Given this forum is something of a longecity backwater might an increase in visibility be in order, possible via a separate forum?
There is particular concern in the uk that peak wave-height will leave many with very limited medical care. So perhaps it is worthwhile drawing up possible strategies from pre-infection to initial infection through to life-threatening status (in the case there is no effective medical care) as well as continue to research possible antiviral supplements. Case logs of recorded effectiveness might provide some semblance of protocol confirmation or trigger revision for the virus-blighted community present or those amongst us directly connected to CV misfortunates.
Vitamin C:
On vitamin C, this guy asserts that bowel tolerance of C sky rocket with ebola, influenza. Here he recounts putting a woman with HIV on high C dosage, claiming 25 years later, there was no trace of the virus.
https://youtu.be/iPZ4UyOl7Ps?t=1226
https://www.ncbi.nlm...ubmed/22429343/
After an overview of the literature on the effects of the separate administration of either vitamin C or zinc against the common cold, this article presents data from two preliminary, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trials, conducted with a combination of 1000 mg vitamin C plus 10 mg zinc in patients with the common cold. In both studies, a nonsignificant reduction of rhinorrhoea duration (range 9-27%) was seen. In pooled analyses of both studies (n=94), vitamin C plus zinc was significantly more efficient than placebo at reducing rhinorrhoea over 5 days of treatment. Furthermore, symptom relief was quicker and the product was well tolerated.
The video interviewee claims to have consumed 2 grams every 6 minutes when down with viral pneumonia (@26.40). If bowel tolerance levels of Vitamin C do increase while subjects are sick with viral infections, it would certainly seem reasonable to expect efficacy beyond the level cited in the paper. I've stumbled across anecdotes but anyone personally experienced this heightened bowel tolerance while ill? Any studies?
Vitamin D. While I have no observational experience of vitamin D's anti-viral properties, I most certainly do its anti-bacterial effects - at extremely high doses. In recent years I've been prone to bacterial infections in the form of tooth abscesses, strongly correlating with instances of supplementing sublingual NAD precursors or c60oo. By and large the infection has been conquered with high doses of vitamin D, the earlier the response, the lower the required dose. During the first occurrence the pain was considerable with the infection causing noticeable facial swelling. From recollection the initial dose was 70,000iu and over the first 24 hours I took around 200,000 iu. (probably up to 100,000 in one dose since). The sensitivity improved within a couple of hours of the initial dose, considerable relief after 24 and within 48-72 hours the abscess was gone - obviously with a promise to return at a future date. In addition, during a recent chest infection I dosed 50-60,000 iu back to back days and noticed marked improvement; however, it returned resurgent as infections do at the sight of an uncompleted course of antibiotics but I was reluctant subsequent to a stretch of high dosing to treat a tooth infection, to push still higher D-levels - I could ride it out.
However, this is certainly not a recommendation, just an observation. I likely failed to replete the inevitable mineral depletion sufficiently - it is a lot of guesswork and could be dangerous (possible increase in atrial fibrillation risk iirc). Though I took copious K2 it may well be that the arteries are in need of de-calcification. However, these doses are not uncharted and since vitamin D is an antiviral it may well given my experience have efficacy at doses most here wouldn't contemplate undertaking. So it is just for now in an emergency-break-glass candidate although perhaps earlier stage dosing at still high but much lower levels might be a consideration.
Some reading:
https://www.amazon.c...k/dp/B005FCKN2S
This book isn't to hand but I don't recall case studies of viral infections treated through high doses of vitamin D though it may have slipped my mind.
Anti-microbial Implications of Vitamin D
https://www.ncbi.nlm...MC3256336/#R137
The antiviral properties of vitamin D are discussed above but what caught my eye was the dosing level below as an anti-fungal.
The role of vitamin D in combating fungal infections dates back to a case series published in 1954, in which three patients with severe refractory chromoblastomycosis showed marked improvement in their skin lesions after receiving repeated treatments with 600,000 IU of calciferol.136 Despite these early promising results—plus the ability of vitamin D to increase circulating NK cells, which may contribute to host defense against fungal organisms37—subsequent findings confirming similar results have been scarce. Thus, more studies are needed to support vitamin D as an adjuvant treatment modality for fungal infection.
At this clinic in London a therapeutic injection of 100,000 iu can be administered.
https://www.harpalcl...min-d-injection
So mega-dosing vitamin D is being done, not that I recall comparable instances on longecity.
Edited by ambivalent, 05 March 2020 - 01:50 AM.