This is an amazing breakthrough for chronic illness and looks promising as a potential cure and reversal for MS, Crohn's, and many many more.

#ChronicIllness
#MedicateASong

https://scitechdaily.com/new-vaccine-can-completely-reverse-autoimmune-diseases-like-multiple-sclerosis-type-1-diabetes-and-crohns-disease/

New Vaccine Can Completely Reverse Autoimmune Diseases Like Multiple Sclerosis, Type 1 Diabetes, and Crohn’s Disease

Researchers from Pritzker Molecular Engineering, under the guidance of Prof. Jeffrey Hubbell, demonstrated that their compound can eliminate the autoimmune response linked to multiple sclerosis. Researchers at the University of Chicago's Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (PME) have developed

SciTechDaily

@noondlyt many years ago - a college roommate had Crohn's - wow

there are better treatments now than then.. but he stated a lot of people literally cannot handle it (and choose to take their own lives).

Anyway, on the basis of the Crohn's angle alone - this is HUGE

@dannotdaniel @noondlyt

I've been reading about that. Look forward to following the clinical trials to see how it does.

@noondlyt Any #biohacker want to help people get around Big Pharma and do this?
@noondlyt Holy shit! This is amazing!
@noondlyt This is revolutionary.
@JakeHarrison In every sense of the word.
@noondlyt Sounds like a funding pitch to me.
@noondlyt Okay, this is just cool. I hope it leads somewhere

@noondlyt

Amazing! I see Crohn's disease, I hope they can cover HS too

@noondlyt This is so exciting, I agree. It offers hope for so many who suffer. Let’s hope it can be brought to market speedily, and more importantly, at reasonable price.

@noondlyt as for MS: i don't think it's correct to say that such a vaccine could "reverse" the damage already done to the CNS, at best it's only going to prevent future damage, which from my understanding modern treatments are already pretty good at

still fantastic news, but the headline is a bit misleading in my opinion

@pierogiburo Re-myelination is already known to occur outside of this context. That, by definition, is a disease reversal. As I understand it, this "vaccine" would stop the attack and thus allow the body to react appropriately and repair the damaged myelin. The key here is turning the destructive process off.
@noondlyt
I've been hearing about amazing advances in the science for decades, but nothing ever comes of it. These days I won't let myself get my hopes up - but this one is quite a different thing. Still not getting excited just yet! But I like the idea...
Here's hoping, with crossed fingers and a bunch of patience.
@EmPenTen @noondlyt I do believe that the inverted/modular-styled approach to many diseases (as presented here) might actually be a key to treat them effectively (by treating I mean complete or almost complete eradication of a given disease in a living organism).
@noondlyt
It brings potential hope, but how often over the years have these not been realised? We are not mice and the leap to humans is immense.
I tend to ignore all these promises unless they reach stage 3 of a clinical trial. It just helps with managing expectations 🤔
@noondlyt this is amazing. I have a family member with an autoimmune disease not mentioned by name in this article. Do you think they will eventually put one out for every autoimmune disease? Something like this could save their life 💛
@justpeachy It is the same mechanism for many of the autoimmune diseases.
@noondlyt Too bad that vaccine is a four letter word in a world that celebrates ignorance and pseudoscience.
@noondlyt @lednabwm
Wow thanks for sharing. My adult daughter has MS - fortunately not too severe but that can always change and I can't help but worry about her future. Fingers crossed on this one!

@noondlyt

I would volunteer to test it for polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR). PMR isn't mentioned in the article, but we won't know unless we try.

Also, I can['t be in the control group because I'm allergic to placebo, and I would go into pseudophylatic shock.

@noondlyt

I've seen many articles like this about breakthroughs over the years.

I have never seen those breakthroughs make it out into production/real life.

Hopefully this autoimmune disease cure does. All of the current treatments involve suppressing the immune system, which quite frankly sucks.

@noondlyt As a type 1 diabetic I hope this technology will be proved safe (no side effects like cancer etc.) and effective. 👍😀
@noondlyt If this makes it through all levels of trials, this would be HUGE!!!! From big disabling medical issues to allergies, this would relieve the suffering of so so so so many people it would be profound!
@noondlyt I'm suspect, but also hopeful. And I think at least sobe people it might be able to help. I'm doubtful for my particular autoimmune illness, but you never know!
@noondlyt
Oh my goodness, I hope this can also be utilised to treat autoimmune #POTS one day 🥺
I couldn't even bring myself to type "cure" instead of treat 🙃
Synthetically glycosylated antigens for the antigen-specific suppression of established immune responses | Nature Biomedical Engineering

Inducing antigen-specific tolerance during an established immune response typically requires non-specific immunosuppressive signalling molecules. Hence, standard treatments for autoimmunity trigger global immunosuppression. Here we show that established antigen-specific responses in effector T cells and memory T cells can be suppressed by a polymer glycosylated with N-acetylgalactosamine (pGal) and conjugated to the antigen via a self-immolative linker that allows for the dissociation of the antigen on endocytosis and its presentation in the immunoregulatory environment. We show that pGal–antigen therapy induces antigen-specific tolerance in a mouse model of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (with programmed cell-death-1 and the co-inhibitory ligand CD276 driving the tolerogenic responses), as well as the suppression of antigen-specific responses to vaccination against a DNA-based simian immunodeficiency virus in non-human primates. Our findings show that pGal–antigen therapy invokes mechanisms of immune tolerance to resolve antigen-specific inflammatory T-cell responses and suggest that the therapy may be applicable across autoimmune diseases. Established antigen-specific T-cell responses can be suppressed by conjugating the antigen to a glycosylated polymer, as shown in a mouse model of multiple sclerosis and with the suppression of responses to vaccination in non-human primates.

@martin_fff ....yes, I know. ...Clinical safety trials phase I under way in Human Beings with MS...the article is transparent and my post states potential.
@noondlyt yeah, the articles most people read hype things much more that the actual spcientific papers do [they don't hype at all]. ScienceDirect not one on the worst, but neither is it one of the best...
@martin_fff Agreed about the hypeScientific papers are so difficult for people who suffer from brain fog and mental fatigue.
@noondlyt really hoping this goes somewhere
@noondlyt Wow, yes, this could be life changing for many people.

@noondlyt

I hope the vaccine fulfills even a tenth of the promises made in that article.

@iju It is scientific hope.
@noondlyt
I hope that the vaccine will be affordable for people if this happens.
@noondlyt This is literally incredible. Cuz I tell you what EVEN if this particular instance fails or has to be idk worked on some more, this totally means it's around the corner and it is going to help millions of people not to suffer needlessly. WOW. Auto immune diseases are on the rise too.
@VeroniqueB99 We are a society plagued with chronic autoimmune diseases.
@noondlyt yes, which is why this would be fantastic. ok, WILL be. 😉 👍

@noondlyt just huge. Testing now with Celiac patients

Hoping for positive results
#scienceisreal