LDN Video Interviews and Presentations

Radio Show interviews, and Presentations from the LDN 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 Conferences

They are also on our    Vimeo Channel    and    YouTube Channel

Pharmacist Mike Graeff, LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Mike Graeff, a compounding pharmacist from Oregon in the United States shares his experience with Low Dose Naltrexone.

I've been a compounding pharmacist in the United States in both Oregon and Washington for 40 years. I worked with a lot of people with specific problems like Multiple Sclerosis. I did a lot of end stage pain management therapy, pediatric work, hormone replacement therapy, etc

And now I worked for Walgreens regional compounding center in Portland, Oregon. We're a regional compounding center one of the largest in the Northwestern United States.

We have six to 10 physicians that prescribe Low  Dose Naltrexone. We have been doing it for 15 years with good results.

I haven't had any untoward side effects reported. Most patients have just responded that it's been extremely effective and it's been very helpful and managing their disease and states that LDN makes a better quality of life for them, but have not really heard of any significant side effects that occurred as of this date.

We make it up as a pure powder formulation, and we take the tablet and make it up into a compound at capsule. So we have two dosage forms available. A lot of times third party carriers, insurance companies don't cover the powder but they will cover the tablet if you formulate it into a capsule formula.

LDN is a very important medication that can be used as an adjunct therapy to patients that are struggling in attempting to get some relief and some improvement in their quality of life. And I think it's marvelous that it is available and I find it very satisfying as a compounding pharmacists to be able to provide this treatment for these patients and for these doctors who  have patients that are looking for this type of medication.

Summary of Mike Graeff's interview, a compounding pharmacist.  Listen the YouTube video for the full interview.

Pharmacist Masoud Rashidi, LDN Radio Show 11 Dec 2019 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Linda Elsegood:  I'd like to welcome my guest, Dr Masoud Rashidi.  He was from California, the owner with his wife, Dr Anna.  They own their own compounding pharmacy in Folsom.  Thanks for joining us today, Masoud. 

Masoud Rashidi:  Thank you, Linda, for having me on the show.

Linda Elsegood:  Could you tell us what made you decide to get into pharmacy?

Masoud Rashidi:   It started back in high school.  My dad knew a pharmacist, and I was able to shadow with him for a day.  It was interesting how you can help people and get to know them.  I wanted to pursue pharmacy after that.

Linda Elsegood:  Wow.  That's amazing, isn't it?  So how long have you been a pharmacist now?  Did they know about LDN?

Masoud Rashidi:  I've been a pharmacist for 15 years now, since 2004.  That's when I graduated from Western University of Health Sciences in Pomona, California.  That's where I received my doctorate degree and started working a few months thereafter.  I started working at a chain, like everybody else out of school.  They did not know about LDN.  After a few years, I started working at a chain in California.  A couple of years later, I decided to explore, because there was a need for a compounding pharmacy in town.  There was none available at the time.  So, we had rotations back to school to learn about compounding, but we still didn't know about LDN until I began compounding and started our own company in 2007.  That's where we became involved in compounding LDN.

Linda Elsegood:  So, in your pharmacy, what forms of LDN do you offer?

Masoud Rashidi:  We provide a few different ones.  Mainly, we do capsules in many different dosages.  We also do lozenges.  We've compounded a topical, such as a transdermal application; also a liquid, both in aqueous solution or oil, depending on the situation  The kid may take the oil or not, so we go from there, depending on what flavors we can incorporate into the different formation.  We pretty much do every possible dosing that is available right now.

Linda Elsegood:  And what strength do you normally start with?  Do you do a micro-dose?

Masoud Rashidi:  Yes, we do micro-dosing; actually we've done a few of them.  Our most common one, of course, is the typical dosing, 1.5 mg, 3.0 mg, and 4.5 mg, but the last few years everything has changed.  We’re doing so many different doses every day.  We've done from 0.1 mg all the way to 9.0 mg.

With micro-dosing, we do from 1 microgram to 5, 10, depending on where are going to end up with that particular patient and their needs.  We've been doing both, like several different dosing, and we send our products to third-party testing to ensure potency and quality.

Linda Elsegood:  Having spoken to so many pharmacists, it's very difficult to say that one microgram of LDN is very difficult to know.  It's very hard to prove.  You have to find the right people to have it tested.  Lots of people, I'm sure, who take LDN are not aware of all the efforts that compounding pharmacies must go through.  Would you like to tell us a bit about that? 

Masoud Rashidi:   We received two different chemicals of Naltrexone from a couple of different wholesalers.  Then we send it for testing after compounding to determine the best one to use.  It’s not a requirement to do all this testing, but we go above and beyond to make sure we get the right dosing.  We send samples to the third-party lab to be tested to see if it is within range.  Legally, you can have 10% variation on the capsules, but in our lab, we like to keep it less than 3% to be even more accurate.  When we send it out, we tried to keep it less than 5%, especially when you get to low doses.  Ten per cent is a lot of variation when dealing with one microgram, so we try to keep that even lower than what's legally allowed to ensure higher quality.  In the past, they've rejected a chemical because it had too much water content.

Linda Elsegood:  What kinds of doctors are you dealing with?  Naturopathic doctors, pain specialists, MD’s, and other prescribers?

Masoud Rashidi:  Yes, you are right on.  One of our biggest prescribers is a nurse practitioner who specializes in women's health and sees many people with Hashimoto's and autoimmune.  We have an MD, after going to the LDN Research Trust Conference a few months ago, has become big on LDN.  We have a few naturopaths.  I go to different doctor's offices and educate them on LDN.  In California, unfortunately, a lot of naturopaths cannot prescribe; they must have oversight MD’s.  They must find a naturopath who can prescribe it because not every naturopath in California can do so.  We do have MDs, nurse practitioners, a variety of different doctors, even paediatrics.  One of our best cases was an autism patient, with a prescribing MD.  It was amazing.  Every time I think about it I get goosebumps because of what happened.  A few days later, the mom calls and says, “Oh, my kid is actually communicating with two siblings!”  It was three days later at 0.1 milligrams.  It's been about three months, and she's one of the best advocates for LDN.  She calls us all the time.  This child is talking more and more with the siblings and the parents and having eye-to-eye contact.  The mom said it was life-changing, and that's what we hear all the time.  My life has changed after LDN.  It's rewarding when you hear those words, and that's why we keep doing what we're doing.  We continue to conduct seminars for the public and for the doctors to increase awareness.  It's been very good for the patients, and our goal is to increase awareness on how great it is and how it can help in so many ways, especially with all the research articles available now.

Linda Elsegood:  What case studies do you have, feedback from patients, and their conditions?

Masoud Rashidi:  One of the biggest ones we get is RA or rheumatoid arthritis.  They get a lot of good response.  After a week or two, they can move their fingers, and they don't have much pain.  They've tried all these different drugs, and nothing works.  Now after a week or two, it's amazing sometimes.  For some patients, it takes a few months, but sometimes, within a week they call you back, and it's like, “Oh my God, what is this? This is working amazingly.” 

One amazing result was an MS (multiple sclerosis) patients.  I was brand new to compounding, six months.  We didn’t have that many employees, so we knew every patient that came in the door. He comes in with a wheelchair.  He’s tried everything.  We consulted with MS experts, and that's how we started with LDN, just speaking with them.  I kid you not, three months later, he comes in, WALKS into the pharmacy.  I'm like, whoa!  He was in tears.  He says, “I’ve been in a wheelchair for so many years.  I've tried all these drugs, and nothing has worked.  This has been amazing.”  That's when we started promoting LDN more, talking to different doctors about it.  We get to a lot of good feedback like that.  There are just too many of them to share.

Linda Elsegood:  What about patients with GI problems?  Have you had any feedback from those?

Masoud Rashidi:  Actually, we’ve seen IBS, IBD, Crohn’s disease, and things like that having really good results.  Of course, as we all know, not every drug is going to do 100% for every patient.  But we’ve had about 80% good results.  The funny part is that they’ve tried all other drugs that are commercially available, and nothing has worked.  At this point, they contact us.  After so many doctors, so many drugs, and they come in and then have good success with LDN.  Every time we do our seminars, people come in and ask, “Oh, would it work for this?”  So, we start researching.  Our latest question, Mom called us and said, “Okay, my daughter's addicted to narcotics.  They put her on Suboxone.  What can I do with LDN?  She's now more addicted to Suboxone than she was addicted to narcotics.”  We're researching that right now.  It's amazing how one drug can treat so many different conditions.

