I don't know much about liver and hep viruses, so I tell you what I know.
I'm fighting shingles virus now, and it's killing me, it's so painful. And it keeps doing damage to my nerves, despite Aciclovir orally. So I am going to try something new, just finished doing research on this a few days ago.
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Monolaurin (brand name Lauricidin) and monocaprin seem to have some efffect on lipid coated viruses - these compounds work like soap (because they are soaps) - dissolve virus envelopes and viruses die.
Here, someone tried this for hep B (which may be sometimes in some people also difficult to cure):
http://groups.google.pl/group/alt.med.cfs/browse_thread/thread/e0485d69066a805/ec5e72e8f54a425c?hl=pl&lnk=st&q=monolaurin#If you decide to buy it, try this link:
http://www.lauricidin.com/- that's where I am gonna buy it - they have best prices.
Unfortunetely, there are no real clinical trials in vivo concerning monolaurin. There were some in vitro (outside living organism, eg. human) trials, which showed that monolurin kills bacteria and viruses, and there were trials with HIV positive people, which showed improvement of their condition, but too few people took part in this trial, so the results were a little unreliable (but only a little), there were some trials with poultry. However so far nobody reached udeniable conclusion that this thing works. But I'm going to try it anyway.
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A thing good for your liver is NAC (N-ACETYL CYSTEINE):
http://www.puritan.com/pages/file.asp?pid=324&cid=&cpid=39which promotes glutathione production in liver, what in theory should reduce inflammation.
But I don't know if this is recommended for liver hepatitis.
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L-lysine is supposed to help in herpes infection, some people use it for hepatitis C:
http://www.alchemistlab.com/lysine_orotate_info2.htmWe have tended to use this product when there is co-infection with HCV, at this point we have not used it enough in HCV cases without co-infection to know its impact on HCV alone.
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Please, remember that I did this research trying to figgure out shingles virus, so it may be necessary to reevaluate these treatments for hep C. But it's something to get you started, although of course these are not "real" treatments, only supplemental.
You might want to try and ask people on hep C support group
http://groups.google.pl/group/alt.support.hepatitis-c/topics?hl=pl&lnk=srgI read somewhere that there is this new treatment with a special kind of interferon, and the success ratio is much higher than with normal interferon (50 % ? I really don't remember), so
it would be important for you to get this new treatment.