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Strategies & Market Trends
CAVALRY'S SHORT BUSTERS - MAGIC EIGHTBALLS PICKS
An SI Board Since September 1998
Posts SubjectMarks Bans
1637 4 0
Emcee:  Cavalry Type:  Unmoderated
If you ever wanted to see a battle waged between the shorts and the longs
check out
HEB, the volume and the price swings have been breath-taking, Asenio i am sure
has only begin his negative pr campaign vs HEB, and HEB is enlisting every
ally and releasing every piece of positive news they can, as a short term
trade the price swings are making heb a great play, the fight between Asenio
and Heb boils down to one issue-is ampligen a wonder drug, can it cure cfs,
aids, hepatitis c and maybe gulf war syndrome and MS.
Deep into phase 3 trials, olsten administering tests big, cost recovery could
add up to 30,000 x 650= 19,500,000 for heb just for testing right now, imagine
with fda approval, and over 500,000 people diagnosed with cfs and knowing no
other potential cure for cfs is even close to phase 3 fda testing
if you believe ampligen works heb is the buy of the century and one day the
president of the united states could really talk about heb and ampligen being
the wonder drug of the century.
also i have put in 100 hours of dd on this i believe ampligen works and every
mis-step along the way can be explained.
here is a letter you all may find interesting- what asenio is doing to heb is
the worst act of greed of i have ever witnessed in my life bar none.
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I am one of the 20 American CFIDS (Chronic Fatigue and Immune Dysfunction
Syndrome) patients currently enrolled in the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA)-approved Ampligen 511 cost recovery study. Now in my
fifth month of treatment, I am one of five patients receiving Ampligen at
the Incline Village, Nevada, site. Our investigator (research jargon for the
physician who is conducting the study at our site) is Daniel L. Peterson,
M.D.
Ampligen is working for me - well enough, in fact, that six weeks ago, for
the first time in YEARS, when my son asked me to go downhill skiing for an
hour or so with him, I went. I fell on an icy spot and broke a rib, but I
would not trade a minute of that day for anything. For a short time I was
liberated from CFIDS, IV's, chronic illness, Ampligen, and the world of
experimental drug therapy.
The freedom and exhilaration I experienced that day are memories I will
cherish forever. They were the first moments of my return to an active
lifestyle, if only for a brief period of time, a lifestyle I hadn't been
able to enjoy for many years. I had the opportunity to spend some quality
time with my son, to be outside doing something active, and to enjoy
spectacular views of Lake Tahoe and the Nevada desert. I kept thinking, "I
don't believe this! Here I am on skis, acting like I'm normal! This is
amazing!" The broken rib will heal. I'll keep the memory of that day
forever. I've been called "Her-maan," for the skier who crashed during the
Olympics this year, and "the Alpine Ampligen Skier." They are names I'm
pleased to be able to be called!
Over the past few months, my thinking has gotten sharper and clearer. I can
concentrate for longer periods of time. My reading has improved (I was a
prolific reader once, but lost that skill when I got CFIDS). This year I was
able to organize my financial information for taxes (mostly by myself!),
after being on Ampligen for only a couple of months. For years I was too
cognitively impaired to even attempt this challenge.
My laboratory tests are improving. For example, my white blood count, which
since CFIDS has been abnormally low, is now in the normal range. My Natural
Killer cell function, part of the immune system's defense against cancer, is
in the normal range for the first time since I began having it checked seven
years ago. These are objective, biological measurements of improvement with
Ampligen. They go beyond whether or not I can balance my checkbook better
now than I could two months ago, or do a load of laundry without assistance.
I first knew for certain that I was responding positively to Ampligen about
a month into treatment. My husband and I were sitting at the kitchen table
working out the logistics of getting our youngest son, Calen, who also has
CFIDS, through the last semester of his senior year in high school, to
graduation in June. I was prioritizing what needed to be done, and in what
order, on paper. My husband put his hand gently on my arm as I was writing.
I looked up at him and said, "What?" He smiled and said, "You're coming back
to me, my wife is coming back!" I knew then that Ampligen was working for
me. I could see it in my husband's face.
I have not always been sick and disabled. My life was full and rewarding
before I came down with what I thought was the flu in February of 1989. I
was a successful competitive distance swimmer and soccer player, a farmer's
wife, and the mother of 3 active and busy children. I kept the books for our
business. When I got sick that February, I was acutely ill for weeks, with
spiking fevers. Whatever I had went into my chest, and I developed
pneumonia.
