Anaerobic Infections
If it's anaerobic, it will live where you have poor oxygenation of the tissues in the body. This could be due to a vascular issue, anemia or poor lung function.
In order to combat such infections, you need to oxygenate the tissues where the infection lives. THAT is your strongest means to kill it without poisoning the hell out of yourself.
Your priorities should be:
One way to treat gangrene is by putting people in a hyperbaric chamber. They quadruple the atmospheric pressure, it super oxygenates the body and in most cases gangrene DIES in response to that.
Please Note: Necrotizing Fasciitis is a form of gangrene and it fairly often infects the genitals. Searching for additional articles on hyperbaric oxygen therapy and gangrene can bring up articles full of really disturbing images and details of this condition.
It can also cause sepsis and I will suggest that ANY anaerobic infection is probably one capable of poisoning you, which complicates curing it because if it dies too quickly, you may end up severely poisoned and could die yourself as a consequence of killing the infection.
I've had die off of what is probably an anaerobic infection in my arms. I had a die-off rash for MONTHS last year after circulation to my arms improved.
It looked kind of like I had a sunburn on just one part of my arms. It was just a red streak on my arms.
It didn't hurt and it usually didn't itch particularly, though it did make me real tired. I tried to make a point of washing it with shampoo in the shower. Washing die-off rashes with soap or shampoo tends to help them resolve faster and can reduce the amount of discomfort they cause (some itch pretty bad).
Die-off rashes look different depending on what's dying.
Slow but steady wins this race. You want to shrink it steadily and don't worry about WHEN it resolves. Just make sure it's SHRINKING and NOT putting too much stress on your system in the process.
In order to combat such infections, you need to oxygenate the tissues where the infection lives. THAT is your strongest means to kill it without poisoning the hell out of yourself.
Your priorities should be:
- Lung support
- Improved circulatory health
One way to treat gangrene is by putting people in a hyperbaric chamber. They quadruple the atmospheric pressure, it super oxygenates the body and in most cases gangrene DIES in response to that.
Please Note: Necrotizing Fasciitis is a form of gangrene and it fairly often infects the genitals. Searching for additional articles on hyperbaric oxygen therapy and gangrene can bring up articles full of really disturbing images and details of this condition.
It can also cause sepsis and I will suggest that ANY anaerobic infection is probably one capable of poisoning you, which complicates curing it because if it dies too quickly, you may end up severely poisoned and could die yourself as a consequence of killing the infection.
I've had die off of what is probably an anaerobic infection in my arms. I had a die-off rash for MONTHS last year after circulation to my arms improved.
It looked kind of like I had a sunburn on just one part of my arms. It was just a red streak on my arms.
It didn't hurt and it usually didn't itch particularly, though it did make me real tired. I tried to make a point of washing it with shampoo in the shower. Washing die-off rashes with soap or shampoo tends to help them resolve faster and can reduce the amount of discomfort they cause (some itch pretty bad).
Die-off rashes look different depending on what's dying.
Slow but steady wins this race. You want to shrink it steadily and don't worry about WHEN it resolves. Just make sure it's SHRINKING and NOT putting too much stress on your system in the process.