Linda Elsegood:  Definitely.  Still talking about GI, do you have any patients using it for SIBO, (small intestinal bacterial overgrowth)?

Masoud Rashidi:  I've read a lot about it.  We have a patient wanting to try it, but the doctor was not willing to prescribe it.  We referred care to this new physician.  This is our first case, and we'll find out hopefully soon.

Linda Elsegood:  What about Lyme? Is that something you've seen 

Masoud Rashidi:  Lyme…yes, we have.  So many people go undiagnosed, and then they get diagnosed, and they don’t know what to give them.  Then they're on pain meds and stuff like that.  We had a Lyme patient, we talked to her doctor and put her on LDN.  It has helped her a lot with her symptoms.  We've had quite a few patients, but she was a really severe case with multiple issues.  About two and a half months later she was off many of her medications, and she was feeling much better.  She could resume driving, not being on all these different drugs.  Previously, she was depressed.  Now she gets up, and she can do things in the morning.  We’ve had other cases with very good results as well.

Linda Elsegood:  Okay. And have you got vets around who prescribe LDN for animals?

Masoud Rashidi:  I've talked to quite a few veterinarians in town.  We’re writing a protocol on how to use LDN for pets.  One veterinarian has used it, and it helps with all the issues that humans have.  There are a lot of articles on that.  We've been starting them on the lower doses.  We do make it mostly liquid in an oil suspension so that it lasts longer.  We have had a few now.  The vets have been very happy, and the owners have been happy.  The dog had arthritic pain and could not move as much.  We gave him the LDN, the veterinarians prescribed it, and then a month or so later the dog is doing much better.  Veterinarians talk to each other.  We get more questions from different veterinarians every day and hope that we can get more awareness of LDN for pets.  It works for them.  We've seen results, few, not many, but I've read a lot of research studies on it.  I am hoping that it's going to become more popular sooner rather than later in the pet world, too.

Linda Elsegood:   Right.  It's all to do with raising awareness and making the doctors feel comfortable.  Not surprised that you have so many MD’s prescribing LDN.  Again, they are traditionally trained and many of them take some convincing to look outside the box.  You were saying ND’s in your area often can't prescribe the LDN.  What about physician assistants?  Are they allowed to prescribe?

Masoud Rashidi:  Oh yeah, they do.  We have one who's a big proponent of it because he's seen really good results.  He's a functional medicine PA.  He involved the doctor and everybody else.  It's contagious when you see good results.  They tell each other, and they start calling it in.  Yes, we have quite a few PA’s that prescribe.  Not as many as I want.  They're coming on board because we’re holding seminars in large scale now.

Linda Elsegood:  Yes, PA’s tend to have more time to listen to patients than doctors.  It's amazing what these service providers are doing.  We'd be lost without them.  

Masoud Rashidi:  You're absolutely right.  As far as they have more time to spend with the patient because doctors have a lot of other things going on at the same time. 

Linda Elsegood:  When you have a chronic disease, let's say MS or lupus, even fibromyalgia, trying to get the diagnosis isn't easy.  And then you’ve got to find somebody to help you to get the right treatment because obviously everybody is different.  It also helps to have that patient, doctor and pharmacist relationship, doesn't it?  You know, the triangle.  Presenting LDN to more doctors and letting them know that you're there to answer any questions or queries they may have I would think helps them become more confident in prescribing LDN.

Masoud Rashidi:  That's true.  Even in our patient's seminar, we had last month, we had four prescribers show up at the seminar that was for the patient.  It was very interesting.  In future seminars, we may broadcast on Facebook Live or somewhere, so more people can be reached who cannot come in.  All our seminars are free.  We do this for awareness.  We have people come in and share their stories.  Patients talk to each other, and then they start getting up and talking to the whole group.  That's amazing, too, because then they are hearing from the patient, not from us.

Linda Elsegood:  Of course, patients, as soon as they learn about LDN, they then go and find a doctor or educate their own doctor.  I think patients also play a big part in raising awareness of LDN, especially when they have good results.

Masoud Rashidi:  Exactly.  We give them a whole binder.  We've seen that patient take those binders to their doctor and show them some of the research studies, because some doctors are still thinking of Naltrexone as a whole dose Naltrexone and they're like, “Oh, you don't need it.”  We tell them, take this to your doctor, and that has helped.  You are absolutely right.  Patients are the best advocate for this whole thing because they see results.

Linda Elsegood:  We’ve come to the end of the show.  Thank you so much for having been my guest today.  It really was a pleasure speaking with you.

Masoud Rashidi:  Thank you for having us, and it was a pleasure speaking with you.  

Linda Elsegood:  Thank you. 

This show is sponsored by Doctors Masoud and Anna Rashidi.  They graduated in 2004 from Western University with a Doctor of Pharmacy degrees. Soon after in 2007, they opened the PCAP accredited Innovative Compounding Pharmacy located at 820 Wales Drive, Suite 3, Folsom, California  95630.  To better serve the community, for more information, please call (866) 470-9197 or visit www.icpfolsom.com.  

Any questions or comments you may have, please email me.  Linda, contact@ldnresearchtrust.org  I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you for joining us today.  We really appreciate your company.  Until next time, stay safe and keep well.

Pharmacist Mary-Louise Condon, LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Mary-Louise Condon is a pharmacist from Brisbane Australia, and an integrative practitioner. She heard about low dose naltrexone (LDN) over the last 8 years, first at an anti-aging convention in Melbourne, as a treatment for autoimmune diseases. After the conference she met with local prescribers to talk about trends in healthcare and how best to support patients on their journey to better health. Several were interested in LDN for patients with Crohn’s disease, Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, who were not doing well on dietary modifications or medications. Being able to offer LDN brought profound improvement in the quality of life of patients, including those who had been housebound, those who couldn’t find items on menus that would agree with them, those losing weight.

They compound LDN as a capsule generally, and at times are able to add a supplement into the LDN that the patient needs, such as magnesium, or alpha lipoic acid for a patient with autoimmune disease. They are considering sublingual and transdermal forms for patients who can’t tolerate capsuled LDN.  Most common side effects noted are sleep disturbance, with upset stomach as second. For some sleep disturbances they recommend taking LDN in the morning

The use of LDN in Australia is in its infancy, and the best way to gain acceptance is through networking among patients, prescribers, and pharmacists. Pharmacists can help network patients with LDN prescribers, or help their prescriber understand LDN. A wide variety of prescribers write for LDN, not just general practitioners.

Generally, sleep issues or gastric upset are the common side effects. They did discontinue LDN for one older woman who developed some sort of neuropathic pain on LDN that may be from the NMDA receptor analog blocking effect, but regardless, Mary-Louise would not hesitate to recommend LDN for that or any relevant condition.

When instructing patients about LDN she stresses the time to see improvement can take 3-6 months. It might take that long for a patient to be able to tolerate even 1 mg. Linda Elsegood commented that they have found that it’s not always that a higher dose is better, but what suits the patient. It may take weeks of months to titrate up the dosage of LDN. In England, liquid LDN is used to titrate the dose up. Mary-Louise noted that they can go lower than 0.5 mg in capsules, but haven’t had the need as yet.

To contact The Compounding Lab go to https://compoundinglab.com.au/. They post throughout Australia, and Mary-Louise consults out of Brisbane. Their email is enquiries@compoundinglab.com.au. This information and more is on their website. They can answer questions about LDN, and help patients find a practitioner who is open to prescribing LDN; or they can make appointments with Mary-Louse or one of their other doctors.

Keywords: low dose naltrexone, LDN, antiaging, integrative, autoimmune, Crohn’s, Hashimoto’s, thyroid, alpha lipoic acid, compounding, side effects,

Summary from pharmacist Mary Louise Condon, listen to the video for the show.

Any questions or comments you may have, please contact us. I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you for joining us today. We really appreciated your company. Until next time, stay safe and keep well.

Pharmacist Larry Frieders, LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Pharmacist Larry Frieders from the United States shares experience with LDN. Archived Show

Many years ago Dr. Bernard Bihari called me and told me about how he was using Low Dose Naltrexone. And he was looking for another pharmacist to help make some in the, particularly in the middle part of the United States. He had a couple of pharmacists working with him on the East coast, but there was interest in my area around the city of Chicago.

