Auto Immune disorders are actually mycoplasma's (tiny single cells w/ no cell 
sides.  They invade your own exisiting cells and take over.  Your immune system 
knows the invader is there, but because it took over your own cell, it is 
"hidden" and cannot be found by your immune system.  CS can invade these 
mycoplasma's and kill them.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, October 14, 2001 7:48 AM
  Subject: CS>How I Successfully Treated an Auto Immune Disorder


  In a message dated 10/13/2001 8:12:05 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[email protected] writes: 



    Subj:Re: CS & HTLV/Auto Immune Disorders 
    Date:10/13/2001 8:12:05 PM Eastern Daylight Time 
    From:    [email protected] (damian) 
    Reply-to: [email protected] 
    To:    [email protected] 




    Not with that version of auto immune desease. I myself have such a desease 
    where by the body attacks that which constitutes it. It started of with 
    hypoparathyroidism, then when to autoimmune. Well thats what they said. It 
    might been the in reverse who knows. I'm unsure if i have any info that may 
    help you.  Though like everyone in this group would say dont give up. Oh 
wait 
    on I remember reading something to do with why the auto immune desease 
kicks 
    in. It has something to with a chemical or virus or something bonding to 
the 
    organ making the immune think its not a friend. I remember reading this on 
a 
    hyperparathyroidism forum. Not much help i know. 

    Take care 
    damian 



  Damian: I am not a physician, or a vet, but here's a little story that may be 
food for thought. Back in the late 80s we got a Newfoundland puppy that (we 
found out later -- too late to go back to the breeder) had, among other serious 
problems, a form of autoimmune disease that created pain in her joints. After 
many trips to the vet, and some experimentation on my part, I discovered that 
if I gave her about a twentieth to one-hundredth of the steroid prescribed by 
the vet together with buffered aspirin, I could "normalize" her overactive 
immune system (since steroids suppress the immune response), and use the much 
milder anti-inflammatory properties of buffered aspirin to treat her chronic 
inflammation. The time consuming part was to find, by trial and error, the best 
steriod/dosage combination that would perform best. She lived to be 9 which is 
almost average for the giant breeds, and when I finally had to put her to 
sleep, it was her hips that gave out, not complication! s ! from the steroids 
or the autoimmune disease. I hope my experience help you. Roger