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

LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Linda: I’d like to introduce Chris from Scotland, who has primary progressive MS. Welcome, Chris. Can you tell us when you first started noticing your MS symptoms?

Chris: It’s right about 2004 when I was around 55 years old. The symptoms came on as problems with bladder control, feeling tired, and so on. It was a very slow realization that I put down to my age. Initially I was tested in  2005 because I was falling down in the street and people were looking at me as though I was drunk, but I was losing balance, tripping over, and falling in the street, so our doctor referred me to the local hospital to get some tests. It took about two years for the neurologist concerned to tell me that I had MS. I was a busy man at that time. I had three retail outlets, we did lots of contract work and this sort of thing, so I was here, there, and everywhere; and everybody’s everybody point of reference thing, so I realized I had to make some alternative arrangements for my business, and there was a lot of stress and a lot of difficult times. It took between 2004 and 2008, I think, to realize I wasn’t going to get any better.

Linda: How did you hear about LDN?

Chris: My neurologist was a disappointment, so I invoked my private health care policy and chose another neurologist, who confirmed the diagnosis and referred me back to the other neurologist, who wanted to give me a steroid IV over a three-day stay in hospital, and I point plank refused to take that and did a lot of research on my own and came up with the LDN solution. I read a book by and Irish lady whose husband was..

Linda: the book would be Up the Creek With a Paddle by Boyle Mary Bradley

Chris: I researched even deeper into that and decided well, if it’s good enough for Dr. Bihari and those guys to try, I’d try as a starting point. It took a while for my local GP to agree to prescribe LDN. He said he had a family to think about and was not going to get involved in this sort of quack therapy. I pressed the point with one of the other GPs at a later appointment and she, who’s the senior GP in the practice, saw what I was trying to do. I presented her with all my findings. LDN was on the NHS list of approved medications, but unfortunately the filler was calcium carbonate which my research through Skip Lenz shows apparently it’s a sort of counter-actor to LDN and negates the effect. Now I have a filler Avicel, for me, the preferred filler for LDN. My dose is between 3.0 – 4.0 mg, depending on how I feel. All available through my local GP at no cost to me.

Linda: Did you notice any introductory side effects?

Chris: Yes. Some great dreams of all sorts of weird little things for the first few weeks that settled down, and now I have LDN with absolutely no side effects.

Linda: Has LDN helped you at all?

Chris: I can only assume a beneficial effect, not knowing what the alternative would have been had I not taken LDN and gone for something else. My theory or philosophy on this is that I done want to ingest any stuff that’s on the drug market for the satisfaction of everyone except myself. I prefer to go with the low bang of LDN rather than the big bank of some of these steroidal drugs. I can only assume LDN is holding on to my MS, preventing it from progressing quite as quickly as I would otherwise normally experience, without the essential side effects, and restart.

Linda: Have you noticed any improvement at all, or have you just remained the same?

Chris: It’s clear the MS is not going to go away, but there is no remedy that cures this problem. My life has been modified not only in terms of the drug and the condition, but also in terms of my workload and work-life balance, and all the rest of it. So I keep taking LDN and assuming that it’s kind of holding on to where I was 2-3 years ago.

Linda: Have you noticed any improvement in your bladder or fatigue or anything? Is there anything that you’ve noticed is better?

Chris: The answer is no. I still have the fatigue and difficult bladder control, and all this sort of stuff, and other essential part of MS. But I’ve never seen LDN as a cure, rather as a means of holding on to my condition at the point at which I first started taking it, and slowing its progression.

Linda: Most people when they start taking it their bladder starts to improve and the fatigue isn’t quite as bad. Have you noticed any improvement in any of these symptoms?

Chris: I remember quite well the chapter in the book that said that somebody had said well, LDN isn’t working so I’ll stop taking it, and their account of that is that within three days or so, they were all over the place and they went back on the LDN and realized that LDN was in fact helping them. So, I don’t want to go down that route. I keep taking LDN.

