Guest guest Posted December 11, 2011 Report Share Posted December 11, 2011 hello all, i am new on this group but have been looking forward to posting for my son who is 7yrs now and has global delay and difficult myoclonic epilepsy.he has been tested recently in london for viruses ie the neuroviral screen he has abnormally high antibody titers to measles 1917 u/ml and also quite high for varicella zoster also at 754miu/ml. can anybody suggest from experience if these are very high and need antiviral like immunovir which has been recommended to me with prednisolone cover. however another source has recommended using intravenous immunoglobulins after the antiviral. i am not sure if this is the best immune support or if there could be a way to avoid the IV i hope someone can help suggest from their experience.Subject: Re: Chicken poxTo: mb12valtrex Date: Sunday, 11 December, 2011, 4:27 My dd decent into he'll was with that shot...so absolutely, whole-heartedly believe this to be true..my husband and I saw this with our own two eyes...it started the very next day... > > I never really put vaccines at the top of the list for causes of Tom's problems until my youngest got his varicella shot and his arm swelled to a size larger than his LEG over the course of 3 days or so. It was awful. That was the day I decided hell no would my kids ever have another vacc. > > > > ________________________________ > > To: mb12valtrex > Sent: Saturday, December 10, 2011 10:55 AM > Subject: Re: Chicken pox > > > >  > > I have seen some health practitioner reports that the chicken pox vaccine is in our kids just like the measles vaccine, living and not be fought off by the immune system. The problem with the chicken pox vaccine is that I have seen it reported and heard it verbally by some health practitioners that it lives in the brain, causing small swelling (not enough to be considered encephalitis or meningitis), just enough to cause behavioral and immune issues. I have seen posts where parents purposely take their children with autism to get them exposed to the chicken pox to try to get the immune system to fight off the vaccine chicken pox. I have seen a few posts of parents saying their kids improved significantly when they were brought around children with chicken pox. I can't remember whether or not their children got the chicken pox sores. You might can find some of these posts in the search. > > Love and prayers, > > Heidi N > > > > My kid has the chicken pox. I was wondering if this might even b a > good sign??? > Remaining ever positive.... > . > > Sent from Yahoo! Mail on Android > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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