| z100a wrote
yesteday i visited a doctor in belgium who wrote ldn for an hepatits patient who was terminal.the patient recovered and is back at work.she uses 50 naltrexone in distllied water.she uses only 2.5 mg.she developed problems with focusing (eyes).is there someone who has this experince.i do not know all the details but there might be thyroid medication there.another patient of her had to stop alltogether ldn because of focusing (eyes) problem. might be also thyroid medication as she is an expert in thyroid. |
If these patients have Graves Disease and concurrent thyroid Opthalmopathy, it is not at all unusual for the focal points of the eyes to change. Thyroid Eye Disease (TED) causes the eyes to protrude from their sockets during the active phase of the disease. The eye protrusion is caused by autoantibodies, just like autoimmune thyroid disease is. If naltrexone actually reduces or helps with the production of autoantibodies.....and your friends also have thyroid disease or TED, the 2 (or actually 3) issues might not even be related.
I have thyroid eye disease, it started about 7 years ago and has greatly improved with time and stable thyroid levels. During that time I have donated 3 pairs of eyeglasses to Lions Club (A charitable organization) because my focusing and vision prescription kept changing. I have had the current prescription for 3 years, so (fingers crossed) my eyesight has finally settled down, and it has nothing to do with naltrexone. :-)