Linda: So your symptoms are exactly as they were when you started LDN?

Chris: I don’t see that there’s been any great improvement.

Linda: Not even slight improvement?

Chris: I can’t say it’s improved, but that it has held on to it. Maybe there was slight improvement when I first started taking it for sure, but since then it’s kind of held on to the way it is.

Linda: Well, thank you very much for sharing your story with us Chris, I really do appreciate it.

Chris - England: Multiple Sclerosis (MS) (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Linda Elsegood: I'd like to welcome Chris from England and Chris has multiple sclerosis. Welcome Chris

Chris: Good evening.

Linda Elsegood: Could you tell us your story?

Chris: Uh, well, yeah, I mean, um, in back in 2002, I got diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Um, after several years of going to the doctors and the Dr. Carney was stress, stress, stress.

Well, I had all these weird and wonderful things happening to me. One of them was, I was walking around. Super bummed balances  I felt drunk, really. And after being in the licensed trade for 25 years, that really wasn't a very good image, Didn't understand what was going on. And it wasn't until I moved out of London  And was taken into hospital when it was stay. Now  I'll go onto the road to actually discover what was the matter with me. Okay.

Linda Elsegood: When you say we'll deal with other than the staggering, what were your symptoms at that time?

Chris: Well, the first symptoms that I had were, Hey, I'm tingling at the end of the book fingers.

And obviously what I've already said, who can only see forward. Drunk really suddenly walk in the side and banging on the wall, uh, old-style or eight, um, pumps my bladder one minute or I didn’t want to go to the toilet and the next minute it was like switching a light on. I know, I know absolutely fasting. Yeah, no, it was another season.

So, you know, wasting between the sounds and what's going on here, you know? And, um, that's, that's the first symptoms that like go right.

Linda Elsegood: What happened later on?

Chris: Well, I mean, I didn't realize this at the time, and it wasn't until I turned on

I think they call it a cognitive thing. Kamia Oh, I actually tried. Oh, I'd call it to focus. So I was unable to concentrate on being a businessman. It was quite difficult, really either. I couldn't really concentrate on things and my reasoning sort of went out the window. Really. In fact, I might call you back to see you.

At one of the worst are people, is that I transferred all my assets over to my wife nine, um, bought house cash in the Knoll, cocking her nine, and then she decided that she didn't want to be married to someone who's here anymore. We got divorced. Um, that was quite a bank cause she's also was making the right decision at the time because I.

Well thinking strike really? Um, connectedness.

Linda Elsegood: How old were you when you were first diagnosed?

Chris: Um, with respect to 2002. So that, I mean,  9years ago he said that's I was 41 Right. A young man. Yes. Oh, I'll just do like a young man.

Linda Elsegood: Of course you are. You're younger than me. So what happened

Chris: Well, I mean, obviously I was going through, I think what lots of people do when they get a new with slight multiple sclerosis they do all the research on the internet, see all these weird and wonderful, wonderful cures. We can cure this and cure that and, um, just grasping at straws for it. And I, I sort of got a little bit disillusioned with the NHS who put me on, I was on steroids, which I really didn't like, no one told me what steroids would do to me. And actually, turn me into a bit of a mean person.

Also, the very nice person really turned into someone who was having the weight of it, um, and also was on, um, I think it's really best, which is interferon three to one. I, and always kept to myself three times a week for three years. And I kept saying to my consultant, no. No, I don't think that she's doing me any good, you know, too long, getting worse and worse.

I mean, I was under a lot of stress as well. I've got to be it. Um, but I sort of found out, I heard about LDN quite a number of years ago, and all these apps were read about it. Try to get LDN through my own GP. And she flatly refused to. Um, proceed within, in any way, shape or form to a private doc who I cannot remember.

