Liver Fluke Fasciola Hepatica and the lives it wrecks

Posted by inthedark @inthedark, Apr 27, 2023

I have come to learn that if you have a parasite infection that you unknowingly give people free rein to discriminate and dehumanize. It started in fall 2020, like I'd had my chest filet open. The most god awful pain ever, lump in throat that continued to swell to where I couldn't swallow solids, spine would swell, neck and into ears and jaw so swollen like it was wired shut, my ear canal eventually swelled shut and the taste of amphibian came to mind as I developed a unusually disgusting constant slime feeling in mouth. Then the lump in throat seemingly ruptured one day in March 2021 as if I was stabbed from inside out, knocked the wind out of me.then proceeded to salivate for several days so much so I had to walk around with a cup and it continued to get thicker and then gritty and I noticed I was spitting up these little white things that looked like sesame seeds and they were moving so went to local ER and they diagnosed me as delusional right out the gate. I went to the emergency room and urgent Care combined a total of 14 times in a two week period as I knew that something much more sinister was coming down the pipeline from my symptoms I was having far worse than the one I already had and I proceeded to choke up things that look like that's what I said I even told them that it looks like flukes nobody would listen to me nobody would do anything and in fact I treated myself with albendazole and praziquantel and all it did was slow it down. Oh did I forget to mention that it's subcutaneous as well yeah it's not just in my gastrointestinal tract and I'm sure you guys will learn to who I am if it kills me because it's imagining it's in my central nervous system because one came out of my eye on January 3rd and it's only a matter of time literally I can feel quicker in my brain sometimes and like my whole head almost stutters on my head thinking problems timing scheduling I can't do anymore I've lost my job because I can't work it's all I can do to get through the day every 12 weeks it goes through a peak. And what I mean by that is goes crazy under my skin and the ones under my skin and in my eye and for my bell I'll look completely different cuz they're all in different stages of morphology and I don't think I'm a doctor but education is education and I've been forced to educate myself on this and I've been doing nothing but trying to save my own ass since March 21 and it's my story and if I don't tell it nobody else will and this disease right here I should not have to be beating down doors to get a blood test that should I have been to me in a country where we were made to think that we don't have this issue here but let me tell you I've done my homework and it's a known thing and we'll see the vets are well aware of the liver flick issue and virtually no farm is free of liver fluke in California and it is waterborne that's a fact and it was also a fact is that the doctors are so poorly educated on parasite infections that they would rather dismiss you and send you home sick as hell even though I've had plenty of signs that point to supporting what I'm saying I have but they don't care it's seriously like I'm living in la la land I mean I don't know how to explain it it's like the Twilight zone it's almost like it's being done on purpose because all they're doing is setting me up to die I'm going to die and if the last thing I can do before I die or in my desk is get the law changed so that people don't have to go to the CDC to get this blood test or the medication then that's what needs to happen because I shouldn't have to be fighting with what little energy I have in my body to just get simple freaking help the CDC said it's diagnosed by either eggs in your stool or by seeing adult flukes well here's my adult flukes take a look

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@davidsean

Your pictures look extremely similar to many of the images I've taken of parasite samples I've pulled from my mouth. Please have hope. While I know this is a REALLY DISPIRITING, I also know there is a way out of this with only the right medication to put a damper on these things. Have hope and be well! Hoping 2024 is a better year. Best, DavidSean ☺

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Are you being treated? Is anything working for you? Do you know what they are?

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@vpear

Anyone know what this is? I have them coming up every time I eat, for a few hours after. I had several months of Ivermectin last summer. That’s when it started. But it hasn’t stopped, even after the medication hasn’t been taken for months. Liver flukes?

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That picture looks to me as if it might well be a liver fluke/intestinal fluke. Problem is…when you’re pulling them out of your mouth (I do the same thing) its like finding fish washed up on the beach. They’re dead. They may not be in great shape. So, it’s hard to tell. (I’m always wondering…is that just food that’s coming up?) That’s why it’s SO important to get a real medical diagnosis (through, for instance, a test to see if you have antibodies against a specific parasite, which is how Covid test work. Another more involved, expensive test, is a “PCR” test, which can detect the DNA from different species of parasites.) But you can’t get these in a kit like a covid test. This condition is really confusing. I’m older. I have a grown daughter who’s a medical professional in Chicago. I’m a technical analyst now, but I used to be a molecular biologist who studied fungi. So, I know something of Biology. But that actually doesn’t do me much good, because I’m not an expert in the field. I could show you literally hundreds of pictures of the things that have come out of my mouth, nose, ears, and things I’ve passed in my stool. This condition came up for me after working in Germany, England, and Italy on and off for about three years. It’s all new to me as well. I take pictures of everything that I can. I also keep samples in alcohol to forward them to a laboratory. But there aren’t very many labs that I can find that specialize in this area. Your picture might actually be a couple of thise things grouped together. That's why I keep these little sample vials around and bottle of isoporopano (running alccoho), because if it's a clump of individual parasitses, the will usually separate in the alcoho.

