Jesse2233 said: this is the 5th person I've heard of getting a full remission using GcMAF Click to expand...

JeanneD said: I, too, have heard a number of cases of success with GCMAF. It may be a "cure" or at least a treatment providing significant improvement for a subset of people diagnosed with ME/CFS. I very much doubt it is a cure for all of us. Many have tried it without success. Click to expand...

Would you have any links handy to those full remission stories?In pretty much every ME/CFS treatment that I have ever come across, you always get a spectrum of response:In a good ME/CFS treatment, a very small percentage (eg < 1%) of lucky patients will be put into full remission by the treatment. Then a larger percentage (say 10 to 30%) will make major improvements on the treatment (by major improvements I mean moving up at least 1 level up on the ME/CFS scale of mild, moderate and severe ). And a similar percentage will make minor improvements on the treatment. And finally there will be a percentage who don't improve at all (or even get worse) on the treatment.So you need to look at recovery stories in this context: they are the tip of the iceberg; such recoveries only happen to a very small percentage of lucky ME/CFS patients taking the treatment. But nevertheless, these of recovery stories indicate the presence of a potentially beneficial iceberg! The bulk of the iceberg consists not of full recoveries — that's just the tip — but rather patients in which the treatment leads to very desirable major improvements.From what I have just read, Goleic seems to be a more potent GcMAF. Goleic it seems has been around for a while though; it was first mentioned on this forum in this post in 2013.I understand GcMAF (and thus Goleic) only stands a chance of working in ME/CFS patients who have high nagalase levels. So it is a good idea to get your nagalase levels checked before you embark on GcMAF.Nagalase inhibits the functioning of the immune response: nagalase inhibits the formation of MAF (macrophage activation factor), thus preventing macrophages from activating. However, GcMAF is able to activate macrophages, thus remedying the ill effects of high nagalase.