He's nine. Um, But speaking, I think dial through with it now, just now I want to stick with what I'm doing, and I didn't go through, I think I had so much else going on in my life. There'll be 50 people and the children and pretty well. I've got to a point where I sort of came out of the episode of both. So I've got to accept some stuff and. I then got the volume to be, but the Scarborough, the multiple sclerosis resourcing through culture stuff, and their website have been texting a new man that the information that they've got and their bridge.

So he's colossal really. And what I like about, and you start, they tell you absolutely everything about everything that's on the market, you know? But they don't, they don't fight for anything, and they don't leave anything out to the person. And he said you should not. So then LDN comes back into my head, and then I start looking at what they were saying about OTA.

I obviously then saw the LDN research trust on there. I'm got in touch with you. you gave information about a doctor that would, um, speak to me then privately. I spoke to that doctor at my consultation, and I've now been taking LDN for a third of $233 today because I'll keep a diary. Right.

Linda Elsegood: Okay. So what have you found out with NHS?

Chris: Well, it's quite striking to me because I have to start all the research that I did about LDN. Um, Eight eight. I went off to start taking it. I was looking at me as this one, the drug. Yeah. And I was how he, it was going to be doing all these wonderful things for me and writing things that were wrong with me.

Um, but LDN for me is quite a subtle drug. And one of the first things that I notice that improved with, well, go ahead. We're more or less. So I got better. Most of my cognitive thinking and my concentration values got better. Yeah. I'm not as balanced as in. I have to be honest, hasn't actually improved that much.

Um, but I have had a situation where we've got our wires crossed, and I had her. I had a period of time I didn't take LDN, because I didn't get my prescription and I did actually nine to how much LDA is done for me, because also now these things coming back and my eyesight got worse. And as soon as I went back on the LDA, things started to get come right again, you know, I mean, LDA is not the only thing that I've done in my life to combat in it.

Positive thinking I exercise regularly, but there's regular stretching and also change diet considerably like, um, a natural one. I’m winning the battle if you say..

Linda Elsegood: Did you notice any initial side effects when you started?

Chris: No, it didn't have any side effects. No, no worries.

Linda Elsegood: So how is your fatigue now, Chris?

Chris: Well, since I've been taking LDN, uh, the fatigue has been barrable really.

I mean, I'll still get it from time to time, but all actually that's more of a. Food issue more than the multiple sclerosis where before it was all used to describe it, let's say fought in the cold in us, spider's web and the more full against people, more than twined I've got until you act to just give up, you know, you actually give up, but no action felt like that anymore.

And I like to think when I like when I do get fatigued. It's more actual. Thirty shirts more than the EMS while I can ELT. And yes,

Linda Elsegood: What foods have you found make you feel fatigue ?

Chris:  Well not, no, it's not so much the food that makes me

Feel fatigue this new food intake or insulate sort of block or four, maybe five times a day. I like to eat smaller meals, more regular. Like if work workload is. As such the loyal back to miss a snack or something, or that auto painted to the house and I'll get tired. Right. Cause I'll miss that out. Move a food issue, not putting some petrol in my body to take the DMS, you know?

Linda Elsegood: So would you continue taking LDN?

Chris: Absolutely. We got that. Absolutely. And what

Linda Elsegood: would you say to other people that we're thinking of trying out the LDN,

Chris: I'll have recommended it to people. I had a friend who had mine. Yes. I know. Recommended it today.

Uh, we don't have a lot local contact.

Um, and you know, I would recommend it to anybody. And I think, I think I've been uptown or talked to about it. Who initially said now, she's actually become to say my progress because I need the Mondo. What did you actually see him the next day? I've seen him a year ago,

looked at me, looked at his pipe.

Linda Elsegood: when you've got the progressive disease it’s great to actually get: it's still such a big deal. Isn't it. To actually stop progressing.

Chris: We've had that. I mean, you need to before. I mean, I, to have a lot of stress with people and stuff like that, but before I started taking it with LDN, I appeared at the time there all wasn't getting out a big bloke.

