Topic: Felt better at altitude!...or was it lack of EMF?
CD57
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My family travelled to Reno to visit family recently. Reno is at about 5500 feet. I noticed while there that I felt very good, and two things occurred to me....I was outside, in the mountains, at high altitude, and there were virtually no EMFs around.
Can anyone comment on this? I thought altitude would make me feel much worse and have never really thought about EMF.
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Razzle
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In my case, it is not EMF stuff but rather the fact that the high altitude causes me to feel better.
I was around tons of computers while in college, and the town I was in for college was at about 4800' elevation.
I felt soooo much better there than at home (which was 2900' elevation).
I think I remember reading something that Lyme can cause a person to feel better at higher altitude and worse by the ocean...which describes me to a T.
-------------------- -Razzle Lyme IgM IGeneX Pos. 18+++, 23-25+, 30++, 31+, 34++, 39 IND, 83-93 IND; IgG IGeneX Neg. 30+, 39 IND; Mayo/CDC Pos. IgM 23+, 39+; IgG Mayo/CDC Neg. band 41+; Bart. (clinical dx; Fry Labs neg. for all coinfections), sx >30 yrs. Posts: 4167 | From WA | Registered: Feb 2011
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Catgirl
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The body acclimates and pushes more oxygen through the blood in places it normally doesn't get to (bb hates oxygen).
-------------------- --Keep an open mind about everything. Also, remember to visit ACTIVISM (we can change things together). Posts: 5418 | From earth | Registered: Mar 2011
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MichaelTampa
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Also, less humidity/mold, as another possibility.
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CD57
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also blood is thinner?
wow, I live right next to the ocean!
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posted
Less humidity and altitude has helped me a lot. We just moved from sea level to about 9200 ft above sea level in Colorado.
Love it here. Weather doesn't feel cold without all that moisture in the air and it feels good to be outside.
-------------------- Faithful
Just sharing my experience, I am not a doctor. Posts: 2682 | From Colorado | Registered: Oct 2009
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TF
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I watched the speaker on Mold Toxicity (Shoemaker 101) at the 2012 Lyme Conference, and he mentioned people who felt better at higher altitude. My notes on his talk are here:
"If a person feels better when they get to an altitude of over 7,500 feet, that is a clue that their ? is low. (Sorry, I missed the word here.) Going to high altitudes make these folks feel better, so that is the clue to this abnormality."
Whatever the missing word is, it is something that is commonly low in at least some mold sufferers. The rest of the notes may give a clue to what it is.
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CD57
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TF...I wonder if that's MSH or VIP hormones that he is so into. Does that sound right?
I did measure abnormal on some of his markers. Time to check into this!
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emla999/Lyme
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Endocrinologist Dr. Ray Peat, has some very interesting things to say about the health benefits of living in a high altitude.
On the link down bellow, starting around the 6:15 minute mark, Dr. Ray Peat talks about the benifical body chemistry/hormonal changes that occur while living in higher altitudes.
Basically, he says that the benefits in health that people sometimes experience when they move to a higher altitude can be due to the body chemistry changes that can occur when they move to a higher altitude.
For example, muscles can work up to 50% more efficient at high altitude. So, ATP wastage is reduced. And at high altitudes there is also a reduced production of lactic acid at a given work rate at high altitude. And living in a higher altitude may increase T3, testosterone, and normalizes hormones.
Also at high altitude, there is lower oxygen pressure and that lower oxygen pressure allows your body to retain more carbon dioxide.
And according to Dr. Peat, carbon dioxide produced in the cells, releases oxygen into the tissues, relaxes blood vessels, prevents edema, eliminates ammonia, and increases the efficiency of oxidative metabolism.
You might want to read some of Dr Ray Peat and Matt Stone's work if living in a higher altitude makes you feel better.
Also, was your eating and water/fluid drinking pattern different while staying there? Changes in eating and water drinking habits can have profound changes on the way that you feel.
CD57
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Razzle, ever thought about trying Procrit?
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beaches
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Many, many years ago I went to Vegas and noticed that aches/pains went away.
Years after that I went on a ski trip to CO where the altitude was about 11,000 feet. I got severe altitude sickness and ended up hospitalized with very serious symptoms that had long ranging affects on my health.
So I wouldn't mind going back to Vegas, but I will never, ever again travel to a place with an altitude over 5K. Just my two cents' worth.
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beaches
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CD57, can I ask why you are asking Razzle about procrit?
