Monday, June 29, 2015

Dear dr Enders,


I am seeking assistance in documenting the utility of Bcg to treat plaque psoriasis and type I diabetes.
See eg pubme.org faustman D clinical trials.gov faustman
I would like to record eg you tube the changes in plaque psoriàsis as Bcg is slot.
The dosing scheme and frequency will be determined by trial and error.

Psoriasis. Is photogenic and Bcg had the added benefit of reducing the likeelihho
Of contracting mlyidrug resistant tb.






Photo

“It’s really too bad, because the intestines are totally charming.” —GIULIA ENDERSCreditGordon Welters for The New York Times

MANNHEIM, Germany — IF Giulia Enders had not contracted a mysterious illness as a teenager that left her covered with sores, she, like most of us, might never have thought much about her digestive tract, except when it was out of whack. She might never have enrolled in medical school, either, and she almost certainly would not have written a best-selling book about digestion last year that has captivated Germany, a nation viewed, fairly or not, as exceedingly anal-retentive.
Back in 2007, after a series of mostly ineffective treatments prescribed by doctors, Ms. Enders, then 17, decided to take matters into her own hands. Convinced that the illness was somehow associated with her intestines, she pored over gastroenterological research, consumed probiotic bacterial cultures meant to aid digestion and tried out mineral supplements.

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