94-year-old Swedish doctor has treated his CFS for over 50 years by injecting himself with staphylococcus vaccines

Korven

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Joined
May 4, 2019
Messages
1,133
This doctor called Carl-Gerhard Gottfries got chronic fatigue syndrome after the Asian flu in 1957-1958 and he decided to start poking himself with vaccines to see if he could find a treatment. After lots of experimentation he found that a staphylococcus toxoid vaccine worked and has since allowed him to be symptom-free for over 50 years (with monthly injections)...

...what a legend!

The original vaccine Staphypan has been discontinued but there is a similar product on the market from Russia that people are using it to treat their CFS.

He says it works by "boosting the immune system" and supposedly it helps shift the immune system back to a TH1 type response.

It would be great if we could find a similar immune boosting agent that is more readily available and also preferably not a vaccine lol.


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCF_RYCnHW4&ab_channel=ErikNilsson


 
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Messages
21,494
This doctor called Carl-Gerhard Gottfries got chronic fatigue syndrome after the Asian flu in 1957-1958 and he decided to start poking himself with vaccines to see if he could find a treatment. After lots of experimentation he found that a staphylococcus toxoid vaccine worked and has since allowed him to be symptom-free for over 50 years (with monthly injections)...

...what a legend!

The original vaccine Staphypan has been discontinued but there is a similar product on the market from Russia that people are using it to treat their CFS.

He says it works by "boosting the immune system" and supposedly it helps shift the immune system back to a TH1 type response.

It would be great if we could find a similar immune boosting agent that is more readily available and also preferably not a vaccine lol.


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCF_RYCnHW4&ab_channel=ErikNilsson



It sounds homeopathic, like needing snake venom to cure a deadly snake bite.
 
P

Peatness

Guest
This doctor called Carl-Gerhard Gottfries got chronic fatigue syndrome after the Asian flu in 1957-1958 and he decided to start poking himself with vaccines to see if he could find a treatment. After lots of experimentation he found that a staphylococcus toxoid vaccine worked and has since allowed him to be symptom-free for over 50 years (with monthly injections)...

...what a legend!

The original vaccine Staphypan has been discontinued but there is a similar product on the market from Russia that people are using it to treat their CFS.

He says it works by "boosting the immune system" and supposedly it helps shift the immune system back to a TH1 type response.

It would be great if we could find a similar immune boosting agent that is more readily available and also preferably not a vaccine lol.


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCF_RYCnHW4&ab_channel=ErikNilsson



Don't tell Pfizer or fauci they might attempt a *new version* mRNA staphylococcus vaccine
 

aliml

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Apr 17, 2017
Messages
692
He says it works by "boosting the immune system" and supposedly it helps shift the immune system back to a TH1 type response.

It would be great if we could find a similar immune boosting agent that is more readily available and also preferably not a vaccine lol.

Top Factors that Balance the Immune System (Higher TH1 / Lower TH2):
  1. Sun/UVB light [1] – UVB decreases IFNy in Th1 dominance but increases it in Th2 dominance. So it’s balancing. It also decreases IgE responses. UVA in the sun also decreases Th2 dominance [2].
  2. Probiotics… Decreases Th2: L Reuteri [3] (probiotic), L. Plantarum [4] (probiotic), L. salivarius [4] (probiotic), L. lactis [4] (probiotic)… Increases Th1: S Boulardii? [5], L. Sporogenes, L Acidophilus [6], L casei [7], Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG [8], Lactobacillus paracasei [9], Lactobacillus salivarius [9], B Longum [10], L Brevis [11], L fermentum [12].
  3. NAC/Glutathione sufficiency decreases Th2 [13] and increases Th1 [14].
  4. Licorice -18/β-glycyrrhetinic acid+LicoA [15, 16]. Glycyrrhizin increases IFNy and decreases the Th2 response [17, 18].
  5. Gynostemma [19]. This is a Th1 immune stimulant and reduces allergies. Gynostemma is recommended also because it’s a powerful mitochondrial enhancer.
  6. Ginger or juice the root [20, 21]. Recommended because it has anecdotal support in addition to the research, but also because you can get it everywhere, it has a long history of use and for its multitude of other benefits.
  7. Reishi [22]
  8. Tinospora [23]. This has a clinical trial backing it, with some anecdotal support.
  9. Quercetin [24]
  10. Astragalus [25] Decreases Th2 and increases Th1.
 
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i_nomad

Guest
It would be great if we could find a similar immune boosting agent that is more readily available and also preferably not a vaccine lol.
…is this sarcasm? Are you unfamiliar with this forum?

Forgive me if you’re a regular and I just don’t recognize you… but most of the point of what is discussed here results in boosting the immune system with what’s readily available.

Food and sunlight. And not eating certain food. Really that simple. Vaccines are never the answer. Never.

The reality is that doctor likely had a poor diet and could have likely solved his problems easily.

Or am I missing something from your post…?
 

