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psoriasis what should i take
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psoriasis what should i take
Hi,
My mom have psoriasis for so many years and seems he started on me too... it started hard maybe about one year or a litle more... i think the big cause was the big stress i had and i have.. where i have it right now is on the face and chest, anyone know something good to calm/stop it? i dont want to take cortisone
if you can point me to some good thing to help it from the iherb website would be amazing, take in fact i would like to treat the psoriasis in some way that dont will destroy my hair... my hair has been allways a big cause of my stress!!
thank you!!
My mom have psoriasis for so many years and seems he started on me too... it started hard maybe about one year or a litle more... i think the big cause was the big stress i had and i have.. where i have it right now is on the face and chest, anyone know something good to calm/stop it? i dont want to take cortisone
if you can point me to some good thing to help it from the iherb website would be amazing, take in fact i would like to treat the psoriasis in some way that dont will destroy my hair... my hair has been allways a big cause of my stress!!
thank you!!
Marvey- Posts : 58
Join date : 2009-07-15
Re: psoriasis what should i take
Psoriasis is often seen as its worse during the winter, so depending on the region can make an impact.
Usually there's an issue with the liver, and often a lack of enough sulfur.
Unless there are food allergies that can cause some issues in the gallbladder, most of the time, psoriasis can be
cleared up with adequate sulfur (MSM) and oral Vitamin D3 (5,000 IU).
But if any of the above is not on target and this is strictly an autoimmune stress trigger, could be that you're producing excess stress hormones which is sacrificing calming hormones. So, would look into taking some progesterone cream,
(not a feminine hormone), plus it inhibits mitosis, and induces apoptosis.
Usually there's an issue with the liver, and often a lack of enough sulfur.
Unless there are food allergies that can cause some issues in the gallbladder, most of the time, psoriasis can be
cleared up with adequate sulfur (MSM) and oral Vitamin D3 (5,000 IU).
But if any of the above is not on target and this is strictly an autoimmune stress trigger, could be that you're producing excess stress hormones which is sacrificing calming hormones. So, would look into taking some progesterone cream,
(not a feminine hormone), plus it inhibits mitosis, and induces apoptosis.
_________________
My regimen
http://www.immortalhair.org/mpb-regimen
Now available for consultation (hair and/or health)
http://www.immortalhair.org/health-consultation
Re: psoriasis what should i take
thank you for your help Caustics!
About MSM is this product ok? https://www.iherb.com/pr/MRM-MSM-Crystals-1-000-mg-7-05-oz-200-g/41347
any advise about it? or you have a better option?
thank you!
About MSM is this product ok? https://www.iherb.com/pr/MRM-MSM-Crystals-1-000-mg-7-05-oz-200-g/41347
any advise about it? or you have a better option?
thank you!
Marvey- Posts : 58
Join date : 2009-07-15
Re: psoriasis what should i take
Marvey wrote:thank you for your help Caustics!
About MSM is this product ok? https://www.iherb.com/pr/MRM-MSM-Crystals-1-000-mg-7-05-oz-200-g/41347
any advise about it? or you have a better option?
thank you!
Used to recommend this powder...but it's just too bitter. Look for capsules and you'll need to take a lot of it.
_________________
My regimen
http://www.immortalhair.org/mpb-regimen
Now available for consultation (hair and/or health)
http://www.immortalhair.org/health-consultation
Re: psoriasis what should i take
thanks for the help CausticsSymmetry!
Marvey- Posts : 58
Join date : 2009-07-15
Re: psoriasis what should i take
you could give bile acids a shot
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0928468003000427
Pathophysiology of psoriasis: coping endotoxins with bile acid therapy
Abstract
The authors have tested the hypothesis that the deficiency of bile acids and the consequent endotoxin translocation might play a role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis. Under normal conditions the bile acids act as detergents (physico-chemical defense) and can protect the body against enteric endotoxins by splitting them into nontoxic fragments and thus preventing the consequent release of cytokines [Persp. Biol. Med. 21 (1977) 70]. A total of 800 psoriasis patients participated in the study and 551 were treated with oral bile acid (dehydrocholic acid) supplementation for 1–8 weeks. The efficacy of the treatment was evaluated clinically and also by means of the Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI score). During this treatment, 434 patients (78.8%) became asymptomatic. Of 249 psoriatics receiving the conventional therapy, only 62 (24.9%) showed clinical recovery during the same period of time (P<0.05). The curative effect of bile acid supplementation was more pronounced in the acute form of psoriasis (95.1% of the patients became asymptomatic). Two years later, 319 out of the 551 acute and chronic psoriasis patients treated with bile acid (57.9%) were asymptomatic, compared to only 15 out of the 249 patients (6.0%) receiving the conventional treatment (P<0.05). At the end of the 2-year follow-up, only 10 out of 139 acute psoriasis patients (7.2%) receiving the conventional therapy and 147 out of 184 bile acid treated patients (79.9%) were asymptomatic (P<0.01).
To conclude, the results obtained suggest that psoriasis can be treated with success by oral bile acid supplementation presumably affecting the microflora and endotoxins released and their uptake in the gut.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0928468003000427
Pathophysiology of psoriasis: coping endotoxins with bile acid therapy
Abstract
The authors have tested the hypothesis that the deficiency of bile acids and the consequent endotoxin translocation might play a role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis. Under normal conditions the bile acids act as detergents (physico-chemical defense) and can protect the body against enteric endotoxins by splitting them into nontoxic fragments and thus preventing the consequent release of cytokines [Persp. Biol. Med. 21 (1977) 70]. A total of 800 psoriasis patients participated in the study and 551 were treated with oral bile acid (dehydrocholic acid) supplementation for 1–8 weeks. The efficacy of the treatment was evaluated clinically and also by means of the Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI score). During this treatment, 434 patients (78.8%) became asymptomatic. Of 249 psoriatics receiving the conventional therapy, only 62 (24.9%) showed clinical recovery during the same period of time (P<0.05). The curative effect of bile acid supplementation was more pronounced in the acute form of psoriasis (95.1% of the patients became asymptomatic). Two years later, 319 out of the 551 acute and chronic psoriasis patients treated with bile acid (57.9%) were asymptomatic, compared to only 15 out of the 249 patients (6.0%) receiving the conventional treatment (P<0.05). At the end of the 2-year follow-up, only 10 out of 139 acute psoriasis patients (7.2%) receiving the conventional therapy and 147 out of 184 bile acid treated patients (79.9%) were asymptomatic (P<0.01).
To conclude, the results obtained suggest that psoriasis can be treated with success by oral bile acid supplementation presumably affecting the microflora and endotoxins released and their uptake in the gut.
alphadelta- Posts : 171
Join date : 2011-10-12
CausticSymmetry likes this post
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