Herpes Virus targeted stack: Hi All, I recently wrote a summary/hypothesis of what I believe could be causing my personal POIS symptoms in a post on
Ideas on Herpes Induced POIS. In the
POIS Cascade Stack thread, I compiled a stack that reflects my personal health philosophy and life goals. But, below is a stack that is solely based on what my test results say would be the best combination of supplements and drugs. It targets specific triggering mechanism of cytomegalovirus (CMV, HHV-5) and HHV-6 herpes viruses which are reactivated by neurotransmitters that cause PGE
2 induced vascular stretching (
RefSE). After looking at
my test results and angiogram-MRI, carefully going over test results of others, I tried the following stack:
Taken 45 minutes prior to sexual activity (prepack):
Vasoconstrictors:---Excedrin (acetaminophen 250mg, aspirin 250mg, caffeine 65mg)
Methylators:---S-Adenosyl methionine/SAM-e (200mg)
---Folate (200mcg)
---pyridoxine HCl/B6 (2mg)
---Cyanocobalamin/B12 (>100mcg)
NF-kB/cytokine regulator:---vitamin D3 (2000IU)
Single trial notes:
1. After the O, there was some small drainage in my right nostral. I sniffed once and it went away. No symptoms for 15min.
2. Approximately, 20min after O, my skin started to tingle as if POIS was coming on. There was new drainage in my nose and I sneezed once. Then I took a second dose of Excedrin. Within 20min of the second Excedrin dose (this is after the O), all the of the symptoms went away. No drainage, no headache, no sneezing, 100% symptom free. I did feel tired, so went to sleep for 2 hours (long nap). But after waking up I did not feel any of the linguring fatigue associated with POIS.
3. Now it is the second day, and I am still completely free of POIS symptoms without taking any supplements (not even vitamin D3).
Most people are cautious about posting results of a single trial, but I have been testing and using vasoconstrictors (indomethacin, caffeine) for over a year now. So I know that they work. According to the reasearch, it is not the inhibition of blood vessel permeabilty that stops the virus activation and inflammation. So not all vasoconstrictors will work. But rather, the vasoconstrictors have to have specific properties that block NF-kB and COX signaling (
RefSE). I discuss this in more detail
here. Also it seems that the fact that so many of the stacks on this forum stop working after a while is indicative of drug-resistance, which is a known property of pathogens.
The below supplements were not taken in the above trial, but can be stacked. However, consult your doctor before stacking multiple vasoconstricting agents as they can increase the risk of heart attack or stroke.
Enhancements:---Trimethylglycine/TMG (methyl-donor) (2g)
---Indomethacin (COX inhibitor/antioxidant) (50mg)
---propranolol (beta2-blocker, blocks PGE
2 induced vasodilation) (see personal doctor for details)
I and others on this forum have use indomethacin. It is so far the single most effective drug/supplement that I have tried (
my indomethacin trial). But I am concerned about its long-term safety. That is the only reason why I don't used indomethacin. Excedrin is safer and as a compound drug, I find that taking two Excedrin doses 1 hour apart (before/after O) is more effective than single dose indomethacin. Indomethacin was shown to prevent CMV reactivation due to vascular stretching (
RefSE) and in one study it was the second most effective drug at preventing HSV-1 reactivation (
Ref).
Methyl-donors and specifically S-Adenosyl methionine (SAM-e) reduce blood levels of histamine. In this way, SAM-e helps to constrict blood vessels (
Ref). Moreover SAM-e and folate are associated with improved endothelial function
(
Ref).
Final note, vasoconstrictors can increase your risk of heart attack or stroke. CMV and HHV-6 infections of the arteries do increase the risk of atherosclerosis. So consult a doctor before stacking multiple vasoconstrictors.Update: I made a mistake in the amounts of methyl-donors that I originally posted. I have corrected the amounts.