29 Burst results for "Degenerative Disease"

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Focus On the Family Daily Broadcast

Focus On the Family Daily Broadcast

07:48 min | 4 months ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Focus On the Family Daily Broadcast

"We are. Let's turn to the audience here. Let's do a quick Q&A with a couple of people. Let's three or four of you. If you have a question, let's get those. And this has been so good. Here in Edinburgh, what a wonderful setting in Scotland. Thanks for making the effort to be here. No, it's my absolute pleasure. I'm loving it. Well, I'm George from Clearwater, Florida. And what coping skills can you give couples that are facing retirement? You talk a lot about other areas and times of life. But you haven't mentioned retirement and facing retirement. That's good. That's a really good question. I think one of the things is to give each other space to adjust to the fact that this is a new season and we all change. Someone once said that were married to several different people during the course of our marriage. One person. But that they change and the season of retirement, if you've been out of the house and busy, suddenly you're both in the house, maybe getting a bit irritated because you're under each other's feet. And I think it's about finding new patterns and new ways of doing things and recognizing that it might be a bit lumpy to start with, but you will get there, particularly if you keep communicating and talking about what you need. What about that balance between pursuing your own interests in retirement? And then combining things. Should you have as a spouse kind of an open heart and mind to let maybe your husband do some things that doesn't involve you? I think that's probably right. Whereas a golf course here in Edinburgh, I once said to my husband that I thought I should take up golf so I could play with him when he retired and he didn't think that was a very good idea. So I haven't, as yet, but sometimes that I think we need the mixture of both. We do need our own space as well as being able to do things. Richard and help on that one. All right, next question. I'm Michelle from dove canyon, California. And I was wondering, how do you find that passion activity together? Maybe you volunteered together already. You've served together, hosted Bible studies, but what about that next phase? Well, I think one thing is not to be too idealistic about it. I don't think every couple was suddenly find this incredibly amazing thing that they're both passionate about. Although I think having a joint purpose is really good. And I think try things out. If you try something and if it doesn't work, then we often say you try something new and then if it doesn't work, you go back to what wasn't working before. But I think ask friends as well. Join in with friends and do things and I think this thing about what are the things that you both enjoy starting there and building from there and looking for opportunities praying for opportunities that might come your way. You said earlier in the broadcast that curiosity factor. This is where you need to keep curiosity going. So if something's not meeting that need, you try something new, right? Yeah, I think that's right. And discovering maybe skills and passions that we didn't know we had or we certainly didn't know our husband or wife had. I'm Michael from Pennsylvania. I've been married for 50 years. Yeah, that's great. Males and females have different perspectives. I'd like to know your perspective on what resolving conflict looks like. Males seem to enjoy fixing things. From the female's perspective, what is resolving conflict look like to you? Processing it. I think processing it. I don't know, I think people have different ways of approaching conflict and probably there are some gender stereotypes within that as well. But for me, personally, I actually don't really like conflict. But I really don't like unresolved conflict. So I will go to places and I will be brave in order to make sure that it's resolved because I really hate it when it is unresolved. So but for me, it will be processing it. I'm an external processor, so for me it will be talking about it. My husband is an internal processor, so he'll do most of his thinking in his head and his first thing that he says is probably the thing that he won't change his mind on. Whereas I go all around the houses and back again because I work it all out. Externally. So I think taking those personalities into account as well. But for me, working through the process and getting to the place where either we agree to disagree or the issue is resolved. You describing something that has always fascinated me why we tend as opposites to attract to each other. I mean, you and Richard, you just described that, right? It's very common that we possess different ways of processing, right? Why did God do it that way? Well, I think just to keep us working at things, maybe I don't know. That's one question maybe I will ask him. It's kind of his sense of humor, I think, right? I'm going to put two people that don't think I like together. They're going to be attracted to each other. I think so we become more like him, which is selfless. I'm sure that is right. We're attracted actually to people who think the same as us on the big issues, but often we're attracted to someone who is the opposite of us. So if we are really disorganized then we're attracted to someone who likes planning. If we are spontaneous, we are attracted to somebody who's not, but at least for a few weeks. For a few weeks, I was going to see what happened is that very thing can start to annoy us and become an irritation. Exactly. You conclude your book with a wonderful story about a taxicab driver and his wife who had been happily married for 35 years, but then something happened and it challenged that relationship. What happened? I was driving through London in this taxi. And the guy just told me about his marriage. So he had been married for 35 years. He said their marriage had had all the usual ups and downs of married life. And then one day his wife went to the bathroom in the night and she slipped and she fell and then the next day she went into the supermarket and she went to reach a tin from the shelf and it slipped out of her hand and things carried on and she went to the doctor and she was told that she had degenerative disease that was affecting her muscles. And the doctor said to her, you must do some weight bearing exercise. And so she tried to put that into practice. And she bought an exercise bike, but that didn't really work. She joined a gym, but that was too difficult. And then one day, through their letterbox, came a flyer advertising forum, dancing classes, and they decided to give it a go. And he said they went along and they really enjoyed it. He said, we weren't we weren't particularly good, but it was really fun. And then one evening they were sitting down and having a cup of tea. And he looked up and he said to her, what is it? He said about this about the dancing you tried the exercise bike and that didn't work. The gym didn't work. What is it about the dancing? And she just looked at him and she said, don't you know? Because I do. It's because you're holding me. And I thought that was just such a beautiful description of marriage. One person being there for the other, through the good times, through the bad times. And that phrase

Edinburgh dove canyon golf Clearwater Richard Scotland George Florida Michelle California Pennsylvania Michael degenerative disease London
"degenerative disease" Discussed on The School of Greatness

The School of Greatness

02:00 min | 7 months ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on The School of Greatness

"That might, I might do that in 30 seconds or it might take a minute to get to that heart rate. And then I'm done. You do a few hills. Yes. What if you did 20 hills? Then too much, a ten to 32nd. That might be okay if you're 20, 25 years old, you're an elite athlete, and that's part of your event. But if you're 45, 50, 60, and you just try to stay as healthy as possible, I think that's too much. And in any event, it's unnecessary, because it's not about the quantity, quantity is good for fitness, but not not necessarily for health. Interesting. So you only need a few sprints every couple, is this every day or every few days, it's I would say it's no more than twice a week. Once a week. For the average person now, and we have to, if you're watching this, you have to understand if you're in the elite athlete category or in the 50 year old trying to stave off living life. Degenerative disease. Yes, yes. So if you're more of a, you know, if you're an athlete, even in your 40s and 50s, you could push it a little farther if you're competing and stuff or doing triathlons or marathons or just wanting to stay lean, it's important to be doing that a little bit more. Yeah. So there's no doubt. I mean, I talk a lot in my videos about moderation, like you do this, hit exercises, you do it twice a week, you keep it short. But obviously that doesn't apply to someone who has a goal in an event. If you're going after fitness, there is no substitute for punishing yourself. You got to do it. Yeah. Because if you're going to perform in an event, you need to do something similar to that event at that level of intensity.

Degenerative disease
"degenerative disease" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

06:40 min | 10 months ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

"Even weight gain, right? For some individuals, when they're overwhelmed when their body is stressed and they're not able to adapt effectively to it. It can cause a whole lot of unwanted symptoms. And so that's why we have to look at where the individual is baseline level of metabolic flexibility. Their ability to burn both fat and sugar for fuel, right? So you should be burning mostly fat when you're at rest, just a tiny bit of sugar as a fuel source. When you exercise at a high intensity should switch to burning mostly sugar and just a tiny bit of fat, your ability to kind of switch between those, like the ease of switching, it determines your level of metabolic flexibility. Somebody who's not metabolically flexible when they go a few hours between meals and their blood sugar goes down. They get hangry, right? They may have cravings. We might have a headache, they might feel irritable. They might be really hungry for some people to get really hungry for some people they get nauseous. They have trouble sleeping, right? If they go too long between meals, just between lunch and dinner, that if they go too long because they're so metabolically inflexible, it can cause a whole lot of stress hormone issues and I can actually throw off their sleep later at night, even though they're fed, right? When they, let's say they eat dinner, the cascade of events that took place because they missed that meal and they had a hypoglycemic reaction could cause poor sleep at night. So we have to look at, where is your baseline level of metabolic flexibility? Somebody use very metabolically flexible should easily be able to go four, 5 hours between meals and feel fine, right? They should easily be able to fast 12, 14, 16 hours overnight, like finishing dinner at 7. And really shouldn't feel hungry till let's say maybe ten, 11, 12 o'clock, the next day. And if you're really metabolically flexible, you might not even feel hungry very often. I know for myself, it's very rare that I feel hungry until I start eating, right? It's like my body is so metabolically flexible. It's so good at burning fat when I'm fasting. And I didn't used to be like this. This is something that I trained into my system. That I can fast for very long periods of time, not feel hungry, exercise, you know, like today I did a workout when I was fasted for 24 hours. So I hadn't eaten since lunch yesterday. I worked out at lunch today. And after that workout, even though I worked out very intensely, I still wasn't even hungry. Now, I did eat. I broke my fast and I did eat. And probably about a quarter of the way into my meal. All of a sudden I felt, oh wow, I'm hungry. So woke my appetite up, right? And that's a sign because my body was so metabolically flexible. Now, years ago when I was a personal trainer, my early my late teens, early 20s, it was like, I could not go to sleep without a protein shake before I went to bed. First thing in the morning, I was ravenous, had to eat like a huge breakfast, right? And I thought I had to eat 6 meals a day in order to maintain my muscle mass. It was very metabolically inflexible. So this is something that I've trained over time. And the benefit of that is it reduces overall inflammation, significantly lowers inflammation, improves your insulin, sensitivity, and your blood sugar regulation. When you're burning fat for fuel, your body produces ketones, right? So between meals, if you go, if you extend that period of time between meals, your body has to use body fat for energy. So not only does that help you burn your own body fat, which most people out there are looking to do, even thin people, it's important that we burn fat. I'm very lean. It's important that we burn fat 'cause that's where we store our toxins. And it's also a great energy source. Now, we can't get fatty acids up through the blood brain barrier because they're too large. So our body actually creates our liver, takes fatty acids, converts them into something called ketones. Ketones are smaller than fatty acids. They're water soluble. They cross into the blood brain barrier. And the way that our mitochondria burns these for energy is this uncoupling process where it actually almost it's almost like a wasting of calories because it produces a lot of heat. But in that process, we actually produce more mitochondria and the mitochondria become more efficient in our mitochondria produce all the energy in our cells. And the more mitochondria, the more healthy functional mitochondria that you have, the healthier your body is and your brain, your nervous system actually has more mitochondria per cell than almost any other organ system other than our reproductive organs. They have about 10,000 mitochondria per cell, whereas your muscle cells have around a 1001 to 2000 mitochondria per cell. So our nervous system is really dependent upon healthy mitochondrial function and ketones when they're also a signaling molecule in our brain. And what they signal is, they shut down inflammation. So the body has these inflammatory amplifiers, and inflammation we know is at the root of all chronic degenerative disease and it only have inflammation in our brain. It produces things like fatigue, for example, fatigue is commonly associated with what we call neuroendocrine inflammation, where there's inflammation affecting the pituitary gland, the hypothalamus, all these key messenger based endocrine organs that produce hormones. And then it also produces inflammation that affects our mood, right? It affects our neurotransmitter balance. It affects our memory and our hippocampus. And so when people have inflamed brains, they get brain fog, fatigue, mood disorders, things like that. When ketones become elevated in the bloodstream, it shuts down what we call the inflammasome, which again is this inflammation amplifier, right? It really jacks up inflammation when it's activated. We turn that off, right? And so now inflammation is very, very low. Now we're able to function at a really high level. And that's why a lot of people like to get their body. Like when people are doing intermittent fasting, a lot of people say, wow, I feel like I think better. I think sharper. I'm able to get my best work done. This is what I hear all the time. People with mood disorders actually tend to do better when they're in a fasted state. Now, again, not for everybody, not right away, we have to kind of condition the body, but the benefits that you can get from intermittent fasting. When done properly, when you've built up the metabolic flexibility to handle this, are quite remarkable. Hey guys, I just wanted to interrupt this podcast to tell you about one of my favorite food products. I mean, if you're out there and you're looking for healthy snack options or

headache chronic degenerative disease
"degenerative disease" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

