With a Huge Increase in Autoimmune Diseases What Should be the RX of Choice?

LDN Specialist Pharmacist Michelle Moser
LDN Specialist Pharmacist Michelle Moser

With a huge increase in autoimmune diseases what should be the RX of choice?  There has been an incredible increase in autoimmune disease diagnoses.  About 10 years ago we had a few, back in the 70s we had very few. As time has progressed over the last 50 years we have seen this enormous increase.  Sometimes it has to do with the way we absorb things.  What's actually going on in the typical diet for whatever country that you live in.  Sometimes that has to do with that diet playing an impact on how we develop our immune system and how we manage our immune system.  Stress can knock our immune system down, lack of nutrition, lack of vitamins, supplements.  A lot of different things can have an impact.  Viruses can really impact autoimmune diseases.  So can fungus.  

Seventy to eighty percent of our immune factors are made in our gut.  If our gut isn't healthy how can we expect our immune system to be healthy ?  Same thing goes for brain foods. When we make medium chain fatty acids in our gut that travels to the brain and that helps our brain to function,  it helps us to grab our words right away and be able to finish our thoughts and walk into a room and know why we're there.  That's a huge thing.  A lot of people complain about foggy thinking and lack of memory and those are usually typical symptoms of a variety of autoimmune disease diagnoses.  It all goes back to inflammation. Almost every disease is centered around inflammation and that's where Low Dose Naltrexone plays an enormous role, it can have the greatest impact, specifically by reducing inflammation in the body and again it's low dose, low risk, low side effect.

Give it a shot.  If it doesn't seem to be changing anything in four to six months just take it away.  You've got nothing to lose.