Yeah. Now on. Yeah, I'm not saying that I could run a marathon, but I'm walking, and I'm late in the next life. You know, I've discovered cycling, and I use it as my form of walking my children. Now, this is me from the marriage. They all have migrated over to me, and I cope with that as well. And I'm good and all sound always up because of that.

No boys crossed. I actually stopped taking them. Nope, not because I wanted to, but just the fact that I didn't have the medication and I think now it's a different,

Linda Elsegood: well, thank you very much for sharing your story with us, Chris. And may your success Continue

Chris: Thanks to you.

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.

Cheryl - US: Lyme Disease (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Cheryl from the United States takes LDN for Lyme disease and Co infections.

Her story  goes back into childhood. She had always struggled with some sort of illnesses. Gastrointestinal issues,  stomach virus, rashes on her face, etc

In her teens she developed depression and anxiety and later pain.

When she was 21, her dog got very ill and she noticed she had a four to five inches in diameter round bite that  looked like a Brown recluse bite. She was having palpitations and strange symptoms.  That bite stayed for about two to three months on her body and it had a little centre point.

They diagnosed her with fibromyalgia in 1994 because she felt like she had the flu all the time. And it just never went away. She was vomiting all the time, she had to leave school in 1995 and declared total and permanent disability. Then she slept all day and night, was freezing all the time, and nobody paid any attention. And at that time, Fibromyalgia  meant "It was all in your head." In 1996 a  specialist put her on Ambien and Flexeril.

She went into remission after started seeing his current husband from 1996 to 2000 until her children were born.

She started to get all sorts of symptoms,  restless legs and vomiting.

She had twins and just slept one hour each night and by the time they were eight months old, her body was just in terrible pain, her gallbladder had gotten to the size of the liver. She got a two hour surgery.

The months following, she ended up trying Methadone, Oxycontin and all sorts of pain meds. She was freezing, had chills and sweats, had a lot of allergic reactions and scratched all the time, couldn't walk and visibly see swelling in her feet. So by late 2009, she was unable to leave her house, became housebound and couldn't wear shoes.

She would wear earplugs because she was so sensitive to sound and light. Everything had to be covered on windows. She was not eating most of the time and still was vomiting.

Later on she went to a clinic and they told her she had been exposed to Borrelia. She received treatment with herbs and after 3 months was able to at least get out of the house in a wheelchair.

She came off opiates because she had Sjogren's syndrome.  Eyes and mouth were extremely dry and so she started a huge elimination diet. She started  on very low doses of LDN she learnt about LDN through a naturopath.

She started at 0.1 milligram, and  was going to bed at 4:30 AM. So she started taking it at 4.30Am and her schedule readjusted. Now she takes LDN at around midnight. She tried to up the dose but because she is very sensitive to medications, It took 4 months to see any results.

 "I tell people don't quit just because you don't see results right away, my body's been sick my whole life,  so it's not going to turn around in five seconds.

But by three months or four months after starting LDN, I noticed that I really didn't need a coat.

I went out one day to bike, and I wear a normal shirt without not sweating and do not have chills. I was able to come off medications like Neurotin and Flexeril.  By 9 months I could bend and clean.

Before I couldn't even pull my back leg up to 90-degree position I couldn't walk down my stairs.

I think my quality of life is probably about an eight or nine now and some days it's actually 10. I have completed a course successfully at Oregon state university after not being able to go to school for years.

And I do pottery, I am a personal advocate now in Portland for a group.

And so I would say that my quality of life is quite good because I get to talk to my children and I get to eat food, and I get to walk up and down my stairs, and I get to sleep.

I'm not saying it's perfect. But I consider level three pain or level two pain to be really good."

Celia - Ireland: Parkinson's (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Celia from Ireland takes Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) for Parkinson's disease.

