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Symptoms of the virus? I have never heard of that. Your regulR ped can run the tigers you don't need the dan to do this. My insurance covered everything Sent from my iPhone

I haven't yet, no. I am trying to figure out what this is going to cost us. I've started the conversations with our DAN!, but I don't know how to make this work out so that insurance will cover the titers we want pulled. If you don't mind me asking, was this covered by insurance or did you have to pay out of pocket, and if you did, was it super expensive? Did you just run the Rubella titers or did you order others? We wanted to do them all, but the doctor is saying that he needs to have symptoms of the virus to have insurance cover it. I think he's making a call for us, haven't heard back yet. It's definitely something we want to do though.

> >

> > After two years of biomedicine, I think I am FINALLY drawing some connections regarding my son's problems, some real connections, but I am still needing some help with what to do about it.

> >

> > Let me start by saying how I figured this out. We had been fighting yeast and Clostridia which we appear to be under control. His recent stool test was practically perfect! And while I am happy about that it got me thinking about the mood swings he was still having, and some bloating. So I began to piece together the viral possibility. Thinking back....after his MMR vaccination at 12 months old, he reacted to it for an entire month, with various full body rashes, swollen glands (one that remains swollen even now, on the side of his neck), and he had a swollen knee that wouldn't bend one day. Then when I started him on OLE, ten days into increasing his dose, he broke out in a rash. It started around his neck and chest and spread to his torso and upper arms, and now that I am looking online, it looked exactly like the rubella rash!! And the icing on the cake...when I give him even one teeny tiny monolaurin pellet the sensory stuff that has been GONE for ages, a

ll comes back, along with emotional instability, low threshold for frustration, and irritation. He even gets itchy and hot all over, like he did with what I thought was yeast overgrowth!

> >

> > Does this look like we are dealing with a Rubella virus?? Oh and I noticed on my hospital discharge paperwork, from when I had him, that I still had antibodies for Rubella, shouldn't they be long gone since I hadn't had a vaccination in well over 25+ years? I didn't have antibodies for anything else they tested me for. Could I have this same problem and have passed it on, in addition to the fact that he had the MMR?

> >

> > Is monolaurin the only natural choice for addressing Rubella? And is there "die-off" with viruses like with other pathogens? Should we ride the doses at a tolerable level or should we plow through (controlled, of course) die off like we do with the pathogens in order to get past the die-off? Is there anything else I should know? I can talk circles about yeast and bacteria, but this...this is all new to me!

> >

> >

> >

>

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Be sure to have a comprehensive list of symptoms that should be reported to your doctor on your next visit. That's all I'm saying..... ; )

-tammy

To: mb12 valtrex Sent: Sat, February 26, 2011 2:45:52 PMSubject: Re: Rubella?

I haven't yet, no. I am trying to figure out what this is going to cost us. I've started the conversations with our DAN!, but I don't know how to make this work out so that insurance will cover the titers we want pulled. If you don't mind me asking, was this covered by insurance or did you have to pay out of pocket, and if you did, was it super expensive? Did you just run the Rubella titers or did you order others? We wanted to do them all, but the doctor is saying that he needs to have symptoms of the virus to have insurance cover it. I think he's making a call for us, haven't heard back yet. It's definitely something we want to do though.> >> > After two years of biomedicine, I think I am FINALLY drawing some connections regarding my son's problems, some real connections, but I am still needing some help with what

to do about it. > > > > Let me start by saying how I figured this out. We had been fighting yeast and Clostridia which we appear to be under control. His recent stool test was practically perfect! And while I am happy about that it got me thinking about the mood swings he was still having, and some bloating. So I began to piece together the viral possibility. Thinking back....after his MMR vaccination at 12 months old, he reacted to it for an entire month, with various full body rashes, swollen glands (one that remains swollen even now, on the side of his neck), and he had a swollen knee that wouldn't bend one day. Then when I started him on OLE, ten days into increasing his dose, he broke out in a rash. It started around his neck and chest and spread to his torso and upper arms, and now that I am looking online, it looked exactly like the rubella rash!! And the icing on the cake...when I give him even one teeny tiny monolaurin

