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Old 11-06-2012, 08:25 PM
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Nervous1 Nervous1 is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 117
10 yr Member
Nervous1 Nervous1 is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 117
10 yr Member
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I have the presence of autoimmune D in my body, and so it is believed that my system is mistakenly attacking my nerves.
This is what I tested positive for @ .09 nmol/L
The most commonly encountered autoantibody marker of autoimmune dysautonomia is the neuronal ganglionic alpha-3- (acetylcholine receptor) autoantibody. This autoantibody to date is the only proven effector of autoimmune dysautonomia. A direct relationship has been demonstrated between antibody titer and severity of dysautonomia in both alpha-3-AChR-immunized animals and patients with autoimmune dysautonomia. Patients with high alpha-3-AChR autoantibody values (>1.0 nmol/L) generally have profound pandys autonomia. Dysautonomic patients with lower alpha-3-AChR autoantibody values (0.03-0.99 nmol/L) have limited dysautonomia.
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