Since I have brought up the topic on the Life Without Bread thread, and it appears that it might be a topic of interest, I thought I would open a dedicated thread to this condition which my son - among other forum members - suffers. As I wrote there:
Atriedes finally got a diagnosis: Verneuil's disease otherwise known as Hydradenitis Suppurative http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidradenitis_suppurativa . Obviously, since he's already had three surgeries due to this condition and is actually going for another, it's fairly serious. He never had acne, he just got horrible boils on his neck and groin/sitting area. He lost well over 100 pounds on the paleo diet which, of course, makes him more comfortable in many ways, but still, this damn condition was already so advanced (which is what caused him to get serious about the diet to begin with) that turning it around isn't easy. Fortunately, one of the world's experts on the condition is not very far away.
One of the things we learned from another forum member who has this condition is the necessity for spending sufficient time each day in water and taking plenty of zinc. Those seem to be the two things that have done the most for him, believe it or not. When you read Elaine Morgen's book "Scars of Evolution", you can see that this condition is related to a possible aquatic adaptation stage in our evolution. (Probable, in fact.) You also learn that the food highest in zinc, which really tends to zap the condition happens to be oysters. However, as far as we can see, already existing fistulas have to be dealt with surgically. Thankfully, his doctor has developed a new technique utilizing fibrin centrifuged from the person's own blood.
SeekinTruth then posted:
Loreta added:
And then to clarify the issue of Fistulas vs just having a huge boil, I wrote:
So now, I'll collect together some other things to add to this thread just in case anyone else is searching for help with this terrible and embarrassing problem.
Atriedes finally got a diagnosis: Verneuil's disease otherwise known as Hydradenitis Suppurative http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidradenitis_suppurativa . Obviously, since he's already had three surgeries due to this condition and is actually going for another, it's fairly serious. He never had acne, he just got horrible boils on his neck and groin/sitting area. He lost well over 100 pounds on the paleo diet which, of course, makes him more comfortable in many ways, but still, this damn condition was already so advanced (which is what caused him to get serious about the diet to begin with) that turning it around isn't easy. Fortunately, one of the world's experts on the condition is not very far away.
One of the things we learned from another forum member who has this condition is the necessity for spending sufficient time each day in water and taking plenty of zinc. Those seem to be the two things that have done the most for him, believe it or not. When you read Elaine Morgen's book "Scars of Evolution", you can see that this condition is related to a possible aquatic adaptation stage in our evolution. (Probable, in fact.) You also learn that the food highest in zinc, which really tends to zap the condition happens to be oysters. However, as far as we can see, already existing fistulas have to be dealt with surgically. Thankfully, his doctor has developed a new technique utilizing fibrin centrifuged from the person's own blood.
SeekinTruth then posted:
SeekinTruth said:That's interesting about the zinc, Laura. I wonder if it's also connected to copper toxicity? Zinc deficiency and copper toxicity/overabundance tend to be associated.
About the fistulas, I read years ago that it's related to gut issues. I actually had one on my tailbone starting in the last couple of years in high school (my brother had it also and my father had it when he was young and had some kind of surgery that took care of it for the rest of his life). Now, from my brother (and my father's experience he related) and a bunch of other people who had this in the same area -- on or around the tailbone, everyone else would have periods where it would swell with lots of pain, and then a wound would open and drain. And then it would close for a while.
In my case, when it was in the very early stage of starting, I actually banged my tailbone on a hard surface, and then the swelling and pain started. For a couple of years, mine never opened and drained. Then, it opened and never closed -- it was pretty much perpetually draining, but the pain was much less. After almost two years of the open wound, and the whole time my mother kept nagging me to go to a doctor and get it taken care of (she kept fearing that I'd get "blood poisoning") I finally scheduled a surgery to cut it out. Well when the surgeon went in to cut out what was an open wound of a 1/4 inch and surrounding slight swelling of about 3/4 inch diameter, he ended up cutting huge amounts of flesh and muscle on the very lower back and right on the top part of my butt. It was real hell for the next couple of weeks.
I had to go a couple of times for the doctor to check on the healing. After the stitches were taken out, he "burned the open flesh" with nitrogen a couple of times that was supposed to help it heal faster. Well, in my case, it never came back again and healed well. The thing is, that years later, when I was 39, I got prostatitis, which is treated with high doses of zinc for several months, among other things. And it has a large component of severe biochemical imbalances that start the process which could be cured with dietary changes and supplements for about 6 months. What I'm thinking now is, I wonder if the lack of zinc/too much copper was already a problem that manifested in the fistula in my late teens-early twenties.