Summary

In 2003 I had a bit of a shake in my right arm but the doctor said  it was not enough to worry about. Then two years went by, and it was obviously getting a bit worse and I was diagnosed with Parkinson's.

I started taking Mirapex and later Parkinson's had progressed, and I was beginning to find it very difficult balance-wise and was not confident about walking but I never stopped working.

I actually got an MBA last year for services to build a heritage of Northern Ireland because I'm trying to restore and regenerate our modern village, which I live in and which my family built-in 1835.

I never had a problem with driving so I've always been independent in that way, but sort of getting in and out of the car wasn't the easiest sometimes.

I heard about LDN through my cousin, went to a consultant and he did prescribe it to me.

I didn't notice an immediate relief but then I realized that I wasn't worried about walking anymore

neither shaking. I've straightened up a bit, not completely straight yet. I just feel so much better.

I had put on quite a lot of weight because I wasn't able to walk very much at all and that's all coming off now, so that's good.

I found it extremely difficult trying to write and now I can write perfectly normally again. I do use computers a lot, and I find that was quite an effort, but now it's absolutely fine.

Before LDN I would score my quality of life with a 5 out of 10 and now I would say 9.5.

Please listen to the video for the full story.

Cathy - US: Fibromyalgia (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Kathy from the United States, and Kathy takes LDN for fibromyalgia.

She felt something was wrong was in 1998 she started to feel as she had the flu.

After being diagnosed with fibromyalgia she was somewhat shell shocked, she was a single mother who owned a business and very active in my community, and she came from a family that did not do illness well, and didn't know what to do next.

She was on a lot of medication which they did help, but the side effects were not something she can live with.

Finally she tried all the natural holistic approaches. But nothing really helped her.

Somewhere around 2013, a friend told her about Low dose Naltrexone (LDN)

Before LDN her quality of life she was a 6 out of 10, 10 being the best. After LDN it was an 8 or 9.

To listen to the full very inspirational story click the video link.

Any questions or comments you may have, please contact us. I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you for joining us today. 

Cathy - England: Tumefactive Multiple Sclerosis (MS) (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Linda Elsegood: I'd like to introduce Kathy from England who takes LDN for TMS, which is tumefactive multiple sclerosis. Thank you for joining me, Kathy.

Cathy: Thank you.

Linda Elsegood: Could you tell us a bit about tumefactive multiple sclerosis.

Cathy: Um, yeah, sure. It's quite a rare form of multiple sclerosis. I was only diagnosed with it, um, in 2012 December, um, by my neurologist.

Um, he actually took a look at my scans and with my medical history said that you've got tumefactive multiple sclerosis. He said you haven't got an SP, which I thought I had or relapsing and remitting. Um, so he, um, I have to go back really to 1990 when I had a stroke. Um, it was classed as a stroke, and I was ill for five years, and my daughters were only 18 months and eight years old at the time.

I was blind for two months, and all the left side was affected. And, um, I couldn't talk, but, well, I could talk, but no one could understand me. it was almost like being in a bubble for five years. And then, um, I don't remember any of it at all. And then after five years, I gradually, um, came out of it.

And I learned, I learned to, um, I learned to, um, sorry. Um, I learned to, um, read and write again and, um, to do everything really. I went to, um, an access course to, to learn, and learn again. Um, and I only did six months of that cause I did what I wanted to do, which was learn to learn. And then did a basic counselling course.

And then, um, went to, um, college, and I went and worked at, um, Harefield Hospital as a healthcare assistant nights. And then while I was there, I did my NVQ level three. And then, um, I did my nurse training. I was the conduit. I was one of Blair's babies. And did my, um, envy, uh, did my nurse training in 2003.

 I qualified 2007 to be a nurse at Hartford hospital or my first staff nurse post. And then in 2008, I had what we thought was another stroke. Um, and my left side was all affected again. Um, and I was like having bad trouble with the perception of heat, hot and cold, the hot-cold was painful and hot was like lukewarm.

