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Commissioner777's avatar

How much do you weigh? I’m a 200 pound man. I’m asking so I know if 24 mg of ivermectin is in the ballpark of what I should take.

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2nd Smartest Guy in the World's avatar

My relative is quite heavy, she's around your weight.

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Justin's avatar

Well, dinner conversation is going to be interesting...

That's kinda like responding in the affirmative as to whether those pants make her butt look big.

I'm rethinking that 2nd Smartest guy label... ;-)

In all honesty, thank you for this info!

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R1ghtTh1nk's avatar

For COVID, dose is based on severity and WEIGHT. I replied to Citizen_Jimserac (above) w/ specifics on how to calculate prevention and early treatment doses - per the FLCCC - as examples. Treatment for heart injury is a brand new idea!

For COVID, at a weight of 200 lbs [91 kg], the recommended prevention dose is 0.2 mg / kg which - for you - is 91 x 0.2 = 18.2 mg. Round off to 18 mg (nearest number divisible by three) to get your prevention dose. (I take a prevention dose of IVM - 12 mg b/c I weigh less than you - once a week.) The dose for "early treatment" is double the prevention dose; yours would be 36 mg / day for five days. The FLCCC recommends triple the prevention dose, if one is sicker.

Dosing for heart injury would be trial and error, though!

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Carol Brizzolara's avatar

200lbs is 90.9kg, so 0.2mg/kg is 18.18mg. You are covered with your 24mg dose. If you get sick you can increase your dose per the FLCCC protocol.

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R1ghtTh1nk's avatar

The FLCCC protocols are specific to COVID. The lowest dose is for prevention (0.2 mg/kg); the middle dose (0.4 mg/kg) is for early treatment; the high dose (0.6 mg/kg) is if sicker than that. But again, those are for COVID. Heart injury is a whole new area.

IMHO, one would have to experiment w/ dose - trial and error - over time.

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Carol Brizzolara's avatar

Yes, but they do give one a starting point for dosing options.

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