And after we talked a while, I figured: "What harm would it do to at least give this a try?" I mean, the standard dose for Naltrexone is 300 or so milligrams per day. And here was this doctor talking about a three milligram dose. I figured 1% of the recommended dose, the chances of side effects are practically zero.

And if this guy says it works with all of his experience and background, Who was I to argue with him? So he gave me an order for a couple of people in the Chicago area. And that's where this whole thing started.  Dr. Bihari mentioned to me that he was using it for AIDS patients and cancer patients, but he was just beginning to see the effects with some of the immune type diseases.

And the first two patients we dealt with were Multiple Sclerosis patients and they had it refilled regularly because it was helping them feel better.

We have now around 500 to a thousand people currently using LDN in the Midwest Chicago area.

And the number of conditions that people are using it for seems to be expanding almost every year. I just talked to a doctor yesterday who was very excited about using it for Rheumatoid Arthritis. And we've also had people with Irritable Bowel disease, other types of immune disorders who were successful with it.

One question that many patients ask is about fillers

We found that maybe calcium was not the best filler to use because there was some binding going on. And definitely we didn't want people using slow release. So we were recommending just the regular prompter lease type filler.

And I've always not liked lactose as a filler because there's a great number of people who have a sensitivity to lactose, because even though there's a small amount in there, just wasn't worth it in my mind to use lactose. So we've been using a cellulose seller for many, many years. And for people who don't like that idea, we also use rice powder, just plain old white rice powder.

Also they are concerned about side effects. Vivid dreams seems to be what happens, but they do go away very quickly.

The only real side effect that I think is worthwhile keeping in mind is that the drug should not be used if you're also using an opioid or a narcotic pain reliever of any kind.

Well, we've actually one of our oncology doctors here in the area actually had two customers, two patients who reacted pretty violent, some kinds of withdrawal type symptoms when they have been on pain relievers. So we've got a hard rule. Don't use Naltrexone if you're also using pain relievers that have narcotics in them, that's about it.

The LDN Research Trust did a survey about four years ago, I think were about 400 people that took part and we found that only 5% of people experienced any side effects at all.

Another important thing is the amount of medications patients take. In fact, I actually wrote a book of that title called "The on drug". I came to the conclusion or the realization that too many of us take too many drugs. And when I was in school, If people took three drugs, we have a statistical table that showed that their risk of serious side effects was about 80% higher than if they weren't taking any. And probably in most of the Western type societies, people are taking 10, 15, 20 drugs per day.

In fact, in my pharmacy, we don't sell commercial drugs. We only do the compounded versions.

LDN seems to be like the only real chemical drug that we have available on a regular basis, but it's a different perspective and I can come at this from the position of a pharmacist.

Summary of Pharmacist Larry Frieders's interview. Watch YouTube video for full interview.

https://ldnresearchtrust.org/

Pharmacist John Herr, LDN Radio Show 21 Nov 2018 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Linda Elsegood: Today I'm joined by pharmacist John Herr, and he's from New Jersey in the US. Thanks for joining me today. John. 

John Herr: Oh, you're welcome. Glad to be able to spend this time with you. 

Linda Elsegood: Good. And I didn't mention where you're from and you're from Town and Country Compounding. So first of all, tell us how you got into working as a pharmacist.

I mean, had you always been interested in pharmacy as a child? 

John Herr: Well, I've always been interested in pharmacy, and I've always been interested in like natural medicine or integrative, we now call it integrative medicine or functional medicine. But back in the day, I think we called it natural, and I was just lucky I went to a think John's University in New York City and, and I made the acquaintance of a physician who was, she was actually a pioneer in bringing natural or bioidentical progesterone into the United States. So back then, I was still in pharmacy school and, and I started to like working with patients with bioidentical progesterone.

And it just kinda changed the way that kind of, I thought as a pharmacist and I, I really consider myself like an integrative pharmacist now. So low dose naltrexone to me was just a natural progression of, you know, my knowledge and my interests.  

Linda Elsegood: so how long would you say that you've been compounding LDN now.

John Herr: Oh my God, I think it's gotta be around two, maybe around 2000 or 2002. You know, just when it was really becoming, you know, old people were starting to understand it. It's interesting. One of my patients, when I had my retail pharmacy, she ended up writing a book about it, about her husband.

It was called “Up the Creek with a Paddle”. and Mary Bradley and I, she had been in my pharmacy and her husband at the time had MS, and we were talking about, and I recommended the low dose naltrexone to her, and then she went and sought out Dr Bahari. And you know, she started, you know, they started her husband on that for his MS and that, that's where my original interest was.

And she ended up writing the book, you know, “Up the Creek with a Paddle”. And my biggest claim to fame is I’m mentioned in the book as the one who told her about researching low dose naltrexone. And then. Subsequently, after that, I became acquainted with a gentleman named Fritz Bell, who started a website, good shape because back then people were just, you know, going on the internet and they were buying the 50-milligram tablet and trying to, you know, create their own.

So, you know, Fritz had a big interest in that and, I filled prescriptions for his wife, but I also filled prescriptions for people where Fritz donated it to them because he wanted people to be able to take the medication and not have to compound their own.

So if they qualified to his standards, we would make it up and send it out, no charge. So those patients could start on the low dose naltrexone. So I go back way to the beginning. And you know, I think back then we just thought of low dose naltrexone and honestly for MS. But you know, subsequently, over the years we've just learned, you know, how vast different disease states we can treat and manage with low dose naltrexone.

Linda Elsegood: And what forms do you compound LDN in? 

John Herr: Well, the most typical is a capsule, uh, which we do an immediate release capsule. Um, we're in the process of buying a, uh, switching over to like a tablet so that we can, uh, you know, meet the need, you know, with a tablet machine. But right now we make capsules. We also make, um, we've actually done a transdermally.

I treat a lot of children on the autistic spectrum disorder. You know, we've had to do it in sublingual liquid for some of the children. Uh, we have a couple of patients on it right now, believe it or not, for a vaginal cream. We've also used it transdermally for like neuropathic pain on different areas of the body.

And I've been researching some articles recently. I'm using it as an Automic drop for chronic dry eye, but I've been talking to a couple of different integrative physicians about using it. But, uh, up to this point, we haven't have anybody try it for the ophthalmic. But I'll, I'll keep everybody appraised when we do because there is, there's a lot of interest in using it for that function as well.

Linda Elsegood: And I know that there are some dentists that are also using LDN, so that's another interesting one. And how about ultra-low-dose naltrexone? Is that used in your area that you cover? , 

John Herr: yeah, we have some patients on it. We also do a lot of pain management. We have, uh, we've managed intrathecal pumps in the home.

So I worked with a lot of doctors, pain doctors and I actually work with a doctor, a doctor speaking at the next conference in Portland. And so I work with his patients, and we have to start a lot lower on his patients because many of them are on opioids. And I've worked with some pain physicians where we've actually compounded as low as 100 microgram capsules because I think you really need a physician who is trained in pain management because they're actually weaning the patient off of the opioids as they're bringing the LDN up very gradually.

And it's a real balancing act because. You are going to detox that patient. So that's not something I would recommend for you, you know, like a general practice physician to you. Um, but we do have a lot of patients that are using it that way where they're getting off of this. And then I just, we just get tremendous feedback when they're off of the opioids, how they're then maintaining the pain with these, with, you know, LDN that we consider, you know, on that standard dose that we consider for pain.

But it is a little tricky to get them off of those. Um. Yeah. Off the opioid, while you're bringing the low dose naltrexone up to the appropriate dose. 

Linda Elsegood: I mean, I've interviewed several pain specialists, and they seem to be using 0.001 which must be like a grain of sugar of naltrexone, and they explain, sorry, 

John Herr: carry on.

Zero one micrograms, 

Linda Elsegood: Linda. Yes. Wow. Yeah, so 

John Herr: I mean, 

Linda Elsegood: exactly, but by doing that and using it alongside the opioid, it makes the opioid stronger so that they can reduce the opioid and slowly increase the by 0.001 sorts of the thing. They do like sort everyday kind of thing, until they can bring the opioid really down and the LDN can take over.

And they have it by doing it so slowly, as you can imagine. Well, slowly by my thinking, um. Or, or rather fast by my thinking. They say it's slow, but it does seem to happen quite quickly where they get them off the opioids, and they have gone, they haven't gone through withdrawal, they haven't had any side effects.

And you know, the LDN, like you were saying, can be used in place of the opioids and give pain relief. It's just amazing to me that something so small that's not harmful or toxic or even expensive can work so well. 