At the time I was doing research on prostate problems, there was a statistic that at least 50% of men age 40 or over are expected to have enlarged prostate, which is a precursor of prostatitis. Well, I'm convinced that such alarming numbers, like so many other things, are connected to a lifetime of the totally wrong diet, and probably stress, toxic buildup, and chemical imbalances, etc.
Just a note. About ten years or so ago, a second cousin of mine who also had the cyclical fistula opening/closing told my brother that he read somewhere that black pepper was a culprit. And he (and my brother) used to eat large amounts of black pepper. When my cousin cut it out completely, it went away in a month or two. My brother tried just cutting down to almost complete abstention from black pepper and his also went away. But for years if he had a considerable amount of black pepper for a couple of days, the irritation and pain would start again. Then after several years of totally avoiding black pepper it resolved completely and now he eats black pepper regularly (though more sparingly) and has no problems. I don't know what the mechanism behind is, but thought I'd mention it as something for others to consider/look into.
Loreta added:
loreta said:How interesting about black pepper.
I had the same problem with a fistula in my tailbone some years ago. A very suffering situation, took antibiotics, went to urgency to opened it 3 times! Finally my doctor told me that the best solution was an operation. I accepted it because I was living literally hell. I was put in a waiting list. And then she gave me again antibiotics....for the third time. Before taking it I went to see an homeopathic specialist, a friend of mine. She asked me not to take again the antibiotics, instead take Silicea 9CH and to put green clay on my fistula almost 3 times a day. And miracle: my fistula disappeared after 2 months of this treatment. Later it came again, I follow the same treatment and it worked. In my case I think it was related with big big stress situation, it was like an emotional response. I believe also that fistulas can be cured with clay, with the help of Homeopathic medicine. The clay absorbs the fistula (I don't know how to express this but you understand). And Silicea helps.
This is my experience with the worst fistula I had in my life. Maybe this can help.
And then to clarify the issue of Fistulas vs just having a huge boil, I wrote:
Laura said:I think that ya'll need to understand what a fistula is as opposed to a boil. A fistula is when a boil forces a connection between an internal organ and the abcess. It can also force a passageway between the internal organ and the outside of the body. A channel coming out from a simple boil could be said to be a sort of fistula, but it generally means an abnormal passageway that is created by the forcing of the abcess. That is, the abcess may find it easier to burrow into the body and infect other organs, than to burrow its way out, to drain as a normal boil would do. (Though boils really aren't normal!) These abcessing processes can force numerous channels in several directions, with branches, causing large scale infection within the body in various organs, interstitial places, cavities, etc. In women, fistulas can be forced between the rectum and the vagina so that fecal matter can leak constantly through. It's a very, very, very unpleasant condition and it's no wonder that people who have it don't talk about it. A fistula can be forced between the inner chamber of the apocrine gland/anal glands to the interior of the colon and constant leaking from the infected gland will pour into the colon and fecal matter can leak into the gland. If it is a double fistula, fecal matter can leak through the channel to another opening that the infection has created to the outside of the body. We've read a few papers about it and looked at the images. It really can get awful.
What we have learned is that it is due to blockage of apocrine glands and the blockage is due to the fact that these types of glands empty into hair follicles and the hair follicles appear to be hyper-active in the production of keratin/skin cells. This is useful if you spend a lot of time in water because the skin is constantly being replaced and the apocrine glands are lubricating the skin appropriately to protect from the washing away of skin cells. But if you are not spending enough time in water, the system backs up. And it has nothing to do with scrubbing or soap or anything like that, nor does it have anything to do with any particular bacteria on the skin since the process begins INSIDE the body. It can crank up in several places at once, start forcing channels through the tissue, and the person can end up, as SeekinTruth and Atriedes have done, with a whole lot of tissue having to be surgically removed en masse. Atriedes has already had three such surgeries and we hope that this last one will be the last though he now has to have the surgeries to close the channels. These types of surgeries leave huge, gaping, wounds that take weeks or months to close. Basically, you can end up with having half of your butt surgically removed or a big chunk of your neck, or a big chunk under your arm, from the front/groin area, up into the lower abdomen where fistulas can be forced.
Apocrine glands are found in the neck, under the arms, in the groin and ano-rectal area. The condition is supposedly more common in women than in men. It's genetic. There is no cure, only control.
Stress appears to be a significant factor since the adrenals stimulate the apocrine glands to secrete.
So now, I'll collect together some other things to add to this thread just in case anyone else is searching for help with this terrible and embarrassing problem.