pellet the sensory stuff that has been GONE for ages, all comes back, along with emotional instability, low threshold for frustration, and irritation. He even gets itchy and hot all over, like he did with what I thought was yeast overgrowth! > > > > Does this look like we are dealing with a Rubella virus?? Oh and I noticed on my hospital discharge paperwork, from when I had him, that I still had antibodies for Rubella, shouldn't they be long gone since I hadn't had a vaccination in well over 25+ years? I didn't have antibodies for anything else they tested me for. Could I have this same problem and have passed it on, in addition to the fact that he had the MMR? > > > > Is monolaurin the only natural choice for addressing Rubella? And is there "die-off" with viruses like with other pathogens? Should we ride the doses at a tolerable level or should we plow through (controlled, of course) die off like we do with the

pathogens in order to get past the die-off? Is there anything else I should know? I can talk circles about yeast and bacteria, but this...this is all new to me!> > > > > >>

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My son's pedi wouldn't test for ANYthing.

Even his dan was hesitant to pull titers right away until I mentioned my hubby's incident with bell's palsy right before I got pregnant. That got his attention quickly. Insurance did pay for those titers. The dans finance office told me we're lucky to have blue cross because they cover more than most.

To: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Cc: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Sent: Sat, February 26, 2011 3:16:39 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella?

Symptoms of the virus? I have never heard of that. Your regulR ped can run the tigers you don't need the dan to do this. My insurance covered everything

Sent from my iPhone

I haven't yet, no. I am trying to figure out what this is going to cost us. I've started the conversations with our DAN!, but I don't know how to make this work out so that insurance will cover the titers we want pulled. If you don't mind me asking, was this covered by insurance or did you have to pay out of pocket, and if you did, was it super expensive? Did you just run the Rubella titers or did you order others? We wanted to do them all, but the doctor is saying that he needs to have symptoms of the virus to have insurance cover it. I think he's making a call for us, haven't heard back yet. It's definitely something we want to do though.> >> > After two years of biomedicine, I think I am FINALLY drawing some connections regarding my son's problems, some real connections, but I am still needing some help with what to do about it. > > > > Let me start by saying how I figured this out. We had been fighting yeast and Clostridia which we appear to be under control. His recent stool test was practically perfect! And while I am happy about that it got me thinking about the mood swings he was still having, and some bloating. So I began to piece together the viral possibility. Thinking back....after his MMR vaccination at 12 months old, he reacted to it for an entire month, with various full body rashes, swollen glands (one that remains swollen even now, on the side of his neck), and he had a swollen knee that wouldn't bend one day. Then

when I started him on OLE, ten days into increasing his dose, he broke out in a rash. It started around his neck and chest and spread to his torso and upper arms, and now that I am looking online, it looked exactly like the rubella rash!! And the icing on the cake...when I give him even one teeny tiny monolaurin pellet the sensory stuff that has been GONE for ages, a ll comes back, along with emotional instability, low threshold for frustration, and irritation. He even gets itchy and hot all over, like he did with what I thought was yeast overgrowth! > > > > Does this look like we are dealing with a Rubella virus?? Oh and I noticed on my hospital discharge paperwork, from when I had him, that I still had antibodies for Rubella, shouldn't they be long gone since I hadn't had a vaccination in well over 25+ years? I didn't have antibodies for anything else they tested me for. Could I have this same problem and have passed it on, in

addition to the fact that he had the MMR? > > > > Is monolaurin the only natural choice for addressing Rubella? And is there "die-off" with viruses like with other pathogens? Should we ride the doses at a tolerable level or should we plow through (controlled, of course) die off like we do with the pathogens in order to get past the die-off? Is there anything else I should know? I can talk circles about yeast and bacteria, but this...this is all new to me!> > > > > >>

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Titers are typically covered by insurance. I've never understood why any DAN would be hesitant to pull titers - a test that will cost the parents maybe $20 but love to convince parents to do a $700 test *not* covered by insurance.I've not heard of any US insurance that doesn't cover the Labcorp titer labs.

Cheryl ~http://www.gryffins-tail.blogspot.com~~@Gryffins_Tail~

My son's pedi wouldn't test for ANYthing.

Even his dan was hesitant to pull titers right away until I mentioned my hubby's incident with bell's palsy right before I got pregnant. That got his attention quickly. Insurance did pay for those titers. The dans finance office told me we're lucky to have blue cross because they cover more than most.

To: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Cc: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Sent: Sat, February 26, 2011 3:16:39 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella?

