How do you distinguish between cytokines from Tregs and cytokines from macrophages.
I have asked myself the same question, I have no idea.
My second question is: Do you know how cytokine levels change in normal non-POISers when they orgasm?
A few years ago I stumbled upon a paper which did investigate the behaviour of interferon gamma in women post orgasm. If I remember correctly it dipped after orgasm. So decrease of IFN-g after orgasm might be normal behaviour. I have lost that article and couldn't find it again. As far as the other cytokines are concerned I have no idea.
Semen contains polyamines (spermine and spermadine), prostaglandins and cytokines. I could be wrong, but my understanding is that these signaling molecules are produced by the males immune system to tell the woman's immune system not to attack his sperm. So our immune system is regulating her immune system (using immune signaling molecules) so that our sperm have a chance to fertilize her eggs. Prostaglandins also help her uterus contract to draw the semen into her Fallopian tubes. Maybe there is a difference between male POISers and male non-POISers in which signaling molecules are produced during sex/orgasm. Getting a female POISer to do time-point cytokine test like you have, may help to eliminate the sperm production variable.
No you are not wrong. A certain prostaglandin plays a major role in this mechanism, forgot which one it was. I have thought about this but I never went deep into this matter. Now that you mention it, I do remember vaguely my mother telling me she gets a burning sensation upon intravaginal contact with male sperm. After reading your comment today this popped up into my mind, but wasn't sure so I called her today and asked her this question.
She did confirm it.
I can have a burning sensation in my penile uterus when seminal fluid is being released, it's not a standard reaction but it happens when there is high frequency/long duration of exposure and/or when sperm is sticky after an orgasm and some of it is left behind in the uterus. When I get this burning sensation it might induce a burning sensation at my rectum as well, while nothing has happened over that area. Could be a signaling problem.
Third, when I received subcutanous injections it burned like hell. I asked my doc the question why it doesn't give me that reaction when you drop it on skin. He told me it's probably a big molecule, like a protein, that is not able to penetrate the skin due to its size.
POIS could be a signaling defect. Maybe it's something as simple as blocking or rerouting a signal to fix the issue. Perhaps you should start a new thread about this subject, there could be something wrong with this mechanism in poisers. Spermine and spermadine are present in food as well, that could explain food sensitivities, it could be part of the same signaling problem.
Now one other thing, before I forget to mention it, it's probably unrelated but since I'm rambling anyway, when I received a subcutane shot most of the time I felt great right after leaving the clinic. It's like my immune system is temporarily stronger/stable, having less intens food reaction, stronger muscles, My dry mouth is being reversed. I have to look up the exact timing, dunno whether I have wrote it down somewhere. Maybe it peaks around 40 min or so, rough estimate, could be a bit later. Most of the time I used samples which were frozen though, so no orgasm was involved. So that's another thing, the molecule(s) in question is able to stay stable when it's enduring low temperatures and it's relatively large in size.
Also, is there any place for innate immune deficiency in your hypothesis? I seem to remember you had low NK cell count (CD16+CD56+CD57+) which is a rare immunodeficiency (Natural killer cell deficiency (JS Orange, 2013)).
I have not thought about that yet.