John Herr: Yeah, it is amazing. I mean, I think we just, as I said, when I first started working with it, we just kind of thought of it for like autoimmune.

But how we, you know, now that we know that it's working on the immune system when we know it's working on, you know, with the upregulation of endorphins and we know that it's working on the toll like receptors for inflammation. And now that we see how it affects dopamine for depression, I just think the, I mean it's just amazing to me how many opportunities there are out there for physicians to learn how they can better treat their patients for numerous, you know, disease states,  

Linda Elsegood: and of course, most people that have an autoimmune condition, one of the underlying problems is the inflammation, isn't it?

So by reducing that inflammation alone helps the person feel so much better anyway, especially with the boost of endorphins as well. 

John Herr: Oh, yeah. Actually, my wife, who's a pharmacist, is a perfect example. Like she went and had all this blood work done in her, what they call her ANA level was through the roof.

So your traditional physician would look at that and say, Oh, you must have rheumatoid arthritis. Because she was getting, wasn't really achy joints, but she was getting pain, almost like fibromyalgia pain. So we knew it was inflammation, and at the same time, her blood pressure was uncontrollable. It was, you know, we actually had her on a heart monitor, and then one of the physicians that we work with, when they did, you know, we really started working more in-depth than they did the food allergies.

We found out she was severely allergic to dairy. So, you know, started her on, you know, obviously an elimination diet, and then low dose naltrexone, which she titrated up gradually to a dose about 4.5 milligrams, but the ANA level came down, you know, uh, you know, obviously with inflammation, all the inflammation markers went down. The pain went away. And the funny thing is like we had to get her off that blood pressure medication really quick. The pressure was just dropping. So now she's just on LDN and you know, obviously supplements and you know, dietary changes, but there's no more blood pressure medication needed, and she doesn't have the pain anymore.

So it's an example of, you know, the LDN is a tool, but you still have to take into account all of the other things that are going on. But the diet, nutrition, exercise, I always try to tell people it's a package deal. You know, the LDN is one of the most important pieces, but there are other things that you can do for your health.

Linda Elsegood: Oh, definitely. Um, I used to have to take, um, Omeprazole for Acid reflux, and if I didn't take it, I was in trouble. It's that severe, but by going gluten-free I now don't have any problems at all. I don't have to take the medication. I don't have any acid reflux at all. But if I go out to eat and you know what it's like you're going through the menu and say, you know, it doesn't look as though there'd be any gluten-free in this. Could you check with the chef for me? And they'll come back and say, no, there's no gluten in it. If there is, I don't sleep that night. The acid reflux is so bad. And I have to sit up. Right. If not, I'm just going to vomit. It's terrible. So I don't always believe people when they tell me there's no gluten, cause I know if there's any gluten in it.  Yeah. So it's amazing, isn't it? How you can just eliminate other medications just by diet. My husband has problems with these. The skin on his hands. He's allergic to milk, and he'd seen so many different doctors in the past, and nobody could tell him why the palms of his hands would go like white and dry.

But when he eliminates dairy, his skin is completely normal. And that was like 30 years of trying to find out what was wrong with his skin and never had an answer. . 

John Herr: Yeah, that's what I, my thing, when I'd give talks on this, I always tell people, patients, or if I'm talking to groups of physicians, you know, whoever it might be, I, I say at least I know in the United States, I say, we say that we're in healthcare in the United States, but we really are not.

We're in sick care, you know, our, our system in this country is, I hate to say it, but it's run by big pharma. So you know where our physicians are, a lot, many of them are trained to wait until the patient presents with the disease and then give a pharmaceutical remedy for that disease, whereas an integrative medicine, or you can take like LDN, I think, you know, we're trying to get at the underlying cause and how can we correct that so that we can live healthier.

Linda Elsegood: yes. It's, um, quite common for people to tell me that. The doctors are only treating their symptoms, but not the root cause. So of course, you then end up with all these medications and some people are taking in between 14 even 22 different medications a day, and some of those are only needed because of the cocktail of drugs that they're taking cause side effects.

But that's okay cause they'll give you another tablet which will combat the side effects from the cocktail you're taking. 

John Herr: Yeah. Well, I think Linda your example was the perfect example there. You know, that drug was originally made for somebody who had an active ulcer and then you theoretically would take it for, you know, two or three months, to allow it to heal and then change your diet and, and you know, go on. But now people just live on that drug, you know, the purple pill. It's like they have to take it forever, which you know, it affects, then you're affecting your gastric pH, your digestion. It's a slippery slope. I agree with you. 100% 

Linda Elsegood: Hmm.

And of course, I also have people telling me that it's expensive to eat healthily, and especially when you've got children, it seems. So sad, and I can understand if you only have a limited amount of money and you've got several children, they all need feeding. But - we call them crisps - you call them chips over there, and we have biscuits, you call them cookies, but you, you, you get where I'm coming from. That is cheaper than buying apples, some pears and bananas and oranges and such, which would be a healthier option. But the price difference is quite amazing, isn't it? And especially if you have. Uh, mass-produced meat from a supermarket or you're buying organic local meat or vegetables.

Uh, the price difference is quite high, isn't it.

John Herr: Oh, yeah. It's much harder to try and eat organic and healthy. You're right. And then you see the commercials where McDonald's is our friend. The dollar meal menu. Oh, please don't just don't even eat there. But do you want you to understand? Some people though, socioeconomics, they don't, they don't have that choice.

But you know, everybody can make little changes, I believe. Do you know? Uh, and then that's what we try to educate them on. And as you mentioned, I mean, just the cost of medication, like, uh, it's gotten, even when they're covered by insurance in our country, many patients can't afford their medications with their copays.

So I, whereas the low dose naltrexone, you know, I'm such a big believer in it. I, you know. Okay. I worked with Dr Dahda who, you know, explains to me that, you know, his patients are chronic pain patients. So a lot of them are, you know, disabled or they, you know, they don't have a large income. So, you know, we, you know, once we have them too, they're titrated to their dose that the dose that they're going to be on for their pain, then we dispense like a 90 day supply.

It, you know, at a cost that in most cases is lower than their copay. Uh, cause we just believe in the therapy so much that we want to, you know, help it help patients and make it available to them. 

Linda Elsegood: What about shelf life on your capsules? How long do they last? 

John Herr: Well, you know, the USP governs that in our country, so I imagine they would last longer, but where, you know, only allowed to put 180 days on, on there.

Once we, from the date that we make it now, certainly at the pharmacist, I think it would last a lot longer. But because it's compounded, you know, the USP United, which is the United States pharmacopoeia, which is basically overseen by the, you know, the FDA, the food and drug administration, and then that's up to 180.

Yeah, a day, what we call the beyond use date or expiration date. So that's what most people are getting a 90 day supply. They'll certainly going to fall within that date range.  

Linda Elsegood: I understand. And so that would be the same for the tablets as well once you start making those if that is the rules and regulations of the land. The 180 days?

John Herr: Yeah that’s correct that’s a solid dosage form and then once you go into anything that was a liquid, for example, um, now if you'd like for it to stop, I had to make it into for a young tile than a liquid format, you know, then we would be restricted, believe it or not, to a 14 day supply? You can also do testing, you know, so you can test that it's stable to extend that beyond use date. But most of the patients we see are, are using the, you know, the solid oral dosage forms, the capsules or the tablets. Yes. So it's usually not that much of a problem.  

Linda Elsegood: and what fillers do you use. 

John Herr: Well, typically, like most people, we use avicell, which is just an inert starch that people do not have any problems with.

But because we, we, you know, my pharmacy, it's, you know, we were only compounding. So we work with a lot of functional medicine and integrative practitioners. So we have a person who did have like what we call chemical sensitivities. A lot of times I don't think that they're going to be allergic to the, uh, you know, to the low dose naltrexone or it, but it could be the filler.

So sometimes what we'll do is we'll give them different filler. We might give them some avicill capsules, we might give them some acidipholis capsules, or sometimes we'll use a vitamin, you know, nutritional that we know that they can take. And then we'll have them take the, you know, capsule, you know, for about a week or so with actually, without, with no now trucks on it.

Just to make sure that they're not having any type of re, you know, reaction to the, uh, to the filler. So, you know, typically we do avicell, but you know, for specific patients, you know, if they have chemical sensitivity, we will adapt it too, you know, whatever will agree with that particular patient, especially if they practice kinesiology.

