People can struggle for years with unexplained medical conditions. They can go from doctor to doctor and have all kinds of tests run. After awhile the doctor usually comes up with a diagnosis of IBS or chronic fatigue when tests really can’t reveal the source of the patient’s problem.
Why is Chronic Candidiasis seldom considered as a diagnosis when usually the symptoms are quite obvious? There are a few reasons for this hesitation on the part of the medical community.
First of all the notion that a person could have a system wide candida infection was not even popularized until William Crook, MD wrote about systemic Candidiasis in his book The Yeast Connection in 1983. So prior to this there was virtually no history or studies to draw from and quite frankly until just a few years ago not much research has been done. Research dollars go to high paying diseases such as cancer.
Secondly there is no definitive test that can tell whether or not a person has systemic candida overgrowth, but the diagnosis has to be based on medical history and symptoms alone. In the age of malpractice, doctors usually don’t want to stick their neck out for a diagnosis that would have little research and test based grounds.
Third, since the medical community is driven in large by the dispensing of medication, there really isn’t long term medication available that’s designed to treat systemic candidiasis, only short term infections. Most doctors, it seems, are unlikely to prescribe a treatment that would be based on diet alone and not involve some type of prescription drug.
See Also
My review of Yeast Infection No More which presents compelling evidence of not only the existence of systemic candidiasis, but also 100’s of personal testimonies of healing by following a Candida eliminating diet.
Conclusions
There is hope as more and more medical professionals are recognizing the validity of systemic candidiasis as patients make full recoveries when they follow a Candida eliminating diet. The evidence is overwhelming that this disorder does exist and I would recommend that anyone diagnosed with blanket disorders such as IBS or chronic fatigue get a second opinion by a doctor that will consider the possibility of chronic Candida overgrowth.
Source: DoctorFungus.org



No, its syndrome of visceroptosis, glenard syndrome.