• H&R Moderators: VerbalTruist

psoriasis

Dtergent...that is very interesting. I think it might be beneficial for other diseases, not just psoriasis. I'm looking into eastern medicine for my chronic pain which has not been helped in any ways with conventional medicine. When the body is out of balance a lot of things can go wrong. I see a link b/w me eating sucrose and feeling worse. A good, sucrose free diet has been very beneficial. To me it makes sense that psoriasis can be exacerbated by sucrose, I see that stuff as poison. Just to clarify, just cuz I'm anti sucrose does not I'm anti other carbs. Other carbs are needed by the body, like glucose and fructose. But sucrose for some reason seems to cause problems for us, the most visible example being dental problems. Nothing other than sucrose causes dental problems. That stuff rots ur teeth. If it can do that, I don't see a reason it can't do something else inside the body, causing problems. When I eat a lot of sucrose I get stomach aches, body pains and other negative symptoms. I can eat carbs, like fruits and vegetables, as long as I leave sucrose out of my diet.
 
It is becoming more and more accepted that psoriasis is not a disease in itself but rather a symptom of some other disease(s) or syndrome(s).

Interruptions in Interleukin pathways and/or functionality of Interferon-Gamma sometimes ultimately cause keratin-related problems (nail deformities, loss of hair density/fullness, and psoriasis). Psoriasis is one of the main causes of the nail/hair problems since the epithelial cells require roughly 4 times the keratin protein than normal cuz they're proliferating so fast. therefore nail/hair cells are malnutritioned in keratin since it becomes scarce.

The sad truth is that you won't find any public health labs that will do these costly tests on you.... And what if for example your IFN-Gamma levels are fine? Would you then look at toll-like receptors etc.?

Psoriasis as a symptom is very much curable but you have to pull some strings with research scientists on the matter to be able to progress anywhere....

As for the psych side of things, it is being discovered how serotonin is much more vital in other places of your body than just the brain-- like how it was recently found that it is involved in a signalling pathway between your small intestine and bones/bone cells, causing them to hold onto calcium or to excrete some into the blood... etc. etc. When people say "stress triggers psoriasis", they mean to say that something serotonergic or related is triggering a syndrome that produces psoriasis as one of its symptoms. For example, if you take stimulants regularly you are stressed out more easily at baseline and may develop psoriasis as anecdotally confirmed in the past. But then again, a drug user may have had their psoriasis emerge from messing with other things such as human Growth Hormone if they for example took GBL, etc..... hGH is also tied in with psoriasis.

It is known that MDMA and similar molecules reduce IFN-Gamma activity so that's another factor...

Basically, you can Google anything with "psoriasis" and find allusions to causation/medication. From elementals (google "potassium psoriasis"), to organics (google "omega-3 psoriasis"), to biologics (google "TNF Alpha psoriasis"), and the list goes on and on. You will always find results that show a link to psoriasis in everything you search.

So what does that tell us? That we're looking in all the wrong places....
 
Selsun Blue seems to work for my ex's head and he gets perscribed face cream for night time....i could find out the name if need be...?
 
Dtergent...that is very interesting. I think it might be beneficial for other diseases, not just psoriasis. I'm looking into eastern medicine for my chronic pain which has not been helped in any ways with conventional medicine. When the body is out of balance a lot of things can go wrong. I see a link b/w me eating sucrose and feeling worse. A good, sucrose free diet has been very beneficial. To me it makes sense that psoriasis can be exacerbated by sucrose, I see that stuff as poison. Just to clarify, just cuz I'm anti sucrose does not I'm anti other carbs. Other carbs are needed by the body, like glucose and fructose. But sucrose for some reason seems to cause problems for us, the most visible example being dental problems. Nothing other than sucrose causes dental problems. That stuff rots ur teeth. If it can do that, I don't see a reason it can't do something else inside the body, causing problems. When I eat a lot of sucrose I get stomach aches, body pains and other negative symptoms. I can eat carbs, like fruits and vegetables, as long as I leave sucrose out of my diet.

I think it's a matter of eating NOT JUST the right food, but at the right amounts and the right way. For instance, many medical practices of other cultures advocate eating until you are not quite full yet, some giving prescribed volume of much less than we do. And also you must eat to ensure good digestion-- settled instead of on-the-go, chewing properly, with good posture, with a right mix of fluids to ensure the proper flow of your food. These guidelines are meant to increase enjoyment and quality of life, rather than be a fascist list of limitations.