Symptoms of the virus? I have never heard of that. Your regulR ped can run the tigers you don't need the dan to do this. My insurance covered everything

Sent from my iPhone

I haven't yet, no. I am trying to figure out what this is going to cost us. I've started the conversations with our DAN!, but I don't know how to make this work out so that insurance will cover the titers we want pulled. If you don't mind me asking, was this covered by insurance or did you have to pay out of pocket, and if you did, was it super expensive? Did you just run the Rubella titers or did you order others? We wanted to do them all, but the doctor is saying that he needs to have symptoms of the virus to have insurance cover it. I think he's making a call for us, haven't heard back yet. It's definitely something we want to do though.> >> > After two years of biomedicine, I think I am FINALLY drawing some connections regarding my son's problems, some real connections, but I am still needing some help with what to do about it. > > > > Let me start by saying how I figured this out. We had been fighting yeast and Clostridia which we appear to be under control. His recent stool test was practically perfect! And while I am happy about that it got me thinking about the mood swings he was still having, and some bloating. So I began to piece together the viral possibility. Thinking back....after his MMR vaccination at 12 months old, he reacted to it for an entire month, with various full body rashes, swollen glands (one that remains swollen even now, on the side of his neck), and he had a swollen knee that wouldn't bend one day. Then

when I started him on OLE, ten days into increasing his dose, he broke out in a rash. It started around his neck and chest and spread to his torso and upper arms, and now that I am looking online, it looked exactly like the rubella rash!! And the icing on the cake...when I give him even one teeny tiny monolaurin pellet the sensory stuff that has been GONE for ages, a ll comes back, along with emotional instability, low threshold for frustration, and irritation. He even gets itchy and hot all over, like he did with what I thought was yeast overgrowth! > > > > Does this look like we are dealing with a Rubella virus?? Oh and I noticed on my hospital discharge paperwork, from when I had him, that I still had antibodies for Rubella, shouldn't they be long gone since I hadn't had a vaccination in well over 25+ years? I didn't have antibodies for anything else they tested me for. Could I have this same problem and have passed it on, in

addition to the fact that he had the MMR? > > > > Is monolaurin the only natural choice for addressing Rubella? And is there "die-off" with viruses like with other pathogens? Should we ride the doses at a tolerable level or should we plow through (controlled, of course) die off like we do with the pathogens in order to get past the die-off? Is there anything else I should know? I can talk circles about yeast and bacteria, but this...this is all new to me!> > > > > >>

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Well, because so many people test postive for hhv6 antibodies. He really wanted to see what my son's gut looked like first (which makes sense) and he wanted me to do a challenge test which I declined (and he was very very cool about it.) I must say this guy is great. He doesn't nickel and dime us ever. They have a finance office who will meet with you and set a reasonable plan according to what you can afford and the order of importance. they do everything they can to make sure you get all the bang for your buck. I can't say enough about the place.

-tammy

To: mb12 valtrex Sent: Sat, February 26, 2011 4:35:58 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella?

Titers are typically covered by insurance. I've never understood why any DAN would be hesitant to pull titers - a test that will cost the parents maybe $20 but love to convince parents to do a $700 test *not* covered by insurance.

I've not heard of any US insurance that doesn't cover the Labcorp titer labs.

Cheryl

~http://www.gryffins-tail.blogspot.com~

~@Gryffins_Tail~

My son's pedi wouldn't test for ANYthing.

Even his dan was hesitant to pull titers right away until I mentioned my hubby's incident with bell's palsy right before I got pregnant. That got his attention quickly. Insurance did pay for those titers. The dans finance office told me we're lucky to have blue cross because they cover more than most.

To: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Cc: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Sent: Sat, February

26, 2011 3:16:39 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella?

Symptoms of the virus? I have never heard of that. Your regulR ped can run the tigers you don't need the dan to do this. My insurance covered everything

