19th November 2009, 06:10 AM
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#671
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: auckland
Posts: 502
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mistica
From the Biochemist:
"All of the available measurements for inflammation are designed for acute infections like septicemia or tonsillitis. Most measure the body's accommodation, e.g. by producing CRP, to the stress of large scale infection. These are poor measures of local infections or low level chronic infection. High sensitivity CRP is a strange measurement of very low levels of CRP. This is strange to me, because CRP is a threshold response and reflects when the switch is thrown signifying major problems. There is no CRP produced in response to low, but disease-causing levels of inflammation. As far as I know, there are no good measures for more limited inflammation and that is why diet-based inflammation is not detected until it results in other diseases, such as obesity, metabolic syndrome, allergies, depression, ADHD, etc.
Cryptic bacteria cause low levels of local inflammation and also suppress the immune system. There are no blood tests for these bacteria, hence their name, cryptic.
Your faces can reveal severe problems, but the insensitive blood tests won't respond unless the problem spreads to your brain or liver. Most of the typical inflammatory cytokines are heparin-binding proteins that are rapidly removed from blood by binding to tissue surfaces. If your rosacea was bad enough to register in blood tests, you would already be hospitalized by your symptoms.
The omega-3s reduce the global inflammation that causes autoimmune and degenerative diseases. In terms of arbitrary numbers, systemic inflammation higher than 50 causes disease, but the blood tests can't detect anything below 50. Most people are walking around with inflammation at about 20 and they occasionally get sore throats that will spike it over 50 and maybe up to 200-300. As we as age, for some unknown reason, the inflammation rises up to the 50 level and people accumulate degenerative diseases. With an anti-inflammatory diet, the level is kept below 50 even into old age. I am just putting numbers on my idea of how it works, since the current tests are too crude to respond to meaningful levels of chronic inflammation.
I hope that this helps. This is the way that I think about it."
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I swear ive read this stuff word for word before in certain books,Im just curious to Google where your infos coming from,Its very misleading not knowing the source
Thanks!
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19th November 2009, 06:37 AM
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#672
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 1,030
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I speak with an ex Harvard biochemist on a daily basis, which you know.
You can't google private emails.
He spends considerable time researching based on known science pertaining to rosacea and related biological processes. In addition he takes into account the personal symptoms and observations made by rosaceans on forums.
Why should any of this be misleading?
He works in his own way.
__________________
Previous Numerous IPL, Sulfacetamide 10%/Sulphur 3%. Zyrtec 5mg.
Supplements: High dose Vitamin D3. Alpha Lipoic Acid, Ester-C, Lactoferrin (now and then).
Multi Vitamins, (Grape Seed Extract, not at the moment).
Probiotics, Digestive Enzymes, (Vitex, not at the moment).
Skin Care: Cetaphil Gentle Cleanser, 1% Salicylic acid. Sunblock - Dermabloc.
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19th November 2009, 11:29 AM
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#673
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 1,030
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Ahoy Dan!
Are you around?
__________________
Previous Numerous IPL, Sulfacetamide 10%/Sulphur 3%. Zyrtec 5mg.
Supplements: High dose Vitamin D3. Alpha Lipoic Acid, Ester-C, Lactoferrin (now and then).
Multi Vitamins, (Grape Seed Extract, not at the moment).
Probiotics, Digestive Enzymes, (Vitex, not at the moment).
Skin Care: Cetaphil Gentle Cleanser, 1% Salicylic acid. Sunblock - Dermabloc.
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Yesterday, 05:55 AM
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#674
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: auckland
Posts: 502
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mistica
I speak with an ex Harvard biochemist on a daily basis, which you know.
You can't google private emails.
He spends considerable time researching based on known science pertaining to rosacea and related biological processes. In addition he takes into account the personal symptoms and observations made by rosaceans on forums.
Why should any of this be misleading?
He works in his own way.
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misleading not knowing his name I'm curious on googling him not ur private talks,
Whats his name??
Thanks!
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Yesterday, 03:06 PM
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#675
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 204
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Hi Mistica,
Yes, I'm around. Work is hectic so I have't had time to read through the posts much this week. I'll check in tomorrow. Any specific questions?
How are you doing?
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Yesterday, 09:52 PM
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#676
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 1,030
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Quote:
Originally Posted by iDan
Hi Mistica,
Yes, I'm around. Work is hectic so I have't had time to read through the posts much this week. I'll check in tomorrow. Any specific questions?
How are you doing?
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Hi Dan,
I do appreciate your coming back to the forum to help us, even though rosacea is distant memory for you now.
My question was posted on the previous page. About capillaries.
In addition to this, I have had a return of bad nose flushing and it starts as soon as I put foot out of bed. The rest of my face is not doing too badly, but the nose flushing is driving me crazy. It takes ages to cool it down with a covered ice pack, where as previous to my 8400IU dose, it rarely flushed badly upon getting up and any slight flush would dissipate with around 30 secs of ice pack application. I have to apply ice, otherwise it would completely engorge and a vast amount of damage would occur.
It happens during the day to a lesser extent and again in the evening. I feel sick about it. Nose flushing is something I LOATHE with a passion. Just when I thought I was well enough to fly too!!!! I really thought I was over this. The severity of it anyway. I was at the point where I was hoping for a further decrease in redness.
Also, what advice would you have for someone who has been taking D3 for months, with a recent increase to 8000IU, and as yet no improvements noted?
The recent increase has caused more flushing and of a different type. Internal, rather than as a reaction to triggers.
Blood serum levels are very high, in the 90's.
I imagine mine must be in the late 80's now.
Thanks as always!
__________________
Previous Numerous IPL, Sulfacetamide 10%/Sulphur 3%. Zyrtec 5mg.
Supplements: High dose Vitamin D3. Alpha Lipoic Acid, Ester-C, Lactoferrin (now and then).
Multi Vitamins, (Grape Seed Extract, not at the moment).
Probiotics, Digestive Enzymes, (Vitex, not at the moment).
Skin Care: Cetaphil Gentle Cleanser, 1% Salicylic acid. Sunblock - Dermabloc.
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Yesterday, 09:55 PM
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#677
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 601
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Quote:
Originally Posted by snuffleupagus
How long should I stay on 1000iu before uping my dose or adding magnesium?
Is it possible that vitamin d makes your hair thinner?
Could be helping flushing a tiny bit it's hard to say so far
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Bump!
Also did it help your p&ps?
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