I supposedly had GB (french polio) when I was 2.  All of my symptoms
(slowly stopped walking, eventually stopped breathing) were similar
and thus that was my diagnosis and treatment.

Recently I was seeing a neurologist and passed along that I had had GB
when I was 2.  He said, "no you didn't". I said huh?  He replied that
the odds of having that were miniscule or impossible given a 2 year
old's immune system isn't mature enough to cause it.

Anyway due to the correlation of GB and the flu vaccine from the 70s,
I am supposed to steer clear of it and still do.  My denier
neurologist didn't dissuade from that position even though he thinks I
didn't have it.

On 9/25/11, PT <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> She started exhibiting the symptoms of Guillain-Barré Syndrome around
> the time she was vaccinated and continues to struggle with it.  The
> family claims the vaccine did it, you know, because they happened at the
> same time.  The family has decided not to treat her with medication and
> is going the natural route, which makes me wonder if there was some
> initial distrust of medicines that contributed to the blaming of the
> vaccination.
>
> It is impossible to prove that the vaccine had anything to do with
> Guillain-Barré Syndrome.  It occurs in 1-2/100,000 people in their teens
> for no apparent reason.  It is believed that surgery, respiratory
> infections and, yes, even vaccines can trigger it.  Still, the cause is
> not known and neither is how it is triggered.  It is interesting to note
> that Ms. Tunley started the vaccine when seeing a doctor for a followup
> for treatment of a respiratory illness.
>
> The CDC pretty much calls BS on the whole thing anyway:
>
> 35 million doses have been distributed.
> 18,700 adverse events have been reported.
> 1,500 of those have been considered serious (requiring a hospital visit).
> 68 deaths have been reported.
> 32 have been confirmed.
> Some of these were caused by unrelated problems (blood clots in women
> smokers on birth control, etc.)
>
> Those are some pretty good odds, if you ask me .. literally less than
> one in a million chance of death.  Odds go higher than that simply by
> walking out the front door.  They look like the odds of just about any
> vaccine resulting in bad things happening ... just .004%
>
> Most colleges require that one's MMRV and Hep. vaccines be up to date.
> No one is bitching about that requirement even though those vaccines
> have serious side effects in rare cases.
>
> Mr. Tunley is looking for something/someone to blame.  Many others don't
> even have a clue what they are afraid of.  The rest are hung up on the
> "OMG teenage sex" connection that conservatives like to pretend doesn't
> happen.
>
> On 9/24/2011 11:25 PM, Dana wrote:
>>
>> I note he does not say what happened to his daughter....
>
>
> 

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