Sent from my iPhone

I haven't yet, no. I am trying to figure out what this is going to cost us. I've started the conversations with our DAN!, but I don't know how to make this work out so that insurance will cover the titers we want pulled. If you don't mind me asking, was this covered by insurance or did you have to pay out of pocket, and if you did, was it super expensive? Did you just run the Rubella titers or did you order others? We wanted to do them all, but the doctor is saying that he needs to have symptoms of the virus to have insurance cover it. I think he's making a call for us, haven't heard back yet. It's definitely something we want to do though.> >> > After two years of biomedicine, I think I am FINALLY drawing some connections regarding my son's problems, some real connections, but I am still needing some help with what to do about it. > > > > Let me start by saying how I figured this out. We had been fighting yeast and Clostridia which we appear to be under control. His recent stool test was practically perfect! And while I am happy about that it got me thinking about the mood swings he was still having, and some bloating. So I began to piece together the viral possibility. Thinking back....after his MMR vaccination at 12 months old, he reacted to it for an entire month, with various full body rashes, swollen glands (one that remains swollen even now, on the side of his neck), and he had a swollen knee that wouldn't bend one day. Then when I

started him on OLE, ten days into increasing his dose, he broke out in a rash. It started around his neck and chest and spread to his torso and upper arms, and now that I am looking online, it looked exactly like the rubella rash!! And the icing on the cake...when I give him even one teeny tiny monolaurin pellet the sensory stuff that has been GONE for ages, a ll comes back, along with emotional instability, low threshold for frustration, and irritation. He even gets itchy and hot all over, like he did with what I thought was yeast overgrowth! > > > > Does this look like we are dealing with a Rubella virus?? Oh and I noticed on my hospital discharge paperwork, from when I had him, that I still had antibodies for Rubella, shouldn't they be long gone since I hadn't had a vaccination in well over 25+ years? I didn't have antibodies for anything else they tested me for. Could I have this same problem and have passed it on, in addition to

the fact that he had the MMR? > > > > Is monolaurin the only natural choice for addressing Rubella? And is there "die-off" with viruses like with other pathogens? Should we ride the doses at a tolerable level or should we plow through (controlled, of course) die off like we do with the pathogens in order to get past the die-off? Is there anything else I should know? I can talk circles about yeast and bacteria, but this...this is all new to me!> > > > > >>

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Well, because so many people test postive for hhv6 antibodies. He really wanted to see what my son's gut looked like first (which makes sense) and he wanted me to do a challenge test which I declined (and he was very very cool about it.) I must say this guy is great. He doesn't nickel and dime us ever. They have a finance office who will meet with you and set a reasonable plan according to what you can afford and the order of importance. they do everything they can to make sure you get all the bang for your buck. I can't say enough about the place.

-tammy

To: mb12 valtrex Sent: Sat, February 26, 2011 4:35:58 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella?

Titers are typically covered by insurance. I've never understood why any DAN would be hesitant to pull titers - a test that will cost the parents maybe $20 but love to convince parents to do a $700 test *not* covered by insurance.

I've not heard of any US insurance that doesn't cover the Labcorp titer labs.

Cheryl

~http://www.gryffins-tail.blogspot.com~

~@Gryffins_Tail~

My son's pedi wouldn't test for ANYthing.

Even his dan was hesitant to pull titers right away until I mentioned my hubby's incident with bell's palsy right before I got pregnant. That got his attention quickly. Insurance did pay for those titers. The dans finance office told me we're lucky to have blue cross because they cover more than most.

To: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Cc: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Sent: Sat, February

26, 2011 3:16:39 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella?

Symptoms of the virus? I have never heard of that. Your regulR ped can run the tigers you don't need the dan to do this. My insurance covered everything

Sent from my iPhone

I haven't yet, no. I am trying to figure out what this is going to cost us. I've started the conversations with our DAN!, but I don't know how to make this work out so that insurance will cover the titers we want pulled. If you don't mind me asking, was this covered by insurance or did you have to pay out of pocket, and if you did, was it super expensive? Did you just run the Rubella titers or did you order others? We wanted to do them all, but the doctor is saying that he needs to have symptoms of the virus to have insurance cover it. I think he's making a call for us, haven't heard back yet. It's definitely something we want to do though.> >> > After two years of biomedicine, I think I am FINALLY drawing some connections regarding my son's problems, some real connections, but I am still needing some help with what to do about it. > > > > Let me start by saying how I figured this out. We had been fighting yeast and Clostridia which we appear to be under control. His recent stool test was practically perfect! And while I am happy about that it got me thinking about the mood swings he was still having, and some bloating. So I began to piece together the viral possibility. Thinking back....after his MMR vaccination at 12 months old, he reacted to it for an entire month, with various full body rashes, swollen glands (one that remains swollen even now, on the side of his neck), and he had a swollen knee that wouldn't bend one day. Then when I

