If you are using a densensitising vaccine make sure it is not an injectable one. The injection of any foreign substance through the skin and into the blood carries with it the risk of adverse (or if you like allergic) reactions. All substances are supposed to enter the blood via the digestive tract, that’s why you should only take an oral vaccine. ‘Anaphylaxis’ is the name given to these adverse reactions which can vary from mild exacerbation of your existing symptoms to full-blown shock and possible death.
If after eight to nine weeks on the combined Anti-Candida/Anti-Allergy Program and vaccine you feel you’re still not making sufficient progress (assuming you are not stressed and you are sticking to the program) it would pay to talk over with your doctor the possibility of a course of Nizoral. Make sure the doctor does a liver function test before you go on this drug.
Symptoms that get worse on cloudy days usually indicate the blood-borne Candida colonies that Nizoral works so well against. Cloud prevents pollution escaping into the upper atmosphere causing it to concentrate at street level in greater than normal quantities. Chemical sensitivity is a give-away sign of blood-borne Candida.
*59\18\9*








