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by jdwithit
1215 days ago
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That is wonderful for your friends, but I don't know what they have to do with this individual you have never met. My uncle has lived with MS for almost 50 years and is in the final stages of life unfortunately, which I guess gives me the same level of credibility. I would not advise a stranger on the internet to inject themselves with something based on one study done on mice. I'm also not going to tell them what to do with their own body. But "run it by your doctor first" seems like a reasonable thing to suggest, even if they ultimately decide to do it anyway. |
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I would not take anything my doctor didn't say would at least not cause harm. But the calculus is different for other people.
Among groups of people with MS I've chatted with there is kind of an unspoken rule to not advise treatment because we all know that we are all different in treatment, symptoms, probably cause... you can get off into the weeds pretty easily.
Lipolic acid, vinpocetine, curcumin, lots of things are anti-inflammatory or good for neuropathy. I've had people recommend getting controlled bee stings, hensbane, obviously meditation for reducing stress and cortisol, and if we go in the direction of alternative methods (which I know people with MS who have used) you get acupuncture and yoga and herbal medicines. CBD in Europe is a treatment, I'm sure other cannabinoids would help different people in different ways too. I just have to tune it out, I want to spend my attention on what I'm good at and enjoy, and trust my [MS specialist] doctor to let me know about new treatments.
Study says "inflammation decreased" which is great. But lots of things do that, so the question is how much... I wouldn't trust it without a fair bit of statistical evidence without my doctor telling me that whatever random supplement is safe enough to risk.