07:26 min | 10 months ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

"Practice to keep inflammation under control. However, just like exercise, you can overdo it, right? You can be too aggressive with it too quickly. And so depending on your baseline level of metabolic fitness, right? That's going to determine how much exercise your body is going to be able to handle at determines. Also, how much, how compressed your eating window would be. Like you mentioned, okay, you could do like an 8 hour eating window where your meals will stay between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.. And that can work great for, you know, for one person, but it could somebody else may not be metabolically fit enough to be able to do that. So if they start immediately doing that, it can over stress their system and that can cause poor sleep, fatigue, even weight gain, right? For some individuals, when they're overwhelmed when their body is stressed and they're not able to adapt effectively to it. It can cause a whole lot of unwanted symptoms. And so that's why we have to look at where the individual is baseline level of metabolic flexibility. Their ability to burn both fat and sugar for fuel, right? So you should be burning mostly fat when you're at rest, just a tiny bit of sugar as a fuel source. When you exercise at a high intensity should switch to burning mostly sugar and just a tiny bit of fat, your ability to kind of switch between those, like the ease of switching, it determines your level of metabolic flexibility. Somebody who's not metabolically flexible when they go a few hours between meals and their blood sugar goes down. They get hangry, right? They may have cravings. We might have a headache, they might feel irritable. They might be really hungry for some people to get really hungry for some people they get nauseous. They have trouble sleeping, right? If they go too long between meals, just between lunch and dinner, that if they go too long because they're so metabolically inflexible, it can cause a whole lot of stress hormone issues and I can actually throw off their sleep later at night, even though they're fed, right? When they, let's say they eat dinner, the cascade of events that took place because they missed that meal and they had a hypoglycemic reaction could cause poor sleep at night. So we have to look at, where is your baseline level of metabolic flexibility? Somebody use very metabolically flexible should easily be able to go four, 5 hours between meals and feel fine, right? They should easily be able to fast 12, 14, 16 hours overnight, like finishing dinner at 7. And really shouldn't feel hungry till let's say maybe ten, 11, 12 o'clock, the next day. And if you're really metabolically flexible, you might not even feel hungry very often. I know for myself, it's very rare that I feel hungry until I start eating, right? It's like my body is so metabolically flexible. It's so good at burning fat when I'm fasting. And I didn't used to be like this. This is something that I trained into my system. That I can fast for very long periods of time, not feel hungry, exercise, you know, like today I did a workout when I was fasted for 24 hours. So I hadn't eaten since lunch yesterday. I worked out at lunch today. And after that workout, even though I worked out very intensely, I still wasn't even hungry. Now, I did eat. I broke my fast and I did eat. And probably about a quarter of the way into my meal. All of a sudden I felt, oh wow, I'm hungry. So woke my appetite up, right? And that's a sign because my body was so metabolically flexible. Now, years ago when I was a personal trainer, my early my late teens, early 20s, it was like, I could not go to sleep without a protein shake before I went to bed. First thing in the morning, I was ravenous, had to eat like a huge breakfast, right? And I thought I had to eat 6 meals a day in order to maintain my muscle mass. It was very metabolically inflexible. So this is something that I've trained over time. And the benefit of that is it reduces overall inflammation, significantly lowers inflammation, improves your insulin, sensitivity, and your blood sugar regulation. When you're burning fat for fuel, your body produces ketones, right? So between meals, if you go, if you extend that period of time between meals, your body has to use body fat for energy. So not only does that help you burn your own body fat, which most people out there are looking to do, even thin people, it's important that we burn fat. I'm very lean. It's important that we burn fat 'cause that's where we store our toxins. And it's also a great energy source. Now, we can't get fatty acids up through the blood brain barrier because they're too large. So our body actually creates our liver, takes fatty acids, converts them into something called ketones. Ketones are smaller than fatty acids. They're water soluble. They cross into the blood brain barrier. And the way that our mitochondria burns these for energy is this uncoupling process where it actually almost it's almost like a wasting of calories because it produces a lot of heat. But in that process, we actually produce more mitochondria and the mitochondria become more efficient in our mitochondria produce all the energy in our cells. And the more mitochondria, the more healthy functional mitochondria that you have, the healthier your body is and your brain, your nervous system actually has more mitochondria per cell than almost any other organ system other than our reproductive organs. They have about 10,000 mitochondria per cell, whereas your muscle cells have around a 1001 to 2000 mitochondria per cell. So our nervous system is really dependent upon healthy mitochondrial function and ketones when they're also a signaling molecule in our brain. And what they signal is, they shut down inflammation. So the body has these inflammatory amplifiers, and inflammation we know is at the root of all chronic degenerative disease and it only have inflammation in our brain. It produces things like fatigue, for example, fatigue is commonly associated with what we call neuroendocrine inflammation, where there's inflammation affecting the pituitary gland, the hypothalamus, all these key messenger based endocrine organs that produce hormones. And then it also produces inflammation that affects our mood, right? It affects our neurotransmitter balance. It affects our memory and our hippocampus. And so when people have inflamed brains, they get brain fog, fatigue, mood disorders, things like that. When ketones become elevated in the bloodstream, it shuts down what we call the inflammasome, which again is this inflammation amplifier, right? It really jacks up inflammation when it's activated. We turn that off, right? And so now inflammation is very, very low. Now we're able to function at a really high level. And that's why a lot of people like to get their body. Like when people are doing intermittent fasting, a lot of people say, wow, I feel like I think better. I think sharper. I'm able to get my best work done. This is what I hear all the time. People with mood disorders actually tend to do better when they're in a fasted state. Now, again, not for everybody, not right away, we have to kind of condition the body, but the benefits that you can get from intermittent fasting. When done properly, when you've built up the metabolic flexibility to handle this, are quite remarkable. Hey guys, I just wanted to interrupt this podcast to tell you about one of my favorite food products. I mean, if you're out there and you're looking for healthy snack options or

headache chronic degenerative disease
"degenerative disease" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

07:54 min | 10 months ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

"To recover well. And there's probably a lot of listeners that are like, yeah, I wish I could exercise. I just don't have the energy to do it. I feel like I'm so sore when I'm done. And so everybody's telling them exercise is good, but they don't feel good. When they're finished exercising, well, it can be the same thing with fasting, fasting is incredibly powerful. The science shows that it's one of the best ways to heal your body, shut down inflammation. It's really the best nutritional strategy you can practice to keep inflammation under control. However, just like exercise, you can overdo it, right? You can be too aggressive with it too quickly. And so depending on your baseline level of metabolic fitness, right? That's going to determine how much exercise your body is going to be able to handle at determines. Also, how much, how compressed your eating window would be. Like you mentioned, okay, you could do like an 8 hour eating window where your meals will stay between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.. And that can work great for, you know, for one person, but it could somebody else may not be metabolically fit enough to be able to do that. So if they start immediately doing that, it can over stress their system and that can cause poor sleep, fatigue, even weight gain, right? For some individuals, when they're overwhelmed when their body is stressed and they're not able to adapt effectively to it. It can cause a whole lot of unwanted symptoms. And so that's why we have to look at where the individual is baseline level of metabolic flexibility. Their ability to burn both fat and sugar for fuel, right? So you should be burning mostly fat when you're at rest, just a tiny bit of sugar as a fuel source. When you exercise at a high intensity should switch to burning mostly sugar and just a tiny bit of fat, your ability to kind of switch between those, like the ease of switching, it determines your level of metabolic flexibility. Somebody who's not metabolically flexible when they go a few hours between meals and their blood sugar goes down. They get hangry, right? They may have cravings. We might have a headache, they might feel irritable. They might be really hungry for some people to get really hungry for some people they get nauseous. They have trouble sleeping, right? If they go too long between meals, just between lunch and dinner, that if they go too long because they're so metabolically inflexible, it can cause a whole lot of stress hormone issues and I can actually throw off their sleep later at night, even though they're fed, right? When they, let's say they eat dinner, the cascade of events that took place because they missed that meal and they had a hypoglycemic reaction could cause poor sleep at night. So we have to look at, where is your baseline level of metabolic flexibility? Somebody use very metabolically flexible should easily be able to go four, 5 hours between meals and feel fine, right? They should easily be able to fast 12, 14, 16 hours overnight, like finishing dinner at 7. And really shouldn't feel hungry till let's say maybe ten, 11, 12 o'clock, the next day. And if you're really metabolically flexible, you might not even feel hungry very often. I know for myself, it's very rare that I feel hungry until I start eating, right? It's like my body is so metabolically flexible. It's so good at burning fat when I'm fasting. And I didn't used to be like this. This is something that I trained into my system. That I can fast for very long periods of time, not feel hungry, exercise, you know, like today I did a workout when I was fasted for 24 hours. So I hadn't eaten since lunch yesterday. I worked out at lunch today. And after that workout, even though I worked out very intensely, I still wasn't even hungry. Now, I did eat. I broke my fast and I did eat. And probably about a quarter of the way into my meal. All of a sudden I felt, oh wow, I'm hungry. So woke my appetite up, right? And that's a sign because my body was so metabolically flexible. Now, years ago when I was a personal trainer, my early my late teens, early 20s, it was like, I could not go to sleep without a protein shake before I went to bed. First thing in the morning, I was ravenous, had to eat like a huge breakfast, right? And I thought I had to eat 6 meals a day in order to maintain my muscle mass. It was very metabolically inflexible. So this is something that I've trained over time. And the benefit of that is it reduces overall inflammation, significantly lowers inflammation, improves your insulin, sensitivity, and your blood sugar regulation. When you're burning fat for fuel, your body produces ketones, right? So between meals, if you go, if you extend that period of time between meals, your body has to use body fat for energy. So not only does that help you burn your own body fat, which most people out there are looking to do, even thin people, it's important that we burn fat. I'm very lean. It's important that we burn fat 'cause that's where we store our toxins. And it's also a great energy source. Now, we can't get fatty acids up through the blood brain barrier because they're too large. So our body actually creates our liver, takes fatty acids, converts them into something called ketones. Ketones are smaller than fatty acids. They're water soluble. They cross into the blood brain barrier. And the way that our mitochondria burns these for energy is this uncoupling process where it actually almost it's almost like a wasting of calories because it produces a lot of heat. But in that process, we actually produce more mitochondria and the mitochondria become more efficient in our mitochondria produce all the energy in our cells. And the more mitochondria, the more healthy functional mitochondria that you have, the healthier your body is and your brain, your nervous system actually has more mitochondria per cell than almost any other organ system other than our reproductive organs. They have about 10,000 mitochondria per cell, whereas your muscle cells have around a 1001 to 2000 mitochondria per cell. So our nervous system is really dependent upon healthy mitochondrial function and ketones when they're also a signaling molecule in our brain. And what they signal is, they shut down inflammation. So the body has these inflammatory amplifiers, and inflammation we know is at the root of all chronic degenerative disease and it only have inflammation in our brain. It produces things like fatigue, for example, fatigue is commonly associated with what we call neuroendocrine inflammation, where there's inflammation affecting the pituitary gland, the hypothalamus, all these key messenger based endocrine organs that produce hormones. And then it also produces inflammation that affects our mood, right? It affects our neurotransmitter balance. It affects our memory and our hippocampus. And so when people have inflamed brains, they get brain fog, fatigue, mood disorders, things like that. When ketones become elevated in the bloodstream, it shuts down what we call the inflammasome, which again is this inflammation amplifier, right? It really jacks up inflammation when it's activated. We turn that off, right? And so now inflammation is very, very low. Now we're able to function at a really high level. And that's why a lot of people like to get their body. Like when people are doing intermittent fasting, a lot of people say, wow, I feel like I think better. I think sharper. I'm able to get my best work done. This is what I hear all the time. People with mood disorders actually tend to do better when they're in a fasted state. Now, again, not for everybody, not right away, we have to kind of condition the body, but the benefits that you can get from intermittent fasting. When done properly, when you've built up the metabolic flexibility to handle this, are quite remarkable. Hey guys, I just wanted to interrupt this podcast to tell you about one of my favorite food products. I mean, if you're out there and you're looking for healthy snack options or

headache chronic degenerative disease
"degenerative disease" Discussed on The Health Quest Podcast

