Not sure if it helps, but here is my cyano experience from last year  The Chemiclean worked amazingly - the stuff I did otherwise not so much.
I had a huge cyano problem last year and almost lost everything, not from the cyano, but what I did to fight the cyano.  My cyano was  due to high nutrient levels from heavy feeding, heavy loading, and reduced water changes.  I battled it for a few months with reduced feeding, reduced lighting, and excessively vacuuming in the DT.  The weekly water changes were doubled and all water removed was by vacuum.  I also heavily cleaned cleaned my primary fuge at one point.
The cyano got to a severe point at which time I tried Chemiclean.  The Chemiclean did the trick on the cyano, but there were other consequences from my own actions.  Before adding Chemiclean I did a huge water change  per directions.  The problem was that I cleaned my secondary fuge before adding Chemiclean - at that time one third of the system volume.
I had never cleaned my secondary fuge/storage before and it was slap full of detritus.  I meant to take it offline first with the valves set up for that exact purpose but forgot.  I stirred everything up when I cleaned it - removing and rinsing all rock and vacuuming all sand.  Even with a vacuum I could not see my hands in the tank.  I am fairly certain this massive nutrient release coupled with the immediately reduced bacteria filtration was my system’s demise - not the Chemiclean.
My pH shot up, reaching higher numbers than I have heard of in marine systems, which took its toll on many inhabitants - over half of them.  To make matters worst my ph probes had drifted out of calibration, so I did not identify the problem at first.
After realizing my mistake and taking appropriate actions, everything settled down in a few weeks.  I calibrated my probes, resumed increased water changes, used vinegar to bring the pH down.  I am now back to normal water changes but The pH never balanced out correctly - I still dose a lot of vinegar to this day.  I setup my apex to turn off the lights if the pH gets too high and to dose vinegar if it gets higher.  I also took my 240 gallon secondary fuge offline, primarily to reduce the water change volumes.
Not a drop of cyano remains and the tank, rocks, sand, etc are always crystal clean other than the never ending bacteria strings formed by heavy vinegar dosing.  The lights go off a few times a day and I use almost a gallon of vinegar every week in my-now reduced 400 gallon system.
I am not sure this is helpful, but that is my nightmare experience with cyano, or more so with wildly excessive cleaning.  Be careful how aggressive you get with cleaning.  I am not promoting Chemiclean here, just advising caution with excessive cleaning.