The doctor told me to expect a prolonged recovery, since I had been so ill.
Six months later, however, I was still not abler to swim or play soccer, or
do the books, or keep up with my responsibilities as a wife, mother and
business partner. I was struggling just to make it from morning to night.
Twelve months later, I was sicker. Eighteen months later, the same. Finally,
after going to several doctors, trying unsuccessfully to find out what was
wrong, I saw Dr. Peterson in 1991. He ruled out other possibilities, and
diagnosed me with CFIDS that October.
1991 was also the first year I heard about Ampligen. The FDA-approved Phase
II double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was still underway, and there was
a lot of excitement and anticipation about what seemed to be sure-fire FDA
approval of the drug within months. But the excitement fizzled out and the
anticipation dissolved over the next six years into disappointment and
disgust. Such a promising drug, yet so many problems, and so much hope and
potential wasted! My interest in Ampligen waxed and waned as rumors about
new studies came and went.
In the spring of 1997, I read in a press release that the FDA had actually
approved a new study with Ampligen. It was called the Ampligen 511 open
label, cost recovery study. "Wow!" I thought. "This time it might really
happen!" My curiosity and interest were tweaked once more.
Dr. Peterson and I talked about the eligibility requirements for the study.
I was a candidate. I was within the age range, I met the 1988 CDC case
definition, I was significantly disabled by CFIDS, and I had the low
molecular weight enzyme (37 kilodalton protein), in the RNAseL part of the
2-5A Synthetase/RNaseL antiviral pathway. This novel enzyme was first
identified by, and is currently being studied by, Dr. Robert J. Suhadolnik
and his research team at Temple University.
The Ampligen 511 study is a cost recovery study, which means that the
patient must pay for the drug and the cost of administering it. My husband
and I sat down with paper and pen, and considered the cost of participating
in the study for six months ($6900 for the drug, another $500-$7000 for
infusions, tests and related medical expenses). We compared this amount with
how much we had lost in income during the nine years I have been sick. Over
the years, an enormous amount of my husband's time and energy has been
diverted away from farming to caring for me. We factored in what we would
continue to lose in income in the future if I remained at the same level of
illness and disability. We also factored in the loss of our entire family's
quality of life over the years, and the sacrifices everyone had made. Our
children had assumed some of my responsibilities, and my husband had added
the rest to his already full work load. I had lost irreplaceable time with
my children while they were growing up, and precious quality time with my
husband. Finally, we factored in the inconvenience of my having to relocate
from Northern California to Nevada to participate in the study, leaving my
family behind.
We weighed the possible benefits of taking Ampligen (enough improvement to
be productive again in the family and business) against the possible risk
(it might not work for me). Safety was not an issue. Hundreds of CFIDS
patients in previous studies in the U.S. and Europe had taken Ampligen with
no serious side effects.
Would Ampligen work for me? I'd never know unless I tried it. As we weighed
the pros and cons, I realized that I couldn't let the chance to try for
better health pass me by. We decided to borrow against the cash value of our
life insurance policies, as we have done in the past for big expenses such
as college tuitions for our children, if I were chosen to be in the study.
I told Dr. Peterson I would like to be considered for selection to the
Ampligen 511 study. Then I waited to hear the outcome of the selection
process. Not surprisingly, there were delays, but in November I learned that
I had been chosen as a study participant. Baseline testing and a ton of
paperwork followed, and on December 15, 1997, my four fellow Ampligen 511
study patients and I received our first doses of Ampligen in Incline
Village.
We were all excited and more than just a little scared that first day. As
the drug dripped into our veins for the first time, I think most (if not
all!) of us were cautiously watching one another as well as ourselves to see
what kinds of responses might occur. I know I was.
Intellectually, we know that we are all different, our symptoms are not
identical, and we all respond in different ways, but human curiosity is
strong enough to keep us wondering how we are doing in relation to others.
We've become a closely knit group over the months, supportive and protective
of one another as we move through the study. We've been at it long enough
now to know that we are progressing at our own individual speeds, but we
still compare notes!
The study isn't over yet. I do not know what the future holds. Hopefully we
will receive permission from the FDA to extend beyond the six months of the
original study. I still have a lot of healing to do, but I know without a
doubt that I am on my way, thanks to Ampligen. I wonder a lot about the
future. Will we have to stay on the drug indefinitely in order to continue
to enjoy its benefits? Or will we reach a point where we go from two
infusions a week to one, and eventually to some kind of maintenance dose? As
study subjects, we're still in the trenches with this experimental drug, and
the answers to these questions aren't available yet.