Um, and that caused quite a few problems, but anyway, went to the hospital. They said it was viral neuropathy. Um, and sent me to my doctors the next day. They said I did. They didn't think I'd had another stroke. Cause I had some tests for that. And then when I went to my GP, he sent me to the neurologist and the neurologist said, I think you've had another stroke.

So he said, why you're having strokes at this age? I don't know. Cause the first one is 36. And now I'm, I think I was about 46 or something then. Um, and then, um, he says we do all the tests, and I had done cardio, bobbin, bubbled grams, and all sorts of things. And they all came back negative. He says you haven't had a stroke until now.

He said, we will send you for the last one, which is a lumber country in Charing cross hospital. Um, and that I told them that I had actually had multiple sclerosis. Um, so he then started giving me the treatment for multiple well, um, tablets to help with the symptoms of multiple sclerosis. Um, and he said that I've got relapsing and remitting, and that's why I'm fully recovered.

And that the, um, stroke in 1990 was obviously an MS episode and not a stroke. So that made sense really. In 2008  I was off work for six months, and I went back on a stage return. And as soon as I told them in March, but I've got multiple sclerosis. I was, um, sat for my position in, um, 2009, um, August.

And since then, I've, uh, 2010. I've been on benefits ever since then. Um, I'm am I able to work. I went right downhill. When, when they sat me. Um, because of the actual, um, minor, you, as you said, it was because of the stress from all that, that made me actual actually deteriorate so fast. And I went from sort of like walking, like doing seven, 17,000 steps on my pedometer a day and down to do, I couldn't even get off the chair.

Do you know what I mean? I was really, um, quite ill. Um, and, um, my, um, memory was very bad. Um, and, um, I, um, I've had, uh, suffer from short term memory loss. Um, and, um, so that sort of made things quite difficult. I couldn't go out on my own because, um, I wouldn't remember where I was and things like that. So I had to have somebody with me the whole time I still do, but I'm so much better since I started on LDN.

Um, I went to, um, my, um, neurologist. He was a general one for, um, a few years. And then when he came to an end, he said Now that you've now got secondary progressive. MS You said, so we can't do anything for you now I'd like you to introduce you to another neurologist.

Who's an MS specialist. He said because I can't think of anything else to give you to help. So I said, okay. I went to a urologist called dr. Malik, can we call him magic Malik? Um, uh, in the MS. Society, you know, and everything because he's fantastic. And he just, as I said, looked at my scans and my medical history and said you are relapsing, remitting, all SP.

Secondary progressive disease you've got TMS, which is a totally different thing you said. So he said, we can actually treat you now actively treat you. And he said, we can give you DMDs, which are disease-modifying drugs, but I didn't want to go on that route because I'd heard so many things about women it's injecting every day.

I wasn't too keen on doing that. Um, and I said, well, um, I've actually heard from another friend who's on this LDN. Have you heard of that? So, yes, you still, I've got quite a few of my patients on LDN. You said, did you want to try that? I suggest I do. So he wrote me a prescription for it. Um, and I started taking LDN in April of this year, and well, I just couldn't believe it.

The second day I felt the benefit from it. I felt, um, all my brain fog lifted. Um, I thought clearly I could finish sentences. I couldn't even finish a sentence. My husband always. I was used to finishing the ending for me. Cause I couldn't remember what I was saying. Um, so I'm able to do that now. Um, I'm able to, um, um, uh, do things that like I hadn't been able to do for ages.

Like, um, I'm still limited to the time that I'm standing up, but I have to sit down. Um, but, um, before that I just, I couldn't stand up and do anything. I just help. I need help to get up out of the chair and get into my wheelchair. I don't use the wheelchair. It sits out there, and I keep looking at it and thinking why don't I need to use you.