The Health Quest Podcast

02:45 min | 11 months ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on The Health Quest Podcast

"Forward slash ohira book that's okay. So we want to give everybody a free copy of this book. Okay, back to different types of metabolites. One of the most well-known groups of metabolites are called short chain fatty acids. These are things like butyrate and propionate and acetic acid and these are really three and four and 5 carbon little chains of organic acids. And they are created when your bacteria break down long carbohydrate chains, which are dietary fibers, so they break these down to produce these shorter chains, the short chain fatty acids. And one of the really important benefits of these short chain fatty acids, they're slightly acidic. So they contribute to creating the proper acid base balance in the GI tract that promotes the growth of your good bacteria and suppresses the growth of your pathogens. When people have dysbiosis, they have an elevated PH, which means it's two alkaline. You have to get it back down to the slightly acidic condition and there are actually many different metabolites that are slightly acidic that contribute to creating and maintaining the slightly acidic proper acid base balance. There is not just the short chain fatty acids that I've mentioned, but organic acids and nucleic acids and fulvic acids is wide range of metabolites that have slightly acidic characteristics that create the proper asset based balance that supports and maintains a healthy microbiome. Another really important metabolite is glutathione, which is produced by lactobacillus fermentum ME three. This is another one of the essential formulas products and our products called reg active, but it turns out this unique strain of bacteria, lactobacillus fermentum ME three synthesizes glutathione and glutathione is called the master antioxidant and it regulates all of our detoxification and is critical for energy production and virtually every single chronic degenerative disease is associated with low glutathione levels. So boosting your glutathione levels is one of the most proactive things that people can do to promote their health and their long-term longevity. And just an example of a really critical metabolite, hydrogen peroxide is produced by

ohira chronic degenerative disease
"degenerative disease" Discussed on Asian America: The Ken Fong Podcast

Asian America: The Ken Fong Podcast

08:02 min | 1 year ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Asian America: The Ken Fong Podcast

"In school? But I doubt if I had mobile phones, whether I would be spending that time analyzing human connection as a small child. Now, why it's important to signpost these moves is, you know, I have a following on TikTok. I have like 90,000 people in there, and I will have kids if I post a human connection tip, say, I don't need human connection. I just need Wi-Fi connection. That poses a huge issue for our future as a species. Because human connection protects our immunity and extends our lifespan. So if you don't have human connection skills firstly in an AI future, how will you compete to get a job? I mean, how Singaporean do I sound right now? How will you compete? But unless you're really, you know, Elon Musk says something to do with people or like something to do with engineering. I like the two things for the future, right? So if you're not going to engineering, you better know something about people that if you've grown up with mobile phones or mask wearing parent or a Botox faced parent or a social distancing, you know, these might be things worth signposting for that generation. And I think we take it for granted. I've done it and I say in the book, I've done human connection wrong every which way because of my own personal trauma. But it's in the studying of something that you get your 10,000 hours, as well as practicing it. So I think you do it naturally. Your master at this, but it's worth for it's worth mentioning for those who may not have that in their future. It can be a skill set that one can learn. I think there are some people that are just naturally more gregarious. It's just like breathing. I don't know if I'm one of those people or if it was. You're definitely one of those people. No, no. You know, I was making adjustments to try to make friends, whatever. But I started very young. The thing that you touched on about 5 minutes ago that I want to get back to is you said, but I don't know something like, I don't know if you can apply this in America today. Because as you are controversial to talk about this in a polarized America and even our world here in Singapore is still polarized. The world is polarized right now between the right and the left. And what I'm advocating for and it's interesting because I'm a minority and I did have a time when I was like as an Asian female. I'm always the only Asian female and a speaking panel at a conference and all of this stuff. And I recently as south by Southwest I attended a lot of sessions and there was a lot of this signposting of I am this. I'm that. And what it does actually as a recipient of that, it makes the other person feel like you could possibly not understand my experience. We are too unalike. And that doesn't work very well for connection based on our unique humaneness. Even though I'm a minority and I do feel that our experience is different. But every human being's experience is different because we're all unique, right? But what I found was interesting because I live in Asia. So there's very few times when I attend panels with someone saying, as an Asian woman, or as a Chinese woman, well, you know, like everyone. Hello, everyone is. But you know, to go over and watch my fellow minorities, speaking that way. And to be in the audience, how did that affect my feeling of connectedness with the speaker? Or to the person? How did that did I feel closer to them? Or did I feel less close to them? And I think the answer is I felt a little bit less close to them. I felt like, oh, this person does not want me to come in here in my experience right now. They really need me to listen to them and be there for them, which I'm totally open for. But I don't know how much room there would be for my reciprocity here. And I thought that was an interesting gut reaction as someone who studies the space. I'm wondering what response you got in light of all this at south by Southwest when you spoke because what's going through my head right now, Simone is, okay, I've got this skill set. I've used it almost all my life. I know how powerful and useful it can be. But with the polarization that we have in this country, United States right now, I run up against this unnatural barrier that's more psychological, maybe when I sense, oh, you know, if I know that this person over here is a huge mega Trump loving white supremacist Christian nationalist, I don't know that I want to genuinely create this curiosity if we get into the ideological difference, then forget it, right? But if I can somehow push past my own repulsion and to say, well, instead of us talking about what makes this land so differently on these issues, I'd have to check my own heart to say, is that true? Do I really want to hear this? I would love to hear what makes you think that way. What about your upbringing? What about your story? What about your experiences? Has given you this particular lens because I don't believe any of us is born with a lens. The way we look at the world is kind of the sum total of everything that's happened to us. But that takes a lot of work and honestly, there are lots of people that I see on social media or television or whatever, and I'm like, yeah, I would not actually want to generate the connection power when I'm with that person. I'm not proud about that. But I think that's me with my skill set saying, I choose not to use it. So okay, I would lean into ask this question. What is your emotional leverage for having to connect with that person? Do you have to work with them? Do you have to sit with them at a dining table? Is that kind of a circumstance? Well, this is hypothetical person. Right now. Yeah, it's not a real person. I think, you know, even at the church we're attending now before we got there and they got a new pastor and he was more progressive and so some of the more the people let's say in the past who or even right now would have been natural Trump supporters, they pretty much left. So I'm already in a somewhat filtered environment. Aren't we all? Because doesn't that algorithm do that to us? Okay, so I've got two stories to make you think about this differently. Okay. The first is, you know, I mentioned that my mom has this very rare degenerative disease in the book and you know, I spent probably one and a half of the years hanging out at that nursing home visiting her almost every day. And what I can tell you about people at the end of their lives is that none of them are walking around talking about their roles. So I was the CEO of a bank and I went and did this with my life and I had a podcast or I had a TV show or I was a keynote speaker they are just sitting around waiting for people they love to visit them. And what this made me really think was is that all the roles that the world's puts on us. Like even from Trump supporter to liberal to conservative. When it comes down to the end of your life, this means nothing. You're a human being before you are a liberal or a conservative or a Asian or a white person or a black person, you're a human being. And human beings all crave the same things. Love connection, food, water, shelter. We know this. So those are your safe topics. Okay? Those are the things that everyone uniquely needs. And if you can look at the person not as the role that is presenting themselves in front of you. But for their unique humanness, it will make it a lot easier. To connect with them. And the second thing is as well, I recently met an African American guy at south by Southwest, and he told me he's from Philadelphia. He told me when he first went to Texas for the first time. He was not in Austin, which is very liberal. It's a blue dot in a red state. He went somewhere very conservative and he was sitting at a bar and there was a guy in a mega.

Elon Musk United States Southwest Singapore Simone Asia degenerative disease Trump Philadelphia Texas Austin
"degenerative disease" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

03:38 min | 1 year ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"Pressure arthritis and then being on a dozen different prescription medications and we consider good health unfortunately to be when we have diseases with symptoms that are readily relieved by prescription drugs. That's not anything remotely resembling. Health is so crazy it really is so many questions i want to ask you. One of them is about high blood pressure which i have experienced myself. But guess what now that i've increased my my my dosage of vitamin c. My blood pressure that and my water intake but mostly my vitamin c. My high blood pressure's gone like it's gone. The thing is. I mentioned earlier about taxes. Taxes are pro oxidant they oxidized all chronic degenerative disease including high blood pressure are the response of one part of the body in this case you vascular system to too much toxicity or too much oxidation and when you can get enough vitamin c on board it can counteract that i might add though however that it's never normal of course to have a chronic degenerative disease like high blood pressure and although it's far far beyond what we have a chance to talk about today you always need to evaluate the mouth because the mouth is the primary source of new taxes in new oxidants coming into the body on a daily basis Infected gums infected teeth infected tonsils infected sinuses. And nearly everybody has that. I mean the number of normal mouse that you can fine in anybody. Fifty five years of age of older is just almost non-existent but by the same token you'll never find just for example a heart patient or a cancer patient with a normal mouth it just doesn't exist. These things secrete and release toxins and pathogens directly into the bloodstream. Lymphatic drainage this is why Heart attacks we have the data as crazy as it might sound shows at all atherosclerotic plaque blocking Conditions that cause a heart attack. All of them are because of seating of the coronary artery with pathogens and toxins coming from the mouth..

chronic degenerative disease i chronic degenerative disease arthritis Heart attacks cancer
"degenerative disease" Discussed on Slate Money

Slate Money

07:11 min | 1 year ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Slate Money

