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How to cure your Asthma or hay-fever using hookworm.

19 pointsby bpickabout 15 years ago

10 comments

minouyeabout 15 years ago
"I became infested almost immediately, it must have been either the first or second day I spent walking barefoot through the latrines. When one thinks of it this was an enormous piece of luck"<p>Wow - what a glass half-full outlook :-)
Percevalabout 15 years ago
The guy wrote a follow-up piece last year: <a href="http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2009/3/16/3408/66053" rel="nofollow">http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2009/3/16/3408/66053</a>
nroachabout 15 years ago
Ok, i'm thoroughly disgusted. How bad does your asthma have to be in order to resort to parasitic infection as a cure? I hate my hayfever, but you can count me out for this remedy.
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tokenadultabout 15 years ago
Here's the Wikipedia link on the general subject:<p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helminthic_therapy" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helminthic_therapy</a><p>I don't have any of those diseases, so I've had no occasion to try it.
eliabout 15 years ago
The "Parasites" episode of Radio Lab discusses the story of another person who did the same thing. <a href="http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/episodes/2009/09/25" rel="nofollow">http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/episodes/2009/09/25</a>
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duncanjabout 15 years ago
There are a couple of factual errors in the story. The worms live in the small intestine. (Think about the name, <i>Ancylostoma duodenale</i>) The third-stage larva is infective, not the first or second.<p>Hookworm infestation causes anemia, lethargy, and malabsorption, so definitely use with caution. It is probably best to use some sort of defined protocol so that you have a small number of worms without the risk of massive infestation.
dilapabout 15 years ago
I'd love to do this (I get super-bad hay fever), but dude's charging $3000 bucks, which seems pretty steep to pay for a disgusting worm with an uncertain outcome. Anyone know a cheaper source? (I was thinking a farm, but apparently the hookworms animals get and the hookworms humans get aren't the same.)
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chipsyabout 15 years ago
For a few years, I had some pretty severe hayfever in the early springtime, but this year there's been almost nothing. I attribute the difference to diet changes reducing the inflammatory reactions.<p>Of course, that's probably not enough for all sufferers.
volomikeabout 15 years ago
As someone with really bad asthma, who coughs constantly when speaking to clients and thankfully works from home and uses a mute during coughs on Skype, this study is fascinating and I hope something comes of it for a vaccine.
Mzabout 15 years ago
I don't even want to read past the intro. I'll stick with cleaning up my diet and home environment and using alternative remedies to get better, thanks.<p>(No, I don't have asthma, though I was misdiagnosed with it at one point. I do have "atypical cystic fibrosis" and there is a lot of overlap in treatments between the two things.)<p>EDIT: Since I have been downvoted, let me clarify: I frequently get strong negative reactions on health discussion lists for the "extremes" to which I have gone to get well, extremes which freak out a lot of other people. To my mind, my choices have been pretty conservative compared to this. I don't keep my health situation a secret here but there is no real reason most folks here would have much context. &#60;shrug&#62;<p>Carry on.
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