The impact of parasite infections on the course of multiple

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Lyon
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The impact of parasite infections on the course of multiple

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mrbarlow
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Post by mrbarlow »

thanks for posting Lyon

Reading articles like these gives me great hope for the treatment I am undergoing and especially given its cost compared to all the DMD drugs

I am even considering an increase in numbers from 35 to 70 hookworms as there appears to be some dose - response relationship
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NHE
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ReL The impact of parasite infections on the course of MS

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The Abstract wrote:Previously, we demonstrated that helminth-infected MS patients showed significantly lower number of relapses, reduced disability scores, and lower MRI activity compared to uninfected MS subjects. In the current study, 12 patients with diagnosis of relapsing remitting MS presenting parasite infections were prospectively followed during 90 months; due to exacerbation of helminth-infection symptoms after 63 months of follow-up, 4 patients received anti-parasite treatment. Helminth-infection control was associated with significant increase in clinical and radiological MS activities. Moreover, these patients showed significant increase in the number of IFN-γ and IL-12 producing cells, and a fall in the number of TGF-β and IL-10 secreting cells, as well as CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ Treg cells evident 3 months after anti-helminth treatment began. These new observations on parasite infections associated to MS indicate that parasite regulation of host immunity can alter the course of MS.
12 people is still a very small study. Hopefully, they will be able to isolate the beneficial chemical cocktail that the worms are secreting that modulates the human immune system. That way, MS patients could potentially have the benefits without the risks associated with having independent minded worms crawling through us.


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Re: ReL The impact of parasite infections on the course of M

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mrbarlow
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Re: ReL The impact of parasite infections on the course of M

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NHE wrote:
The Abstract wrote:Previously, we demonstrated that helminth-infected MS patients showed significantly lower number of relapses, reduced disability scores, and lower MRI activity compared to uninfected MS subjects. In the current study, 12 patients with diagnosis of relapsing remitting MS presenting parasite infections were prospectively followed during 90 months; due to exacerbation of helminth-infection symptoms after 63 months of follow-up, 4 patients received anti-parasite treatment. Helminth-infection control was associated with significant increase in clinical and radiological MS activities. Moreover, these patients showed significant increase in the number of IFN-γ and IL-12 producing cells, and a fall in the number of TGF-β and IL-10 secreting cells, as well as CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ Treg cells evident 3 months after anti-helminth treatment began. These new observations on parasite infections associated to MS indicate that parasite regulation of host immunity can alter the course of MS.
12 people is still a very small study. Hopefully, they will be able to isolate the beneficial chemical cocktail that the worms are secreting that modulates the human immune system. That way, MS patients could potentially have the benefits without the risks associated with having independent minded worms crawling through us.


NHE


Which they will then charge extortionate amounts for thus locking 95% of MS sufferers Worldwide out of the treatment.

Low dose infections of Hookworm are documented repeatedly in medical texts as harmless - asymptomatic. I have an American parasitology book from the 1960's that states this when there were no therapeutic benefits known.

Give me 50 hookworm over the snake oil any day
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mrbarlow
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Re: ReL The impact of parasite infections on the course of M

Post by mrbarlow »

Lyon wrote:
NHE wrote:12 people is still a very small study. Hopefully, they will be able to isolate the beneficial chemical cocktail that the worms are secreting that modulates the human immune system. That way, MS patients could potentially have the benefits without the risks associated with having independent minded worms crawling through us.
NHE
Yes it is a small study and if I'm not mistaken only four of the entrants had problems requiring them to take anti-helminthics, which this second study/observation is based on taking the numbers even lower.

I've had a couple of computers die in the time since and long ago lost the record of our correspondances but a few years ago I had the pleasure of corresponding with William Harnett of the University of Strathclyde, who along with his wife Margaret at the University of Glasgow who by far were the earliest and by far have done the most work in isolating the chemicals and proteins that helminths utilize to control animal/human immune systems. They long ago isolated ES62 (excrete/secrete) from the filarial nemotodes, which happen to be particularly obnoxious helminths. At the time of our correspondance Dr Harnett didn't know of reasons to consider that the excretions/secretions of other helminths would be drastically different than any other helminth that has evolved to survive in humans.

The Harnett's work is a work in progress admittedly. No one claims that ES62 constitutes the entirety of the impact on the human immune system or that it is the complete chemical/protein package of what fllarial nemotodes secrete/excrete nor that it's exactly the same as the multitude of other helminths excrete/secrete.

This is only the first thing that came up, they've done a ton of work on this since.....going from memory I think he said 1965 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 ... 400.x/full


http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 ... 400.x/full

My Cousin is doing his Phd at Cambridge in Medical Biochemistry and whilst not strictly his field he reckons isolation and commercialisation of the compounds involved is decades away.

In the meantime if you believe Helminthic Therapy works then 5 years treatment will cost about the same as 3 weeks Copaxone
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mrbarlow
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Re: ReL The impact of parasite infections on the course of M

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Lyon wrote:
mrbarlow wrote: In the meantime if you believe Helminthic Therapy works then 5 years treatment will cost about the same as 3 weeks Copaxone
:) Even less if one isn't squeamish and does as the originator did and raise your own http://www.asthmahookworm.com/jt_archiv ... infest.php

I can't say that it "works" but I think the evidence is strongly pointing that way but everything I've seen strongly points to the times and places that humanity loses those helminths which evolved as "part" of our immune system as the same times, places and populations which experience(d) alarming increases of immune/inflammatory disorders.

Sure, association doesn't denote causation but when it's now shown in studies that these parasites have an obvious effect on disease that becomes WAY more than simple association.

It's also always important to keep in mind that the evidence shows the "formative years" for the immune system are before the age of puberty, up to 14 or 15 and after that "IF" benefits are noticed from adding helminths to the system of adults after disease processes have started, that's just icing on the cake and shouldn't logically be expected.



This would explain why Helminthic therapy is a life long commitment. It may well be that childhood exposure for a temporary period conveys lifetime protection whereas as an adult you need ongoing exposure to have any benefit.

Still an effective treatment for $700 a year is miles ahead of anything offered by conventional medicine.
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Re: ReL The impact of parasite infections on the course of M

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HelminthicTherapy
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Post by HelminthicTherapy »

honestly, I am not sure why every person with relapsing/remitting multiple sclerosis isn't trying helminthic therapy. The benefits are quite clear. I invite everyone to join these 2 facebook groups where the therapy is being discussed:
https://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=gr ... 26152&ap=1
https://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=gr ... 84867&ap=1

Also, this site has a ton of info on the subject:
http://opensourcehelminththerapy.org
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Re: The impact of parasite infections on the course of multi

Post by HelminthicTherapy »

Here's the full text of that paper:

<shortened url>
Lyon wrote:I think everyone interested in the possible relationship between the loss of our "evolutionary normal" helminths and the subsequent rise of autoimmmunity must be familiar with the study article by Coreale and Farez in the Annals of Neurology Volume 61, Issue 2, pages 97–108, February 2007 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17230481

Now in the April issue of Neuroimmunology http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21277637 they provide evidence of the opposite, that eliminating those helminths from people with MS seems to allow MS to again progress.

I hadn't realized that the study had followed the patients nearly so long as the 90 months they quote but in the world of MS studies 7.5 years is a long time.
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