Description
Addressing Shingles Effectively in Daily Practice
Shingles is a long-lasting and extremely painful condition caused by reactivation of the Varicella-zoster virus (VZV). As individuals age, the intensity of pain associated with herpes zoster tends to increase, potentially lasting up to a month after the rash has resolved. If the pain endures for more than three months, it is classified as post-herpetic neuralgia. Treating shingles poses a significant challenge for both patients and healthcare professionals in daily practice.
In our upcoming webinar, Dr Marcus Stanton will be presenting his approach to treating shingles effectively by addressing the root causes of VZV reactivation (e.g. chronic/excessive inflammation, reactivation of other herpesviruses, imbalances of the PNI axis). Drawing from his extensive experience with micro-immunotherapy and other regulatory tools, he will be providing key insights and guidelines for practitioners eager to optimise their therapeutic strategies for herpes zoster
Micro-immunotherapy: Sustainable & Targeted Immunoregulation
Treating shingles is often a major challenge because the pain is frequently not alleviated as desired with medication. Numerous successes in the treatment of shingles and postherpetic neuralgia have been recorded with micro-immunotherapy. By gently modulating and strengthening the immune system, it aims to bring VZV back under control and thus reduce symptoms and pain. It is an excellent complement to conventional medical treatment because it not only supports the healing process but also helps to protect the body sustainably against a recurrence of the disease and its long-term consequences.
About Dr Marcus Andrew Stanton

– Medical doctor (Luebeck, Germany)
– Lecturer, internationally
– Medical supervisor and instructor for other therapists
– Medical author and publisher
– President and Dean of IFOS (International Academy for Oxidative Stress)
– Vice-President of the Helping Association for environmental illnesses (VHUE e.V.)
– Founding member of NIKO (Network Interdisciplinary Complementary Oncology)
– Editor and medical advisor of CO.med (Magazine for COmplimentary MEDicine)
– TV anchorman on “Quantensprung” (nexworld.tv) and editor-in-chief for medicine and science
Marcus Stanton had been tempted by intellectual challenges from an early age on: Becoming member in the chess club at the age of 6, founding a computer club with 14, and worked himself into quantum physics with 15.
He has endeavored to build bridges from philosophy, humanism and the sciences into medicine. With his unique way to convey knowledge to others in a descriptively and fascinating way, he already was asked to hold classes at his own high school while attending it.
He follows this goal of an holistic medicine in an open, patient-centered collaboration of all medical disciplines in frequent lectures throughout different countries. He is also a teacher in the advanced medical education, has an own program on the internet-TV and is being invited as an interview expert, for example in Germany with RTL and N24.
In his seminars and lectures he often teaches an entire weekend without script or notes – by vividly combining aspects of physiology, biochemistry, pathology, quantum physics, bio-electrics, field-material condensation stages, life’s conflicts and causality to a coherent and entertaining big picture.
He always emphasizes, that each patient bears a very individual constellation, which often cannot be addressed by standard protocols and statistical medicine that is based on the most common denominator, but by looking personally at all layers and influences of the being.