Malaria Regimen
Follow the Antiparasitic Regimen and The Water Cure. Use Nutricology Artemisinin and high dose Vitamin C.
Use the Antiparasitic Regimen using only recommended serving size of the Eclectic Institute Intestinal Support (also known as Black Walnut Wormwood). This supplement already contains a water extract (freeze dried) of wormwood annua, which is the single best agent to use against malaria. The extract of wormwood annua, also known as artermisia annua, sweet wormwood or sweet Annie, contains artemisinin. Artemisinin is an antiparasitic which crosses the intestinal barrier easily, better than wormwood absynthium, another ingredient of the Eclectic product, to fight parasites in the bloodstream.
Pure wormwood annua extract is available in Nutricology Artemisinin, and if money is tight and only one product will be purchased, make it the Nutricology, but otherwise use the Nutricology product as a booster to the Eclectic to ensure quicker success.
To also ensure a quicker resolution, use the Water Cure, using the full amount of salt specified, and vitamin C.
The best treatment for malaria is prevention. Do everything possible to reduce the chance of mosquito bites when in infected areas. Use a high dose multivitamin or B complex internally, which seems to help repel the critters. In this case, do not use the eRegimens top-rated multivitamins, Garden of Life Multi or the NSI Synergy line (or Purity Perfect Multi), which contain low amounts of riboflavin. Use a regimen that includes B vitamins of at least "50", if not 100, potency, as is provided in Solaray Twice Daily multivitamin. Also, using Artemisinin internally will help repel them. Use a good mosquito repellent topically. A good natural type would contain catnip and lemon tea tree oils, among other ingredients. If DEET or any other potentially toxic type will instead be employed, first protect the liver with a silymarin product like Now Silymarin.
Qinghaosu, dietary vitamin E, selenium, and cod-liver oil: effect on the susceptibility of mice to the malarial parasite Plasmodium yoelii.
Levander OA, Ager AL Jr, Morris VC, May RG.
Human Nutrition Research Center, US Department of Agriculture, MD 20705.
Young
female mice were fed torula-yeast-based diets deficient in vitamin E or
selenium or supplemented with cod-liver oil to determine the effect of
host antioxidant status on the therapeutic efficacy of the Chinese
traditional antimalarial drug qinghaosu (QHS), a sesquiterpene
endoperoxide. Vitamin E deficiency enhanced the antimalarial action of
QHS against Plasmodium yoelii, both in terms of decreased parasitemia
and improved survival but Se deficiency did not. A vitamin E-deficient
diet containing 5% cod-liver oil had such strong antimalarial activity
in itself that no additional therapeutic benefit of QHS could be
demonstrated. Hematocrit values in parasitized mice treated with QHS or
fed the cod-liver-oil-supplemented, vitamin E-deficient diet were
normal.
Nutritional manipulation of host antioxidant status may
provide a promising prophylactic and/or therapeutic tool for the
control of malaria.
The eRegimens family of Supplement suggestion websites which include reprints of some of the regimens on their own websites:
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The eRegimens family of Supplement and Regimen websites includes the following, which are reprints from the eRegimens Regimens Section.
Allergy Regimen and SupplementsAlzheimer's Regimen and Supplements
Asthma Regimen and Supplements
Backache and Sciatica Regimens and Supplements
Digestion Regimen and Supplements
Fibroid Regimen and Supplements
Heart Disease Regimen and Supplements
Hepatitis Regimen and Supplements
Herpes Regimen and Supplements
Hypertension Regimen and Supplements
Malaria Regimen and Supplements
Pregnancy Regimen and Supplements
Restless Legs Regimen and Supplements
Sex Drive Regimen and Supplements
Sinus Infecton and Congestion Regimen and Supplements
Snoring Regimen and Supplements
Stress Regimen and Supplements
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