Jose Montoya on Natural Killer Cells in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
From a transcript of a recent talk by Dr. Jose Montoya:
forums.phoenixrising.me/index.php?threads/lecture-by-dr-montoya-from-feb-2018-partly-on-antiviral-treatment.58055/
Natural killer cells continue to be a common theme.
It has become that every time that we have a new patient here at Stanford, we do the natural killer cells, and at least 30% of them have significantly low natural killer cells.
And that's an important argument of reflecting why we do certain things in terms of management and treatment.
Natural killer cells were placed by nature in humans to defend against tumors and viruses.
And they have been really well conventional medicine studies showing that if someone does not have natural killer cells, they have really bad herpesviruses infections.
The whole literature on that area is well documented.
And CFS patients happen to frequently have low natural killer cells.
And we have some of our patients who have no natural killer cell activity.
So there is something that's a clue.
This provocative book will end the injustice of the silent treatment Neenyah Ostrom's reporting has been getting from the media and The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome community. Ostrom blew the lid off one of the biggest medical secrets of our time: the link between the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemic and AIDS.
Ostrom interviewed most of the major researchers in the field, as well as countless patients and government scientists. She uncovered so many similarities between Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and AIDS that she came to the conclusion that they are part of the same epidemic, and she argued that until their connection is admitted by top government researchers, there is little hope of making real progress in the fight against Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.
Charles Ortleb's book captures all the challenges and excitement of running a small newspaper that was publishing a brilliant journalist who essentially was the Woodward and Bernstein of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemic. In Rolling Stone, David Black said Ortleb's newspaper deserved a Pulitzer Prize.
forums.phoenixrising.me/index.php?threads/lecture-by-dr-montoya-from-feb-2018-partly-on-antiviral-treatment.58055/
Natural killer cells continue to be a common theme.
It has become that every time that we have a new patient here at Stanford, we do the natural killer cells, and at least 30% of them have significantly low natural killer cells.
And that's an important argument of reflecting why we do certain things in terms of management and treatment.
Natural killer cells were placed by nature in humans to defend against tumors and viruses.
And they have been really well conventional medicine studies showing that if someone does not have natural killer cells, they have really bad herpesviruses infections.
The whole literature on that area is well documented.
And CFS patients happen to frequently have low natural killer cells.
And we have some of our patients who have no natural killer cell activity.
So there is something that's a clue.
The definitive history of the
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome cover-up.
As the publisher and editor-in-chief of a small newspaper in New York, Charles Ortleb was the first journalist to devote a publication to uncovering the truth about Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. He assigned Neenyah Ostrom the duty of following every twist and turn of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome story. No newspaper in the world did more to warn the world about the virus called HHV-6 which seems to be triggering Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and many other immunological disorders.This provocative book will end the injustice of the silent treatment Neenyah Ostrom's reporting has been getting from the media and The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome community. Ostrom blew the lid off one of the biggest medical secrets of our time: the link between the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemic and AIDS.
Ostrom interviewed most of the major researchers in the field, as well as countless patients and government scientists. She uncovered so many similarities between Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and AIDS that she came to the conclusion that they are part of the same epidemic, and she argued that until their connection is admitted by top government researchers, there is little hope of making real progress in the fight against Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.
Charles Ortleb's book captures all the challenges and excitement of running a small newspaper that was publishing a brilliant journalist who essentially was the Woodward and Bernstein of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemic. In Rolling Stone, David Black said Ortleb's newspaper deserved a Pulitzer Prize.