I already took a 20mg doses, 2 days ago. It's made me sleep like I haven't done for years, also I've been able to reduce almost totally my cannabis consume that I mostly take for medical reasons. After researching I've found it could be due to glutamate inhibition that also happens with cannabis. Glutamate is supposed to be over-activated in CFS and FM leading to excitotoxicity.
My mind is also working better and faster than it's been for some months. I've been able to study and the "mental fog" has gone away for most part of the days (coming back a little alongside with head aches after eating some things).
I've also felt a better tolerance to effort and exercise but my body is heavily contractured and pain keeps bothering me, tho I think the pain is more "clear" and less spreaded over my body. Anyway I tend to start the pain episodes when I get better from the fatigue ones. I don't think of them too bad and I am used to it.
I think this experience has been really positive and I'm feeling like doing it again. Also, I didn't break through DMT and I loved what I was feeling (like being called from above to the "other side"
so I'll be doing it again soon and in bigger doses.
Quote:I'm also watching this thread. I'm very interested in the curative effects of DMT in regards to CFS. I have suffered from CFS for the past 20yrs but was never diagnosed. It wasn't until last year after my experience with oral DMT (MHRB + rue) that I finally found some relief. I'm still struggling with lingering symptoms that I'm hoping will be eliminated by vaping DMT.
Please keep us updated on your progress and how you feel when you finally breakthrough.
Ksr6pp, 20yrs of CFS must have done lots of bad to your system and I'd love to know what you experienced from that oral dose. How much did you take and for how long did the benefits longed? Also, which symptoms did you feel that relieved the most? Would also love to hear what you get if you end vaping DMT
Quote:he thing about psychedelics is that the mood lift associated with use may be altering your perception of your own physical and mental well-being without actually changing system-level function. The trick here would be some kind of blinded/placebo controlled study, although how you'd do that with a hallucinogen is utterly beyond me.
Yeah Nathanial, that's what I thought when I took shrooms, I thought it was mostly a big emotional force and "sense" I got to get through my path. But now, thinking about it I realise the better year I spent with my condition being "tamed" was the one I took shrooms almost monthly, and I wasn't precisely well just before it.
Quote:Keeping an eye on this thread though. I wonder if this is modulated by sigma-1 function. If you can get your hands on a sigma-1 antagonist, see if microdosing looses effectiveness.
I'm scared of taking a sigma-1 antagonist for I'm in a really bad state of my condition right now. Some weeks ago I was barely able to get out of the bed, read or write. I'm getting more and more convinced of the benefits of DMT in my condition after reading its effects on ion channels modulation (for Ca2+) and suppresion (of Na+) and how it also acts on mitochondrias and aforementioned glutamate through NMDA inhibition. Also, as I pointed out in the first post it directly inhibits the segregation of the cytokines related to CFS (in what we now know as the NO/ONOO cycle).
But I'm just a philosophy student and my biochemistry knowledges just go back to my last years of high school, so this all could be completely misinterpreted.
So I hope anyone who is more knowledgeable on these topics would come here and refute me or bring some light about all this
Just for the record and if anyone is interested in sending a more valuable message than I would, I've been able to open a communication channel with Attila Szabo, author of one of those researchs I linked in the first post, the one about the promising posibilities of psychedelics in immunomodulation.
I'll keep reporting.