Makrosky

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Joined
Oct 5, 2014
Messages
3,982
Top Factors that Balance the Immune System (Higher TH1 / Lower TH2):
  1. Sun/UVB light [1] – UVB decreases IFNy in Th1 dominance but increases it in Th2 dominance. So it’s balancing. It also decreases IgE responses. UVA in the sun also decreases Th2 dominance [2].
  2. Probiotics… Decreases Th2: L Reuteri [3] (probiotic), L. Plantarum [4] (probiotic), L. salivarius [4] (probiotic), L. lactis [4] (probiotic)… Increases Th1: S Boulardii? [5], L. Sporogenes, L Acidophilus [6], L casei [7], Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG [8], Lactobacillus paracasei [9], Lactobacillus salivarius [9], B Longum [10], L Brevis [11], L fermentum [12].
  3. NAC/Glutathione sufficiency decreases Th2 [13] and increases Th1 [14].
  4. Licorice -18/β-glycyrrhetinic acid+LicoA [15, 16]. Glycyrrhizin increases IFNy and decreases the Th2 response [17, 18].
  5. Gynostemma [19]. This is a Th1 immune stimulant and reduces allergies. Gynostemma is recommended also because it’s a powerful mitochondrial enhancer.
  6. Ginger or juice the root [20, 21]. Recommended because it has anecdotal support in addition to the research, but also because you can get it everywhere, it has a long history of use and for its multitude of other benefits.
  7. Reishi [22]
  8. Tinospora [23]. This has a clinical trial backing it, with some anecdotal support.
  9. Quercetin [24]
  10. Astragalus [25] Decreases Th2 and increases Th1.
Very interesting. Thank you. I am lately wondering if the commonly prescribed NAC that family doctors prescribe like candy when you have some kind of chest problem, might be working not on liquidifying mucus so it is easy to expectorate (as Drs claim that is the mechanism of action of NAC) but rather by enhancing natural immunity so the body clears the pathogens itself. And that is why it might seem effective when Drs prescribe it and patients take it obediently.
 

Juniperus

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Joined
Feb 28, 2019
Messages
8
I think it it plausable to boost your immunsystem by taking vaccines. I have been following the danish vaccine researcher Christine Stabell-Benn for some time. The focus of her research is non-specific vaccine effects, i.e. all those other effects, both positive and negative, that vaccines have on our immune systems and overall health, beyond their very specific ability to protect against one infectious disease.

According to her research the dividing line is more or less between "live" and "non-live" vaccines. That is, if it contains a weakened but still complete version of the pathogen or only contains a small part of the pathogen it’s supposed to protect against.

Live vaccines tend to be associated with a reduction in overall mortality that goes far beyond the protection they offer against the specific pathogen. Non-live vaccines, on the other hand, actually seem to increase overall mortality, so that whatever benefit they provide against a specific pathogen is outweighed by their negative overall health effects.

Sebastian Rushworth has en execellent conversation with her on youtube:
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xcwg-Vzg9NU
in wich she elaborates on the subject.
 

aliml

Member
Joined
Apr 17, 2017
Messages
692
Very interesting. Thank you. I am lately wondering if the commonly prescribed NAC that family doctors prescribe like candy when you have some kind of chest problem, might be working not on liquidifying mucus so it is easy to expectorate (as Drs claim that is the mechanism of action of NAC) but rather by enhancing natural immunity so the body clears the pathogens itself. And that is why it might seem effective when Drs prescribe it and patients take it obediently.
You're welcome. Theoretically, NAC may help treat TH2-dominant diseases.

The following have been associated with Th2 dominance in limited studies [1]:
  • IgE-related allergies, which are immediate and can be measured by skin scratch tests [57]
  • Seasonal allergies
  • Airway constriction
  • Asthma
  • Nasal drip
  • Mucus
  • Eczema (Dermatitis)
  • Hay fever (Allergic rhinitis)
  • Increased stomach acidity or GERD
  • Excess histamine or what some people call “histamine intolerance”
  • Hives (Urticaria)
  • Chronic Fatigue Syndrome [58]
  • Autism [59]
  • Uveitis, Grave’s disease, Sjogren’s, Oral Lichen Planus, SLE (also Th1 dominant) [60, 61, 62, 63]
  • Coronavirus disease
 

Makrosky

Member
Joined
Oct 5, 2014
Messages
3,982
You're welcome. Theoretically, NAC may help treat TH2-dominant diseases.

The following have been associated with Th2 dominance in limited studies [1]:
  • IgE-related allergies, which are immediate and can be measured by skin scratch tests [57]
  • Seasonal allergies
  • Airway constriction
  • Asthma
  • Nasal drip
  • Mucus
  • Eczema (Dermatitis)
  • Hay fever (Allergic rhinitis)
  • Increased stomach acidity or GERD
  • Excess histamine or what some people call “histamine intolerance”
  • Hives (Urticaria)
  • Chronic Fatigue Syndrome [58]
  • Autism [59]
  • Uveitis, Grave’s disease, Sjogren’s, Oral Lichen Planus, SLE (also Th1 dominant) [60, 61, 62, 63]
  • Coronavirus disease
Very interesting. Thank you.
 
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