Almost everyone is infected with Epstein Barr virus, herpes virus 4, the one that is infamous for causing infectious mononucleosis. It is well known that the virus is suspicious in Multiple Sclerosis but it is not clear cut or straight forward.
One thing that is documented is at the time AZT became the first drug that was prescribed for HIV, several people that had MS prior to diagnosis noted that when they started the drug, there MS went away completely. Below is a video of a scientist in the MS community making a very good case for Epstein Barr virus being the cause of MS, as well as a link to a scientific paper of an HIV negative person who had MS and made a decision based on being a medical student to take combivir (zidovudine/lamvudine) and had an indefinite remission of the disease.
Zidovudine is only a powerful inhibitor of gamma herpes virus only, Epstein Barr in this instance, unlike acyclovir or ganciclovir it doesn't need viral kinase to be phosphorated to virus DNA.
My uncle had non-Hodgkins lymphoma, the culprit is Epstein Barr.
I came across this as over 2 years ago I came down with a bad viral infection (coxsackie hand/foot/mouth disease) and between that and living in a moldy environment my immune system got all out of whack and I had all the characteristics of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. It forced me to move and sell my house. My immune system rebounded and now I'm pretty much normal (took about 3 weeks), no substitute for a functioning immune system. Mycotoxins from mold can severely depress the immune system.
Multiple Sclerosis Fatigue and Chronic Fatigue in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome are very similar, as many as 10% of people that get mononucleosis from contracting Epstein Barr convert to Chronic Fatigue.
I think when CRISPR gets fully underway and they are able to fully cure certain chronic infections, we will find out just how many illnesses some of these bugs are responsible for.
Anyway, just posting this to see what some of you think, would prefer if you form an opinion after reading the paper and watching the entire video if you have time.
I don't have MS or problems anymore but figured it was immoral not to share some of this information as one could actually put something in permanent remission versus
just treat the symptoms while still progressing with a disease.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0d6v-2Xc-5E
One thing that is documented is at the time AZT became the first drug that was prescribed for HIV, several people that had MS prior to diagnosis noted that when they started the drug, there MS went away completely. Below is a video of a scientist in the MS community making a very good case for Epstein Barr virus being the cause of MS, as well as a link to a scientific paper of an HIV negative person who had MS and made a decision based on being a medical student to take combivir (zidovudine/lamvudine) and had an indefinite remission of the disease.
Zidovudine is only a powerful inhibitor of gamma herpes virus only, Epstein Barr in this instance, unlike acyclovir or ganciclovir it doesn't need viral kinase to be phosphorated to virus DNA.
My uncle had non-Hodgkins lymphoma, the culprit is Epstein Barr.
I came across this as over 2 years ago I came down with a bad viral infection (coxsackie hand/foot/mouth disease) and between that and living in a moldy environment my immune system got all out of whack and I had all the characteristics of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. It forced me to move and sell my house. My immune system rebounded and now I'm pretty much normal (took about 3 weeks), no substitute for a functioning immune system. Mycotoxins from mold can severely depress the immune system.
Multiple Sclerosis Fatigue and Chronic Fatigue in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome are very similar, as many as 10% of people that get mononucleosis from contracting Epstein Barr convert to Chronic Fatigue.
I think when CRISPR gets fully underway and they are able to fully cure certain chronic infections, we will find out just how many illnesses some of these bugs are responsible for.
Anyway, just posting this to see what some of you think, would prefer if you form an opinion after reading the paper and watching the entire video if you have time.
I don't have MS or problems anymore but figured it was immoral not to share some of this information as one could actually put something in permanent remission versus
just treat the symptoms while still progressing with a disease.
Could antiretrovirals be treating EBV in MS? A case report
We present the case of an HIV-negative patient clinically diagnosed with relapsing-remitting MS who achieved significant disease improvement on Combiv…
www.sciencedirect.com
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