"So adam you have published the definitive pandemic book before independence is even over. I'm not quite sure how that's even possible. What would you say is like the main message of this book. Wants the big takeaway. The people should leave with after having read it. Do you think is this point. That the keynesian riff this idea that what we discovered was not that we could fix the pandemic. Because we're not done with the pandemic at the time of publication by any means or that it leaves you with any very optimistic assessment of the state of american society or indeed european collective in the capacity for collective action in europe. But what we have learned. Is that whatever we can actually do. We can afford to pay for. And that i think is the central message. This is obviously direct follow on from conversations that many people have been having since two thousand eight. It's kind of conversation with the. Nt crowd with conversations which fed into the discussions of the early economic policy of the biden administration. That's i think that the particular claim. I want to demonstrate and furthermore this isn't true just for the rich world so we mustn't think of this country by country. But if you've got the right. Settings on federal reserve policy can in fat loosen the monetary framework for the entire world and out there in the emerging market economies. There were lots of highly sophisticated actors. Now that can take advantage of that. So this is sort of balance to in terms of you know the committee to save the world. And talking of which i note that bob rubin reviewed your book in the new york times which wow yeah. He was the early committee to save the world within the framework of constraints of how much money he had to save the world with me that he had to like rummage around in in tools to find whatever money he needed to say well in the current committee to save the world. Which is jay powell and the central bank is they just printing whatever they need and not only. Does it save america. But you'll saying that saves sub saharan. Africa will south. America will other places to what it saves is their banks. What it saves is their financial system. What it means is that we suffer heart attack on top of the cancer and the steady degenerative disease were also suffering from so. That's what it does. What we've learned is how to prevent to be specific here the extraordinary turmoil that we saw in global financial markets in march twenty twenty adding to our troubles. And what we were able to do is to neutralize. That is a problem. In fact to extraordinary extent so peru by the end of twenty twenty was able to issue a century really very modest interest rates. Now that doesn't mean that they don't have a constitutional crisis going on and it doesn't mean that they've been able to contain the pandemic in lima where there's ten million people from seventy percent or an informal employment hasn't solved those problems. This is the sting in the tail of the canes quote. We can afford anything we can actually do. So it's the actually doing as it were has been revealed to us is the central as the central issue but in as far as money and finances concerned. We do indeed have an incredible capacity to neutralize the problem reading your book and going back to march twenty twenty and you really sort of lay out the crisis that the financial crisis we were facing at the time it was kinda shocked to reread it and realized just how close we had come to just like you said a total heart attack. I wonder if you could lay that out a little bit for our listeners. Because i think at this stage in twenty twenty one with you know everyone talking about inflation people might have forgotten how close we came to collapse and mean it was really striking but the bond market went bonkers it absolutely an is the treasury market right so in a sense. This is the key thing for people interested in finance. I think always to juggle in their heads right the headline grabbing equities stories the big name tack fang and so on everyone gets excited about so rooting field team or something in sports competition and then there's the boring really boring bombed equivalent of that which is know fixed income debt issued by those same companies which no one ever talks about. It's a big market but it's just unfathomably tedious. And then there's the fixed income thing where all the politics is concentrated which is the macro economic bitter the financial markets where. You're not betting on the team. You're betting on were the viability of the entire franchise and that government debt and the biggest market of all in that is the us treasury market. That is the gigantic walker. The twenty trillion dollar market to endo markets that's whereas the benchmark interest rates And it's very complex. Picture of the federal reserve. Central banks bassett demographic fools all of that but the fundamentalists option in that market. Is you can wish transact and for the more you can transact in huge volume without it affecting the price so this is pretty close to a market like when very big actors could make very big moves without it affecting the price that tells you the the market is so gigantic the individual rationality can be separated from the aggregate. It's very basic axiom. Certain sorts of thinking about economics the terrifying thing that happened in the second and third week of march that broke down the prices for us treasuries with moving in the wrong way the right way and inverted commerce gotten used to is that when equities go down people panic and run into bonds so their prices go up and if their prices go up yield the effective interest rate will get goes down. So that's kind of self stabilizing thing. Juices the economy to have lower interest rate. So the first weird thing we had was the in fact. The price of bonds was falling to the price of treasuries swelling to. So that's telling you everyone selling everything sending equities and treasuries the only thing they won't almost by process of deduction cash and then the other thing that happened is because so many people were trying to sell at once in this market which is normally just assumed to be just this giant machine. It stopped working. You couldn't transact. I was speaking to a bunch of investors in hong kong giving them flashbacks and one of them was telling me about just the he can remember the day the eighteenth of march and he tried to sell two billion dollars worth of treasuries couldn't sell them. There was no bid and that is terrifying because this is the piggy bank right when you allocate allocated portfolio most the big portfolio allocations. Don't hold much cash. will they holders things. They can sell instantly very quickly at a price they note. Let me ask you about the causality here. Because i mean there was this big treasury crisis and you can kind of see like right. Now we're coming up to another those periodic times when we hit debt ceiling debate and everyone worries about the treasury market and government defaults. No none of which ever seems to have any effect on the treasury market or treasury yields. Anything like that and yet a pandemic had this you know almost existential effect on the treasury market and almost broke into and it was only absolutely extraordinary action from the federal reserve. Pulling out all the stops that had been invented for the global financial crisis and then some that prevented this..

biden administration bob rubin jay powell steady degenerative disease heart attack saharan american society america us treasury adam the new york times lima peru europe treasury Africa cancer federal reserve
"degenerative disease" Discussed on The World: Latest Edition

The World: Latest Edition

06:46 min | 1 year ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on The World: Latest Edition

"Never forget canes chantey gone into versus germany that goal a header by team. Captain hurricane have secure england's place in the quarter-finals watching goals. like this is bittersweet for john's dials. his the nabi was part of the last england team to win an international football tournament. That was the world cup in nineteen sixty six million one victory afterwards. Nobby stiles famously danced jay on the side of the page holding the world cup trophy in one hand. His teeth in the other last october stein's died with advanced dimension. His john spoke with me on the phone. it was aware was losing his memory thankfully in his last years. We wasn't aware of how poli wash now. Besides began to develop symptoms of dementia. When he turns sixty john is convinced the practicing headers every day in training was what caused the brain damage. Our out doubt conservatively. I think he will have headed the ball train. And over seventy thousand times so for me playing the game. He load killed him. It's not just a hunch. That has john stein's blaming football for his dad's death after he passed away. John donated his fold his brain to science. The results showed knobby side suffered from chronic traumatic in steph allopathy or cd it's a neurodegenerative disease that's linked to repeated blows to the head most often seen in professional boxers styles isn't the only one from the england team to had brain disease in fact out of the eleven players on the pitch that day five develop dementia and four of those men have already died from neuro pathologist willie stewart is with the queen elizabeth university hospital in glasgow. He says none of this is a coincidence. Couple years ago we showed that for football for soccer players. The risk of death with degenerative disease was considerably higher three times higher than would expect so. You're you're times more likely to develop dementia as a professional food. Bola as you wear a population stewart decided to investigate further in his latest study just released he had more bad news for professional footballers he found that the longer. Your career is the greater the risk of brain disease and for players who had the ball a last like defenders. The risk of dementia is far higher. The research was funded by england's football association. The group appears to be rattled. A few days ago issued new guidelines recommending. The players should only carry out ten so-called high impact headers in week's training. Really stuart says he's not impressed. Unfortunately the Based on pseudoscientific analysis with figures from the air. Nobody's gonna be leasing. This was going to be enforcing this is. Just what's i contacted the fa for comment but it said no one was available for an interview. Stuart says the only safe solution here is to ban headers from football altogether. When people say it's the end of the game. I think we need to look at them. In the eye and say which would you rather. We make no change to the game or would continue to see your heroes on the field. Developing dementia and very high rate prominent. Voices say more evidence is needed. Vincent gupta is chief medical officer with v pro. The international federation of professional footballers conclusion that hating is the calls for these higher full long-term neurodegenerative disease is not valid based on this single studio. Each why we need more county chic information about that the logical hypothesis. But we don't have these evidence good barr says banning headers in the english league doesn't make sense if international leagues. Don't follow suit. Johnston says he finds all of this pretty disheartening and not only because of what happened with his father. It is also a concern for me. Because i wasn't as good as i was a professional football for ten years so watching that happened to my dad and i speak to other ex. Players are similar aged fifty seven. We're massively concerned Spoke to annex primarily jumping coupla weeks ago and he said he was terrified style. Tasmania he feeds abandoned by the fa and that he's not the only one the footballer tracy like katelyn as soon as that. No use to the clothes. They don't see any point in trying to help them. I mean how those people how the people in authority can look at themselves in the mirror. And think i'll let all these people had the ball and they're gonna get hill like my dad. Did i don't know how they can live with themselves. Really says the class action lawsuit could soon be in the works. Ultimately professional football bodies will be forced to change their tune but for many players. He says it may already be too late for the world. I'm to in london finally today. After nearly a year and a half the canadian border is open again in one direction anyway. Vaccinated americans can now cross into canada without having to quarantine for canadians heading south. No crossing over as benjamin pain reports from washington state. The new rules are leading to long awaited reunion. Today with some families still divided. Justin moat has yet to meet his six month old nephew in person even though he's really wanted to and lives nearby so close and then we're talking thirty minute forty five minute drive to meet family. Skipped my blood. And i never even laid off in a photograph lives in bellingham washington while his sister and nephew live into austin british columbia. Normally that border divide wouldn't be a problem but the border shutdown not essential travel march of last year when the us and canada imposed restrictions on each other because of the cove nineteen pandemic so an announcement from canadian. Prime minister justin trudeau. Last month was welcome news to moat in his family. On august ninth we will be opening non-essential travel to americans who've been fully vaccinated for at least fourteen days. This is in recognition of our unique bond especially between border communities but not all border communities are rejoicing at some part because the us isn't reciprocating. At least not at the land border. If a canadian wants to visit the us they can only fly not drive..

dementia football england Captain hurricane Nobby stiles brain disease john stein neurodegenerative disease willie stewart queen elizabeth university hos john nabi poli Vincent gupta international federation of pr stein degenerative disease Bola fa world cup
"degenerative disease" Discussed on SGGQA Podcast – SomeGadgetGuy

SGGQA Podcast – SomeGadgetGuy

04:15 min | 2 years ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on SGGQA Podcast – SomeGadgetGuy

"Let's build something cool together. That hearing loss is just age related. When we encounter societies that are a little less technologically infused then more western society when they're not bombarded by constant noise in their environment and from their entertainment. We don't see the same distinct rates of hearing loss and in the modern era receiving rates of hearing loss increase in younger and younger people. So they're to me is a much more environmental based 'cause to hearing loss than just well as you get older your ears were out instead. I think as you get older. You've just subjected your ears to so much impact and so much noise that that's what's wearing them out more so than just age degradation will now. We're finding that when you starve. The brain of important pieces of information like human speech parts of your brain might start to degrade and it seems as you lose the ability to hear speech in complicated environments. That's a pretty good predictor of you possibly encountering some type of degenerative disease later in life. If there's ever been a call to say take care of your ears and protect what you still have. I don't know what else we could serve. You know i. I've encountered so many people. I've already lost my hearing. Nothing i can do about now. Well you still have some so. Why don't you protect that. And this would be a really good time to start the process of trying to see an audiologist where some hearing aids might bring back some of that your ability to hear are even some of those here ables. They're they're so silly and they're kind of expensive but they genuinely do a phenomenal job of filtering out noise and helping you focus on speech. Sometimes they sound a little. Am radio but do you want to hear the person you're talking to or do you want to constantly be going. Ha what am. I definitely suffer from some of that if i'm in a busy coffee shop and hard tile and reflective surfaces on all the walls. I can't hear someone sitting right in front of me. I'm reading lips as much as i am. Actually hearing their speech this to me is also another data point to consider my own personal health. Because kinda like my brain. And i'd prefer it to stay functioning as i get older. I'd like to have a decent quality of life as i become a senior citizen. So i'm just trying to catch it back up with the chat here from taco. yeah. That sounds very concerning turns out a lot of our hobbies inhabits caused serious illnesses and conditions slightly terrifying from ted talks. Ted ted talks tech could not say that correlation not causation. We don't know the function of we don't fully understand how the ear degrades we don't understand the functions of the brain that directly relate to this what we're seeing in a study like. This is pretty good data to suggest predictive right now. This has been an ongoing conversation. As you lose your hearing that might affect balance that might affect a cognitive Issues and this is another study following up on a degenerative brain diseases dementia when we start seeing numbers like ninety one percent. We don't understand the cause. I don't believe anyone is claiming they understand. How the damage to the celia in the inner ear results in a lowered frequency response for human speech might contribute to tonight us and what that does to the auditory signal paths going to the brain and then what parts of the brain directly affected for these types of degenerative diseases if we understood all of that we probably have a better handle on treating degenerative brain diseases..

ables degenerative disease Ted ted aids degenerative brain diseases de ted treating degenerative brain di
"degenerative disease" Discussed on The Highwire with Del Bigtree

The Highwire with Del Bigtree

09:05 min | 2 years ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on The Highwire with Del Bigtree

