achillea
Member
- Joined
- Feb 29, 2016
- Messages
- 903
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Click Here if you want to upgrade your account
If you were able to post but cannot do so now, send an email to admin at raypeatforum dot com and include your username and we will fix that right up for you.
Take a look at this and the Take Home section...
http://autoimmunityresearch.org/transcripts/AR-Albert-VitD.pdf
Milk consumption tied to Parkinson’s disease
Dr. Greg Blaney - L Form Bacteria - BioFilms - Th1 pathogens - MP Marshall Protocol - 12.07.09 - One Radio Network
It would appear the thread title is accurate.
So they're placing the blame on the vitamin D in fortified milk.
Keep in mind I'm not the brightest tool in the shed, but what turned me away from it is that almost all information about the Marshall Protocol is from Marshall himself or a few sites dedicated to the protocol, so I'm concerned about bias, and the entire thing sounds a little too good to be true. It's a difficult plan to follow, so I'd like to be certain about the efficacy before undertaking it, but there are some people that rave about their good results. There does seem to be people that respond very well to vitamin D supplementation, and others that find it problematic, and there still isn't really a general consensus on how high vitamin D levels should even be. There's even debate over whether 25(OH)D, or 1,25-D should me measured.We really thought the forum was for posing info and receiving response from others who are interested in health like Peater Piper giving the input about having investigated the Marshall Plan and found it lacking .
Could make it worse longterm though.hmmm, makes me wonder if "vitamin D" would be beneficial in large doses for a temporary period during an autoimmune flare. Going by the logic in this video, it would suppress the immune system. Once the flare was over, reduce it to a small dose.
So, modulates in what direction? Suppressing or enhancing? I assume it is "changing" the immune system somehow, but in what sense? For better or worse?Vitamin D is absolutely not an immunosuppressor hormone, it's a immunomodulator, which is totally different. It modulates and does not suppresses it. Two different concepts.
It basically makes it stay quiet and not over react (e.g. not fighting our own body). That is how autoimmune diseases stay in remission.So, modulates in what direction? Suppressing or enhancing? I assume it is "changing" the immune system somehow, but in what sense? For better or worse?
"More than this, vitamin D strengthens the capacity of the immune system to react against viruses, bacteria, like the Tb bacillus.
The ability of our immune system to react against these micro-organisms is strengthened by the supply of vitamin D.
It' s already well-known in the scientific community that those who have tuberculosis need a supply of vitamin D so that the anti-tuberculosis effects can be more effective.
Moreover, it' s well-known also that the HIV carriers patients, for instance, or hepatitis C virus carriers too, they both need to be supplemented with strong doses, and not with daily doses internationally "recommended", but, on the contrary, of a physiological amount of 10.000 units a day, so that hepatitis C virus doesn't cause too many damages in the liver, as it
would be if there was a deficiency of vitamin D.
The same thing happens for the other examples of HIV and tuberculosis."
The Science Behind The Coimbra Protocol
It basically makes it stay quiet and not over react (e.g. not fighting our own body). That is how autoimmune diseases stay in remission.
There isn't a lot of disambiguation in the Peat community between "suppressing the immune system" and "factors which cause an immune system not to be over active / over reactive" (autoimmune issues). Autoimmune and Vit D deficiency have significant correlations everywhere in the world.