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MS Relapse - EBV - Flu virus
 
dano123 Views: 4,408
Published: 9 y
 

MS Relapse - EBV - Flu virus


Update:

My wife eliminated Colitis going gluten free.
Her specialist said she would have it for the rest of her life and would have to remain
on the drugs for the rest of her life.
We decided to go Gluten free on our own and she has not been back to see him in 4 years.

She also has MS so we were wondering if it was also related to Gluten, but she has had a relapse after getting the flu and with a temperature of 104.4F
She was unsure of using the zapper for the flu at the beginning of the flu, but because she is on Rebif, which lowers the immune response, we were
worried that she would not be able to fight this flu which turned into Bronchitis. She was already on Antibiotics for 3 days and was getting worse. We were worried that pneumonia was next.
She started to zap after 4 days into the Flu/Bronchitis and everything cleared up
totally within the next 2 days. She only zapped for 2 days and on the third day she was better and out shopping.
It was amazing how fast it cleared and completely. Most colds/flu these days linger on for weeks or months.

For us, this rules out the 100% Gluten (diet) association with MS, since she has been Gluten free for almost 3 years, but Gluten can cause inflammatory diseases which adds STRESS to the body, so this STRESS can still be a trigger or be involved. There is also the psychological STRESS Trigger.

The studies on HERV-Fc1 retrovirus, HSP70, mycoplasma, C.pneumoniae and EBV (Epstein Barr Virus) appear to be a better fit on what is going on, especially with the introduction of another virus and with a fever(HEAT response trigger). Early studies suggest that antiviral drugs may be a better way to control MS, BUT they just don't have one yet for this application...

Antiviral herbs may be of benefit in preventing a relapse.
The zapper already deals with many viruses, bacteria and parasites so maybe maintenance zapping could help in controlling future relapses.


5 days after the Flu was gone she had very mild symptoms of a MS flareup, so in hindsight, she should have zapped at the first signs of the flu, or maybe should have continued zapping after the Flu had disappeared.
She is now on steroids for the next 3 weeks....
1: If she had of zapped at first signs of the Flu, she could have eliminated getting the Flu, Bronchitis and most likely the MS relapse.
2: or, if she had of continued zapping after the the Flu, then she may have been able to control the EBV which has an association with MS relapses.
The EBV stays latent in B cells until it gets activated (woken up) by another virus. (in her case the flu)

The 2nd option above has not been proven, but the 1st one may have worked in preventing the MS flareup and subsequent relapse.....
Most MS relapses begin after an infection, so eliminating the virus before it gets started is key. DON'T get a COLD or the FLU or a SINUS infection or any INFECTION (Trigger) especially that deals with a fever (HEAT Trigger).
We always knew it wasn't good to get a cold or the flu with MS, but it appears you are almost guaranteed of a relapse with one, especially with a fever..
If you do feel something coming on, the zapper can eliminate the cold or flu. We used modes 1 and 4 Rife frequencies for the flu. Has anyone had any luck controlling EBV? If using a zapper, what frequencies were used?

BTW - I started to get the first symptoms of the Flu and was able to zap it away with 2 hours of zapping.... (I think I eliminated it within an hour, but went for 2hrs)

It took 18 days from the onset of the flu before the MS symptoms presented and 17 days from the first day with a fever.
The MS symptom included light headedness (not spinning) and nausea for the first 5 days, then balance and vision became affected.

Some more info on EBV that supports involvement.
Contracting EBV in your late teens and when it presents with infectious MONO, increases the risk for MS. Most people get EBV before they are 5 yrs old. 95% of the population has EBV, so it may be when you get it and how it presents, that determines the increased risk.

This fits for my wife. She had MONO in late teens.
can anyone else confirm?
 

 
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