Fibromyalgia & IC Pain ReliefAllergy Relief DropImproved Libido for Men and Women
Sign Me up for the Newsletter
Enter Code*       f6kky
Share on Facebook Roby Institute Health Blog Dr. Roby Youtube Channel Alternative Medicine Tweets!

DEPRESSION; HASHIMOTOS THYROIDITIS; ALLERGY TO DOGS AND TREES

location: Austin TX

Your Question: What type of treatments are available for depression?

I also have Hashimoto’s Disease, which is controlled by Synthroid and Cytomel. Allergy testing shows that I am allergic to all types of trees and dogs.

I want to know if depression can be cured or will I have to take a pill that causes a multitude of side effects…

I prefer healing the source rather than the band aide method that most doctors today recommend. Please let me know if I am a candidate for your service.

Thanks very much.


All of the symptoms that you have described, are consistent with hormone imbalance and hormone allergy. They are Dr. Roby’s specialties. Since you live in Austin, and so do we, let me offer you a free evaluation consult, in our office, 4407 Bee Caves Rd. The phone number is 338-4336.

Try to come in with symptoms.

Whenever you have an allergic reaction to something, and allergic people are almost always having them, it causes soft tissue swelling. Your brain is made up of soft tissue. Depending on the location of the most swelling, different parts of the brain produce different symptoms. Yours, apparently, is causing depression. It is actually a very common occurrence. We can help you to deal with it, by rebalancing the hormones. Once the hormone imbalance is corrected, the symptoms will go away on their own.

While you are making up your mind, please go to the website: www.robyinstitute.com, and get the free download of the first chapter of Dr. Roby’s new book, “Maybe It Is All In Your Head … And You Are NOT Crazy!”. That first chapter will give you a better idea of what is really going on in your body, why it is happening, and how we can give you the tools, to take back the control, and keep it.

I would suggest, if you are on the site, that you read/reread the sections on Hormone Imbalance, Food Allergy, and Airborne Allergy, in that order. You will know more about hormones, than any doctor you have ever seen. If you find yourself with more questions about something you have read, or maybe just clarifications, email them to me, and we will figure it out, together. Please feel free to email me at any time.

To make an appointment with us, call 338-34336, and ask to speak with Pam, if she is available. She can tell you about insurance benefits, available appointment dates, fees, and schedule the appointment for you.

Thank you for sharing your problems with us. Now, come on in, and share the solution.

Best regards, and Happy New Year.

Dorothy Dreux
Roby Institute

CAT ALLERGY

location: CA

Your Question: I am about to turn 40 and other than Interstitial Cystitis (diagnosed about 8 years ago) I am in good health. I take Elmiron and it works well; I am pain free. As a child I grew up with 5 cats in the home before we know I was allergic. When we found out, I took allergy medicine. When I visit this cat at the shelter I take an allergy pill and I seem to be fine. My allergic reaction is sniffling and sneezing.

I would like to adopt this shelter kitty but am concerned about if my allergy to cats would make my IC worse?

Thank you for your help.


It is quite possible that you could safely adopt this cat. You would have to be vigilant in observing whether or not, your allergy symptoms are getting worse in a consistent way. Unfortunately, if you have allergies to other things, it might be difficult to tell which substance is causing the exacerbation of symptoms. Allergies are not always seasonal, but many are, so they will come and go. If you begin to have more symptoms, it might mean that you are going through what is for you, just a seasonal allergy time.

The fact that you have IC, indicates that the root of your allergy problems is that you a hormone imbalance. If you were to treat the hormone issue, most of the symptoms could go away. Hormones and allergies are very much interrelated. Where you find one, you find the other. We like to treat both problems at the same time.

I know that my answer seems a bit ambiguous, but since we haven’t had the opportunity to test you for hormones and allergies, it is difficult to answer in definitive terms.

Best regards,

Dorothy Dreux
Roby Institute

CHRONIC FATIGUE; ANXIETY; EXCESS ADRENALINE; BRAIN FOG

Hi,
I have come across your practice on the internet and have been fascinated by your studies on hormone imbalance.

For the past four years i have been living in hell, and been diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome, TMJ, Fibromyalgia, Adrenal fatigue, Low blood pressure, hypoglycaemia… the list goes on! my symptoms are mainly chronic fatigue, anxiety, over producing adrenalin, brain fog and memory loss/lack of feeling…i know underneath is a hormone problem which has caused all this. I recently started applying natural progesterone cream but the symptoms were so severe, pounding heart, shortness of breath, dizzyness and numbness down one side of the body, it became clear that i am just so sensitive to hormones, i thought the cream was killing me and stopped after a week…i am now so exhausted i am in bed most of the day, adrenaline pumping through me and feeling terrible, my doctor says i had this reaction because i have taken the emergency contraceptive pill 4 times in my life, i am 28 years old, and this has messed up my hormones…. i am so desperate to get better, i will even come to texas if i have to; i am in London!