"A look at this over. Three hundred million doses of the vaccine have been given the us for most people the vast majority of people the vaccines been administered with little or no side effects but again just because the vaccine is generally safe doesn't mean that it's one hundred percents safe what's been happening over the last year and a half is people that are trying to tell the truth. People that are trying to get answers are having a hard time. Getting their truce communicated without being vilified without being ridiculed without being censored. And i think that's the general experience of of the people in this group that are going to be talking to you. Today i enrolled in the face. Three clinical trial here. In the united states for astrazeneca. I received the maderno vaccine mattie received or second dose of the pfizer vaccine as a participant in the critical trial after the injection. I had immediate heart palpitations. And feeling as if i was going to pass and my blood pressure reading was so high that i don't know how i didn't have a stroke around midnight. I went to stand. And both my legs buckle. I was suffering from severe paris dijon and was paralyzed partially paralyzed from my chest. Down neuropathy in both feet involuntary muscle twitching and weakness internal tremors. I have debilitating brain fog. I have facial hair sesia and nerve pain over the next two and a half months. Her abdominal muscle pain became unbearable. She developed it. there's no symptoms. Include gastro premisses nausea vomiting radic one pressure and heart rate memory loss. She mixes up words headaches dizziness fainting. I had convulsions and nighttime seizures. I have my six year old daughter. Wake me up from a fit in the middle of the night. I lost control of my legs and my bladder along with my dignity. Will i get better. Will i developed parkinson's or ms or a l. s. or another neuro degenerative disease. I don't know and my doctors can't tell me. Well i ever run again. I ever ride my bike. I would give anything to get in my car. Industry is it. I had rays bloodwork. Mri's cat scans ultrasounds eeg's and more today. The medical community has still remained baffled unable to restore my health. My medical team at the hospital refused to associate my condition with vaccine and i continually asked them to report to veers. But i don't think they did. What happened to me is now happen to thousands. The test clinic agreed to pay for my bills. I have yet to see a single sent this group people. They have very super request. They just want to be seeing. They want their stories heard. They would like to be believed. Please do not erase us. Please do not make invisible over. One is permitted to be seen her believed because she has not been. We need to be believed. That is the biggest issue. We just want you guys to believe that this is real we cannot work. We cannot care for our families or children ourselves. We are struggling to make it through each day. Abandoned by our healthcare teams we are the collateral damage of the pandemic. Obviously powerful testimony. I think it's heartening to know that there are politicians getting involved and starting to starting to bring attention to the truth of what's taking place here but when we look at that handful of people just think about the fact that this four hundred thirty thousand reports and growing around this country four hundred thirty thousand people or more. That have been injured. That's just who've been reported that's just who knew there was a system. That's just who had a doctor that would agree to help them with that report. Most of the reports. we're getting from hospitals. All around the country is that they're being shut down. They will not report any injuries trying to make the vaccine. Look better than it is. This is a crisis. This is something like nothing we've ever experienced in the united states of america. I'm not saying that vaccine injury hasn't happened for sure. This show has been following the injuries that have happened throughout the decades and my background and making the film faxed clearly revealed that there's been vaccine injuries and those families are watching these videos. And these testimonies saying. I know exactly where these people are out of been ridiculed my whole life for telling the truth whether it was about my child or myself. They try to erase it and to think that our health agencies are discounting these reports are nullifying the existence of these people going through this that they rushed a vaccine on the population without a proper capture system. If they're gonna say that varies is not accurate enough. Then why did you launch this without any ability to capture the actual injuries. And then you're not using the scientific method. I wanna be clear. The scientific method would say that with a brand new product which this is whether it's pfizer whether it's whether it's madonna or johnson and johnson astra zeneca in europe. These are brand new products never tested on human beings. Under those circumstances every injury is supposed to be considered an actual connection to the vaccine until it can be proven otherwise every single one should be an investigation because we have no knowledge. You do not go out of your way to say no discount all those and they're going to have to prove themselves that's the only with the product that's been approved not one that's not approved right now. The scientific method say we must assume the vaccine is dangerous until it proves otherwise we should be challenging and yet fout. She'd nobody wants to talk about these injuries. That are happening all the facebook pages that are being taken down hundreds of thousands of reports these pages where people are talking netscape. Had doctors weigh in on when doctors were asked to weigh in on the safety. This didn't end up being. I think it's safe. This ended up being hundreds of doctors talking about their own injuries from vaccination. I'm not even sure that was what this arctic was supposed to be about and we know for a fact that their injuries happening. The cdc knows that the fda knows it whether it's you know the bell's palsy that's over two thousand. They know that's happening. They said it from the beginning. They saw in their own trials. They saw some bell's palsy condition. You have jeon. Bahrae syndrome is taking place. We know about this rare nervous syndrome now from new nerve syndrome to johnson. And johnson's vaccine or you know you've got blood clots thrombosis site opinion. All the cdc has had to sit down and talk to scientists and scientists. Thing i don't think we should give this to people. We should maybe be pulling back myocarditis swelling of the heart and children especially taking place. There you have it end pericarditis. These are all known side effects but to say well it's really rare really rare for one hundred and something thousand reports is not rare. We are way beyond rare and you cannot just keep shoving this under bed like a kid. That won't clean the room. We've got to clean this up. But here's what's really disturbing when we're seeing all these injuries now when we're seeing over nine thousand deaths in a system. That is totally under reported. You've gotta start asking yourself. Did they really not know that these injuries were going to happen. Did they really not know that these deaths were. We're going to happen. We have seen a failure of the corona virus vaccine in over two decades. They've never made a corona virus vaccine. That did not cause antibody dependent enhancement meeting. The vaccine helped the virus. In fact the animal help that make the animal sick and potentially lead to death in virtually every animal trial. So it's not like you is unknown. That were real risk to this. The technology had never been injected as a vaccine into a single animal before it was injected into people in these trials. and so. here's what. I have a hard time believing. I have a hard time believing that they really had great trials and they know that suddenly after twenty years of failure every attempt not just one of johnson and johnson. Astrazeneca pfizer maderno. All of them suddenly figured out the problem got it right. That defies all reason. This sounds more like propaganda to me than science and there was billions and billions of dollars to be made if you like that clip and be sure to check out our live broadcasts of the high wire every thursday morning at eleven. Am pacific time. You can watch it on. I tunes end twitter we'll see..

nausea vomiting radic headaches dizziness astrazeneca neuro degenerative disease pfizer united states of america heart palpitations johnson mattie seizures parkinson paris Bahrae syndrome nervous syndrome nerve syndrome cdc bell madonna netscape
"degenerative disease" Discussed on WSB-AM

WSB-AM

01:36 min | 2 years ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on WSB-AM

"Metro Atlanta taking advantage getting out for their first Sunday brunch since coronavirus restrictions were lifted, But Channel two action news reporter Kristin Jennings reports, many restaurants are having a hard time keeping up with the crowds. Metro Atlanta restaurants no longer have a shortage of customers. I thought it dining in You know, maybe a month or so ago. Now the problem is not enough workers to meet the growing demand. The lines are insane. The wait times are insane, So it's just easier to take out most time employees they're having to pick up doubles and come in on their off days. To make up for the shortage. The governor's executive order means restaurants can have more customers inside tables must keep a distance of at least 3.5. Ft versus six ft apart. Six person has died after a shooting in South Carolina Wednesday by a former Falcons player, Police say Philip Adam Adam shot 38 year old A C technician, Robert shook outside a home where he also killed a couple of their two grandchildren plus another a seat technician. Then Adam's turned the gun on himself. Adam's brain will be research for degenerative disease. The York County Coroner says tests will check for the kind of degeneration that affected a number of pro athletes and may cause cognitive disorders. Douglas County deputies air searching for road rage suspect involved in a shooting on I 20 Friday afternoon. It was the latest in a serious of metro Atlanta highway shootings. Deputies say a man and a small black car shot into the rear view mirror of a white Honda accord. This was on Thornton rode entry. Rev. Suspect then backed up that entry ramp and sped away. Anyone with information should call police and a remembrance service today held for Prince Philip at Canterbury Cathedral Ability of.

Kristin Jennings South Carolina Falcons Philip Adam Adam Six person six ft Metro Atlanta Robert Wednesday Prince Philip Douglas County Adam Canterbury Cathedral Honda Channel a month or so ago 38 year old two grandchildren Friday afternoon today
BTS #46 David (Dedi) Meiri PhD on Cannabis and Cancer, The Future of Cannabis Research - burst 05

The Curious About Cannabis Podcast

04:24 min | 2 years ago

BTS #46 David (Dedi) Meiri PhD on Cannabis and Cancer, The Future of Cannabis Research - burst 05

"Suit. Today may not looking with thirty eight or centers every time that we are the change so having their kind of a big picture that they can in the federal candidate may influence levin affecting human body looking on the older to get first of all. Give me the tools to ask wished and then the question is are starting to emerging. Of course it's everything is that they did just chemistry and that still in then so having these abilities in these tools first of all change our been away. Many many many scientists physicians collaborations companies approach means. Just that the doing each experiment but they know nothing about the molecules using. Can i purify in with him. I don't know the those music In these open the door for me last year to enter to many different angles of different illnesses and diseases using candidates. You know the best thing. Neuro physician in the world approaching means today the doing this experiment. They need you with me. You're not saying you know this is this is all and we've you know so more and more and more may lab change the way you i researched talking to grow in. There was things so out there. Light with a patient. You know epilepsy or a sleep disorders or in two zero zero there on the on the patient instead just i want to do the understand now the reason. Why can't this effect in which compound how to improve so the roof from allow of six seven students to a level forty five plow which have different groups. I have a group of chemists doing analysis everything every group to doing cancer biology and we can talk about the perfume one every doing a research around neuro. Degenerative diseases like alzheimer's epilepsy. The order In every group. That's working how kennedy's affect the immune system few types of small small think about in small. But it's not be groups. It's individual the doing other things in the last five years in other big project that we did. We crane to big data database in israel on the patient. So in the last five years every cannabis in being bigness. Again there is you know there is a probes to be a small country despite for your board does day and but there is benefit that everybody knows everybody. And everybody's working together. So until last year we had just eight authorize globals just eight greenhouse is easier to work with them to follow up to every candidates. Be every a cannabis They ever product. The patient can get go through my lap. I analyzed all defeated candidates in a in there on the other side. We follow up on on the patient. How it's affecting so does it died improve. Sleep mainly kind of sign of and which i don't call it side effect. If you have a problem of saying oh slipping improving scooping. It's not your scientific. But we we measure that in which we started to to bring that to bed. Get into completed to try to match. Which type of cannabis in which profile of candidates affecting which illnesses in what

Israel Last Year SIX Two Main Strands More Than Ninety Percent Today Eight Forty Five Plow Each Experiment Last Five Years Two Main Cannabis Strain Alzheimer Seven Students Eight Greenhouse Banjul Four Nurses ONE Zero Annabi First Levin Degenerative Diseases Alzheimer's Epilepsy Epilepsy Kennedy Cancer
Advancing Cell Therapies Beyond Cancer

The Bio Report

03:19 min | 2 years ago

Advancing Cell Therapies Beyond Cancer

"Thanks for joining us as a pleasure to be here. We're gonna talk about regulatory t cell therapy and cinema bio therapeutics efforts to develop these for autoimmune and degenerative diseases perhaps we can start their. What are regulatory t cell. Therapy's and how do they work sure So this is a feel that has Really over the last two decades exploded in our understanding of the importance of these cells in controlling everything from allergy to organ transplant rejection to autoimmune diseases. In basically what to rags. Dr is a very small population of white blood cells largely circulating in the blood but also present in tissues and these cells have the capability and capacity to actually shutdown unwanted immune responses perhaps most Typically in patients that have a defect in these cells called apex patients They'll usually die within a year or two of massive autoimmune and allergic responses unless they get a bone marrow transplant from a mother or father that That gives back there to population so these cells are really essential to controlling tolerance in the immune system preventing immune cells from attacking and destroying self tissue. You see these. Potentially addressing large populations of people with autoimmune degenerative diseases potentially how big a market re talking about an. How effective are we today in treating these conditions. Yes certainly this is a very big bucket ranging everything from rheumatoid arthritis to multiple sclerosis type one diabetes and over eighty other autoimmune diseases Up through including degenerative diseases like ls potentially alzheimer's or even parkinson's disease and the reason is is that so many of these diseases are mediated by uncontrolled inflammation. People don't fully appreciate the fact that the immune system is playing an active role in a of of diseases outside of the more classic immune diseases so when you think about market potential it's almost impossible to To ferret out what the actual size will be in reality. of course These cells are gonna be used. I in diseases that are highly morbid and potentially a strong medical need either as disease class or as individuals and we hope to start out in diseases that are clearly a fall within that that rubric but ultimately one can imagine cell. Therapy's being a new pillar of medicine where you can think about them. In a variety of immunological settings where you wanna give a treatment once or a couple of times and then have a long-term living drug that will suppress unwanted inflammatory responses.