Anyone who is considering taking Ampligen needs to realize that the healing
process is not quick or even consistent. It is an up and down thing, like
being on a roller coaster. You may feel good one day, and wiped out the
next. You need to be patient, and you need to remember to keep your eye on
the big picture, and not to get too caught up in how you feel from one day
to the next. Don't expect recovery to happen overnight. It takes a while for
the body to adjust to the drug. Each patient is unique, each person's
symptom picture and experience are unique. Each patient will progress at his
or her own pace. Changes and improvements are often subtle. Other people may
notice them before you do. Or one day you may suddenly realize you're doing
something mundane, like cooking soup from scratch, that you haven't been
able to do for years, and you think, "I must be getting better! I couldn't
have done this last year!"
Each of us measures quality of life according to our own life experiences
and dreams. For me, it is being able to do the things I used to take for
granted, but haven't been able to do for a long time. It means being able to
plan and cook a meal so that everything reaches the table at more or less
the same time, and in more or less edible condition. It means being able to
stay up to talk with my husband or children about something important that
is going on in their lives, and really participate in the conversation. It
means having the energy to visit with friends, to go out and be active again
for a bit, and to be able to get out of bed the next day. It means being
able to think about being productive again, even to think about going back
to work part-time in the future. It means HAVING a future to think about.
The choice to take Ampligen or not is a person one, but all CFIDS patients
deserve the right to make that choice. Thanks to the letter writing efforts
of hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of CFIDS patients, their families and
their friends, Ampligen is closer now than it has ever been to being
approved by the FDA to treat CFIDS in the U.S. Approval means reimbursement
of costs by insurance companies, accessibility to the drug, and the creation
of opportunity for the development and approval of other promising drug
treatments for CFIDS. I look forward to the day when every CFIDS patient in
America has access to this drug, and to the other drug treatments that will
inevitably follow.
Karen Lang
Incline Village, April 1998

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1637 IMON is a turd we wrapped in one of those dog poop bags and tossed it into theAnthony@Pacific-4/2/2000
1636 >>>>closing my si account today..to all the friends i made during mzonkie-4/10/1999
1635 How about that PESO? lolololol-QED.Tom Swift-3/27/1999
1634 NWCM is primed for a short squeeze. 25% of its 1.6 mil float is shorted and ISJoe Copia-2/16/1999
1633 OK, Monday we will talk.Tom Swift-1/28/1999
1632 He probably ran out of money to buy BB companies odd-lots. You can't make mMr. Forthright-1/24/1999
1631 Good luck to you Cavalry. May I ask...why are you leaving SI? steve Steve Smith-1/19/1999
1630 Thanks for the compliment Steve, closing my si account today..to all the friendCavalry-1/19/1999
1629 To: Kerry J. Carmichael (1608 ) From: Cavalry Cavalry-1/17/1999
1628 Hello Cavalry, Your call on CALP, now IMON was awesome back last year. steve Steve Smith-1/15/1999
1627 Let's talk about PESO this time next month. You will be lololololing out oMoneyBaggs-12/31/1998
1626 HiYa, Cav. You are right about PESO. All you have to review is the trading to Due Diligence-12/31/1998
1625 <i>Show me proof, I don't believe that this is true. That is not the ISOMAN-12/31/1998
1624 <I>.Virus's can't be sent through E-mail except through attachedTom Swift-12/31/1998
1623 Virus's can't be sent through E-mail except through attached files. &lISOMAN-12/30/1998
1622 thanks for the hot tip. zx-12/30/1998
1621 And I will keep on laughing cavyboy -- volume -- volume -- yeah, that's theTom Swift-12/30/1998
1620 The friends i have that picked up peso at 30-40 cents are very happy now, the rCavalry-12/30/1998
1619 Thank you Janice, I count you both as smart and swift, unlike Cav. BTW, I sawTom Swift-12/30/1998
1618 Well, people are getting a little faster on the in/out trigger with these net IBill Ulrich-12/30/1998
1617 <i>the race goes to the smart not the swift get it tommy gun</i> YJanice Shell-12/30/1998
1616 Kerry you are a kind and smart man, but i fear you use p&d a little looselyCavalry-12/30/1998
1615 How about that PESO? lololollolol! Tom Swift-12/30/1998
1614 Great imagery, Cav! Your luxury liner? Janice Shell-12/30/1998
1613 call ibm pissant, they started the email not me cav Cavalry-12/30/1998
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