http://www.marshallprotocol.com
Resonates with some of the MS / multiple pathogen "conspiracy" theories

Ongoing research includes a Internet-based, phase II clinical trial of a succesful antibiotic therapy for sarcoidosis (at SarcInfo.com). Currently the study is supporting a cohort of nearly 200 sarcoidosis patients. Two papers have already been published describing the preliminary results:
Marshall TG, Marshall FE: Antibiotics in Sarcoidosis - Reflections on the First Year.
JOIMR 2003;1(3):2 http://www.joimr.org/phorum/read.php?f=2&i=38&t=38
Mangin M: Observations of Jarisch-Herxheimer Reaction in Sarcoidosis Patients.
JOIMR 2004;2(1):1 http://www.joimr.org/phorum/read.php?f=2&i=51&t=51
First thought:: So anyone know of any Internet-based studies in the MS field? Other than of course the ad-hoc personal type studies that get posted on boards such as this (although other boards are obviously inferior eh Arron ?Ours is a Phase II observational study. Many of the patients in this cohort are Health Care workers (Physicians, Nurses and ex-Nurses), and thus are not necessarily representative of the patient population as a whole. Therapy was prescribed and monitored by the patients’ personal physicians. Since the recruitment and ongoing support was provided over the Internet, all patients needed to have a level of education sufficient to operate Internet-capable Computers.
These factors are all capable of introducing bias into the study results. Further bias could be introduced by the lack of a standardized results questionnaire (it was adjudged impractical to produce a standardized questionnaire which could meaningfully evaluate a heterogeneous cohort of Cutaneous, Cardiac, Pulmonary and Neuro-sarcoidosis patients).
To compensate for these biases, extreme care was taken to document adverse events, especially adverse outcomes, and correspondence was publicly logged and reviewed by both investigators.
Despite these reservations, the remission induced by this Antibiotic/ARB protocol was dramatic, and it is unlikely that any of these methodological limitations were sufficient to have skewed the study’s conclusions.
Anyone spot why the avoidance of Vit D?The Marshall Protocol (MP)[1,2] uses specific combinations of antibiotics in a pulsed regimen along with an angiotensin receptor blockade and avoidance of Vitamin D.
These pathogens then stimulate Nuclear-Factor-kappaB in the cytoplasm to release mRNA from the nucleus. This triggers a Th1 cytokine cascade. Additionally, the production of ACE (angiotensin converting enzyme) is stimulated which converts inert angiotensin I to usable angiotensin II, for which these pathogens have receptor sites. This excess angiotensin II allows the pathogens produce excess 1,25 D. This excess affects proteins in the macrophage cell walls, allowing bacteria to more easily traverse the cell outer membrane
Don't know about conspiracy theories. Who are the conspirators?Resonates with some of the MS / multiple pathogen "conspiracy" theories![]()
First, let me say this: The first six months were something of a roller coaster for me, which is why I didn't start posting anywhere until after this time. I didn't have the confidence to do so until after my second scan, showing the improvements in black and white. When I started the treatment my disease had become so rapidly progressive that I really am not exaggerating when I say I would need 24 hour care by now. This is after a long period when the MS appeared to be so benign that I didn't really feel affected by it a lot of the time. If I had started posting straight away, my postings would have looked very different, but since this is all now written in retrospect, you tend to forget the worst moments, or at least put them to the back of your mind. Thinking back to this time last year, though, for a few days I was in absolute agony, with pains in my right arm and across my shoulders. I couldn't go into my studio to do any work but sat in the kitchen crying. When the pain wasn't there, though, I felt so much better than previously. Before I started the treatment I was never in any pain. If I had been keeping an online journal, I can't imagine what I would have said then! So, what I mean to say is that although I was effectively improving all the time, it often didn't feel like that. I would have thought, "So what if my plantar reflex is vastly improved, what does that mean if I am I so much pain?"After reading about your experiences, I started on David's treatment about 3 months ago. I must say that it has been a confusing period and sometimes it is hard to say whether you are really improving or you think that you are improving just because you want it so much. That is the reason why I haven’t been posting in the regimen section yet.