I have a couple patients and practitioners, you know, practising aetiology so they can kind of, sometimes they can tell which filters are, you know, will react to a patient even. Just from the, you know, if you understand, can aetiology, how it works in the body versus even half the taking it to see if they have a side effect.

Linda Elsegood: Okay. And what about the capsules? Are they sort of, um, a vegan free capsule? 

John Herr: Yes, we can get a, um, they're, they're a vegetable base, so now they're not a,  typically they come gelatin or, or, or vegetables. So we can, you know, we can get either, our goal is to go. At least eventually to the tablets once we, um, you don't have the tablet machine running correctly, but with the tablet you're, you know, unfortunately, you have to kind of make a couple of strengths.

It's not that you can go, oh, I can just run or, you know, or make a runoff, you know if it was a strange or an odd strength, you know, let me just make 30 or a hundred of that. What you have to do that in bigger batches, I don't think I will ever not be also making capsules. You said if you have the patients that need them, the ultra-low dose or patients who.

Everybody used to think it was 4.5 milligrams like religion, but now we know some patients do better with nine milligrams, some patients do better on three milligrams. So I envisioned that will always be, you know, compounding capsules. But we'll also, for those patients that are taking the more common dose, we'll have the availability of the, you know, tablets that we can keep up with the demand because you know, myself being, and.

in this metropolitan area of New York City, New Jersey. There are so many patients who need this, uh, need this treatment. 

Linda Elsegood: And what area do you cover? Um, before we started, you said the Manhattan area, so. Could you just explain exactly where you, you cover? 

John Herr: Oh, sure, sure. Yeah. And in the United States, uh, again, the FDA requires that you have to be licensed as a pharmacist in any state that you're going to send, you know, medication into and low dose naltrexone is considered a, you know, prescription medication in our country. So, you know, you have to be licensed in those States. So I, I've concentrated my licenses in the Northeast, so I, you know, work in areas such as, you know, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, you know, the, in this area of the Northeast.

But, uh, you know, previously I was president of IACT, which is the international Academy of compounding pharmacists. So I know pharmacists all over the country. And a lot of times I'll get a request for, you know, low dose naltrexone in another state. So I always know, you know, a good colleague that I can refer to that prescription to if no, if I get, I have a request and, uh, to state that I'm not licensed then.

And compounding pharmacists generally kinda like to network and share ideas with one another, which, you know, it's very collegial, which is something that, you know, really makes me enjoy the profession. So I do many instances I send prescriptions that I get to people I know in other States because I'm not licensed in that state, so we always try to make sure the patient gets their medication.

Linda Elsegood: And since you've been compounding LDN for so many years, has anybody ever reported to you any adverse effects that may be unusual? 

John Herr: I have like one patient and that she's come to like three of my seminars and her husband's a physician, but she just has a funny reaction to the naltrexone, and we've tried it.

We've tried ultra-low-dose and, and everything, but it really just upsets her, you know, upsets her stomach or her head. She just doesn't feel right on it. And I mean, she's tried it so many times because of it just, she's read so much about it, and her husband's been a practitioner. She's all one patient that's just tough to treat. But other than that, we get the typical side effects you see, which are the, uh, you know, the vivid dreams, the stomach upset, you know, maybe like a slight little headache. But typically we just work with those patients and tell them that you need to start the dose slowly and titrate up gradually.

So we've actually put together a, a, you know, like a titration kit. You know, for patients, cause many of the doctors don't realize that many doctors hear about low dose naltrexone and they just, you know, they think they can simply write a prescription for a four milligram or a 4.5 milligram. So we'll, we'll go in and educate those physicians that we have, this titration kit that we go up gradually once the patient gets to be on, you know, the dose that seems effective for he or she, well, they then compounded into that particular strength. So I think that's really helped a lot for patients to, you know, avoid the side effects and, uh, you know, get to their particular individualized dosage. 

Linda Elsegood: Well, I've been on LDN since 2003, and at that time over here anyway, we were given three milligrams for a month, and then you went on to 4.5, and that was it.

But the dropout rate was really high starting on three milligrams because we have found now that some people, you know, two milligrams is as high as they can go. So you can imagine starting on three it was a no go from the start, you know, it was far too high for them. But now, depending on what the condition is, It might be as low as 0.5 milligrams starting or 1.5 but doing it gradually and slowly. We find that not many people drop out of taking it. They seem to tolerate it really well and notice benefits quite quickly. 

John Herr: Oh, I agree with you, Linda. 100% on that. And then the other thing, like I always try to caution patients on it is that don't give up on it.

Because sometimes, even though maybe they didn't get any side effects, the patient thinks they're not getting the effects from the low dose naltrexone. And it's funny, we had two women, they were, you know, they were, you know, they were girlfriend, you know, and they both had a similar condition around the same age, and they went to the same physician, both started on the titration kit and, and the one woman that she got to 3.5 mg and she was just feeling wonderful. And the other lady kept going up and she got to like 4.5 and wasn't experiencing any, um, any relief from her. Uh, you know, what she was trying to treat,  but we just told her, you know, you gotta stick with it, stick with it. And you know, she was discouraged because the girlfriend was, you know, she was not even 30, you know, it's about 30 days. And she was feeling well, and she wasn't getting any benefit that she perceived. And lo and behold, it took four months.

And then she started to get the relief. So the other thing is like, even though you know you start low on the dose and titrate, which you know, we agree 100%, you also have to make sure that the patient realizes that sometimes you need it can take six months before the low dose naltrexone really start to show differences in their body.

And I always try to caution patients, you know, depending on the disease that they're trying to treat or the condition they're talking to trying to treat, I tell them, look, this didn't happen to you overnight. You know, this whole thing was probably going on your own, in your body for a long period of time.

So, you know, you're thinking traditional medicine, like, you know, you had a toothache and somebody gave you Tylenol with Codeine, and of course, it's going to work immediately. But with this, we're trying to upregulate your body and get your body to correct what's going on. So you do have to caution patients that, you know, give it time.

I usually recommend, give it a good six months before you say it's not doing anything for you.  

Linda Elsegood: well, we noticed, um, when we did a survey that some people said they had no symptom relief, but their disease stabilized. So I mean, that's a win in my book if you've managed to stop progression, but then between 15 and 18 months there was, um, 2% of people, whatever it was, didn't find symptom relief until they'd been taking it 15 to 18 months, which is a really long time. But they had stabilized before then. Um, and only 5% of people at that time or have any side effects at all. But the number of people who have stopped LDN because it probably wasn't working, or it was too expensive, but they stopped. And those people normally come back to me in about three, four weeks and say, in actual fact, the LDN was working for me. I'd forgotten that my bladder used to play up. I'd forgotten the pain that I had, “I’d forgotten …..”. You know, it wasn't until they'd stopped that they noticed that LDN in actual fact was working for them.

John Herr: yeah. I agree with that 100%. I've, you know, I've had like another woman, we would just counselling who hang out with her. Uh, you know, general, like almost like fibromyalgia pain and everything. Had ah It's totally a had gone away while she's been on the low dose naltrexone, but then all of a sudden she started to get pain in that.

And uh, you know, she's gotten real nervous. Like, Oh no, but I held the end isn't working for me anymore. I have to have this. This is how it is. This has been a miracle for me. What's going on? But then again, you know, functional, integrative medicine, when we talked to the patient with what's going on in your life, he starts to see that, Oh, you know, now you're going through, you know, you're right at the, into perimenopause, going into menopause, you have the pain.

Oh, it's right around my menstrual cycle. Okay, what's happening there? You're probably. Your estrogen level isn't where it used to be. And we know when women, particularly that when their estrogen and the estrodile goes down, they tend to get aches and pains. Hmm. So maybe it's a matter of, you know, adjusting your estrogen at this point.

It's not that the LDN stopped working, so you always have to look at your patients, and that's why the patient always has to go back and, uh, you know, consult with there, either their compounding pharmacist who can send them back to their physician or their physician. But it's not always just the, uh, you can't always blame it on the LDN.

Other things, you know, are happening in your life are happening with your body as, as we, as we age. So it's, uh, that's why I say it's a package. 

