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To: Rockingham

my problem is that my bloodwork always comes back relatively normal- Yet something definitely happened to my health awhile back- I was an old man at 32 when whatever it is struck- too young to be that sick- so i desperately tried to ‘fix’ the problem without knowing what the problem actually is- (I suspect mitochondrial issue- energy disruption somewhere along the ‘energy to cell fuel’ process-)- 30 years later and I’m no closer to an answer- well, i think it might be one of a few different things- PEM being one-

I’m at the point where i just have said no to any more experimenting- the couple of things it could be don’t have cures for- just system maintenance suggestions really- Steroids, which ive had to go on many times help a lot, but docs really don’t like using those long term- and for good reason-


25 posted on 05/17/2025 9:20:02 AM PDT by Bob434 (Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana)
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To: Bob434
It sounds like you have Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in some form -- an adversary I know all too well through personal experience. A mitochodrial issue and PEM implicate vitamin D and magnesium. Both are common deficiencies for Americans. Dietary inadequacies and lack of sun are mostly to blame, but steroids also deplete vitamin D and antacids of the PPI class deplete magnesium and vitamin B-12.

Vitamin D has numerous functions, including acting as an antioxidant that protects the mitochondria as they process lipids with oxygen and generate the essential cellular energy molecule ATP. In effect, the mitochondria are like small furnaces or refineries.

Of course, any furnace or refinery needs maintenance. That is where magnesium comes in, repairing damaged mitochondria, eliminating ones that cannot be repaired, and building new ones as replacements. A chronic deficiency of magnesium leads to an accumulation of defective and malformed mitochondria.

In addition, magnesium is required in over a thousand enzymatic processes in the cell that create the proteins and hormones essential to health.

The problem with magnesium blood tests is that the mineral is tightly regulated so blood values are rarely classed as abnormal. Most magnesium is contained within cells and assessing levels there requires expensive specialized MRI type testing that is rarely insured or available in clinical practice. Unrecognized magnesium deficiencies are common.

The problem with magnesium supplements is that most are relatively worthless because magnesium does not easily pass the GI system or reach the bloodstream in forms that can be absorbed into cells. The amino acid chelates of magnesium L-threonate and magnesium glycinate are exceptions, as is magnesium taurate. They are the forms of magnesium to take. I prefer the threonate because it more readily crosses the blood-brain barrier.

If you want to try the supplements that I suggest, I will make more detailed guidance through private mail. I warn that I am not a doctor, just someone who seems to be a little farther along in dealing with similar health issues.

33 posted on 05/17/2025 10:10:01 AM PDT by Rockingham
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