MetaGunny
2.5K posts

MetaGunny ری ٹویٹ کیا

@thegarybrecka Rounds of albendazole prazntiquel ivermectin niclosmide tinidazole
One colonic per week
Megamucosa
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@EdaG889915 Most chronic health issues especially on the skin are fungal or parasitic
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MetaGunny ری ٹویٹ کیا

How often do you think about t̸h̸e̸ ̸R̸o̸m̸a̸n̸ ̸E̸m̸p̸i̸r̸e̸ SQLite at night?
I ordered the cheapest Hetzner CX23 ($4.99/mo, Shared Resources tier) and did real-workload SQLite benchmark 🧵
@levelsio@levelsio
SQLite supports databases up to 281 terabytes in size SQLite is a highly optimized piece of software and can easily write 500,000 rows per second with proper batching
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MetaGunny ری ٹویٹ کیا

THIS is what they don’t want you to know 🪱👇🏻 The truth is hiding in plain sight, if you just do a little digging on your own you will find the endless studies linking parasites to many different diseases — including the big C. But doctors aren’t taught about root causing healing, they only know how to sell you the highest priced “remedy” for your illness. Of course this is the case, because if they started treating the real root cause there would be quite the difference in cost, along with no lifelong customer. This is why I continue to use a natural detox for myself
🤜 🪱
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@DrNeilStone HEALS BECAUSE IT GETS RID OF THE ROOT CAUSE OF ILLNESS AND DISEASE: PARASITES!
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WHAT IS EVERYONE'S OBSESSION WITH IVERMECTIN
Ron DeSantis@RonDeSantis
The ivermectin bill was passed by Republicans in the Florida Senate but then killed by Republicans in the Florida House. I was ready to sign it.
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The reason I think MCAS is so difficult is because it's a multi-variable problem
Once your immune system is weakened and the tide turns, then basically you become vulnerable to all sorts of things
Basically once your body goes toxic, then you're going to have all sorts of issues
The key thing though with MCAS is chemical sensitivities and that's a clear cut sign of leaky gut
With MCAS the parasites have gotten so bad that basically it's acute-level leaky gut and Candida can absolutely destroy your gut lining as well
Then logically it makes sense that the immune system is going crazy because it's trying to fight all these parasites but it can't get to them due to biofilms, cysts, and other protective measures. They hide themselves well
So traditional medicine, trying to test for it and so on and so forth, just doesn't work
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Thank you for this. I will look into going the prescription anti-parasitic route. I have addressed and/or am addressing my root cause issues like bartonella and mitochondrial dysfunction that likely led to me being a great host to these parasites, btw, so hopefully once I rid them they will stay mostly gone.
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In addition to mast cells, I have suspected that T cell over-activation may be a core driver of the strange MCAS/autoimmune phenotype I developed in recent months.
Interestingly, thymoquinone (Black Seed Oil) turns out to be a potent T cell inhibitor...
Backstory: Mega-dose melatonin (250mg per night), which stimulates CD4+ and especially CD8+ T cells, was the initial precipitating event in me developing this phenotype.
The straw that broke the camel's back..
(And yes, taking such a high dose of melatonin was very dumb).

