What’s better Hydroxychloroquine or Ivermectin?
HCQ would have saved tens of thousands of lives if used until better medication was found. The drawback is that it needs a high dosage to work against viruses. Ivermectin is almost a silver bullet, it just cannot get used if the blood-brain barrier is compromized (by illness, medication, pregnancy, lactating).
Then there are a dozen or so other drugs that help keeping the virus in check (famotidine, bromhexine, monoclonal antibodies, ..), drugs that protect the body from the symptoms caused by the virus like oxidative stress and blood clotting (n-acetyl-cystein NAC, melatonin, vitamin C IV, heparin), and drugs that prevent the body from killing itself by an overreacting immune system (vitamin D, steroids).
I have everything except an inhaler, monoclonal antibodies and ivermectin on hand, I do however have tons of HCQ and all other medications listed in both protocols, afd says HCQ works but the flccc protocols says it doesn’t.
HCQ works, but the dosage against the virus is higher than the dosage against anything else, so there is a risk. HCQ was the best we have found until it was discovered that ivermectin works even better - and with just the normal dosage. https://trialsitenews.com/university-of-baghdad-pilot-clinical-trial-ivermectin-plus-hydroxychloroquine-azithromycin-superior-to-no-ivermectin/
That’s the problem. I’ll have to call afd to get some ivermectin. Hcq and antibiotics doesn’t seem to work as well.
I don’t know if hcq, doxycycline, prednisone, Pepcid, quercetin, NAC, Zinc, antibiotics, curcumin, bromelian, vitamin c and high dose vitamin D would be as effective without ivermectin.
I know this doctor/scientist claimed this worked to stop cytokines storms during the swine flu. His site is gone but I save the info, didn’t know about archive back then. The 50,000 iu pills are easy to find on Amazon and are cheap, they’re powdered capsules so some oil is needed to for you body to absorb.
Stock your home's pharmacy with several fresh bottles of 50,000 IU capsules of Vitamin D3 (a medicine a this dosage, not a supplement) and if you get this flu, take 2,000 IU per kg of body weight per day for a week. As I weigh 220 pounds, I would take 200,000 IU per day for seven days if I thought I had an infection with a 1918-like influenza virus.
When I first started trying to find these back in 2010 only one place sold them and they were close to $100 a bottle, I think they’re $15 to $20 now.
I posted this early:
I found it after googling AFD’s site but FLCCC has a different protocol. Seems to be more dexamethasone and starting later and hcq has no benefit. But FLCCC seems to wait until you have breathing problems instead of starting right away.
https://americasfrontlinedoctors.org/treatments/hydroxychloroquine/treatment-protocols/
Page 2 & 3:
I have everything except the inhalers, I have prednisone but already converted it to the proper dexamethasone dosage. I just have to order a few inhalers in the coming weeks.
As the FLCCC states, it' a matter of timing. C19 has 3 stages: First the virus replicates under the radar of the immune system. Then the virus neutralizes ACE which leads to oxidative stress wich leads to blood clotting. Then the immune system wakes up, overreacts, and kills everything in sight. Steroids like dexamethasone dampen the immune reaction. You don't want to use them in the first and second stage, hopefully the immune system wakes up and fights - and steroids would be counterproductive in this phase. Only in the third stage you want to dampen the immune system overreaction, and steroids can do that very effectively.
Some say that they have stopped the virus in the first stage with Budesonide inhalers. But this could be counterproductive if Budesonide shuts down the immune system before the virus is cleared.
Thanks. I looked at that multiple times, I thought the FLCCC was using 40mg of dexamethasone which is 240 mg of prednisone. And afd was using 6mg of dexamethasone which is roughly 40mg.
I get it now, avoid the steroids unless you start feeling worse, then use them. Afd should explain it better in their graphic, they just say high risk is over 45 or someone with 2 or more co-morbidities. From their site I would’ve started my elderly mom on prednisone right away.
(post is archived)