Can you offer any advice?

Many thanks
Chloe


Yes. We can help you. Since you already know what the problem is…you hit it right on the head. Even traditional medicine is beginning to admit that hormone allergy does exist, and that people like you and I, actually do have a real problem. They’ve even given it a name: progesterone mediated hypersensitivity. We still call it hormone allergy among ourselves. You seem to be a classic case for us. Even our poster child.

Before you do anything else, go to www.amazon.com. Download and read the first chapter of Dr. Roby’s new book: “Maybe It Is All In Your Head…And You Are NOT Crazy”. You can also go back to the website, which I would suggest: www.robyinstitute.com, and carefully read, or reread, these three sections, in this order. If you find more questons to ask, after reading them, just email your list to me. 1) Hormone Imbalance. 2) Food Allergy. 3) Airborne Allergy. You will have more knowledge about what is going on in your own body, and what you can do to regain control of it, than any physician that you have ever seen. If the diagnosis of hormone imbalance seems a bit grim, keep in mind that it isn’t some dreadful, deadly disease that you have to suffer with. It is an imbalance. One that is easy to recognize and easily fixed. It is a lifestyle change, not just a treatment.

Can you come here for testing and treatment? We can email a lab slip so that you can have your blood work done locally. It usually takes about 10 days for us to receive the results back. You can call or email us, and someone will give you the findings, and your options, as we see them. We can schedule you for an appointment as soon as the results are in.

Because hormones and allergies are so closely interrelated, Dr. Roby prefers to test for, and treat both at the same time. He has found that it gives him, and the patient, optimal results in the shortest possible time. There are, however, some things that you can begin doing immediately, that will make you feel much better. It is the nonmed portion of the protocol. Follow it for thirty to sixty days, and I promise that you will feel 50% better. We do like for you to check in with us during this period, so that we can monitor your progress, and give you added suggestions, if needed.

Movement: LSD, Looong Slooow Distance walking. 1 hour in the morning, and 1 hour in the evening, indoors, preferably on a treadmill. How slow should you go? Not over 1 mile per hour, at first. Pulse rate should stay below 90. You do not want to become breathless, you don’t want to sweat, and you don’t want to become tired. If any of those things happen…you are going too fast. Begin slowly. If you can only do 10 minutes, that’s fine. Tomorrow you try it again. When it becomes easy at 10 minutes, try for fifteen. Incrementally done is best. Although we use this for weight loss, it is used even more often, for dissipating the excess adrenaline. It is one of the only and certainly the safest, ways. Of all three steps in this protocol, movement is the most important. If you cannot, or will not move, the entire process is derailed. Without movement, there isn’t much life.

When you are pumping out adrenaline, and using it for all of your energy needs, it sends a signal to the brain that you are in an emergency situation. Our bodies are hard wired to stop burning fat in the presence of adrenaline. Adrenaline also makes it difficult to sleep. the hormone allergy sets up the need for the over production of adrenaline. Adrenaline causes stress, stress causes pain, which causes more adrenaline…you can see where we are going with this…into the stress-pain-stress-pain cycle. Some outside influence must be used to turn it off. Much the same way as shutting down your computer, and restarting it, gives you a new slate. That is what we do. We can stop the pain, almost instantly, simply by using sublingual drops of the offending substance. It isn’t a therapeutic dose, just blocks the allergic reaction. This gives us the time to design a longer term treatment plan for you, based solely on the results of your tests. Each of the treatment plans is unique to the individual. Even the bioidentical hormones. The doctor’s prescriptions for the creams and capsules, are based on the tests, and formulated for those results.

Diet: Simplify. Low carbs, low fat diet. Eat mini meals, more frequently. We like the South Beach Diet because of the number of choices that it offers. Weight Watchers is good, too. All diets will work if you follow them religiously, and South Beach is, for most of us, the easiest one to stick with. And, remember that sugar is never your friend. You will want to choose the carbs from the lowest side of the Glycemic Index. The food restrictions are used on ‘school days and nights’. On the weekend, Saturday or Sunday, you can eat whatever you have missed the most during the week. You can eat a lot of it. Eventually, you will know which foods are, in your own opinion, are worth going through the inevitable reactions that you will have, and which are not.

Spirituality: Yours, not ours. Whatever makes you relax and concentrate on your own well being. Yoga, prayer, Tai Chi, etc. This is still part of the controlling mechanism for excess adrenaline production.

Please let me know if you have more questions, or if I can help you with anything else. Email me at any time.

Dorothy Dreux
Roby Institute