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First mistake a lot of people make is I'll say a parasite cleanse and they've done some basic herbs, and that's just not enough if you have MCAS level symptoms
I'm usually 100% natural but with parasites you have to go the anti-parasitic route
To keep it simple I'd start with doing one colonic week and rounds of albendazole prazntiquel ivermectin niclosmide tinidazole
You basically have to keep doing them until you don't have any die-off/herzheimer
It took me several months of antiparasitics and then several months to beat Candida
(I also had cysts all up and down my right hand side so I also developed a technique using therapeutic ultrasound to break those up)
You then have to battle Candida, which the natural herbs and route is a better route to go but make sure you rotate them
Now there could also be mold, lime, etc. The key thing with MCAS is you have to beat all of these triggers, the heal leaky gut and then calm the immune system
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@MetaGunny What is your favorite parasite cleanse/regimen?
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@Flyaway622 @AutonomicBrad77 I only spent 5 years of hell fighting this and hundreds of thousands of dollars on it and tried anything and everything. In the end it was parasites so no, not joking
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@rileyanderz It took me years to crack the code but I can tell you with high probably you have acute level leaky gut and the root cause is parasites and candida
Very easy to test this, look into doing rounds of albendazole, prazntiquel, ivermectin, niclosmide
Heal leaky gut with megamucosa
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7-10 days ago probably marked the worst point in my decade-plus chronic complex illness history (though tough to say as there are a number of contenders):
- Constant dizziness/instability/drunkenness
- Crawling, tingling skin
- Cold sweats
- Insomnia (2 weeks of 2-3 hrs on average)
- Extreme chemical sensitivity
- Severe dry mouth, difficult to speak
- Pain from light/sunlight; burning after <5 mins
- Pain in every joint
- Head pressure, brain fog, disorientation
- Unbelievable memory loss
- Severe kidney pain
- Constant hunching (weird one; "sickness behavior")
- Painful, itchy scalp; hair thinning/loss
It was the first time I was genuinely ~afraid~ to go outside. The most ~afraid of the world~ I have ever been.
I assumed I would be stuck in that state for weeks and months, slowly crawling out.
Miraculously, though, about a week later, I feel something like 40-50% better.
I think that if a healthy person were to inhabit my body in its current state they would still be terrified/appalled, but to me it is such a joy just not to feel like I am actively dying.
It also provides a somewhat stable baseline from which to figure out what to do next.
Anyways, I have been talking about a lot of these things on here, but wanted to share what seems to have gotten me out of such a hole (for now, at least):
- Ketotifen (0.25mg per day)
- Luteolin (400mg per day and working to 800mg)
- Glia Plasmalogens (shoutout @chydorina)
- Quercetin (500mg at night)
- Vitamin E (gamma/delta tocotrienols; 250mg)
- BDMC curcumin
This stuff has quelled the unbelievable inflammatory state I was in, apparently driven at least in large part by mast cells.
This stabilization of the body's inflammatory backdrop seems to be STEP 1 for severe chronic complex illness.
Since then, I have also added in some very gentle pregnenolone and thyroid hormone.
STEP 2 (currently ongoing) of the recovery from such a deep hole is supporting the mitochondria, specifically from a lipid membrane and mineral/vitamin co-factor perspective, in order to provide the energy necessary to facilitate repair. I will be sharing my thoughts on that more in the coming weeks.
#MCAS
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@harryfisherEMTP What doctor has time to post a hundred things on Twitter everyday??
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@longitude0 @newstart_2024 Right there are ways to mitigate it but you never hear them mention this
The benefits simply don't outweigh the risk
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@MetaGunny @newstart_2024 It should be taken with food, not on an empty stomach, and with a source of vitamin C (eg orange juice).
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Aspirin — the cheap pill sitting in your medicine cabinet — could become a powerful new tool against cancer.
A March 2025 study published in Nature found that aspirin helps “unleash” T-cells in the immune system, making them more effective at hunting down and attacking cancer cells, including metastatic ones. Dr. Elisa Port, Chief of Breast Surgery at Mount Sinai, explained on CBS News that this ties into the same mechanism that makes aspirin effective at preventing blood clots and heart disease.
The research builds on earlier work showing aspirin’s anti-inflammatory effects can enhance immunotherapy responses by reducing platelet-driven immune suppression.
It’s still early stages (mostly animal data so far), and doctors aren’t recommending it for cancer prevention yet — but the potential is intriguing.
It’s honestly wild that something so common and inexpensive might play a real role in fighting cancer. Shows how much we still have to discover about everyday medicines.
If this holds up in larger human trials, it could offer a low-cost way to support cancer treatment for millions.
Would you be excited or cautious if a common drug like aspirin turned out to have real anti-cancer effects?
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