| Dr. Cheneys Basic Treatment Plan |
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By Carol Sieverling
Source : http://www.virtualhometown.com/dfwcfids/medical/nmh.html
For those who may not know of Dr. Cheney, his is one of the most recognized names in CFIDS treatment and research. He was one of the doctors who recognized an outbreak of "something" in Incline Village at Lake Tahoe in 1984 and called in the CDC. He has treated over 3000 patients with CFIDS from 48 states and 15 countries. He currently is Professor of Medicine and Chair of the Nutrition Department at Capitol University of Integrative Medicine in Washington D.C. Dr. Cheney has published numerous articles in peer reviewed medical journals and lectured around the world on the subject of CFS and was a founding Director of the American Association of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (AACFS), a professional association of scientists and clinicians. He has held research positions in tumor immunology at the CDC in Atlanta, the Departments of Pharmacology and Radiation Oncology at Emory University School of Medicine, and the prestigious Wistar Institute on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Cheney was Chief of Medicine at Mountain Home Air Force base hospital in Mountain Home, Idaho and Chief of Medicine at Lakeshore Hospital on the North Shore of Lake Tahoe in Incline Village, NV. He was chosen to chair a select panel of nationally known clinicians to discuss treatment at the CFS Conference sponsored by the AACFS and Harvard Medical School in October of 1998. Dr. Cheney has authored, or co-authored, publications and scientific presentations in many fields relevant to CFS including: immunology, virology, clinical epidemiology, metabolism, neuropsychology & neuroendocrinology, exercise physiology, computerized EEG brain mapping, as well as clinical treatment trials of Ampligen.
This protocol was written by Carol Sieverling based on published materials, a transcript of an office visit in 1998, and a transcript of a 1999 conference presentation. These recommendations are indeed generic, (particularly regarding diet), and constitute a foundation that should apply to most CFS patients. However, each individual will have symptoms that require more specialized treatment, which is beyond the scope of this document. Contact Carol with any questions.
Basic Treatment Plan Parts
Perspective
Attitudes and beliefs about one's life and about chronic illness can be impediments to treatment. Measuring your worth by your accomplishments can result in anger and loss of ego when the ability to work is taken away or significantly reduced by CFIDS. There's an over-representation of Type A patients in this disease. A change in belief systems is essential: a change in orientation from "doing" as a definition of yourself, to "being" as the definition of yourself. And to orient from recovery to healing. People can heal although they may not recover. And people can "be" although they not "do." As soon as patients orient toward "being" and healing, interestingly they are far better able to "do," and I think far better able to heal and recover. It's almost as if once they turn away from their goal, and march off in a different direction, they actually have a better chance of getting back to the goal they turned away from. Conversely, if they're going to "do" no matter what and recovery is their absolute goal, I don't think they do that well. Similarly destructive beliefs are those such as hopelessness about the possibility for improvement, or an attitude that "my illness allows me to control others." Acceptance of one's illness and finding new ways to view oneself as a contributing member of society are critical to setting the stage for medical treatment. Two tapes are recommended to patients: "The Power of Myth
Basic Diet Recommendations
NO SUGAR: Due to defects in utilization, it produces toxins that cause pain, headaches and neuro-psychiatric problems. Sugar stimulates the growth of abnormal gut microflora, especially candida. It generates a tremendous amount of free radicals and raises insulin levels, both very problematic. If you crave it, try eating carbohydrates instead. If you must, eat sugar (including fruit) with meals, never alone. Some honey and powdered fructose can be used in cooking, as well as the herb stevia.
REDUCE "BAD" FAT: Limit daily intake to less than 30 grams due to a defect in fat transport across mitochondrial membrane. Supplementation, however, of essential fats (EFA's omega 3 and 6) is necessary.
NO NUTRI-SWEET: It contains the toxin methanol and can exacerbate neurotoxicity.
NO RED MEAT: High in bad fat & difficult to digest, causing GI tract symptoms & systemic symptoms such as joint pain.
NO CAFFEINE: If you can't give up the caffine, at least limit it as much as possible.
BE CAREFUL WITH THE FOLLOWING:
Dairy products (can cause GI and systemic symptoms)
ELIMINATION DIET
The single most common antigen to which we are exposed is food proteins. If food protein is not properly digested, it's a significant inducer of immune activation in the gut, and it can maintain this disease indefinitely. Put another way, as long as you eat indiscriminately, you cannot get well with CFIDS. So ultimately you have to begin a process of determining the foods to which you are reacting, and eliminate them. Perhaps more important is to digest the food in the first place, which I don't think patients do very well. They then get undigested food protein coursing through the small bowel. There are permeability issues that affect the gut. If the gut is permeable, nothing digests completely and the undigested food particles course across the boundary into the bloodstream and get exposed to immune cells that perceive them as foreign bodies and trigger an allergic response and then you're off to the races with this disease. So I think a lot of attention to elimination diets, and improving digestion and gut epithelial function can pay huge dividends in this patient population. I've seen people in 30 days have huge clinical responses simply by this very simplest of moves.
(Editorial Note: Cheney uses the ALCAT test to determine food sensitivities, most of which are temporary, and he is now using bioenergetic testing as well. This is also sometimes referred to as electrodermal testing.)
