jon019 wrote on Dec 1st, 2016 at 1:18am:....well, to begin with..... you serve up HORSESHIT!.....it behooves (pun intended) me to point
that out....
...posting the same thing twice is juvenile...
...extended use of naproxen is DANGEROUS......
...you need to keep up on your "research"...the evidence builds....
Multimedia File Viewing and Clickable Links are available for Registered Members only!! You need to
or
...nothing in my quote was unseemly or untrue....there's a whole thread to peruse here
so no sense repeating same argument...cuz "you can knock forever on a deaf man's door"....
...why is it you don't join the rest of the family and lend support on other issues/topics....this one
trick pony stuff is boring.....
....where have you been for the last 3 months....I thought you finally went away...pain free
on the D3 regimen..
Bye
First of all, saying I'm 'serving up horseshit' is what's truly juvenille, particularly when you can't properly explain with any supporting facts why you think so.
Second of all, I didn't INTENTIONALLY double-post. Since I only just logged back on here for the first time now (Feb. 9th, 2017) I didn't realize I had somehow produced a second copy of my reply.
Third of all, I came on here to report that I had an allergic response to something in a supplement that I was taking (still haven't isolated the exact ingredient) called 'Libido', which is supposed to help your body boost its testosterone production. The allergic response also, you guessed it, produced a brief cluster cycle. This is extremely interesting, because, as Batch points out in his thread, allergic (ie. histamine response) is a potential trigger for CH.
What's noteworthy to me, as a former chronic CH'er, is that a histamine response can produce a mini-cycle over two-three days, which I'm able to break with enough antihistamine. This lends credibility to the notion that CH may be condition whereby your body's histamine response mechanism is triggered on the circadian rhythm by something in your body OR by an actual allergen that simply produces a histamine response! There's inflammation, to be sure, but the inflammation is caused specifically by a histamine response. It's just that in the case of a CH'er, that inflammation happens to press against (crush?) the tri-geminal nerve. In any case, I feel like I'm getting closer and closer to understanding CH, as I can now stop and start the CH's at will. The question of the CH's happening in longer clusters probably has to do with this histamine response being triggered by something produced within you body, on the circadian rhythm, rather than an external allergen (something you eat/breath in, etc.)
As a result of this finding, I'm going to request that the admins close and archive (but not delete) this thread. I do want the information in it to be preserved for research purposes, but I think I will try to participate in Batch's thread again and possibly start a new thread pertaining to these new findings associating histamine response, inflammation and CH.
Thanks to all, even the curmudgeons!
Feb. 15th addendumI've decided to continue this thread, as it now serves essentially as the record for my CH experience. Now that I've been PF for over 1 year after being chronic, and then once again started a cycle, almost certainly due to an allergic response, I'm going to keep adding info in the hope that it will somehow benefit others. I still believe in Batch's high vitamin D3 anti-inflammatory approach, and that my NSAID supplement does further increase the efficacy of the D3 treatment. However, allergic responses triggering large histamine levels seem to be VERY capable of pushing the inflammation levels up well past the level that the D3/vimovo can contain. In the case of my latest CH, even in conjunction with high doses of benadryl, if the histamine response is severe enough. I am therefore now exploring the root causes of my allergic response (which even produced a rash, both a few weeks ago, and a much smaller one again yesterday), and hoping that what I come up with will also help others.