Re: Your Brain Versus Your Gallbladder? A No-Brainer!



On Apr 30, 2:20 pm, Sewer Rat <ratfromthese...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
snappy wrote:
I don't know about you, but I would rather take my brain any day than
my gallbladder!!
This is the research from Brian Fallon at Columbia, demonstrating
improvement in cognition after ten weeks of intravenous ceftriaxone:

And would orals not demonstrate improvement in cognition? Or would they
demonstrate improvement as well?

Instead of ceftriaxone there is the option of using cefotaxime, which
doesn't screw gall bladders.

Personally, I would decline a free treatment with ceftriaxone. I stick
will orals, and I have come to a point that I think it must be possible
to eradicate all Borreliae even in chronic Lyme. The only thing left to
do is to find optimal combinations, dosages and sequences of antibiotics.

Yes.. We need to fund lots and lots and lots of practical treatment
studies.....what are Klempner, Barbour, et all doing with all of their
bioweapons money? Twiddling their thumbs?

Are they studying treatment modalities in a wise way-- or
manipulating results to conform with their preexisting theory about a
post lyme immune reaction? Didn't they reading Jay Sanford's paper
outlining permanent brain infection back in 1976? What is going on?

Anyway, in the interim, I don't want to lose my brain......I seem to
be doing worse on the azithro 250 mg-- than on the 3 grams of
amoxicillin-- more fog is descending.... and I probably will be
willing to chance the Rocephin....because the brain fog ensures a very
low quality of life..... I'm trying to talk my Dr into increasing the
azithro dose and adding either mepron, plaquenil or tinidazole. What
would you suggest?
Thanks

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Your Brain Versus Your Gallbladder? A No-Brainer!
    ... improvement in cognition after ten weeks of intravenous ceftriaxone: ... And would orals not demonstrate improvement in cognition? ... Instead of ceftriaxone there is the option of using cefotaxime, ... I stick will orals, and I have come to a point that I think it must be possible to eradicate all Borreliae even in chronic Lyme. ...
    (sci.med.diseases.lyme)
  • Ceftriaxone-Associated Biliary Complications of Treatment of Suspected Disseminated Lyme Disease
    ... Lyme disease is endemic in Monmouth and Ocean counties, ... Most children had received prolonged and repeated courses of oral antimicrobials and/or home intravenous infusion of antimicrobials; 79% had been hospitalized for treatment of suspected LD or management of treatment complications, most notably drug- induced symptoms of gallbladder disease occurring in patients receiving ceftriaxone, and bloodstream infections associated with intravenous catheters. ...
    (sci.med.diseases.lyme)
  • Re: A randomized, placebo-controlled trial of repeated IV antibiotic therapy for Lyme encephalop
    ... campaign, especially longterm IV ceftriaxone. ... But perhaps they could only choose one treatment, ... critical debate concerning persistence. ...
    (sci.med.diseases.lyme)
  • Re: NEWS: Mark Klempner and The Science.
    ... antibiotic treatment does not preclude isolation of viable ... It seems ceftriaxone is defeated by ... spirochetes, and even when I cultured 46 petri dishes of spirochetes ... A short term course of ceftriaxone followed by eukaryotic cell penetrating protein synthesis inhibiting antibiotics that can be taken orally makes more sense. ...
    (sci.med.diseases.lyme)
  • Re: Wormser: "Were lying."
    ... Peenies, Peenies, Peenies, My Name is Chuck and I love McSweenies' wrote: ... But there are many Lyme patients who lost their gall bladder due to IV ceftriaxone treatment. ... It may be helpful for a short term, but ceftriaxone can't kill the intracellular Borreliae. ...
    (sci.med.diseases.lyme)