started him on OLE, ten days into increasing his dose, he broke out in a rash. It started around his neck and chest and spread to his torso and upper arms, and now that I am looking online, it looked exactly like the rubella rash!! And the icing on the cake...when I give him even one teeny tiny monolaurin pellet the sensory stuff that has been GONE for ages, a ll comes back, along with emotional instability, low threshold for frustration, and irritation. He even gets itchy and hot all over, like he did with what I thought was yeast overgrowth! > > > > Does this look like we are dealing with a Rubella virus?? Oh and I noticed on my hospital discharge paperwork, from when I had him, that I still had antibodies for Rubella, shouldn't they be long gone since I hadn't had a vaccination in well over 25+ years? I didn't have antibodies for anything else they tested me for. Could I have this same problem and have passed it on, in addition to

the fact that he had the MMR? > > > > Is monolaurin the only natural choice for addressing Rubella? And is there "die-off" with viruses like with other pathogens? Should we ride the doses at a tolerable level or should we plow through (controlled, of course) die off like we do with the pathogens in order to get past the die-off? Is there anything else I should know? I can talk circles about yeast and bacteria, but this...this is all new to me!> > > > > >>

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Well, because so many people test postive for hhv6 antibodies. He really wanted to see what my son's gut looked like first (which makes sense) and he wanted me to do a challenge test which I declined (and he was very very cool about it.) I must say this guy is great. He doesn't nickel and dime us ever. They have a finance office who will meet with you and set a reasonable plan according to what you can afford and the order of importance. they do everything they can to make sure you get all the bang for your buck. I can't say enough about the place.

-tammy

To: mb12 valtrex Sent: Sat, February 26, 2011 4:35:58 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella?

Titers are typically covered by insurance. I've never understood why any DAN would be hesitant to pull titers - a test that will cost the parents maybe $20 but love to convince parents to do a $700 test *not* covered by insurance.

I've not heard of any US insurance that doesn't cover the Labcorp titer labs.

Cheryl

~http://www.gryffins-tail.blogspot.com~

~@Gryffins_Tail~

My son's pedi wouldn't test for ANYthing.

Even his dan was hesitant to pull titers right away until I mentioned my hubby's incident with bell's palsy right before I got pregnant. That got his attention quickly. Insurance did pay for those titers. The dans finance office told me we're lucky to have blue cross because they cover more than most.

To: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Cc: "mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >Sent: Sat, February

26, 2011 3:16:39 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella?

Symptoms of the virus? I have never heard of that. Your regulR ped can run the tigers you don't need the dan to do this. My insurance covered everything

Sent from my iPhone

I haven't yet, no. I am trying to figure out what this is going to cost us. I've started the conversations with our DAN!, but I don't know how to make this work out so that insurance will cover the titers we want pulled. If you don't mind me asking, was this covered by insurance or did you have to pay out of pocket, and if you did, was it super expensive? Did you just run the Rubella titers or did you order others? We wanted to do them all, but the doctor is saying that he needs to have symptoms of the virus to have insurance cover it. I think he's making a call for us, haven't heard back yet. It's definitely something we want to do though.> >> > After two years of biomedicine, I think I am FINALLY drawing some connections regarding my son's problems, some real connections, but I am still needing some help with what to do about it. > > > > Let me start by saying how I figured this out. We had been fighting yeast and Clostridia which we appear to be under control. His recent stool test was practically perfect! And while I am happy about that it got me thinking about the mood swings he was still having, and some bloating. So I began to piece together the viral possibility. Thinking back....after his MMR vaccination at 12 months old, he reacted to it for an entire month, with various full body rashes, swollen glands (one that remains swollen even now, on the side of his neck), and he had a swollen knee that wouldn't bend one day. Then when I

started him on OLE, ten days into increasing his dose, he broke out in a rash. It started around his neck and chest and spread to his torso and upper arms, and now that I am looking online, it looked exactly like the rubella rash!! And the icing on the cake...when I give him even one teeny tiny monolaurin pellet the sensory stuff that has been GONE for ages, a ll comes back, along with emotional instability, low threshold for frustration, and irritation. He even gets itchy and hot all over, like he did with what I thought was yeast overgrowth! > > > > Does this look like we are dealing with a Rubella virus?? Oh and I noticed on my hospital discharge paperwork, from when I had him, that I still had antibodies for Rubella, shouldn't they be long gone since I hadn't had a vaccination in well over 25+ years? I didn't have antibodies for anything else they tested me for. Could I have this same problem and have passed it on, in addition to

the fact that he had the MMR? > > > > Is monolaurin the only natural choice for addressing Rubella? And is there "die-off" with viruses like with other pathogens? Should we ride the doses at a tolerable level or should we plow through (controlled, of course) die off like we do with the pathogens in order to get past the die-off? Is there anything else I should know? I can talk circles about yeast and bacteria, but this...this is all new to me!> > > > > >>

