Sciatica

Condition
Sciatica is caused by the shingles virus (HHV-3) infiltrating nerves of the lower back. The virus attaches to the sciatic nerve, tibial nerve, pudendal nerve, and lumbar nerves L1-L5. It gets between the vertebrae and inflames the nerves. Medical research and science has now confirmed the shingles-sciatica connection after Medical Medium first revealed it in Medical Medium Book 1 (New Edition). Per Brain Saver Protocols (2022): Sciatica — Refer to Shingles protocol. Sciatica is caused by the shingles virus (HHV-3) infiltrating nerves of the lower back. The virus attaches to the sciatic nerve, tibial nerve, pudendal nerve, and lumbar nerves L1-L5. Medical research and science has since confirmed the shingles-sciatica connection, having taken this information from Medical Medium teachings.
  • Immune system lowering foods accelerate sciatica: Acidic foods like caffeine, dairy products, and vinegar lower the immune system and make the body an acidic environment, allowing the shingles virus to creep up and inflame the lumbar nerves. Vinegar and dairy products use up calcium to neutralize their acidity, weakening bones including the spine. Caffeine makes the body acidic, lowering the immune system and allowing pathogens like shingles to creep up. An acidic, weakened immune system allows the shingles virus to thrive.
  • Viral inflammation: It takes more than a pinched nerve to have pain - viral inflammation combined with structural problems explodes the impact
  • Epstein-Barr virus co-infection: Many people have both shingles causing sciatic pain, lower back/hip/joint pain, AND Epstein-Barr virus causing nerve pain in the shoulders, arms, hands, and neck simultaneously. They walk around with multiple low-grade viral infections and are highly inflamed, not knowing what to do. The combination of shingles in the lower back and EBV in the upper body creates confusing, widespread pain that is hard to diagnose. Fibromyalgia, neurological Lyme, lupus, and MS often co-occur because all involve pathogens clinging to nerves.
  • Shingles virus: Mysterious back pain including sciatica is caused by the shingles virus
  • Shingles virus: Shingles virus in the lower back gets all the spine inflamed causing sciatica
  • Viral inflammation mechanism: Structural problems like bulging discs or degenerative disc disease alone are not enough to cause chronic sciatica. It takes viral inflammation from the shingles virus combining with structural issues to explode the pain into a chronic, debilitating problem. Many people walk around with seriously deteriorated spines and feel no pain at all — the moment viral inflammation from shingles is added, a lifetime of sciatica can begin. Someone with a bulging disc who is not inflamed won't have a problem; the same person with viral inflammation will.
  • Viral inflammation mechanism: Structural problems like bulging discs or degenerative disc disease alone are not enough to cause chronic sciatica. It takes viral inflammation from the shingles virus combining with structural issues to explode the pain into a chronic, debilitating problem. Many people walk around with seriously deteriorated spines and feel no pain at all — the moment viral inflammation is added, a lifetime of sciatica can begin.
  • Shingles virus: The shingles family of viruses
  • Shingles virus: The shingles family of viruses (HHV-3, with over 30 varieties, all but one undiscovered) is the number one pathogen causing back problems. Shingles virus gets into nerves in the lower back and attaches to the sciatic nerve, getting all the spine inflamed and causing sciatica. The virus can cause inflammation and nerve pain even without a visible rash. You do not need to have the classic pustule rash to have shingles-driven sciatica — it can be completely internal.
  • Shingles transmission routes: The shingles virus can be contracted through restaurant cutlery (forks not properly sterilized pass shingles between many people's mouths), dental instruments (probes and drills), and close personal relationships (everyone is constantly transferring bugs back and forth). Virtually everyone has at least one variety of shingles in their body.
  • Shingles transmission routes: The shingles virus can be contracted through restaurant cutlery (forks not properly sterilized pass shingles between many people's mouths), dental instruments, and close personal relationships. Restaurants are one of the biggest transmission routes — forks that have been in many people's mouths run through crappy dishwashers, not sterilized. Virtually everyone has at least one variety of shingles in their body.
  • Shingles shuttling from liver: The shingles virus can migrate from its hiding place in the liver and travel into the lower spine. This explains why sciatica can seem to come and go — the virus travels from the liver into the lower back, causing flares. When immune function is reduced by stress, betrayal, hardship, loss, or exposure to troublemaker foods, the virus travels from the liver into the nerves.
  • Nerve damage attracts pathogens: When nerve root hairs fray off damaged nerves, it creates a homing signal that shingles virus looks for and attaches to. This explains why structural spinal problems become far worse over time — the structural damage invites the viral inflammation, which then compounds the problem well beyond what the structural issue alone would cause.
  • Frayed nerve root hair homing signal: When nerves are pinched or damaged, their root hairs fray off like the fibers of a piece of yarn. This creates a homing signal inside the body that the shingles virus specifically looks for and homes in on. The virus then clings to the damaged nerve, causing it to swell even more, creating a vicious cycle of increasing sciatic pain.
  • Frayed nerve root hair homing signal: When nerves are pinched or damaged, their root hairs fray off like the fibers of a strip of yarn. This creates a homing signal inside the body that the shingles virus specifically detects and homes in on. The virus then clings to the damaged nerve, causing it to swell even more, creating a vicious cycle of increasing sciatic pain. The more pain from the lower back, the more chances of jolting or wrenching it, and the more the cycle worsens.
  • Heavy neurotoxins settling in lower body: When shingles feeds on heavy metals like lead and copper in the liver, it releases heavier neurotoxins that settle into the lower areas of the body, including the lumbar spine and sciatic nerve region. This explains why sciatica often involves the lower body specifically — the heavy neurotoxins gravitate downward.
  • Shingles virus: When the sciatic nerve goes, that's the bugs because shingles creates that

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