Well as i'm sitting here typing this I've got a mashed up garlic clove taped to my nuts I have been shocked as to how fast this rash/fungus/bacterium/x has spread, so I'm trying some things I've not done before. I thought I had this under control, as I had been washing the affected areas with Hibiclens and seen a reduction in it. Then boom, right in the middle of ongoing treatment it gets worse...
That's new information for me on the histamine. I am on the lookout for more established connections to show my doctor, because he is interested in this disease but is needing some help with some of these theories since his focus is on psychiatry. If I am able to get him to follow some of these ideas, he has numerous connections at the NIH he could refer me to.
I'm having a bad day with my congnitive symptoms, so I'm not writing too well lol
Hey nightingale. Don't worry about how you're expressing yourself. It seems fine to me
Garlic might be a great anti-fungal but will actually burn your skin. It might not be a good idea to tape it to any part of your body. It has blistered my fingers on more than one occasion.
The histamine connection is that you may or may not have a genetic acetaldehyde metabolism problem BUT if you're producing too much histamine then you're using up your acetaldehyde dehydrogenase inactivating the histamine. Some of the orthomolecular researchers refer to under-methylation where they argue that some people have high histamine. This is a good thing if your histamine is a bit more than normal as it gives you a competitive edge. Apparently, it's common in athletes and high achievers in science and commerce.
They orthomolecular researchers claimed it's bad if the histamine is too great or is getting deactivated too slowly which happens in about 15-20% of undermethylators.
Dr. Bill Walsh is one of the guys who still researches this along with the Linus Pauling institute. Most of mainstream medicine had decided it was nonsense but then Professor Bruce Ames in Berkley put together a body of research suggesting that mainstream medical researchers were writing it off to quickly and suggesting that supplementation of various vitamins and amino acids may improve or stabilise chemical processes in the body thrown into disarray by illness or genetic mutation (of coenzymes like ALDH for instance).
So it really depends what's causing the rash. If it's fungal then anti-fungal treatment is the best option. If it isn't fungal then it could be a high histamine and acetaldehyde metabolising issue. I'm only hell bent on the anti-fungals because I have an obvious fungal infection. I'm suggesting that anybody with POIS may have an infection and it may contribute to POIS or it may be coincidental or happen because POIS has weakened their immune system. Lots of possibilities. Either way, I don't want to take my NADH again until next week when the course of anti-fungals has finished and I'm taking the anti-fungals because of obvious fungus
For example, Daveman says he puts corticosteroids on his rash to reduce it. That's indicative of a histamine release, not a fungal infection.
I'm still taking ginkgo. It contains quercetin which appears to be a mast cell stabiliser, reducing histamine release. It's cheap and safe.
I'd suggest that if you can rule out a fungal infection with your doctor then add the NADH and some D-Ribose every day. Both of those increase energy, decrease fatigue and assist a range of chemical reactions in the body.
It seems to be the most effective of the b3 forms for me anyway. A small amount (just a few mg) seems to go a huge way.