Autoimmune Degenerative Diseas Autoimmune Diseases Sclerosis Type Degenerative Diseases Alzheimer's Parkinson's Disease Allergy Rheumatoid Arthritis Diabetes
"degenerative disease" Discussed on Academy of Neurologic Physical Therapy Podcast

Academy of Neurologic Physical Therapy Podcast

08:19 min | 2 years ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Academy of Neurologic Physical Therapy Podcast

"With my peleton bike so i spend a lot of time doing that Now that there's a pandemic a lot of walking outside and the pond in my neighborhood alright. So we heard from heather and what you to do in your spare time but bark. Can you tell us a little bit about what you like to doing your free time. I was born and raised in montana where the snow was on the side of mountains So i grew up skiing. But i moved to minnesota. Twenty years ago and boycotted the concept of ice skating With the pandemic our family has had a lot more downtime and we bought our kids ice skates about a month ago and i watched them on snow boots. So this morning. I actually went and bought ice skates to join my kids so there was a lot more motor learning a lot lot of balance and falls but And and it's really a joy to be coached by your six eight and eleven year old on how to do a skill that they're better at So that's what we're doing this winter. That's great a very humbling experience right. Yes lastly i know that everyone in the program committee has some more stories to tell some maybe not appropriate for broadcasting but far. Do you have any program stories that we can share with our listeners. So last year was kind of just at the. I think it was almost the last day of. Csm when we're kind of tired and at the finish line and we were just talking to the speakers up front kind of talking about a game plan and getting ready to introduce them and as we're standing at the podium not speaking into the podium all the sudden we hear this voice coming over the sound system over our heads of very official person doing a very nice introduction Really didn't know where the voice was coming from as it turns out next door the other section had gotten a few minutes headstart on us and we are getting their audio and our audio is getting patched into there's So we thought maybe we should just have the audiences switch rooms and listened to the speaker in the opposite room. Maybe that would have prepared us for this. Virtual environment where But after a few minutes than audiovisual guys Fix it up. But that was pretty comical at the end of the a weekend that degree story. And i'm not sure if that was the same room that will hours in but that was kind of the war story. Irish digging of to Where the rooms had gotten crossed there. So that's funny And another thing. That had happened to me ways. When i felt like i was managing to really well. We had a lot of people in the room at the time. It was the front of the room that the person who is introducing the speakers and I had one of our whole group of just complete rockstars from the field of physical therapy there and I was interacting with them. They go to introduce them and introduce the lead speaker. And i say and here is adele field slit who we all know in love and it turns out. Her name is not pronounced that way at all. I was really embarrassed after that. I sat down my face. Must've been rod Because that's not how you savor name and say that. I really put my foot my mouth. I guess you could say. I think it's your photon your mouth. Yes i was scared to even say it now. I thought it was going to stay at wrong again. I have a war story to tell about you. The the first time i met you in person But we can say that for later date. But i think csm. I'm obviously biased. But i think it's absolutely the best conference That you can possibly attend as a therapist and maybe across in other healthcare professions And the gift that our committee has given is amazing programming from amazingly smart intelligent or researchers clinicians and educators and so our job is simply pick from this bevy of great programming and help put it together So he couldn't do it. Without all these presenters all the individual six years included So we're excited for. Csm every year. This is obviously the look a little bit different But i think at the core of it. We're going to have some phenomenal educational programming. And yeah we won't be able to sit in the chairs next to each other or actually search for a chair with each other and try to separate But we'll all be attended this year. And i think one benefit this year's the cost of attending. Csm is quite a bit lower. The tuition is almost half the price. I believe there's no air travel there's no lodging there's no sixteen dollar drinks and the coffee line in the morning. Just gonna be me. And my wife said there's some benefits to the virtual formatting so make sure you do sign up even in this awkward year to attend encourage your co workers. That have never come before. I know i have a ton of co workers. That never come because they can't get the time off. That's not an excuse this year so we're hoping for a really good numbers because again we're gonna offer that very very good high quality education experience and so how do we have to sign up yet. Is there a deadline or is it right up to the middle of march. That's a great question. there's no reliever deadline so there's no incentive to register early but it does help us with the planning on expecting how many people are going to call them up. Joined kind of like what. Heather mentioned with the bandwidth on the virtual rooms So you can register at any moment. And i believe he can register up until the very last day of march. So if you've talked it up really good. Some of your colleagues might be attending the last day to kind of plug in and get twenty. See us at the last last minute. So yet you can register at any moment Up until the conferences over at the march some great so at the end of every year every attendee is probably tired. I don't think anyone is as tired as the two of you and yet the amount of support that you give physical therapist whole profession and each one on the programming committee is a may is. And i'll tell you when i get home and i know bart's tired and then in the mail comes a handwritten. Thank you note from. Bartsch is just an amazing feeling. And and i'm just so excited to be part of it heather and burt. Thank you both so much for joining us today. He gave us a wealth of information. And this is really helpful for anybody planning on going to see them this year. So thank you so much. We hope that you'll be back again next year to do this with us. Thank you so much for having ashley really appreciate it. Records great to talk to you and all of your sick friends and looking forward to seeing you at virtual. Csm this year were saying you to. We hope to see you at our csm mixer on tuesday february fourth at eight pm eastern time. This podcast was produced headed by the a n. P. t. degenerative diseases. Special interest for podcast. Our team included farm paget sarah crandall katie mcgraw adriana carey and mirror pierce and i am rebecca martin subscribed to or newsletter on the an pt website. Neuropathy dot org or check us out on facebook and twitter. If you enjoyed today's episode please share it with a colleague today and thanks to jimmy mackay for providing music and thank you for listening. What a brilliant idea. So so much fun. Let's try it again. And then i'll give you a better answer question. I'm so sorry we. Of course the internet just suen gone. I have no idea said dr. And he'll just maybe as factual and maybe it's not a bunker bunker bar we love the bunker or as we say in boston the bunka you're in the bunka..

jimmy mackay rebecca martin minnesota six years next year sixteen dollar last year Twenty years ago six tuesday february fourth boston twitter Heather Bartsch facebook this year today adele two montana
"degenerative disease" Discussed on 4D: Deep Dive into Degenerative Diseases - ANPT

4D: Deep Dive into Degenerative Diseases - ANPT

07:04 min | 2 years ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on 4D: Deep Dive into Degenerative Diseases - ANPT

"That we can share with our listeners. Last year was kind of just at the. I think it was almost the last day of. Csm when we're kind of tired and at the finish line and we were just talking to the speakers up front kind of talking about a game plan and getting ready to introduce them and as we're standing at the podium not speaking into the podium all the sudden we hear this voice coming over the sound system over our heads of very official person. Doing a very nice introduction really didn't know where the voice was coming from as it turns out Next door the other section had gotten a few minutes headstart on us and we are getting their audio and our audio is getting patched into there's So we thought maybe we should just have the audiences switch rooms and listened to the speaker in the opposite room. Maybe that would have prepared us for this. Virtual environment where But after a few minutes than audiovisual guys were able to fix it up but that was pretty comical at the end of the a weekend that's degree story and i'm not sure if that was the same room that will hours in but that was kind of the worst story. Irish digging of to where the rooms had gotten crossed there so that's funny And another thing. That had happened to me ways. When i felt like i was managing to really well. We had a lot of people in the room at the time. It was the front of the room the person who is introducing the speakers and I had one of our whole group of just complete rockstars from the field of physical therapy there and I was interacting with them. They go to introduce them and introduced the lead speaker. And i say and here is adele field slit who we all know in love and it turns out. Her name is not pronounced that way at all. I was really embarrassed after that. I sat down my face. Must've been rod Because that's not how you savor name and say that. I really put my foot my mouth. I guess you could say. I think it's your photon your mouth. Yes i was scared to even say it now. I thought it was going to stay at wrong again. I have a war story to tell about you. The the first time i met you in person But we can say that for later date. But i think csm. I'm obviously biased. But i think it's absolutely the best conference That you can possibly attend as a therapist and maybe across in other healthcare professions And the gift that our committee has given is amazing programming from amazingly smart intelligent articulate researchers clinicians and educators and so our job is simply pick from this bevy of great programming and help put it together So he couldn't do it. Without all these presenters all the individual six years included So we're excited for csm every year. This year's obviously the look a little bit different But i think at the core of it. We're going to have some phenomenal educational programming. And yeah we won't be able to sit in the chairs next to each other or actually search for a chair with each other and try to separate But we'll all be intended this year. And i think one benefit this year's the cost of attending. Csm is quite a bit lower. The tuition is almost half the price. I believe there's no air travel. there's no lodging. there's no sixteen dollar drinks and the coffee line in the morning is just gonna be me. And my wife said there's some benefits to the virtual formatting so make sure you do sign up even in this awkward year to attend encourage your co workers that have never come before i know. I have a ton of co workers. That never come because they can't get the time off. That's not an excuse this year so we're hoping for a really good numbers because again we're gonna offer that very very good high quality education experience and so how do we have to sign up yet. Is there a deadline or is it right up to the middle of march. That's a great question. there's no reliever deadline so there's no incentive to register early but it does help us with the planning on expecting how many people are going to call them up. Joined kind of like what. Heather mentioned with the bandwidth on the virtual rooms So you can register at any moment. And i believe he can register up until the very last day of march. So if you've talked it up really good. Some of your colleagues might be attending the last day to kind of plug in and get twenty. See us at the last last minute. So yet you can register at any moment Up until the conferences over at the march some great so at the end of every year every attendee is probably tired. I don't think anyone is as tired as the two of you and yet the amount of support that you give physical therapist whole profession and each one on the programming committee is a may is. And i'll tell you when i get home and i know bart's tired and then in the mail comes a handwritten. Thank you note from. Bart is just an amazing feeling. And and i'm just so excited to be part of it heather and barr. Thank you both so much for joining us today. Gave us a wealth of information and this is really helpful for anybody planning on going to see them this year. So thank you so much. We hope that you'll be back again next year to do this with us. Thank you so much for having ashley really appreciate it. Records great to talk to you and all of your sick friends and looking forward to seeing you at virtual. Csm this year were saying you to. We hope to see you at our csm mixer on tuesday february fourth at eight pm eastern time. This podcast was produced headed by the a n. P. t. degenerative diseases. Special interest for podcast. Team our team included farm paget sarah crandall katie mcgraw adriana carey and mirror pierce and i am rebecca martin subscribed to or newsletter on the an. Pt website neuropathy dot org or check us out on facebook and twitter. If you enjoyed today's episode please share it with a colleague today and thanks to jimmy mackay for providing music and thank you for listening. What a brilliant idea. So so much fun. Let's try it again. And then i'll give you a better answer question. I'm so sorry we. Of course the internet just suen gone. I have no idea said dr. And he'll just maybe as factual and maybe it's not a bunker him bunker bar we love the bunker or as we say in boston the bunka you're in the bunka..

jimmy mackay Last year six years Heather today twitter next year facebook sixteen dollar two boston rebecca martin this year bart This year twenty Bart both tuesday february fourth at middle of march
"degenerative disease" Discussed on Academy of Neurologic Physical Therapy Podcast

Academy of Neurologic Physical Therapy Podcast

07:38 min | 2 years ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on Academy of Neurologic Physical Therapy Podcast