Linda Elsegood: I was asked a question this week, and a gentleman said,

it would appear on the forums that he's been reading that LDN doesn't work as well for men as it does for women. And was this a hormonal problem? Have you noticed it doesn't work as well for men as women, it seems, 

John Herr: you know, you're right. We have more of women that, uh, that are on low dose naltrexone, but I, I don't know why, but I thought like when we were talking pain, you know, certainly the, um, I think it works for both men and women equally well, but when we have other conditions such as fibromyalgia, that it makes you wonder, is it, is it also something going on with the hormones or, I think I have a great interest now in, in like Lyme disease and low dose naltrexone. And, and we know surely that Lyme disease, you know, uh, affects the pituitary, which is signalling in the body to produce hormones. And also, if you think about chronic pain, when people are in chronic pain, they're not producing their hormones the same.

So that's where I think we have to not just think that it's just a panacea and then we can just give low dose naltrexone, but we have to measure those patients hormone levels. And adjust them accordingly. So, and I think. You know, honestly, that may be what you, what you just elucidated is that you know, women will tend to, you know, go through menopause or their hormones will change at a much earlier age than men.

So, you know, for a woman, you know, we usually say around age 50 our hormones are trying to change. Men won't happen later on in life. So maybe it's not a difference, you know, in between males and females as much as, is it also something that has to do with the relationship between the hormonal changes.

And women getting them at an earlier age than then we're associating that more women do better than men, but reality maybe. Cause it's that man still has this testosterone in his body. 

Linda Elsegood: Oh, okay. It does. It does. And we're now out of time, but I have to have you back another day. We could have carried on talking there forever.

Could you tell people how they can contact you? 

John Herr: Well, certainly, uh, you can call us at our pharmacy directly, which is a 201 447 2020, and then you can always find us on the internet. Our, uh, pharmacy is https://tccompound.com/ and from there you can even email the pharmacist a question or, you know, call us directly.

And we just love talking to patients, and that's what we do. And we, and we do hold seminars, usually monthly on low dose naltrexone, which we will post on Facebook and on our website. And, you know, make people aware that if they're, you know, in the area that they can come in and see it. 

Linda Elsegood: Wow. Amazing. Well, thank you very much for all your hard work and for promoting LDN to your patients all these years.

Um, absolutely fantastic. And for educating people, so thank you very much. 

John Herr: Oh, thank you, Linda. I love talking with you and, uh, looking forward to doing it again. 

Linda Elsegood: Thank you.

At the town, a country compounding pharmacy in Ringwood, New Jersey, owner, pharmacist, John Herr and his team are passionate about low dose naltrexone. They have compounded LDN for over 15 years. And they're committed to compounding high-quality medications and serving as an educational resource for patients and practitioners alike.

Visit https://tccompound.com/

any questions or comments you may have. Please email me contact@ldnresearchtrust.org. I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you for joining us today. We really appreciate your company. Until next time, stay safe and keep well.

Pharmacist Jeff, LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Pharmacist Jeff shares his Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Jeff has been a compounding pharmacist for over a decade and has been exposed to a variety of different conventional treatments to treat a number of autoimmune conditions. However, it was only in the last few years that he came across Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) and the success it can have in autoimmune patients.

In this interview, Jeff gives various examples of how his patients have suffered from their autoimmune diseases for years but have found great relief once prescribed LDN.

This is a summary of Pharmacist Jeff’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Jeff’s story by clicking on the video above.

Pharmacist Dan Karant, LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Pharmacist Dan Karant shares his Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Dan Karant is a pharmacist at, and the current owner of, the Medicine Shop in Northern Ohio, the United States. Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) has been incorporated into his treatments for as long as he can recall and has had a great deal of success.

Throughout his career he has predominantly specialised in fibromyalgia, finding that LDN can be incredibly effective in relieving the pain and other symptoms inflicted upon his patients by the autoimmune disease.

In this interview Dan explains how he personally prescribes LDN and how to achieve the best results.

This is a summary of Dan Karant’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Dan’s story by clicking on the video above.

Pharmacist Amy Lamb, LDN Radio Show 22 Oct 2017 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Pharmacist Amy Lamb believes that Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) is one of the few drugs that can safely help Hashimoto’s sufferers. She sees many patients with autoimmune conditions benefiting from huge relief with LDN. 

Amy continually educates herself in alternative treatments in order to help her patients. Her five year stint as a compounding pharmacist gave her a greater insight into pharmaceutical treatments of autoimmune diseases. In this interview she also stresses the importance of a balanced diet, good sleep and avoiding toxins and stress.

This is a summary of Amy Lamb’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Amy’s story by clicking on the video above.

Pharmacist Michelle Moser, LDN Radio Show 02 May 2017 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Michelle Moser shares her Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Michelle is a graduate of University of Washington 1987 with bachelor of science in Pharmacy. She holds a fellowship with American College of Apothecaries and American College of Veterinary Pharmacists. Michelle has worked in Long-term care, hospital based and retail pharmacies in the Puget Sound area. 

2011 opened the doors for Makers Compounding Pharmacy where medications are made by hand for specific patient needs. Compounding for human and veterinary customers is a privilege, according to Michelle. March 2017, the ultimate goal is achieving national Accreditation through PCAB became a reality.

This is a summary of Michelle Moser’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Michelle’s story by clicking on the video above.

Pharmacist Eric Borgeson, LDN Radio Show 2019 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Linda Elsegood: Today I'd like to welcome my guest pharmacist, Eric, Borgeson from Jersey Shore Pharmacy in New Jersey. 

Thanks for joining us today, Eric. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Thank you for having me today. 

Linda Elsegood: Could you tell us how you got into the pharmacy? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: I originally got into pharmacy when I was 15 years old.

I got a flyer in the mail, and it's about a Lamborghini, and I wanted to drive a Lamborghini and own one. So I got into pharmacy because there were three ways to get the money required to buy the Lamborghini. It was either to inherit, which wasn't most likely going to happen or to win the lottery, which did not happen.

And the third way was to cure a disease. Then while in college, I'm getting closer and closer to a degree. In pharmacy, your ideas change, your goals change. So I became more of a person who wanted to help people and to help take care of other people and help them with their medications and getting better and staying well.

Then it was about a sports car. 

Linda Elsegood: Hmm. And have you thought any more about, you know, curing a disease? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Not so much. I mean, curing a disease seems almost impossible at some times to say, like, to be able to come down to the exact small things that actually caused the diseases. It's easy with something like HIV or AIDS where it's a virus, and you just have to figure out how to stop the virus and stop it from replicating versus a bigger disease such as cancer or MS or Crones when there are so many factors that go into it that you don't know how to stop it. One factor is great, but when it's still there and still happens, and we still don't have the answer, you’re scratching your head as to why is this still occurring? I thought we stopped it at the source. 

Linda Elsegood: Yeah. Okay, so in your pharmacy, what do you mainly do? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: We mainly make hormone replacement therapies that involve progesterone, testosterone, estriol, Estradiol.

In that, we also make supplements for various ailment that people have. And then other various ways that people wish to take. Well, we also do the low dose naltrexone, for those patients who have fibromyalgia. We also have patients who have that and chronic fatigue syndrome that we seem to help out with that.

Linda Elsegood: Do you have many doctors that are prescribing? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: It takes a special kind of doctor to prescribe it and seems like it has to be one that believes in trying a different approach, or what their patients bring to them to try. So we have about a half dozen neurologists that do prescribe it in the area.

Also, there are few alternative practice doctors that prescribe it in the area, but we don't really have any gastroenterologists who prescribe it much. 

Linda Elsegood: Oh, okay. And we always find that the most prolific prescribers are mainly nurse practitioners. Do you have many of those in your area or, or none at all? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: We do have a lot of those in our area.

A lot of physician assistants and a lot of nurse practitioners, but they seem to really do a lot of the alternative medicines, in the sense of the low dose naltrexone, tell their patients that way. They seem to stay more towards Western medicine. The ideal of this is what the book says, how I treat my patient or X, Y, Z.

Linda Elsegood: Well, we did three talks last year like a roadshow taking LDN out there and getting pharmacies and prescribers in the area invited to come to an evening, just a two-hour talk on LDN. That has been really successful. So maybe we need to come to your area and get your prescribers to come along and, and listen - if they will listen.

Dr Eric Borgeson: Sounds like an excellent idea. 

Linda Elsegood: Yeah, that, that definitely does, isn't it? 

So what forms do you compound LDN in? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Primarily receive. We make a capsule for us. We've made liquid for one person before, but primarily we just make LDN capsules. There was a prescriber as a psychiatrist, with interest in a low dose naltrexone cream too.

But he didn't follow through with it or never found a need for it.