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@davidsean

That picture looks to me as if it might well be a liver fluke/intestinal fluke. Problem is…when you’re pulling them out of your mouth (I do the same thing) its like finding fish washed up on the beach. They’re dead. They may not be in great shape. So, it’s hard to tell. (I’m always wondering…is that just food that’s coming up?) That’s why it’s SO important to get a real medical diagnosis (through, for instance, a test to see if you have antibodies against a specific parasite, which is how Covid test work. Another more involved, expensive test, is a “PCR” test, which can detect the DNA from different species of parasites.) But you can’t get these in a kit like a covid test. This condition is really confusing. I’m older. I have a grown daughter who’s a medical professional in Chicago. I’m a technical analyst now, but I used to be a molecular biologist who studied fungi. So, I know something of Biology. But that actually doesn’t do me much good, because I’m not an expert in the field. I could show you literally hundreds of pictures of the things that have come out of my mouth, nose, ears, and things I’ve passed in my stool. This condition came up for me after working in Germany, England, and Italy on and off for about three years. It’s all new to me as well. I take pictures of everything that I can. I also keep samples in alcohol to forward them to a laboratory. But there aren’t very many labs that I can find that specialize in this area. Your picture might actually be a couple of thise things grouped together. That's why I keep these little sample vials around and bottle of isoporopano (running alccoho), because if it's a clump of individual parasitses, the will usually separate in the alcoho.

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Okay, understood. There could be food attached.(sorry, so gross)- but the fluke shapes and demodex shapes consistently occur, which is why I’m so concerned. Thanks, this is helpful, especially knowing you are a molecular biologist. Like you said, it’s so difficult to find someone to identify/heal this.

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@vpear

Anyone know what this is? I have them coming up every time I eat, for a few hours after. I had several months of Ivermectin last summer. That’s when it started. But it hasn’t stopped, even after the medication hasn’t been taken for months. Liver flukes?

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VPEAR - I want add that I’m NOT saying the the things in the last image you posted were not Fasciola hepatica or some other “fluke” or trematode or helminth parasite. They actually looked like fasciola hepatica to me. I just wanted to say I could not tell for sure. For instance, the first pictures that @inthedark posted looked to me VERY MUCH like the first flukes/parasites I vomited up for hours on end from my stomach and throat and lungs after I took my first anti-parasitic drug of any kind (Praziquantel), which seemed to get rid of chunk of large ones, but did not cure me of them. My experience has been very similar to what @inthedark has described, including have trouble getting medical professionals to treat you, often because they’re not familiar with this. It’s hard to get treated, and it’s hard to get a definitive diagnosis, to get labs to perform an antibody test (to see if you have antibodies against a specific parasite, or to see if a sample of the parasite reacts to an anti-parasite antibody), or to perform a ‘PCR’ test, to see if there is DNA from a specific parasite in a sample. To get good treatment, you need a definitive diagnosis. But an individual can’t get the CDC or Mayo Clinic Labs to give you a test (even offering to pay any sum necessary) without being referred by a state health agency. And some state health agencies (such Missouri, where I live) no longer perform parasite/worm identification. It’s a like a chicken/egg conundrum without an easy entry point. I’m working on cracking this riddle, to find an entry point to get a definitive diagnosis, and ultimately good treatment. Not just for myself, but so I can add information about how to do this to this discussion. ☺ Because with the right drugs, there is honestly a way out of this. If the parasite you I or any of the other members of this discussion are afflicted with is Fasciola hepatica, then ridiculously, two treatments of a drug called triclabendazole 12 hours apart can work wonders for a cost of like...$4 a dose. It’s ridiculous. And the drug isn’t dangerous or addictive or anything. It’s just hard to get your hands on in the US, because the condition is rare here. But have hope, because there is a cure out there.

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@davidsean

VPEAR - I want add that I’m NOT saying the the things in the last image you posted were not Fasciola hepatica or some other “fluke” or trematode or helminth parasite. They actually looked like fasciola hepatica to me. I just wanted to say I could not tell for sure. For instance, the first pictures that @inthedark posted looked to me VERY MUCH like the first flukes/parasites I vomited up for hours on end from my stomach and throat and lungs after I took my first anti-parasitic drug of any kind (Praziquantel), which seemed to get rid of chunk of large ones, but did not cure me of them. My experience has been very similar to what @inthedark has described, including have trouble getting medical professionals to treat you, often because they’re not familiar with this. It’s hard to get treated, and it’s hard to get a definitive diagnosis, to get labs to perform an antibody test (to see if you have antibodies against a specific parasite, or to see if a sample of the parasite reacts to an anti-parasite antibody), or to perform a ‘PCR’ test, to see if there is DNA from a specific parasite in a sample. To get good treatment, you need a definitive diagnosis. But an individual can’t get the CDC or Mayo Clinic Labs to give you a test (even offering to pay any sum necessary) without being referred by a state health agency. And some state health agencies (such Missouri, where I live) no longer perform parasite/worm identification. It’s a like a chicken/egg conundrum without an easy entry point. I’m working on cracking this riddle, to find an entry point to get a definitive diagnosis, and ultimately good treatment. Not just for myself, but so I can add information about how to do this to this discussion. ☺ Because with the right drugs, there is honestly a way out of this. If the parasite you I or any of the other members of this discussion are afflicted with is Fasciola hepatica, then ridiculously, two treatments of a drug called triclabendazole 12 hours apart can work wonders for a cost of like...$4 a dose. It’s ridiculous. And the drug isn’t dangerous or addictive or anything. It’s just hard to get your hands on in the US, because the condition is rare here. But have hope, because there is a cure out there.