"Between seven to ten pm awesome and last year. He cement mentor mixture. I thought that was a great event. And i'm trying to remember some of the the mentor. Things that go on there. I don't know if if you have details on all of that or not. I think if you attended that event you could expect to get a little bit of information about the opportunities within a npt Particularly if you are looking to engage in volunteering either as a student or as someone who is early in your career unfamiliar with the opportunities across all of our committees and our six you may also season representation from the various things including the residency and fellowship sick As well as probably an informal opportunities to engage with other people in our profession. That sounds like a great opportunity and so is there anything else. Big picture that i'm missing. Are there any other big events that we need to be aware out. no well. i think personally since. I'm so integrated with the neuro programming when i'm on the ground at csm it's twenty seven sessions three days three times a week. You know it's busy. And i only get to see. Even maybe fifty percent of the neuro programming. I think one of the biggest benefits of virtual is. I'm gonna be able to ten a lot of different. I first of all. I'm going to be able to send all of the programming from neuro which i'm ecstatic for. But i'm also i work in acute care I work with geriatrics. I send patients home healthcare. I dabble with research so i'm really excited to be able to look at all the different programming from the different sections and academies and. I'm going to be able to take all that in over the course of a two month. Time period So i think that's exceedingly exciting. I think since it's a new platform this year. There's a few things that we all of us will get smarter over the course of the two months but i think one of the most important things is Make sure you listen to the lecture before you go to a q. and a. so if you don't listen to the lecture then the and qna's not going to be very valuable to you so make sure you listen to that ahead of time and i also highly encourage you to attend the q. And a. because these these lectures are great. But i think that dialogue with the presenters. It's so valuable even if you don't ask a question you just learn so much more by kind of understanding and how chew on the content and the information so Just make sure attend the classes ahead of the and make some time to carve out so you can actually attend the. But i think that's the most important factors awesome. Thanks for that advice. I think that makes a lot of sense because sometimes you don't even realize what you don't know what you didn't quite understand until somebody else asks the question and you realize that's a really great question. So thanks part so now that we have kind of the way of the land. Starting to feel like i i understand what. Csm is gonna look like a little bit this year. Let's get one step further and sees the as from the perspective of a single attendee. And so for the sake of this podcast. Let's pretend we see primarily patients which diseases so heather. Would you be able to kind of walk us through where someone like me. Should even start so if you go to. Ta dot org slash fm. You can find the entire schedule that is available and you can search by section so you would choose neurology and you could see our entire schedule that we are offering. But if i was really interested in german disease i would be looking specifically at thursday. The twenty third february where we have a lineup of several live in in a row that might specifically starting at seven pm. There is expanding dual task training and parkinson's disease the intersection of treatment and technology. There is hitting the mark exercise prescription and high intensity training for persons with m s. Then at seven thirty there is promoting high quality evidence based practice in rare neurodegenerative disease huntington's disease as a model and at eight thirty that evening. There is global neurological physical therapy. Be a part of the community awesome so this is really four great topics that would be very applicable for anybody in her special interest group. That was february. Twenty third right correct from seven to ten eastern time. So if i was really interested in that would be the night had focused on but that is not all of the offerings that were having under jenner disease. This year are great. Awesome and are there certain networking events that are really specific descrip- so yeah indeed there are so if you're interested in you wanted to participate in the degenerative disease meeting you would be looking at february fourth at eight pm eastern time and you would want to tune in that on zoom all right and i don't know if you know off hand these things that you can just show up to all of the courses really. Do i have to register ahead of time. Do i just log in. How does that work is a good question so when you register for cfm you can pre select courses. That is not a binding commitment. You can change your mind at any time But actually is pretty relevant because it helps ata decide how much bandwith they need. Because even though it's virtual there is theoretically unlimited capacity for a number of attendees at any one time so in your preselect data at helps them gauge. How much bandwidth. They're going to need so that everyone who would like to attend can attend the live q. And i and. I do believe that you have the option to rsvp to be safe meeting as well okay. Great and that's really good information. It really behooves us to actually be as honest as we can about what we're going to attend ahead of time or air on this is gonna carson. It would be helpful but certainly people can change their minds at anytime. Ra great Is there anything else that you feel like individuals in this perspective this category should really prepare for heading into csm. Or that about covers. I i think that about covers that i would echo bart thank. You would get more out of the live q. And a. if you have already watch the recorded lectures but as well. We also have a platform in Dedicated to dvd issues as well. We have fifty three degenerate disease posters. That you might want to watch awesome. That's great and now. I have a question too so there's probably a couple hundred different education sessions i could wash. Does that mean that c- cruiser just unlimited almost for this two month event. Or how does that work. It does not So there is a cap to see e. is i believe. It is two point zero. Ceos and in order to achieve those see us. You will need to take a ten question posts ouster each course that you have attended and you need to pass this test but you have unlimited opportunities to pass this test. In order to claim your seat us all right awesome and obviously. We're not just going to see us. Sanford as the years. There's so much so many more benefits of csm that but it's good to know how that process works now that we've kind of concluded the business part of the call. I have to ask heather. What do you do in your spare time. Well i have upheld hon bike and i am completely obsessed.

february seven pm fifty percent thursday two months twenty third february last year six three days twenty seven sessions two month seven this year This year ten question eight thirty eight pm eastern time ten pm each course one time
"degenerative disease" Discussed on KFI AM 640

KFI AM 640

02:18 min | 2 years ago

"degenerative disease" Discussed on KFI AM 640

"Active ingredients and mushrooms called restart your life, which is marketed as a general immune booster, But it's awesome for as an anti viral again. There's so many ways that we can protect ourselves. There's so many ways that we can prevent chronic degenerative disease. There's so many ways that we can prevent cancer and Alzheimer's. All of the things that we suffer from so tragically George that have our health compromise and anybody who knows it's not only it's only physically awful, but it's psychologically awful to have to live with the fear of a disease or to have to live with a disease. And there's so many things that we have at our disposal because this is the key. It's divine. It's built into the body toe fight disease and to repair damage. It's built into the body through an intelligence is far beyond anything. That's human. That's at the very cellular level to complexity, the tightly organized regulation of the biochemistry. All of the things that are happening in parallel in unison in harmony in the body in terms of chemical reactions and shape, shifting and self talking to each other, and biological repair and digestion are so mind mind blowingly intricate and complex. And the fact that all we have to do is put things in the body and this is really important to stay here. But things in the body that the body recognizes. That's the key George. The body recognizes certain things and it's not a lot. The menu is not very large. It's the mighty 90 essential nutrients and if things that are in vegetables and fruits and produce and sometimes in dairy and meat and eggs, but it's not any drugs. It's nothing that the medical model has in his bag of tricks. The body recognizes certain things and by the body. I mean itself and all we have to do is give it those things. And let the body do the rest. How cool is that? You have this amazing autumn automatic flesh robot machine that can fight disease. Nika repair its Celtic and processed food and air that can help us get through life on a get up in the morning and do our business and all we have to do Give it a certain menu of raw materials, and it'll do the rest. Then we're going to come back in just a moment here on coast to coast AM and take calls Ben Fuchs with us.

degenerative disease George Ben Fuchs cancer Alzheimer
Melatonin, CBD, Creatine, and Immunity Boosts

The Keto Answers Podcast

07:42 min | 3 years ago

Melatonin, CBD, Creatine, and Immunity Boosts

"Chris Welcome welcome to another episode of. Ask The guys here. We have a title. So here we are. This is what I would we do. Five or six other episodes like this before it's been a while and well we've done. One and people have been asking so you are again Chris is. Chris Irvine. On that nailed it the Kitale tallest. Trying to new break out a little bit more and changes named you just name. We talk about so. Talk about what you're stuck. We'll talk about it off off off Mike. Be Out. We're GONNA. Talk about stuff. Hopefully, not everything Joseph's. Chris's our resident expert here. BIA curiosity so cuny time. This one is about supplements if we got a lot of questions about. Settlements how to use them when to use themselves. Fire him off to see. We have all right so first question we have is from Heather N. and the question is should I supplement with Melatonin? If I'm having trouble sleeping so I would say no, and we can this. This is in my newsletter couple of weeks ago I. Don't know if you read that, but tour down a little bit. MELATONIN has its place. It is a precursor to a letter to the. Is Naturally secreted by your brain anything that's naturally secreted by your brain. I'm not a huge fan of. Taking Sasha Sisley. This is actually if you look at it, it's the only hormone that you can get without a prescription. Technically. Hormone your body. It's the only way you can get without a prescription interesting, yeah! I mean I. think my thoughts with Milton I think the answers that depends because I think it depends on. If you are living a lifestyle that allows you to produce it naturally so I think if you're a night shift worker, or you're somebody who is able to. You know if you're not, it's not the first step you should take if you're having trouble sleeping so I if you if you're not checking the boxes. With you're trying to improve your sleep quality then you shouldn't be turning Melatonin, but if you are work your work, circumstances are living circumstances. Have you in a position where you aren't going to be able to produce a lot of Melatonin? Naturally then I think you prior getting good sleep is going to be important, and if Melatonin can help that I think it can be a good song. Yeah, so the question is what is melting do and how is it? Producing one is produced by the body naturally. Melatonin essentially just tell you about it activates cascade of different Newark. Chemicals screwed that basically tell you buy. It's time to go to sleep. At screened by Pinal Gland I believe. And it is. Associate with a lot of things, light is major one. So what happens is most people don't. Fall Asleep with the sunset right and so the sun normally go down in all human history, and for every other analysts happens. By starts up regulating melatonin. melatonin sort of master switched. Those tells the rest of your body's going down and shutting down for arrest. When this doesn't happen. Can Be hard to go to sleep, and only that cannot stop you from getting into different stages of sleep as fast as you normally would, so you may be unconscious, but that doesn't mean you're getting the restorative sleep that you normally would so. Why is this problem? While people are after the sun goes down, they're exposed to blue light on their screens fluorescent lights in their house. The suppresses Melatonin production. So if that's the case, you have no other option. Maybe it's a good idea to take it I would take it regularly, but it at the same exact time. You shouldn't be producing it all over the place, so it shouldn't be off the map like. If you're taking Melatonin and you taking it one eight PM. One at ten PM. One and seven PM. In place you basically telling your brand that you're traveling in time zones back and forth and back and forth so I would focus far more on this is a last resort, and for special circumstances moving which we can get into, but the number one thing that I do when I go somewhere as If I have blue light, blocking glasses I blue blocks. and. There's a bunch out there. That's the ones I prefer. If I can't control the lights on my house. I've liked that dim when the sun sets and turn red and orange, after the sun has set, so those are wavelengths that do not. Suppress, Melatonin and this why the lends them blue light blocking glasses, the sandy fill blue light. You think about it like if you're outside at a campfire. The Ladies Very. Orangish, Yellowish Reddish Hue, there's very little to no blue light in there, so that's all from the sun so. Removing that from your day to day, life in is consistently as possible so that way you're not getting these weird signals of your body that you're switching time zones against another completely natural thing for humans to go through. That would be a huge thing, but I think there's a Lotta other things why people aren't getting good sleep, and so assuming that it's because of your lack of Melatonin production is i. think a little silly I think that you could look at. Obviously light is a huge one temperature of your room and then. The ability for light the in your house from. Blue. Blue. I'm trying to your. Shades. blockers no time. Look. light-blocking shades trying to say here. Oh blackout curtains blackout. So those are a good thing, and then we have lights actually if you're in a city where there's a lot of additional light, yeah, we have then lights that turn on the sunlight. One Sunrise should be happening. So this is another. Thing that happens. Has People Get Blackout Curtains? And then they don't wake up to the sun, which is again? In the wrong direction, so we actually have lights that turn on. As the sun rises locally, so you can just do all this stuff is super easy, Philips. Hue Lights, but we have. Great and Eating Super Close about times and I WANNA. Thank people you way too close to bed. I put at least three hours before you try to shut down and mental stimulation is also too much, so people are worried about this at that looking at the news. They're watching TV. They're just in. There had even hanging out with friends like I've done last couple of nights. You know people talk. Nine nine thirty s usually go to bed then I get home and it looks super stimulated. I can't sold out for a couple of hours. There's a lot of reasons why people wouldn't be able to sleep or feeling Russ restless. Having lack of militant brushes by news worry about? Your thoughts here. Will agree with that I. Think the the two things I would add to. That I agree that like I think it's a last ditch. Thing that you need to try. There's a of other things you can get in check with your environment and with your health habits before you need to turn to that supplementation. Do things I would add for helping is. Sleeping with your phone either out of room, or at least face down or not sleeping with the television on. There's some really interesting research out there that even when your eyelids are closed in your sleeping, flashing lights can cause face shifts in your circadian rhythms that can suppress Melatonin production or ramp up cortisol in the middle of the night. Things like that so. That's can be as simple as having your phone facing up and it lighting up while you're sleeping. That can completely threw off your sleep. So I thought that was really interesting thing when I was reading that studies. That would be a big thing. To consider and then. There's there is some interesting research on Melatonin for neuro degenerative diseases where you know, it seems like as we age, our natural production of Melatonin starts to decrease in. They've done studies where supplementing with it in elderly populations really increases cognitive function. That actually just came out this year I. Think showing that so like you said I think it's either. It's either a last ditch effort, supplement or something used for very specific circumstances.

