ONE PILL OR ONE THOUSAND
EXCERPT
“Dr. Beatrice Golomb USCD suggests that despite the no apparent symptoms in early courses, the mitochondria are accumulating damage. The threshold for each person is determined by numerous factors, but once you cross over the threshold, an adverse event ensues.
“Dr. Beatrice Golomb USCD suggests that despite the no apparent symptoms in early courses, the mitochondria are accumulating damage. The threshold for each person is determined by numerous factors, but once you cross over the threshold, an adverse event ensues.
One pill or one thousand, for each person the threshold is different. But make no bones about it, there is a threshold for each person. A line, that once it is crossed, there is no going back.”
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“Subtle Signs of Toxicity, An Impending Disaster
Perhaps you, as a reader, are new to this situation and you have taken a fluoroquinolone in the past and you believe that they worked well and that you did not respond negatively to them. Or, maybe you are faced with taking another round of fluoroquinolones and you question if you were affected previously. Either way, this section is for you.
For many, the beginning stages of FQ toxicity can be subtle and can be a harbinger of a serious adverse event to come if another round is taken. For many these subtle signs, which are not all inclusive, can ‘fly under the radar’ so to speak, being easily dismissed as something else.
Hypothetical Examples Based On Real Cases
You’re a police officer or laborer and you had a strange bout of tendinitis, for instance in the outer tip of the hip, normally diagnosed as trochanteric bursitis caused by tight belts or resting on your side at night.
You’re a gardener or a tennis player and your elbow pain was (epicondylitis) diagnosed as an overuse of your arms while gardening or playing tennis, but you remember that you had never had it before.
You, as an athletic person, takes you longer to recover after exercise. It is not alarming, and you have not paid much attention to it.
Your sleep is worse than before; it seems normal as you have a lot of pressure at work, right?
You’re a police officer or laborer and you had a strange bout of tendinitis, for instance in the outer tip of the hip, normally diagnosed as trochanteric bursitis caused by tight belts or resting on your side at night.
You’re a gardener or a tennis player and your elbow pain was (epicondylitis) diagnosed as an overuse of your arms while gardening or playing tennis, but you remember that you had never had it before.
You, as an athletic person, takes you longer to recover after exercise. It is not alarming, and you have not paid much attention to it.
Your sleep is worse than before; it seems normal as you have a lot of pressure at work, right?
From time to time you get some small throbbing pains that vary in different parts of the body. They last only for a few seconds then disappear.
You notice occasional muscle twitching in an eyelid, or any other muscle group of the body. It is not painful.
At night you feel some mild itching migrating along your body. One brief itch here and another there. It is more intense in the scrotum or groin. Instead of identifying it as a peripheral neuropathy, you conclude that your clothes, your perspiration or the new brand of soap that is more irritating must be causing it.
You feel strange sensations against your skin, like a butterfly flapping its wings or a buzzing that give you tingle feeling. You may pass it off as being tired or over stressed.
You feel some muscle stiffness, and your range of movement is not as full as before, especially in one or both legs, but it is normal because you are getting older.
You notice occasional muscle twitching in an eyelid, or any other muscle group of the body. It is not painful.
At night you feel some mild itching migrating along your body. One brief itch here and another there. It is more intense in the scrotum or groin. Instead of identifying it as a peripheral neuropathy, you conclude that your clothes, your perspiration or the new brand of soap that is more irritating must be causing it.
You feel strange sensations against your skin, like a butterfly flapping its wings or a buzzing that give you tingle feeling. You may pass it off as being tired or over stressed.
You feel some muscle stiffness, and your range of movement is not as full as before, especially in one or both legs, but it is normal because you are getting older.
You’re used to drinking coffee and now you do not tolerate coffee as well as before. You have to reduce the amount of coffee that you used to drink.
Your memory is not as good as it used to be. The cause may be too many things to think about and too much stress. You dismiss it as getting older.
You have the urge to urinate when the bladder is partially full. When you feel the need to urinate you have to rush for the toilet.
Your memory is not as good as it used to be. The cause may be too many things to think about and too much stress. You dismiss it as getting older.
You have the urge to urinate when the bladder is partially full. When you feel the need to urinate you have to rush for the toilet.
You notice that you cannot fully flex, or strongly flex, your big toe (one or both), or sustain the flexion for more than a few seconds.
You experience nightmares or intense startling while falling to sleep and you find these disturbing or frightening. How strange you think.
If you have experienced some of these symptoms and you have had one or more previous courses of FQ’s, there is a strong possibility you have reached your threshold of tolerance. Going beyond this point could result in destruction of your quality of life.
Remember, the common denominator is that you have already previously had a course(s) of FQ’s. These strong, but often subtle, warning signs that your body will not tolerate more FQ’s. The cumulative dosage could be lethal."...
Read entire article http://www.myquinstory.info/cumulative-toxicity-of-the-flu.
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