This is the same thing as erythropoietin, which is given to people who are severely anemic due to kidney failure.
Can ppl other than those with that dx even get that med?
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TF
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If you read the link (from Better Health Guy) in the mold toxicity thread I referenced above, you will see these notes on the subject of feeling better at altitude:
�C4a can be lowered with the RX drug Procrit, also known as erythropoietin or EPO. �IF you feel better at high altitude, Procrit may help.
The missing word in my notes is some acronym. It may be C4a, based on the Better Health Guy notes.
Whatever the missing word is, it seems the solution is Procrit.!!!
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CD57
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Yeah there was another thread about this, sorry beaches. Procrit sounds scary though.
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posted
YES! I had the same exact experience while visiting Tahoe and Reno in August. It was a remarkable improvement, especially in head symptoms.
Posts: 618 | From NC | Registered: Oct 2009
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posted
c4a is usually elevated in Lyme patients indicating inflammation. I don't know if it's c4a.
All I could talk about when I got back from that trip was how great I felt in Reno and Tahoe. I started feeling worse as we made our way to the coast of CA.
can someone give more info. on procrit? I have a high c4a level and if procrit lowers it, that would be great.
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Razzle
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I was given procrit and it did not help anything...not even my anemia...
-------------------- -Razzle Lyme IgM IGeneX Pos. 18+++, 23-25+, 30++, 31+, 34++, 39 IND, 83-93 IND; IgG IGeneX Neg. 30+, 39 IND; Mayo/CDC Pos. IgM 23+, 39+; IgG Mayo/CDC Neg. band 41+; Bart. (clinical dx; Fry Labs neg. for all coinfections), sx >30 yrs. Posts: 4167 | From WA | Registered: Feb 2011
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CD57
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Jwall maybe we need to move! I think someone posted about more CO2 in the blood at those altitiudes, which can be a good thing.
I live on the coast and as we made our way back home, yep, started up again.
This is a great question for an LLMD.
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emla999/Lyme
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CD57,
You might find the links down bellow to be interesting. And yes, I agree that an increase in the production of CO2 can sometimes be helpful... and being at a higher altitude can increase the body's production of CO2.
The mixture of baking soda and maple syrup has been popularized in some alternative health circles as being helpful in the treatment of various ailments such as cancer. And the improvements that some people have seen with that combination are often attributed to that mixtures "alkalinizing effects" but the reported benefits of that mixture may have more to do with the resulting increase in the production of carbon dioxide(CO2).
Also, Professor Buteyko developed a breathing method that can raise CO2 levels within the body.
And I also just want say, that I do not think that drinking a mixture of sugar/maple syrup/sodium bicarbonate/water or by just raising CO2 alone is going to cure people of something such as Lyme Disease. But such a mixture maybe beneficial in some circumstance.
Ugh. I can't think that would help but could sure hurt many processes in the body. Many.
"Felt better at altitude!..."
It may also have to do with the humidity factor at that time. Sure does for me, I love low humidity. -
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emla999/Lyme
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Keebler, CO2 can have beneficial health effects upon the body. And moving to a higher altitude can increase the body levels of CO2.
Also, the Buteyko method can raise CO2 levels within the body. And some have proposed that a mixture of maple syrup/sodium bicarbonte/water or the mixture of sugar/sodium bicarbonte/water can increase the body's level of CO2.
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Keebler
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- emla,
I was mainly thinking of blood sugar reactions from the mix. I know maple syrup can crash me fast, even a little bit with food. Because lyme messes with insulin issues, I think that was just my gut reaction.
And to much baking soda can also have consequences to lining of stomach and kidneys. Of course, amount matter but just a couple things to keep in mind as one considers other ways to achieve the same thing. -
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emla999/Lyme
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CD57,
Another possible reason for the improvemnents that you felt when you moved to a higher altitude maybe be due the increase in your body's production of the thyroid hormone Free T3.
Moving to a higher altitude can increase the body's production of Free T3.
" Serum free T3 increased steadily at moderate altitude and reached a significantly higher level at the end of the training period than before."
"CONCLUSIONS:
The serum Free T3 increases when unacclimatized sea level skiers move to train at moderate altitude."
So, moving to a higher altitude can affect the production of your thyroid hormones and thus some people may feel better when they move to a higher altitude.
And I would guess that if a person that had a low functioning thyroid (hypothyroidism) moved to a higher altitude then maybe that person would probably feel better at least in part due to the increased Free T3 production that can occur from living in a higher altitude.
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