Linda Elsegood: Oh, that's a shame. I mean, it seems to be working extremely well for mental health issues and also with pain, even people that are taking high doses of opioids by using ultra-low dose naltrexone. Do you have any pain specialists in your area?

Dr Eric Borgeson: We do have some, there’s a large number of pain specialists in our area, but none of them has prescribed it. But that may just be, as you said, due to a lack of education about the product. Or even just the availability. There's a bunch of us out there and trying to promote ourselves and what we do and other people out there are telling people that there are other means than traditional medicine, that there is this alternative. Sometimes it seems to fall on deaf ears or doesn't make it to the right ear. 

Linda Elsegood: Yes, true.  You know, if we can get people to come to the conference, that would be amazing. You know, watch the live stream.  But there is a lot of it. This year we had, I think, about 30 hours of pre-recorded presentations plus the two and a half days as well. It's quite a commitment to sit and watch them, or if you do have a year to watch the presentations. But nine out of 10 prescribers that watch it are so enthused by it. They will go and prescribe LDN.

And of course, as soon as they see patients doing well, they want to prescribe it more and more. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Why don't we? Everyone has patients that they have who might be able to benefit from LDN. They're looking for something and they just can't seem to find that one magic bullet, but even something else that would help them with the bad effects of their illness and can’t think of what.

And then sometimes they're like, ‘Oh, let's try this!’ as you said. And then they're like, ‘Oh, that’s great, that worked really well for’, for example, ‘Ms Hill over there. Maybe we need it for Ms Parker over here or different elements for a different condition.’ This may help them because they had thought of it.

Linda Elsegood: Hmm, exactly. And it's, you know, a Eureka moment, isn't it? When you've had a patient who's really ill, and there's nothing else you can do and the patient isn't getting any better. And then discovering, LDN could possibly work and seeing what the results are. I find it really fascinating. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: It is fascinating and satisfying.

It's at that moment that you're able to feel like ‘that's where we got into medicine’, to help them out with these things, to make it, to give them the treatment that they need to help improve the lives that they have. 

Linda Elsegood: You said that you compound supplements as well. What would your recommendations be to patients who take LDN? What supplements would you say they should be taking or checking?  

Dr Eric Borgeson: Yes, because a lot of that's what attracts them to help with the inflammatory disorders. We usually recommend other anti-inflammatories to go with it.

Or perhaps B12. Or other complexes that we have, just an overall energy-boosting for our patients who have chronic fatigue syndrome, or it may be that we also recommend they get their iron levels tested to make sure that not just a vitamin D issue, that it actually sees if there's any iron component to it, that's missing, that they don't have enough steroids and things like that.

Linda Elsegood: Why would somebody have low iron if they had a healthy diet? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: They may not be getting enough iron from their natural diet. Over here in the States, we have a lot of vegans or vegetarians that if they don't get enough beans or other source of iron or even just iron supplements taken with something such as citric acid or even just orange juice with it.

They may actually get enough absorption, and they might not be getting enough just in their diets as I said, from lack of iron sources. It's like they're not getting enough iron from beans or things like that. 

Linda Elsegood: How would you know if your absorption was working correctly? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: You'd have to get a lab test from your doctor and then get a blood draw to see what the levels were and then take them, they do move slowly.

So you'd have to draw blood, with a retest after six to eight weeks to see if you were deficient. I had to get our tests in six, eight weeks to see if the levels are brought up or not. And then you can slowly continue to supplement from there. For example, my own baby, at 18 months, was getting a great diet and drank milk.

He did everything, but he still had an iron deficiency, which was surprising to us when we brought him to the doctor. So we give him a vitamin supplement, iron supplementation for three months or so, and now his iron levels are up to normal and up to date, and we've been able to stop the supplementation.  He's able to maintain his iron. 

Linda Elsegood: That's good. So you don't necessarily need to take it for life just to increase it. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Well, no, that's good just to correct it.

Linda Elsegood: Yes. Okay. So when a patient comes to see you, I mean, obviously you're not prescribers, but if you notice there was something that could help a patient, how would you go about informing them?

Dr Eric Borgeson: If we see a deficiency that we can help with a patient, we'll write them up in a note and tell everything. Like, this is what we recommended to your doctor. And then we ask if they want us to fax it over to them on their behalf or if they want to bring it into their doctor or they want to call their doctor about it.

So we'd help educate them about what the issue is, why we think this is a good treatment for them. Why is it a good way to progress? Then for them, with the way to get what we suggest that they should get. Most prescribers in our area have worked with their patients for years, or decades even.

So anything that a patient brings to them, they're mostly willing, they're most likely to let them try it because it has a sound rationale behind it that's opposed to, you know, a patient saying, Hey, I found something on the internet. Great. 

Linda Elsegood: And what do you think the response would be if you suggested LDN for these chronic fatigue patients or MS patients.  Do you think the doctors would be open to that, those who haven't previously prescribed? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: I do think it happens with doctors who have previously prescribed it. Some may be sceptical about it at the beginning, but then they just want what's best for their patient. So if they don't have any negative experiences, they will invest my track record in my history.

In nineteen years, I'd never actually seen any really severe allergic reactions. And they don’t see any severe adverse effects from taking low dose naltrexone. All I've seen is that's what's happening with someone who was on opiates before and got a medium dose of naltrexone and they now went into withdrawal a little bit.

But that was the only a slight case of anyone who's had an adverse reaction from our experience with it. So most doctors in that instance, when presented with a lot of positives that can occur from it and not a lot of negatives, then they're more willing to prescribe it for their patients.  

Linda Elsegood: What would you say the outcome has been from the patients that have tried LDN?

Dr Eric Borgeson: I can say it's not all of our patients, unfortunately, that get benefits from it. It seems to really be about six out of 10 or seven out of 10 patients who do take it and take it regularly and as they're taking it at bedtime, take it roughly the same time, at bedtime. It seemed to have the best effects with it, but as not all medicines work the exact same way for everybody, it doesn’t work for everyone, unfortunately.  

Linda Elsegood: What dose range do you compound? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: The majority of our patients, we have a total range. Once we have to do one and a half; we have two-point ones, three ones, three and a half, four and a half. We have a few patients on six points, and we've done a few patients up to nine.

But the majority are down in the three and four and a half range. Because most of the studies in LDN, most of the tests and most of the studies have been done on the four and a half milligram variety of low dose naltrexone as opposed to higher doses. And then we start the lower doses because people should be titrated up slowly as opposed to just jumping to the highest dose.

Linda Elsegood: And what I was saying about pain specialists is because pain specialists now are using ultra-low dose LDN, which is 0.001 so it's, you know, really micro-dosing, and it seems to work absolutely amazingly by using this microdose alongside the opioids, not taking them off, keeping them on makes the opioids far more effective.

And then they're able to decrease the opioids while increasing the microdose, and in some cases actually weaning people off the opioids, some that have been on opioids even 20 years. I heard a story the other day about coming off the opioids on LDN and having better pain relief than they were on this cocktail of opioids and didn't go through withdrawal.

Dr Eric Borgeson: Now that is just amazing. 

Linda Elsegood: Yeah. We're doing a documentary on opioids and LDN, and we've interviewed several pain specialists who have amazing things to say, so we are hoping for big things with LDN, and hopefully, we will have to get you to make ultra-low-dose as well. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Excellent. Well, we look forward to that.

We ought to have more papers on that? 

Linda Elsegood: Yes. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: So I thought they had talked about micro dosing and nano dosing. The question is more homoeopathic sometimes at that point where it's like, what? How small of a concentration can you have before you actually start to see an effect? That'd be fantastic.

That doesn't have to be that high, and it doesn't cause any withdrawal effects on you simultaneously. Improve anti-inflammatory at the same time, not have to use such high doses of opiates. 

Linda Elsegood: Exactly. And the pain specialists that do use LDN at 1.5, will use it with opioids, but only several hours apart.

So if you take one in the morning, you take the other one at night. We don't ever recommend that. Nobody does that themselves, that always has to be under medical supervision, but there are doctors that will do that and find that it does work really well, but maybe it's the same thing as the ultra-low dose alongside the opioid making it that much more effective, but it's certainly something that is a hot topic at the moment. Which is really interesting. So what's your next goal in your pharmacy? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Our next goal? So, currently, we are rolling out our USP 100. We're working with the regulation part of that to improve us. And then we also have some creams out for testing now to help increase the bud study, like the beyond use stating that people can have for pregnant alone.

