesting is perhaps a safe sane way to mitigate a relapse and the resultant neurological damage. " That has been one of the biggest benifits! Whereas before, recovery from what we call a " crash " was weeks (sometimes many), now it's days! My cognative difficulties diminished over about a month and now seem " less connected " to a physical crash. I have pushed my new limits physically to the point of crash and noted much less cognative, emotional, and memory degradations than I have in past crashes. > > Very interesting, . I am aware that histamime and histidine have an inverse proportional relationship, so during my recovery I included histidine. I just did a food tolerance/metabolic typing based on my bloodtype, and specific food allergies/sensitivities. I believe you are onto something here that could really help someone break off an attack/relapse, while they detox and learn what foods their body cannot tolerate. Perhaps posting this info under 'files' may be best. I am doing very very well, however fear of eating something that may cause a flare-up is a problem. I now know that diet and detox is the key, but what you are suggesting is perhaps a safe sane way to mitigate a relapse and the resultant neurological damage. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 21, 2012 Report Share Posted June 21, 2012 : Exciting stuff! Thanks for posting this info. Didn't that lady who had MS and came up with Prokarin mention she was on a system dealing with histamine? Anyway, good one! Mike > > > > Very interesting, . I am aware that histamime and histidine have an inverse proportional relationship, so during my recovery I included histidine. I just did a food tolerance/metabolic typing based on my bloodtype, and specific food allergies/sensitivities. I believe you are onto something here that could really help someone break off an attack/relapse, while they detox and learn what foods their body cannot tolerate. Perhaps posting this info under 'files' may be best. I am doing very very well, however fear of eating something that may cause a flare-up is a problem. I now know that diet and detox is the key, but what you are suggesting is perhaps a safe sane way to mitigate a relapse and the resultant neurological damage. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 21, 2012 Report Share Posted June 21, 2012 Hey Mike, The effect I think most benificial may not be associated with histamine. The effect of some antihistimines at low doses, that I see as most important, is they inhibit apoptosis (programmed cell death). MS, for instance, appears to be associated with the premature death of certain cells that are involved in remylination. I suspect benadryl inhibits apoptosis in all cell types. Low dose antihistimines will probably help in immune deficiency diseases by inhibiting apoptosis of activated T cells....HIV possibly the same. It is this function that I believe is KEY to our purposes! > > > > > > Very interesting, . I am aware that histamime and histidine have an inverse proportional relationship, so during my recovery I included histidine. I just did a food tolerance/metabolic typing based on my bloodtype, and specific food allergies/sensitivities. I believe you are onto something here that could really help someone break off an attack/relapse, while they detox and learn what foods their body cannot tolerate. Perhaps posting this info under 'files' may be best. I am doing very very well, however fear of eating something that may cause a flare-up is a problem. I now know that diet and detox is the key, but what you are suggesting is perhaps a safe sane way to mitigate a relapse and the resultant neurological damage. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 22, 2012 Report Share Posted June 22, 2012 I am on the prokarin. It increases the histamine. Subject: Re: New member & mitochondria/benadryl To: mscured Date: Thursday, June 21, 2012, 2:43 PM  : Exciting stuff! Thanks for posting this info. Didn't that lady who had MS and came up with Prokarin mention she was on a system dealing with histamine? Anyway, good one! Mike > > > > Very interesting, . I am aware that histamime and histidine have an inverse proportional relationship, so during my recovery I included histidine. I just did a food tolerance/metabolic typing based on my bloodtype, and specific food allergies/sensitivities. I believe you are onto something here that could really help someone break off an attack/relapse, while they detox and learn what foods their body cannot tolerate. Perhaps posting this info under 'files' may be best. I am doing very very well, however fear of eating something that may cause a flare-up is a problem. I now know that diet and detox is the key, but what you are suggesting is perhaps a safe sane way to mitigate a relapse and the resultant neurological damage. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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