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Papadopoulos et al. have written that atopy should be treated as a suboptimal innate immune responseThe body's first line of defense against intracellular and other pathogens. According to the Marshall Pathogenesis the innate immune system becomes disabled as patients develop chronic disease..1) Consistent with that thinking, the Marshall ProtocolA curative medical treatment for chronic inflammatory disease. Based on the Marshall Pathogenesis. is a treatment for allergies. Other treatments (some of which are contraindicated) include the following.
vitamin D supplementation can cause allergies2)
Hyppönen et al. performed a retrospective cohort study of 7,648 Finnish infants born in 1967. The prevalence of atopy and allergic rhinitis at age 31 years was 46% higher in participants who had received vitamin D supplementation regularly during the first year compared to others.3)
see also allergies to MP antibiotics
The word allergy is often misused. An allergy is an acquired hypersensitivity to a substance (allergen) that does not normally cause a reaction. It is essentially an antibody-antigen reaction. The reaction is due to the release of histamine or histamine-like substances from injured cells.
Manifestations most commonly involve the respiratory tract (most serious is anaphylactic shock) or the skin because this is what the histamine reaction affects. Other types of reactions such as gastric disturbances or side effects of medications are more correctly labeled intolerances. True allergies are a Th2 response of the immune system. Many patients on the MP have found that their long-term 'allergies' disappeared. This is not surprising since Th1 inflammationThe complex biological response of vascular tissues to harmful stimuli such as pathogens or damaged cells. It is a protective attempt by the organism to remove the injurious stimuli as well as initiate the healing process for the tissue. is often not recognized as the cause of allergy-type symptoms.
…Review my presentation on antibiotics at Chicago, where I argued that the size of antibiotic molecules is too small for true allergy to develop, as they are too small to catalyze the formation of antibodies? Consequently they are typically recognized by innate immunity, and not by acquired immmunity. Now, my arguments can (of course) be challenged. But nobody has done that yet.
~Trevor Marshall, PhD
Asthma is a chronic or recurring inflammatory condition in which the airway develops increased responsiveness to various stimuli, characterized by bronchial hyper-responsiveness, inflammationThe complex biological response of vascular tissues to harmful stimuli such as pathogens or damaged cells. It is a protective attempt by the organism to remove the injurious stimuli as well as initiate the healing process for the tissue. , increased mucus production, and intermittent airway obstruction. Only a minority of asthma sufferers have an identifiable allergy trigger. Sounds a lot like Th1 diseaseAny of the chronic inflammatory diseases caused by bacterial pathogens., doesn't it? The Marshall Protocol will often resolve your asthma. 4)
Symptoms may include trouble breathing through the nose, headache, aching behind the eye area, tenderness in the cheeks, sinus congestion, nasal discharge, or post nasal drip.
Nasal irrigation or a steam inhaler may relieve some symptoms.
Sinus symptoms are often an expression of trigeminal nerve dysfunction and will respond to the MP, albeit in the later stages of the therapy.
~Greg Blaney, MD
The issue of pollen allergies is a difficult one. I cannot personally suggest anything, as all the allergies (which I used to have aplenty) slowly disappeared as therapy progressed. I would suspect that the pollen will be less of a problem for you this year, and virtually no problem next year, but I may be wrong. Be careful to not confuse the signs of sinus due to immunopathologyA temporary increase in disease symptoms experienced by Marshall Protocol patients that results from the release of cytokines and endotoxins as disease-causing bacteria are killed. and sinus due to allergies.
~Trevor Marshall, PhD
How to Become Gluten Intolerant
Reactions to foods are due to inflammation and immunopathology. Many members report resolution of their food intolerances on the MP.
My food allergies are totally gone. For the first time in years, I am not having reactions to trigger foods like corn, milk, sugar, wine, etc.
~Amypea
If your 'allergy' symptoms are intolerable, first reduce immunopathology by using the strategies suggested in Managing immunopathology to see if they improve. If they do, then you know you are dealing with a Th1 response, also known as Immunopathology
If you do not achieve relief from the MP meds adjustments, you may use palliative meds (Rx or OTC) ordered by your Dr and following recommendations in Other treatments It is okay to take antihistamines to treat intolerable symptoms. Try to use short-acting antihistamines, such as Benadryl (diphenhydramine) which can be taken as needed only, to reduce the amount of medication used.
Dry eyes and eye drops see The eyes have it*
see also allergic foods and IP* (log-in required*)
The use of allergy medications such as (), a bronchodilator, preventive for allergic (Th2 immune system) responses and anti-inflammatory agent, are not so benign. They affect the immune system and may interfere with the MP meds so their use should be avoided unless you are sure that the source of your symptoms is a true allergic response. If your breathing feels okay without it, perhaps you do not need it. An short-acting, nonsteroid inhaler may be a better choice.
Active patients
Last updated: January 4, 2009
Patient interviews
Marshall Protocol member comments
We've found that hypersensitivity, whether skin reactions to metals or reactions to fumes, dust, odors, smoke, etc., resolves with recovery on the MP. Evidently when the Th1 inflammation is under control, normal homeostasis is reached. I know this will be hard to believe. I myself find it astonishing that I can wear jewelry without rashes, touching and eating certain foods no longer bothers me, and I pay little attention to smoke, orders and fumes. It's quite a change in my life after 40+ years.
~Belinda
I think it's just experience that tells us things are herx. We nearly all start by arguing that something 'couldn't be herx because…' and we all end up saying 'ok, you were right, it was herx' when we see what a limited timescale it has, and how its coming and going relates to the medication programme.
Anyway, it doesn't make any practical difference to what you do, does it? I mean, the MP is the way forward, no matter what's causing your symptoms. And you'll gradually see them fading, or going altogether. Keep a good record of daily symptoms, so that you track your progress.
I had a lot of true allergies before I started the MP; I had no idea they could be sarc-related. Now they've gone - except that sometimes I get a few hours or even a day or two of returned allergy, on the same days of my Z cycle each time. Allergies are an over-reaction of our distressed immune system; it stands to reason that some herxes will be allergy-like symptoms.
~Julia
I can be certain it is herx and not “allergy” to the antibiotics because so many of us took larger doses of antibiotics many times pre-MP with no adverse reactions at all; but it knocked us on the ground once we avoided light, D and got the 1,25-DPrimary biologically active vitamin D hormone. Activates the vitamin D nuclear receptor. Produced by hydroxylation of 25-D. Also known as 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol, 1,25-hydroxyvitamin D and calcitirol. down with the Benicar. I can see no other logical explanation for why I could take large doses every day before, and then a 'crumb' will now hit me like a freight train on MP. Others have noticed this too, and it is no group hallucination. I am certain if you looked for antibodies to the antibiotic in your system you would find none.
~PBear, RN
One thing I wanted to mention is on Christmas, the wind was blowing and the dust was kicking up. This often happens in Arizona and there are days when you can't see the mountains because of the dust. On Christmas day, I had some pleurisy like symptoms, dizziness, brain fogThe loss of intellectual functions such as reasoning; memory loss; and other neurological abilities that is severe enough to interfere with daily functioning., fatigue and sinus problems. Since I started the Marshall Protocol, I haven't needed steriods for my allergy / asthma problems. In the past, I would often need steriods and/or emergency care when this happened.
~Plateletgal