Cause right now there are no studies that pregnenolone is only good for 30 days based on U of T seven, nine, five. So we've put some out to a testing lab when we're on day 90. Now. We've had good results so far. Um, so we're pushing the boundaries there on science to see how long, um, we can get pregnant alone in this space for so that patients can, you know, have larger day supplies and less frequent turnover of medication, like having to order it and decreasing the burden on them.

Linda Elsegood: So what, what is that actually for? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Oh, pregnant. It's part of 'em. Uh, the hormone. a homeowner placed on therapy greens and helped synthesize other hormones for you. That's like a precursor. 

Linda Elsegood: So when people take hormone replacement medication, I mean. Is that just one medication once a day or do they have to take more?

Dr Eric Borgeson: Some prescribers use it once a day, and then some prescribers do it twice a day. It depends on the doctrine—the prescriber.

Some doctors want to keep the levels up more sustained and found that trees, it's the cream today seems to be more effective than once a day. So, again, that goes back to being patient dependent as some of their patients only use them once a day, and they seem perfectly happy with it. And sometimes it's just replacing progesterone that we've, that women lose over time, like people who are over 50, maybe experienced progesterone loss.

So then it's just bringing their progesterone levels back up to where they were normally originally. Um, so we're just, then at that point, you're just supplementing the progesterone at bedtime, and that's it. Cause it can cause drowsiness and some people as well. So, um, you wouldn't let me drive there during the day.

So the prescribers prescribing more. 

Linda Elsegood: And what about, um, blood tests? Do they always come back showing that they're, the tests are negative or positive even for thyroid problems, hormone problems? What I'm trying to ask is, is it a, is it a clear cut thing where, you know, this is the marker you've got, so you definitely need some help or, or are the grey areas.

Dr Eric Borgeson: I would say there's a grey area. There are black and grey areas where it's like, while you're, it depends on what level they're looking for. Like people who are high roid. Some people just look at the thyroid-stimulating hormone levels and base it off of that when they should really be using more of a direct T three and T four, um, blood tests.

It's a little bit more expensive obviously, but they use the direct T three and T four just to ensure that your body is converting. The T four into the active teeth three and then back to the inactive T four. And if it's not getting to the active state, then it looks fine on your blood work on just a thyroid-stimulating hormone side.

Ella is finding your blood work, so then it won't be fine. Um, once they, once you take the direct levels. 

Linda Elsegood: Hmm. Because I know, I know some people have had tests gone to one doctor and had the tests and been told the fine, then go to another doctor would have a different test and find they actually do need help.

Dr Eric Borgeson: I'm really alone in college where I was like, are you treating the numbers or you're treating the pain. And so they would be looking at the symptoms that the patient's experience in regards to, you know, are they losing weight? Are they having excessive sweating or, you know, are they just gaining weight.

The irritable or you somnolent infant, you know, are they, are they too tired? Not tired enough, too much energy, not enough energy. There are so many variations, professor, for the thyroid patients that they have to take into consideration, 

Linda Elsegood: but it's not helpful. Is it? When you go to the doctor in the field.

Really unwell to be told that your blood tests are normal. There's no further action that needs taking, you know, but hang on, I don't feel very well. There is something wrong with me. And then, of course, some of these patients are then told it's all in your head, you know, that you imagine it. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Yeah, there's that. Unfortunately, that does occur. Um, but yeah, I look, people always want to go, you got the people who don't even want to go to their doctors, but then they're like, well, I need an answer. I need to know what is wrong. And then after going their doctor, they're like, my doctor said there's nothing wrong and enough must not be anything wrong.

Linda Elsegood: So what, what are you going to say? What are you able to do as a pharmacist? If a patient comes to you and says, ah, I've had these blood tests, and they're all negative. There's nothing wrong with me yet. I'm really not. Well, how do you help those patients? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: We interview the patient at that point. Part of that is not feeling well and then try to find what may have paused that from the start, like more of the history and the biography of what caused their own wellness and then what things they've tried to further on wellness.

And then either possibly recommend a different doctor for them if they didn't go with a doctor who specializes in what seems to be wrong with them. Um, or maybe we've had to do tiny on what they say. We might have to do some further research. With them to see what else we can find on their topic of what seems to be ailing them.

What are things that we may not have even considered? 

Linda Elsegood: Yes. Yeah. Now, as I say, you're in New Jersey, so how far, you know, if you look at the whole state of New Jersey, whereabouts are you based? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: What about in the middle? Against the shore. We're, we're an hour and 15 minutes South of New York City, about an hour north of Atlantic City and an hour and 15 minutes diagonal from Philadelphia.

So we're ready against the shore about halfway up 

Linda Elsegood: on the coast. Okay. Yeah. I've actually been to Atlantic City as well. I, I came back, and I think I was home about a week and they had those terrible storms or hurricane or something and it ripped all the boardwalk up, but it was quite nice. I was saying to my family; I went here. I went there.

It didn't look like that, though. Um, I think I would have been, yeah. Quite frightened if I'd been there when that happened, but I did 

Dr Eric Borgeson: see it. Hurricane Sandy was not a nice hurricane. I had lost power for a day or two. There are people that have the pharmacy. I worked at the time. It didn't have power for a week.

Wow. You know, it was very, very traumatic. That was even in that, in inland, like 10 miles, like 10 15 miles. Like it was a very. Like for all the trees and knocked down and all the damage it did. It wasn't just the ravaging shoreline, which it did that as well. Burying houses and just strolling the entire, every house on the Island pretty much was almost seemed to be knocked down at some point.

Linda Elsegood: Goodness, 

Dr Eric Borgeson: there's so much damage on the Island, 

Linda Elsegood: but wow. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: I mean, we rebuild them. It's better than it was before, 

Linda Elsegood: but you do have more extreme weather them than we have here. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Occasionally there's not, you know, that's, I've only had one hurricane since I've been here, and that's the one. 

Linda Elsegood: Okay, well, that's not so bad.

That isn't 

Dr Eric Borgeson: it. Did you get some torrential downpours? Do get some lightning and thunder. They are always borne up tornadoes, but no ones. I'd never seen one in this area.

Linda Elsegood: but your position, um, how you will be located. You know, what area do you cover around your pharmacy? How far do people travel?  

Dr Eric Borgeson: ah, people can keep seeing how people travel up to 45 minutes to come to us. But we do mail like we ship prescriptions. Um, we just compounded prescriptions. We do ship for free throughout the state.

Because we're licensed in all States, so we'll have the doctor, well, doctors will fax over their prescriptions, or they'll call them in, and then we'll get them ready, and then we send them out to the patient, so they don't have to make them if they're over 45 minutes away, they don't have to travel there to get their prescription if they can't get anywhere else.

Linda Elsegood: And your license in which States did you 

Dr Eric Borgeson: say it's in New Jersey where we are, but we're licensed in eight States, I believe. 

Linda Elsegood: Okay. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: We're licensed in Arizona, Connecticut, Colorado, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Florida, Maryland. Those are the ones that come to mind 

Linda Elsegood: for pushing you on the spotlight. It's a tricky, tricky to remember, isn't it? Wow. So do you think, um, Philadelphia, didn't you say you near Philadelphia? What was it about Philadelphia? Do you ship there, Pennsylvania? 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Yes. We do ship to Pennsylvania. There's a children's hospital on the edge of Pennsylvania that we do a lot of compounds for. There's a children's hospital, Philadelphia, and we help take care of some of their patients. 

Linda Elsegood: Oh, okay. Wow. We've just about come to an end.

Um, you've already given your contact details, and that will be on the video for people to see. So thank you very much for having been my guest today. 

Dr Eric Borgeson: Thank you very much for having me. I look forward to seeing you guys may come to visit New Jersey. 

Linda Elsegood: Thank you.

Jersey Shore Pharmacy is a fully licensed and accredited pharmacy in New Jersey, specializing in compounding formulations. Such as LDN, bioidentical, hormone creams, home appraisal, and pet medications. They strive to help everyone with their individual needs. Visit https://www.jerseyshore.pharmacy/  or call 01 (609) 660-1111 Monday to Friday 9:00 AM until 7:00 PM. Saturdays. 9:00 AM till 3:00 PM.  You can also find them on Facebook. Today I'd like to welcome my guest pharmacist, Eric, Borgeson from Jersey Shore Pharmacy in New Jersey. 

Any questions or comments? You may have. Please email me at contact@ldnresearchtrust.org. I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you for joining us today. We really appreciated your company. Until next time, stay safe and keep well.

keep well.