Researchers at the University of Wisconsin reported

ositive results when volunteers were asked to ingest pig whipworm eggs as a way to help heal multiple sclerosis.

And Dr. Joel Weinstock, now a professor at Tufts Medical School, concluded that pig whipworm seemed to help inflammatory bowel disease.

Body needs more biodiversity

Parker believes that the idea behind this odd treatment is sound.

Called hygiene hypothesis, a term coined in the late 1980s, the theory is that when children aren’t exposed to infectious agents or parasites, the development of the immune system is affected.

Humans have lost a lot of biodiversity in their bodies with the rise of clean water and food processing, according to Parker.

“It’s very conclusive that our systems are missing this stuff,” he said. “They need biodiversity to function well so the body can start healing itself.”

He added that the alteration of our bodies’ ecosystems is similar to what’s happening to the earth’s ecosystems, too.

But people treating themselves with parasitic worms can stop the progression of multiple sclerosis, he said.

“Like with exercising, the body gets better,” he stated. “Science says it works. Social networks say it works.”

Meanwhile, the list of what can be treated with these parasitic worms is pretty long, according to John Hawdon, PhD. Hawdon is the vice president of the American Society of Parasitologists and a researcher at George Washington University.

There’s evidence that it may work for celiac disease, Hawdon told Healthline, and it may work to treat other chronic illnesses, too.

“I’m optimistic that some diseases may get some relief using parasitic worms,” said Hawdon, who calls worm therapy an intriguing possibility. “They can calm inflammation.”

Problems with worm therapy

As with any new therapy, there are issues.

The worms haven’t been approved for medical use by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

That means they aren’t available in the United States.

They must be imported from the United Kingdom or Thailand, said Parker.

And without government regulations, quality can vary.

“The most inexpensive worms, especially hookworms, have the most side effects,” Parker warned. “Taking too many can trigger adverse reactions.”

Also, worm treatment is only temporary.

People who treat their diseases must ingest the worms every two weeks.

“So people will end up taking them for the rest of their lives,” Hawdon said.

Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, sees worm therapy as outright dangerous.

“The only things speaking on its behalf are very small studies,” he told Healthline. “Giving people worms belongs in the trash bin.”

He would rather cherry-pick the worm molecules that create the anti-inflammatory effect and turn them into medication.

“You could develop new therapies with them,” he said, “and create new approaches.”

“At one time, people also thought bacteria was bad,” countered Parker. “Now we know there’s a complex ecosystem. It’s about coming back into balance.”

Source: https://bit.ly/2yABDAO