Guest guest Posted February 24, 2009 Report Share Posted February 24, 2009 Iodine/Iodide has been very beneficial for me. My intestines were loaded with candida and bad bacteria (as identified by a Doug Coil Rife Machine - my intestines practically vibrated right out of me when it was applied) which the iodine is great at killing. My current medicine chest of daily supplements is: Iodine (Iodoral - dumb expensive stuff) Oregano Oil Olive Leaf Extract Mix VCO (Virgin Coconut Oil) in the diet when I can All 4 of these items are universal killers - they kill bacteria, viruses, fungi, and protozoa. I also take lots and lots of probiotics (2 Jarrow EPS pills 1-2 times a day) I also take these on occasion: Multi-Vitamin Selenium (will look at increasing, even though the AMA tried to scare us by saying it causes kidney or heart issues - therefore, it must be good stuff) Calcium CoQ-10 I'm also doing a modified Salt/C protocol which the Lyme Disease patients swear by for killing the bigger protozoa/parasite/worms. I mix in Baking Soda which neutralizes the Vitamin C which the cancertutor.com board recommends to create Ascorbates which look like sugar to cancer cells. On top of all of this I do periodic intestinal, parasite, liver, and kidney cleanses, fasting, and an occasional IV Chelation treatment to purge out the heavy metals. I also just ordered Dr. Sutter's Book: http://books.google.com/books?id=lodeRTRg23UC & dq=sutter+not+illegal & printsec=fro\ ntcover & source=bl & ots=0C8vGnp7O6 & sig=_hQ7v7_gR5XlekTEZ_wS-AEPzuA & hl=en & ei=tTWkSc\ zyDMG1-Ab8peC6Dw & sa=X & oi=book_result & resnum=1 & ct=result BTW, my intestines are now very clean and I have very few vibrations when the Doug Coil Rife Machine is applied. But that's just me, Brad On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 12:49 PM, Buddy A. Touchinsky, D.C. <dr.touchinsky@...> wrote: > Hello all, > > Anyone have any good results from adding idoine/iodide? I read a few books > over the weekend by Brownstein, MD and he talks about how most people he > checks are deficient, and in adding supplementation, results have been very > good. He tests for it, however, with very little downside, I'm thinking of > trying it with people at modest levels to see how they feel. > > He also discusses the use of selenium with most of his patients since that > is usually the rate limiting agent in the production of glutathione. I've > heard that somewhere else. Hmm, I wonder where??? > > Buddy > > -- > Buddy A. Touchinsky, D.C. > Blue Mountain Family Chiropractic > www.bmfchiro.com > Healthy Habits Natural Market > www.healthyhabitsnaturalmarket.com > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2011 Report Share Posted March 21, 2011 Is there any interaction with iodine and ldn? I really dislike the taste of lugols iodine 5% that my dr, gave me. I am taking ldn 1.5 mg in the AM. I sleep much better at night that way! My circadium rythm is mixed up anyway. I have alot more energy on LDN. joyce Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2011 Report Share Posted March 21, 2011 yes, Joyce, many of us take both very happily. Here's the discussion group for iodine: iodine/ -- >Many of us take both (myself included) with no problems. Get Iodoral >instead if you do not like the taste. > >Jaxi > >On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 12:10 PM, joyce ><<mailto:jamkaye@...>jamkaye@...> wrote: >Is there any interaction with iodine and ldn? I really dislike the taste >of lugols iodine 5% that my dr, gave me. I am taking ldn 1.5 mg in the AM. >I sleep much better at night that way! My circadium rythm is mixed up >anyway. I have alot more energy on LDN. joyce > > > >------------------------------------ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 My circadium rythm is mixed up anyway.that means probably adrenal fatigue Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st Century Stress Syndrome I am using the Free version of SPAMfighter.SPAMfighter has removed 2567 of my spam emails to date.Do you have a slow PC? Try free scan! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2011 Report Share Posted May 8, 2011 There are many conflicting sources regarding iodine, especially specific to the Hashimoto's disease. My practitioner uses it herself, is not hashi's or hypo, and put me on it. I initially felt sick, she told me to drink salt water, and in about two weeks, I felt better than I had in years. If I had to do it over again, I would not have taken it. I stopped taking it in December 2010. Currently I'm going partly by instinct and partly by some research by Dr Kharazian. And I'm doing well enough and getting better. You can also refer to a book by Dr Kharazian. He has done years of research and currently treats very difficult cases in CA. You can also go to his website and request to be put on his newsletter. Dr K's protocol does not include recommending high doses of iodine for a hashi's patient. He believes that it adds fuel to the fire of the disease. I hope this helps and I wish you well. ---- Original Message ----- From: " secapps51 " <moqui51@...> hypothyroidism Sent: Saturday, May 7, 2011 5:27:11 AM Subject: Iodine I asked this on another group so I hope it is ok to ask it again here. I was reading an article in the health food store about iodine and wondered if there is a way to tell if we actually need to supplement with iodine. I am hypo/hashimotos and I do not use much salt, but the salt I use does not have any iodine in it. Do we get enough iodine from the foods we eat? And if we supplement, how much do we need? Is iodine good for those who are hypo or is it bad for those who are hypo. I am really not sure. Thanks, Susie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2011 Report Share Posted May 8, 2011 I have to agree with . There are plenty of MDs that practice alternative medicine and use natural supplements to treat their patients. One of them is one of my Cardiologists who knows how chemically sensitive I am, and has me on natural things like magnesium, CoQ10, etc. Roni From: <res075oh@...> hypothyroidism Sent: Sunday, May 8, 2011 9:58 AM Subject: Re: Re: Iodine For internal medicine I'd suggest you go to someone other than a chiropractor. .. .. > Posted by: " nmsjoy@... " nmsjoy@... > <mailto:nmsjoy@...?Subject=%20Re%3A%20Iodine> radiant505 > <radiant505> > > > Sat May 7, 2011 9:36 pm (PDT) > > > > There are many conflicting sources regarding iodine, especially > specific to the Hashimoto's disease. My practitioner uses it herself, > is not hashi's or hypo, and put me on it. I initially felt sick, she > told me to drink salt water, and in about two weeks, I felt better > than I had in years. If I had to do it over again, I would not have > taken it. I stopped taking it in December 2010. Currently I'm going > partly by instinct and partly by some research by Dr Kharazian. And > I'm doing well enough and getting better. > You can also refer to a book by Dr Kharazian. He has done years of > research and currently treats very difficult cases in CA. You can also > go to his website and request to be put on his newsletter. Dr K's > protocol does not include recommending high doses of iodine for a > hashi's patient. He believes that it adds fuel to the fire of the > disease. > I hope this helps and I wish you well. ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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