21 Feb 2016 09:35 am
Hi there, I'm looking for some feedback for an appropriate timetable for dosing up on medicine, for the "Emerging Stratton Protocol" which uses a dose of calcium pyruvate 1hr before each dose of tetracycline (like minocycline), macrolide (like roxithromycin), nitroimidazole (like tinidazole)...and ultimately a rifamycin (like rifabutin).
21 Feb 2016 09:35 am
21 Feb 2016 03:14 pm
thanks Sarah. I have been wondering why Stratton doesn't publish his latest protcol (has it really been stable for the past 8 years)?Helen
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Doing Thibault protocol (NAC/mino/roxi/tini/nattokinase)...but considering morphing to Stratton protocol
21 Feb 2016 03:35 pm
Basically, the actual protocol is just the antibiotics, which include rifampicin in the case of trials and with many of Sriram's patients. Stratton doesn't have any patients since all his time is taken up with teaching and research. He will offer advice but this can be rifampicin or what David and Thibault use. Pyruvate has never been part of a published protocol......................Sarah
Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.
24 Feb 2016 05:29 am
good to know...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Doing Thibault protocol (NAC/mino/roxi/tini/nattokinase)...but considering morphing to Stratton protocol
I would suggest that you
I would suggest that you stick with what Thibault prescibed for you. 2008 is a long time ago and pyruvate is rather old hat. If you talked to Stratton now, I doubt that he would suggest it........................Sarah
Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.