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- DISCUSSION: Histamine as an inducer of symptoms in IBS
Clinical studies support the hypothesis that histamine is an inciting factor in IBS for a sizable cohort Antihistamine reduces pain in irritable bowel syndrome In a 12-week randomised trial, the team gave 28 patients the H1 antihistamine ebastine and 27 patients a placebo Ebastine treatment
- Filgotinib (JAK1 inhibitor) future of CFS ME treatment?
Extending the duration of treatment is possibly maybe unnecessary for longer illnesses or higher severity What is essential is that an effective concentration of the inhibitor is present in the cytosol of the affected cells
- Game-Changing Leaky Gut Treatment (Larazotide Acetate) will soon be . . .
Here is a leaky gut study on IBS which found that in IBS-D, it is the colon which is leaky, and the worse the colonic leak, the more frequently the patient passes stools
- IBS much improved after removing CHLORAMINE (not the same as chlorine . . .
Synopsis: If you have IBS, and your tap water supplier puts chloramine (not the same as chlorine) into your drinking water, then simply adding 10 mg of vitamin C to every liter of tap water you consume, which neutralizes the chloramine, may greatly improve your IBS symptoms (chloramine can have adverse effects on the intestinal lining)
- Blasto - who has tried triple therapy cocktail - Phoenix Rising ME CFS . . .
A similar treatment comprises: secnidazole, furazolidone, and nitazoxanide Though my greatest improvement in IBS symptoms was achieved by removing chloramines from my drinking water See this post for a comprehensive set of Blasto eradication protocols, some of which have a 100% success rate
- IBS much improved after removing CHLORAMINE (not the same as chlorine . . .
The reason I suspect removing chloramines may be particularly helpful to those with IBS-D is because IBS-D is commonly associated with intestinal permeability (leaky gut), † † and chloramine is known to cause or worsen leaky gut † So chloramines may exacerbate IBS-D by exacerbating intestinal permeability
- Gastrointestinal Treatment | Phoenix Rising ME CFS Forums
Gastrointestinal Treatment This is the forum for gastrointestinal treatments 1 2 3 … 49 Next
- Treating SIBO - Phoenix Rising ME CFS Forums
Recurrence of symptoms after the treatment course What is the likelihood of SIBO recurrence after completing a course of rifaximin treatment? To help address this question, Lauritano and colleagues treated 80 consecutive patients with IBS and SIBO with rifaximin 400 mg three times daily for 10 days
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