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Oh my God, I hope and pray you are right. I’ve had such a horrible day. Eyes bothering my so much w blepharitis. I’ve been “throwing up” parasites for hours. Skin is crawling/itching. I can’t believe humans can suffer this indefinitely! We have to find help! Someone out there must know how to relieve this???!!!! I’m in my 15th month, waiting for a call from a specialist at Stanford who may never call.

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The Gold Standard Anti-Fasciola drugs are:
Triclabendazole (brand name Egaten by Novartis: two doses of 10 mg/kg given 12 hours apart.) This drug is hard to come by, I think.

More common proven anti-Fasciola drug:

Metronidazole, commonly proscribed for vaginal infections, Brand name: Flagyl
1.5 g/day metronidazole orally for three weeks. This may be able to acutally cure you.

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Meanwhile, following are the drugs that have made my life tolerable while waiting for real medical expertise and help:

Artemisinin (OTC – high dose three times a day.)
Praziquantel (25 mg/kg, which is 2 grams for me, 3 times a day)
Albendazole (400 mg, twice day)
Fenbendazole (444 mg, twice a day)

The four drugs above, when taken together, for me put a stop to the intolerable itching, the severity of the skin lesions, the uncontrollable/unpredictable diarrhea. I noticed that @inthedark also reported using Praziquantel and Albendazole, and though it didn’t cure him (or me), it does seem to help to "slow them down."

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@vpear

Oh my God, I hope and pray you are right. I’ve had such a horrible day. Eyes bothering my so much w blepharitis. I’ve been “throwing up” parasites for hours. Skin is crawling/itching. I can’t believe humans can suffer this indefinitely! We have to find help! Someone out there must know how to relieve this???!!!! I’m in my 15th month, waiting for a call from a specialist at Stanford who may never call.

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One more thing. For immediate relief, I take these anti-worm “baths”, where I put all of the following in the water

• Tea Tree Oil
• Benzyl Benzoate (from Amazon. Use very dilute-a few drops in bath, or will feel horrible burning sensation).
• Sulfur Soap (I purchase online by the case now).
• Dandruff shampoos: Selsun Blue, Head & Shoulders, Salicylic acid soap.
• In addition, I also add in some of anti-parasite medication, a tiny bit of praziquantel powder and some albendazole, to the bath water. I figure…if it hurts the parasites when you take these drugs internally, it can’t hurt to add a trace amount to your bathwater to bother the ones close to the surface of your skin as well. ☺

These ‘anti-worm’ baths actually REALLY HELP THE ITCHING which can be really intolerable.

I hope some of this helps you.

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@davidsean

Meanwhile, following are the drugs that have made my life tolerable while waiting for real medical expertise and help:

Artemisinin (OTC – high dose three times a day.)
Praziquantel (25 mg/kg, which is 2 grams for me, 3 times a day)
Albendazole (400 mg, twice day)
Fenbendazole (444 mg, twice a day)

The four drugs above, when taken together, for me put a stop to the intolerable itching, the severity of the skin lesions, the uncontrollable/unpredictable diarrhea. I noticed that @inthedark also reported using Praziquantel and Albendazole, and though it didn’t cure him (or me), it does seem to help to "slow them down."

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We’re they prescribed? By a dermatologist? Or over-the-counter?

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The Artemisinin is available over the counter. Re the others: a Peace Core friend familiar with the "flukes" was able to get me a bottle of bulk Praziquantel. I got an RX from my primary care physician for a short course of the Albendazole, which helped. Then my friend procured the Albendazole for me. @inthedark also used Praziquantel & Albendazole. You might ask @inthedark how they got their hands on the Praziquantel & Albendazole. Because many physicians aren’t familiar with this infection, we’re kind of on our own to get relief…prior to getting dedicated medical care, which I’m working on now. The Fenbendazole is actually not approved for this use, but you can order it in pill form OTC on Amazon. But truly, your best option is to have your physician get you an Rx for Triclabendazole (which is hard to get a hold of even with an Rx I’m told), or perhaps an Rx for Metronidazole (generic Flagyl), a more common medication. The following NIH links describe recent research papers detailing Metronidazole’s use in treating Fasciola. If you drop the strings below into Google, it should being these papers right up. (This site does not allow dropping in links...to avoid spam, probably a good idea.)

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14523339/

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36660413/

Hope this helps. I know how frustrating this is, and how intolerable this condition can be if these things are allowed to rage unchecked. Unfortunately, this is just really rare in the US, so most in the medical establishment don’t know about it, or how to treat it.

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