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Because they were trained by the same people who trained the mainstream people and they haven't got all the brainwashing out of their heads. LOLAll the doctors are like this... don't want to do a 20$ lab test (cash price would be 300$ but ins only has to pay 20$) but they are all about ready to sign you up for some surgery... so they can't say it's to save the insurance company from undue expenses.

I had a doc just tell me a few weeks ago she wouldn't run thyroid antibodies on me because I am already on thyroid, and since it wouldn't change the treatment, then it's unnecessary. Niiice. Uh, yeah, not going back to see her, either.

 

Titers are typically covered by insurance.  I've never understood why any DAN would be hesitant to pull titers - a test that will cost the parents maybe $20 but love to convince parents to do a $700 test *not* covered by insurance.

I've not heard of any US insurance that doesn't cover the Labcorp titer labs.

Cheryl ~http://www.gryffins-tail.blogspot.com~

~@Gryffins_Tail~

 

My son's pedi wouldn't test for ANYthing. 

Even his dan was hesitant to pull titers right away until I mentioned my hubby's incident with bell's palsy right before I got pregnant.  That got his attention quickly.  Insurance did pay for those titers.  The dans finance office told me we're lucky to have blue cross because they cover more than most.

To: " mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >

Cc: " mb12 valtrex " <mb12 valtrex >

Sent: Sat, February 26, 2011 3:16:39 PMSubject: Re: Re: Rubella? 

Symptoms of the virus? I have never heard of that. Your regulR ped can run the tigers you don't need the dan to do this. My insurance covered everything

 Sent from my iPhone

  I haven't yet, no. I am trying to figure out what this is going to cost us. I've started the conversations with our DAN!, but I don't know how to make this work out so that insurance will cover the titers we want pulled. If you don't mind me asking, was this covered by insurance or did you have to pay out of pocket, and if you did, was it super expensive? Did you just run the Rubella titers or did you order others? We wanted to do them all, but the doctor is saying that he needs to have symptoms of the virus to have insurance cover it. I think he's making a call for us, haven't heard back yet. It's definitely something we want to do though.

> >> > After two years of biomedicine, I think I am FINALLY drawing some connections regarding my son's problems, some real connections, but I am still needing some help with what to do about it. > >

> > Let me start by saying how I figured this out. We had been fighting yeast and Clostridia which we appear to be under control. His recent stool test was practically perfect! And while I am happy about that it got me thinking about the mood swings he was still having, and some bloating. So I began to piece together the viral possibility. Thinking back....after his MMR vaccination at 12 months old, he reacted to it for an entire month, with various full body rashes, swollen glands (one that remains swollen even now, on the side of his neck), and he had a swollen knee that wouldn't bend one day. Then

when I started him on OLE, ten days into increasing his dose, he broke out in a rash. It started around his neck and chest and spread to his torso and upper arms, and now that I am looking online, it looked exactly like the rubella rash!! And the icing on the cake...when I give him even one teeny tiny monolaurin pellet the sensory stuff that has been GONE for ages, a ll comes back, along with emotional instability, low threshold for frustration, and irritation. He even gets itchy and hot all over, like he did with what I thought was yeast overgrowth!

> > > > Does this look like we are dealing with a Rubella virus?? Oh and I noticed on my hospital discharge paperwork, from when I had him, that I still had antibodies for Rubella, shouldn't they be long gone since I hadn't had a vaccination in well over 25+ years? I didn't have antibodies for anything else they tested me for. Could I have this same problem and have passed it on, in

addition to the fact that he had the MMR? > > > > Is monolaurin the only natural choice for addressing Rubella? And is there " die-off " with viruses like with other pathogens? Should we ride the doses at a tolerable level or should we plow through (controlled, of course) die off like we do with the pathogens in order to get past the die-off? Is there anything else I should know? I can talk circles about yeast and bacteria, but this...this is all new to me!

> > > > > >>

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-- Toni------Mind like a steel trap...Rusty and illegal in 37 states.

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