Exercise
Golden Rule: Find the boundaries of what you can do and then stay within them. Both trying to do too much, or pulling back and doing too little are counter productive. Limit setting is probably the most important thing you can do. Patients are very susceptible to push-crash phenomena and you need to learn to stay within certain boundaries. To the extent you do that, you will tend to do better. To the extent you don't, you likely will not do well.
Aerobic Training: Beyond certain limits this cannot be attempted until you are much improved. Be cautious about any aerobic exercise (any sustained activity, such as running, walking, or swimming, designed to raise the heart rate and increase oxygen flow throughout the body). The aerobic system is injured and reactive oxygen species (free radicals) generated in the mitochondria by excessive training may not be detoxified with resulting injury which can potentially be permanent (DNA damage). Walk, cycle or swim only as much as your body will allow, no more than 20 minutes, three times per week. Aerobic exercise past a certain point can dramatically worsen this disorder.
Anaerobic Training: The anaerobic pathway is largely intact in CFIDS. Weightlifting, isometrics, and stretching can maintain muscle tone and strength and improve the elimination of toxins formed by the pathway itself. Do low level weight lifting with 1 to 20 pounds, using all muscle groups. Lift for 10 seconds, rest for 60 seconds - repeat for each muscle group. Do lift/rest cycles no more than 20 minutes three times per week. Sequential isometric contractions can be substituted for weight lifting. (This can be done while lying down.) Still use the 10 seconds on and 60 seconds off rule.
Rebound Exercise: The bounce-back chair (a tall bungee cord-like contraption) is probably the best form of exercise for CFIDS. Low level, non-vigorous bouncing for ten to fifteen minutes every other day is best. Less ill patients can add aerobic exercises between five-minute periods of bouncing per the video-tape instructions. Its advantages include correcting dysautonmia, the dysfunction of the autonomic nervous system that underlies many of the symptoms in CFIDS.
The Bounce Back Chair was studied by NASA to treat astronauts returning from orbit who fainted upon standing. After six months in orbit, you lose your autonomic nervous system capacity to stand in a gravitational field. You simply faint and seize. If you remember these astronauts, when they took them out of the capsule they had to drag them out vertically because they would faint on standing. They end up with a dysautonomic condition similar to chronic fatigue syndrome patients. NASA figured out that the best way to bring back the autonomic nerve system was to bounce. So they put them in these bungee cord contraptions and they just bounced them--this up and down motion essentially regulates autonomic tone and improves the autonomic nervous system.
Rebound exercise is very easy, it's non-weight bearing, and you can add in arms, legs and abdominal motion while bouncing, to tolerance. It also improves immune regulation by pumping lymphatic fluid back into the blood. Lymph acts just like gamma gobulin. Finally, this exercise was shown by NASA to be 68% more efficient as an exercise routine than running. ("Efficient" means maximum gain for minimum effort.) It is therefore ideal for people with little energy to spare.
The Bounce Back Chair is available from Sun-Ray Supply at 1-800-437-1765. It costs around $400. Those who do not suffer from balance problems can achieve many of the same benefits from a mini-trampoline.
Prescription Drugs
Klonopin (generic: clonazepam) (0.5mg)
Doxepin Elixir (10mg/ml)
Kutapressin is a broad-spectrum anti-viral. I prescribe it for those who test positive for a reactivated virus: EBV, CMV, HHV6, etc. Benefits may not peak until four months or longer. Daily sub-Q doses of 2cc or greater seem to work best.
B-12 Injections (10,000 mcg/ml of hydroxycobalamin, 1cc or more daily, given subcutaneously or intramuscularly.)
Nitrogenous waste molecules in the brain are coupling out the B-12 as fast as it's leaking in, and you end up with no B-12 in the brain. The British used 5 gm infusions of hydroxycobalamin to successfully detox people with cyanide poisoning. Another study documents the use of up to 26 mg a day of B-12 with great benefits and no side effects. At these high doses hydroxycobalamin rather than cyanocobalamin must be used to avoid the toxicity of the cyanide in the later. To the extent that cyanocobalamin might be a good detoxifier, which it isn't, you just trade cyanide for the toxin it removes. A few patients have reported feeling hyper/jittery or lethargic, or experience acne and diarrhea when taking the hydroxycobalamin. Reduce the dose if this occurs - it's pulling out toxins too fast. It's important to supplement other B vitamins moderately when taking high dosages of B-12.
This form of B-12 is available only through a compounding pharmacy. If there isn't one near you, the Wellness Pharmacy (1-800-227-2627, mail order) offers 30 1cc injections for around $80. Hydroxycobalamin is heat sensitive, refrigerate it. See appendix for abstracts of the three studies referred to in this paragraph.
Supplementation: Essentials
Magnesium
Multi-Vitamin
Reduced L-Glutathione
Essential Fatty Acids (EFA's)
Probiotics
NOTE: Products which are anti-oxidants (Co-Q-10, Lipoic Acid, L Glutathione, etc.) are especially important even though you may not notice any significant improvement in current symptoms. They can prevent permanent damage caused by free radicals (oxidative stress) and increase the possibilities of a good recovery in the future.
Other Important Supplements
Bioflavanoids
Vitamin C
Vitamin E
Digestive Enzymes
Betaine HCL
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| Last Updated on Thursday, 17 March 2011 12:49 |






