Re: Please help me. No one will help.
Hi everyone. I want to apologize for the lateness of my reply. Over the past few months it has been hard on me and I had hardly any energy to reply but I did want to let you know that your suggestions helped me a lot. I am now on treatment by Dr. Omar Amin, but I still wanted to post my results to help other people. I sent in my stool sample to Dr. Omar Amin. I highly suggest him. I have been on treatment for two weeks and I am getting to where I feel almost normal again. I will have to take treatment for half a year but it's a lot better than a lifetime because the other doctors finally diagnosed me with crohn's diesease and say Im not curable, but he says he can fully heal me.
Here is some information from my results.
(I had a severe yeast infection and two types of bacteria.) I believe that I also had a type of roundworm and flatworm like a lot of you suggested, but I think taking the huang lian su tablets and chaging my diet helped me get rid of the last of the bigger types. I won't be able to prove it on paper but I passed black flat things every time I pooped for 3 to 5 days on the no sugar, no gluten or dairy diet. Im not sure how my body got rid of them all the way but Im fairly confident that they are gone now and the left over stuff is stuff I can't see. If any of you still have symptoms and you don't seem to pass anything anymore you might be like me and just have things you can't see.
Here is the bacteria that was found:
#1.) CITROBACTER FREUNDII
Citrobacter freundii are opportunistic anaerobic rod-shaped Gram-negative bacilli. Citrobacter is found in the human
intestine and almost everywhere else including water, waste water, soil, etc.
Transmission: Citrobacter freundi is an indicator of a potential source of contamination from infected soil or water sources.
Symptoms and pathology: Citrobacter freundi is rarely a source of illness but is often the cause of opportunistic infections
mostly causing abnormal inflammatory changes in the intestinal tract and affecting biliary, urinary, and respiratory tracts, and
blood of patients with weak immune systems. It has been suspected to cause diarrhea and possibly extra-intestinal infections
including peritonitis. C. freundii represents about 29% of all opportunistic infections. One fatal disease that C. freundii has
been associated with is neonatal meningitis. The mortality rate of Citrobacter meningitis is unacceptably high, with death rates
of patients ranging from 25 to 50 %. Moreover, serious neurological problems were reported to persist in 75% of survivors.
For more information, see Amin, 2011 . J. Bacteriol. & Parasitol. 2:
109-112.http://www.parasitetesting.com/_private/J.%20Bacte%20&%20Parasit.-pathogenic%20bacteria.pdf.
Treatment: Citrobacter species are a common cause of nosocomial infections associated with patients that are undergoing
prolonged hospital treatments. For
Antibiotic recommendations please see sensitivity results. For an herbal alternative use
Freedom, Cleanse, Restore protocol.
Prevention: Avoid exposure with soil or water based contaminated objects.
#2.)Escherichia coli is a Gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium that is commonly found in the lower intestine of warm-blooded
animals. Most E. coli strains are harmless, producing vitamin K2, and by preventing the establishment of pathogenic bacteria
within the intestine. They are used as bio-indicators to test environmental samples for fecal contamination. Different strains of
E. coli are often host-specific, making it possible to determine the source of fecal contamination in environmental settings.
Transmission: This is a fecal-oral infection, directly or indirectly.
Symptoms and pathology: Over 700 antigenic serotypes of E. coli are recognized based on O, H, and K antigens. Most
human beings have more than 1 strain of E. coli at the same time. Most strains of E. coli live in the intestine of humans and
other mammals without causing any pathology. Pathogenic strains of E. coli, however, are responsible for 3 types of
infections in humans: urinary tract infections, neonatal meningitis, and intestinal diseases. The latter includes (1) ETEC
(Enterotoxigenic E. coli) causing diarrhea in infants and travelers, (2) EIEC (Enteroinvasive E. coli) causing dysentery-like
diarrhea with fever, (3) EPEC (Enteropathogenic E. coli) causing watery, sometimes bloody, diarrhea especially in children,
and (4) EHEC (Enterohemorrhagic E. coli) causing hemorrhagic diarrhea and/or food poisoning which may develop into
hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) and includes the invasive 0157:H7 strain making up 80% of the EHEC serotypes
producing the verotoxin or Shiga toxin. Strain identification requires molecular techniques not readily available in most
diagnostic laboratories. For more information, see Amin, 2011. J. Bacteriol. & Parasitol. 2:
109-112.http://www.parasitetesting.com/_private/J.%20Bacte%20&%20Parasit.-pathogenic%20bacteria.pdf.
Treatment:
Antibiotics have not proven useful for the acute diarrheal illness. In fact,
Antibiotics may increase the chances of
developing HUS (up to 17-fold). This effect is thought to occur because the
Antibiotic damages the bacteria, causing them to
release even more toxin. Most investigators suggest
Antibiotic use only if a patient is septic. For antibiotic recommendations
see sensitivity results.For an herbal alternative use Freedom, Cleanse, Restore protocol.
Prevention: Avoid any sources of direct or indirect fecal contamination.
Note:
I hope this information is able to help someone else. Thank you for all that helped me.