So I'll wait until I have to before I sit in and sit on you again. Um, and um, I use a stick to walk with and, um, I use the car as an electric wheelchair really? Cause I get it, just get dropped where we're going. And I walked from where We're going into wherever we're going. But the best thing about it is that I can actually chat away to people now, whereas before I would just say something and then forget what we're talking about and move onto something else, you know?

So it's been a, an amazing, um, drug for me. And I, and I am an advocate for it. And I keep on telling all my people What I'm on, what different sites I'm always advertising LDN and telling them how it's helped me. And I'm sure it could help you, you know, especially because they've all got MS. Most of the people that I talked to, you know,

Linda Elsegood: When did you first, did you have an interested in psychotics?

Cathy: I used to have, um, some fantastic dreams. Um, and they weren't horrible at all. I, in fact, I quite miss them. Um, I used to have like really vivid dreams as if, um, the colour was like fabulous. It was like unbelievable. And, um, anything to do with like flowers or if there was anything to do with colour in there, it would be really vivid.

And you can remember the dream. I can't remember the last time I could remember a dream, you know, uh, but now I can remember them. Um, I haven't really had, um, that only lasted for a few, probably a few months if that, but they've, they've all gone now. I don't have any, any sort of side effects that I can think of.

Linda Elsegood: Thank you very much.

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.

Caron - England: Multiple Sclerosis (MS) (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Sarah from England shares Caron’s Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) Story on the LDN Radio Show.

Caron was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) when she was 40 years old. Karen was a college lecturer and mother of two teenage children before her diagnosis. Her symptoms included pins and needles, blurred vision muscle spasms and fatigue, which forced Caron into an early retirement.

“Since Caron started on Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN), she has felt the benefits in her everyday life and suffered zero side effects. She’s now able to participate in family activities and get involved more which is great.

To anyone contemplating trying LDN, it could change your whole life; you could take control of your condition and take your life back. What do you have to lose? If you don’t try it, you will never know”

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

Carole - England: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS/ME) (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Carol from England shares her LDN story for ME/CFS. She started showing signs around 15 years ago. She had swollen glands and terrible muscle and joint pain. She also has difficult time making words out when she spoke. She found LDN through one of her friends through Facebook and decide to give it a try.  After she got LDN her pain levels went down and she had way more energy to get through the day. Her Quality of life improved drastically.

To listen to her story click the video link.

Any questions or comments you may have, please contact us. I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you for joining us today. 

Carol Petersen, RPh, CNP; Pharmacist; 17 June LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Carol Petersen, RPh shares her Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) Experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Carol Petersen is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Madison: School of Pharmacy and holds a certification in nutrition. She is a member of several professional organizations, including the American Pharmaceutical Association (APhA), the American College of Apothecaries (ACA), the International Association of Compounding Pharmacists (IACP), and board member at International College of Integrated Medicine (ICIM). She is also active with the Integrative Medical Consortium (IMC) and a member of the Association for the Advancement of Restorative Medicine (AARM). Carol currently serves as president of her local Toastmaster’s group.

On behalf of Women’s International Pharmacy, Carol attends and speaks at conferences across the country. She is a primary contributor for Women’s International Pharmacy’s educational outreach by writing, editing, and reviewing articles for monthly newsletters.

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

Carol - US: Multiple Sclerosis (MS) (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Carol from the United States shares her Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) Story on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Carol was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) when she was 26 years old. Prior to discovering LDN her symptoms included skin irritation and a dragging sensation in her left leg, limiting her ability to walk.

Once she began LDN, the improvements in her health were immediate. The spasticity in her legs was lessened, allowing Carol to walk again.

“I would say that LDN has definitely improved my quality of life and I’m continuing to improve in terms of my health.

I suffered a bad relapse when I accidentally left my LDN out and it was exposed to extreme temperatures during the winter and summer months. The batch was then ineffective, unbeknownst to me, which led to the relapse.

As soon as I had a fresh batch of LDN, I was back on track.

To anyone contemplating trying Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN), you should try it. It can’t hurt you; it can only help.”

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