energyandstruct
Member
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2017
- Messages
- 960
This is Dr. Shoemaker’s paper, which is going to be an important one. He just published this, this week actually.
Using nasal VIP in 20 patients with what he calls chronic inflammatory response syndrome related to water-damaged buildings, because he’s a mold expert.
By the way, there is no clinical difference between CIRS-WDB and chronic fatigue syndrome. We trade patients. I get his patients that he can’t seem to fix with the mold, and he gets some of my patients, because I can’t seem to fix them, because maybe they have mold. So we keep trading patients. And we can’t tell the difference between them.
This 18-month therapy with nasal VIP corrected numerous inflammatory biomarkers and numerous hormone derangements.
This is important right here – reduced pulmonary artery systolic pressure.
It increased T regulatory cells – which means it tends to reduce some of the pro-inflammatory aspects at the core of this disease.
No doubt, if you can reverse flow reversal in the brain and liver, you will get better.