If you have a garden, you understand the process. Too many "wet", nitrogen components in the compost, like dough (in our bodies, carbs, heavy food like meats without fiber), without the corresponding fiber (dried leaves, stems, wood chips), and your compost will get smelly. In fact, I've put out vats waste like cooked rice, and after a few days, they did smell like rank shit. Too much "dry" matter like all whole wheat crackers or salad greens with just vinegar or something, and you have a very slow decomposition process, but with minimal smell or anaerobic bad-smelling bacteria. The key, for an organism getting 3 doses of meals a day, is to get a good combination of food, liquids, and activity to help it along-- to digest what you had for breakfast, so that lunch goes down easy, and so forth.

Otherwise, you get an accumulation of waste in your body. Sugars are not in themselves bad, but become so not just because of the chemicals in processing, but because they do encourage unpredictable bacterial growth and fermentation. Anyone who produces fermented drinks knows this. White sugar, in particular, has no fiber "buffers" (unlike mascobado, which still has some fiber and other minerals)-- but if you must take it, mixed with hot milk can slow down the too-fast process of absorption.

Lemongrass does a good job of cleansing our bodies. It cleans the blood and gives to our excretory organs what they should process.

It really is all a matter of waste in-waste out.
 
Heres the deal. Psoriasis has always known to be an auto -immune condition. In past years mild to moderate psoriasis would often be treated with methyltrexate (spelling) which is an immuno-suppressant however is quite toxic to the body, as was a drug called psoriatane. These days there have been some remarkable advances in the treatment of psoriasis. Depending on the severity and percentage of coverage on the body can determine which you may be suited for. There is UV light therapy as mentioned above, they now have better bands of uv light and is more focused so that the risks are decreased.

*** The Miracle drug ****

Stelara

I cannot say enough about it. Its a biological class drug, which is administered as a subcutaneous injection. It works by acting on key proteins in your immune system called L-12 and IL-23 that are shown to be present in psoriatic plaques. It is administered as a started dose, follow up does at 4 weeks, and then once every 12 weeks, roughly four doses a year. This is a huge breakthrough as the first form of these types of medications such as enbrel was a once a week injection, and was not as focused in on that part of the immune system which is responsible for psoriasis. This made you more prone to infections. Topical medications may have to be applied every day or multiple times a day and often are not totally effective.

Stelara in my opinion is the closest thing to a cure out there. It works extremely well, tests showed 7/10 people rated their symptoms as clear or minimal after 12 weeks.

I have had psoriasis for many years and at times it can get bad. I don't have health insurance at the moment and was recently able to get on a support program through J&J giving me a years treatment for free. It's quite expensive medicine, so if you have limited insurance or no insurance and are interested in looking in to it I would encourage you to look at the website for stelara and get the contact info for the support, or ask a dermatologist.

good luck
 
my husband has psoriatic arthritis, any time he has an outbreak of psoriasis he ends up with his joints giving him a lot of pain but that was years ago. We changed his diet to include a lot more fish and were using tumeric for the swelling of the joints, as for him it turned out it was the arthritis causing the psoraisis.
For the psoriasis I was using olive oil with vitamin e oil, adding in chamomile, mellisa and lavender. it would soften the skin and allow it to reduce over a week but he had months of no psoriasis or arthritic pain, any time we seen the start of the psoriasis we would start using the oils again and it would be gone for another while.
I do know that changing the diet to dairy wheatfree and a huge reduction in red meat helped, with also drinking plenty of fluids daily to keep hydrated also added into this for him. hope some of it helps or gives you an idea of what else to look at :)
 
^ I'm glad your husband has found some relief! Psoriasis with arthritis does not sound pleasant at all. :-/

My mom had pretty bad psoriasis and has tried numerous creams/medications/whathaveyou. What appears to work the best is a cup or two (will ask her at some point and update this) of apple cider vinegar added to bath water. I don't know how often she does this though I know it's at least once a week.

A classmate told us that what has worked the best for him with his psoriasis was just not thinking of it. He admitted that he was skeptical of this advice that his doctor gave him, but he noticed that after awhile of not thinking of the psoriasis, it drastically went away. Apparently it has something to do with how when you're stressed/worried, your immune system is out of whack, and since psoriasis is an autoimmune disease... Yeah, hopefully you guys get where I'm going. :P

I still have my fingers crossed that I won't inherit the psoriasis gene. Mom's grandma had it. My grandma does not. So it appears to skip a generation--Time will tell, as they all got it around their late 20s/early 30s. If I do develop it, I have this thread as my arsenal against it! :P
 
Hope you do not get it either, it is not nice. The apple cider vinegar, and normal vinegar I have heard of before and we have never got round to trying it as the method we use works, why ruin it lol. My husband got this in his early 20's and it was not till I changed his diet and started using natural ways did he have relief, he had been on loads of pain killers and anti-inflammatories which never seemed to do much and it stayed all the time. Just glad we tried other ideas and eventually got something that worked :)
 
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