Melatonin Chris Irvine Sasha Sisley Philips Mike Joseph Heather N. Milton Newark Cortisol Russ Melatonin.
The Association Between Soft Drink Consumption and Mortality

Dishing Up Nutrition

05:28 min | 3 years ago

The Association Between Soft Drink Consumption and Mortality

"Particular research study was reported in Jama which is the Journal of the American Medical Medical Association reported September Third Twenty Nineteen and this study looked at the death rates for about four hundred and fifty thousand thousands individuals in ten countries in Europe who drink to sugar sweetened or artificially sweetened soda drinks every single day versus those individuals who drank only one glass of soda per month so this harassed different either either two per day. Sweetened Sodas wait artificially sweetened soda or one per month And what the researchers I found was that there is a clear association with all causes of these deaths for those soda drinkers who routinely drink soda. Every single day and in fact there was a twenty seven percent higher risk of death when drinking two or more soft drinks daily. That is so interesting. I hire that research. I remember when that came out in September and it was just all over the headlines I actually like shared it and posted on my facebook page and people were commenting commenting. They're like mixed feelings. Oh No yes I knew that but a lot of people did not know that and again that's four artificially sweetened sweetened or sugar. Sweeten so whether it's the Diet soda or the regularly sweetened with sugar stuff exactly exactly so when we break down that study even more look directly at the neuro degenerative diseases the total soft drink. Consumption was positively associated with a higher risk of Parkinson's mortality. If the soft drink consumption appears to affect the increased death rate for people who have Parkinson's we have to ask what is so doing. How is it affecting those who have? ADHD here's one possible connection many studies. Show that some synthetic the food additives including artificial colors and you probably have heard people talk about red dye number forty as a specific artificial coloring. That red dye number forty can lead to learning behavioral or other health effects for some people so take a look around and then we're going to dive into this a little bit more. I learned a lot just in putting together research for the show about. We're all of this red dye is where's it hidden in these foods and beverages as well. Yeah yes so let. Let's think about that like you said Kara of where might you find this red dye number forty and the one of the first things that come to my mind are the sports drinks especially the more fruity flavored ones. So the strawberry cherry the fruit punch pink lemonade eight flavored ones even pink. So it's not it doesn't have to meet just read yet not a Redeye. Yeah could be orange. It could be a lot out of different colors actually not just red colored foods so in addition to sodas I'm Red Dye number. Forty is also found in again fruit. Snacks Snacks Yogurt breakfast cereals jams jolly canny cereal bars hotdogs chips pizza strawberry A. and Cherry Jello. Those are just to name a few and actually as I was pulling together some bits for the show here too. I ran across. If you've ever looked at the the package or the ingredients list for instant chocolate pudding powder chocolate pudding packets that has red dye number forty in it. It's Kinda interesting so you think it's a brown colored food right and what I found was they added this to chocolate pudding because otherwise we'd look green without it. Why would it look a green? That's a really great question. It's not enough cocoa actual real cocoa in it and I believe that's what I when I pulled that article from is it said it would be green just because they don't use as much Rio Coco to get the chocolate into her. Yeah so interesting yes so people really have to be reading labels. Yes yes right yup absolutely so we know that every year the industry dumps about fifteen million pounds of artificial dyes into the food we eat so red dye number forty is just the most common one that's used in the United States so that's the one you'll probably see the most often throughout Europe several countries. He's have banned artificial dyes. But other ones that you may see on the label include like yellow numbers six yellow number five. So there's a couple of other ones that you I have to watch out for as well. Okay I suppose. Good rule of thumb might just be has artificial coloring. It's a food to be preferably avoided MHM Other chemicals in there as well red dye number forty again is probably the one we hear about the most doesn't mean the others are completely innocuous even mm-hmm and depending on the person to absolutely so now we must ask the question. Is there a connection between radike forty and Adhd many studies published in journals such as pediatrics. The Lancet the Journal of Pediatrics have found that some but not all people are negatively affected by artificial food

Adhd Europe Parkinson Jama Facebook Rio Coco Journal Of The American Medica Journal Of Pediatrics Redeye United States Lancet Fifteen Million Pounds Twenty Seven Percent
Walk to defeat ALS

Drive Time Sports

01:00 min | 3 years ago

Walk to defeat ALS

"It and on the ground and it's what we signed when our soldiers are deployed to protect our freedom abroad but now the bravest men and women among us our approach on the ground military veterans are twice as likely to fall victim to a LS the fatal neuro degenerative disease that robs them of the power to use their lax hold someone close a solid meal simply say I love you before ultimately losing the ability to bring most often remain aware and alert to the world around them as their bodies gradually shut you don't need to know about red with a alas to no it must be stopped the those affected your support join the A. L. S. associations wall to defeat a LS to help us find treatments and a cure for Lou Gehrig's disease but the walk you you want to defeat a LS dot

Degenerative Disease Lou Gehrig
Officials warn hunters about 'zombie' deer

Wake Up Call

01:13 min | 3 years ago

Officials warn hunters about 'zombie' deer

"This to alright let's talk about zombie dear Nevada wildlife officials are warning hunters about these stumbling drooling zombie dear so far Nevada has invaded the infection this hunting season but apparently the deer roam twenty four states in the U. S. and their sickened by this Nero did Janet degenerative diseases that literally causes them to just sort of stumble around and drool then about a department of wildlife is urging hunters to visit their mobile sampling stations and actually check the carcasses for chronic wasting disease a fatal illness that affects the brain and spinal cord of everything from deer elk moose it's the latest measure to protect the state's wildlife they say but the symptoms of this zombie dear this chronic wasting disease reduced infected animals to zombie like creatures and they can become even more aggressive so not only are they stumbling around drooling they have draft drastic weight loss and then they get more aggressive and less afraid of humans which is why they get the little zombie

Nevada Chronic Wasting Disease Drooling Janet
The Cells of Regeneration

The Pulse

04:18 min | 4 years ago

The Cells of Regeneration

"This is the pulse i Mike and Scott and were talking about comebacks. Some species make comebacks differently by way of regeneration you know when animals can regrow parts of themselves like starfish or lizards. That's what Molecular Biologist Alejandro Sanchez Alvarado Studies and his creature of choice is a flat worm. The Latin name is Schmidt Mediterrania. They're about the size of toenail clipping and they live in freshwater in southern Europe. You can take these animals and you can cut them into as many as eighteen different fragments and and the remarkable thing is that each and every one of those fragments will go on to reshape themselves and produce eighteen individual flowers. That's the equivalent of like me cutting my little finger and watching my little finger regenerate taught me completely and do we have any clue why they have this ability to regenerate. Do they get cut into eighteen pieces frequently when out in nature they do something <hes> that <hes> some of the species do something that is akin to regeneration which is they themselves will fishing. They'll actually split themselves into two fragments as a way to reproduce essentially they clone themselves in the wild so so the way it works <hes> to describe it is that <hes> they have a little head and a little tail and detail serves as an anchor the head begins to crawl forward and he stretches almost like a rubber band until he forms a very thin waist the now just snaps and when it snaps it produces a headless tail and the tail is head both of which will actually go on to regenerate complete animals in the span of approximately a week to week and a half and how do they do that att. That's amazing yeah so that's the one million dollar question that is that is really key question. We have some suspicions based on scientific evidence that <hes> a great deal of the regionality powers are based just in the existence of a population of adult stem cells that reside in a fairly random way in their body plan and we know that the cells are activated open amputation. We also know that cells are activated needed <hes> whenever some of the tissues in the animal old <hes> and die <hes> the cells will divide if we understood this process. What could that mean for us humans for our health? The hope is that by understanding the life forms that inhabit the planet with us that that will allow us to understand our biology better and <hes> we believe that this is an accurate approach to understanding life because we now no no that many of the genes that populate the genomes of these very diverse and very different species from us we have in our own genome. There's a high degree of similarity between the genes that are present in the plenary Marion genome the flat wound genome and in the human genome so I think that if we understand their biology and how they do this this will help us inform our own biology and figure out ways to perhaps reactivate those processes or modified let him in such a way in their own bodies that we might help mitigate <hes> damage to our own tissues or restore <hes> missing structures that <hes> maybe traumatic injury or degenerative diseases or something of the like they were a lot less complex than US obviously right and I'm thinking now there's certain things that we also can regrow like our fingernails and our hair and our skin so is it just that we're too complicated located to regrow like you know a human leg is a pretty complicated thing so I would imagine it would be tough to we grow that are I agree with you except that <hes> there are examples in nature where that actually happens to organism's anatomy anatomy is as complicated as ours and they'll give you a good example which is that salamanders which are vertebrates they have spinal cord. Have Limbs are not too dissimilar from your mind.

Schmidt Mediterrania Alejandro Sanchez Alvarado Mike United States Europe Scott One Million Dollar
Broken Promises: Teachers Sue U.S. Over Student Loans That Weren't Forgiven

NPR's Business Story of the Day

06:16 min | 4 years ago

Broken Promises: Teachers Sue U.S. Over Student Loans That Weren't Forgiven

"Support for this podcast and the following message come from Google from Connecticut California from Mississippi to Minnesota. Millions of businesses are using Google tools to grow online learn. How Google is supporting businesses in your state at Google dot com mm slash economic impact now we haven't n._P._R.? Exclusive one of the biggest teachers unions in the country is suing the U._S. Department of Education. It's alleging that alone. Forgiveness Program for millions of public service workers is in in such a shambles that it is illegal. N._P._R.'s Chris Arnold has gotten a copy of the complaint filed in court today and he brought us this report. The programs designed to encourage people to work in public service must either governments or non profit work so nurses nurses police officers librarians teachers. All kinds of other jobs congress said more than a decade ago that basically if you make your loan payments for ten years and you work in public service the program will forgive the rest of your federal student loan debt that. That sounds like a really good deal to a lot of people and more than a million have filed official paperwork for the program but the Department of Education is just cannot seem to get this right they keep making mistakes and are not appropriately administering this program I am the Congress has created. That's Christopher Peterson. He's a law professor at the University of Utah and a former top attorney at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and he may be understating things. Here's a number that you need to know one percents percents but the education department's own couch of the people who think they've made their ten years payments and they apply for loan forgiveness. Only one percent are getting approved that means if you took all of the people getting rejected and got them together other into one place you'd have football stadiums full of nurses firefighters teachers law enforcement officers that are seeking to have their debts forgiven having made all of these payments under the impression. Question that they were on track and now they're being turned away in droves this has sparked a growing number of lawsuits many against the loan servicing companies that manage student loans for the Department of Ed but Peterson says this latest one ratchets catches up the pressure. Here's a teacher's Union representing one point seven million members suing the Education Department Randi Weingarten is the president of the American Federation of Teachers and she says this program is hurting the very people its supposed to help and it's so broken so broken that it violates our basic United States constitution requirement of due process the basic fairness clause of the United States constitution and that is the core of this lawsuit okay so to understand what's going wrong here. We're going to zoom in on just one of the lawsuit's plaintiffs okay well. My name is Debbie Baker. <hes> I'm actually a music teacher. I knew that <hes>. That I had the correct employment I mean Good Grief Public Schoolteacher Oklahoma teachers don't make that much many and they certainly didn't then and I thought this is great so back ten years ago. Baker says she looked under student loan statements called up that eight hundred number and and said I WANNA do this public service loan forgiveness thing that's what the Department of Education tells people that they should do that number connects you to a loan servicing company which the government hires to advise people with student loans and collect their payments. I called them up. I told them I heard about it and they explained that basically went on income sensitive repayment plan and that after you've made one hundred twenty payments you could apply for the program so it was it was that easy bigger says each year here she'd call back do paperwork and she'd say I'm working towards public service loan forgiveness ear Liz everything good qualifying for public service loan forgiveness and they said okay great over the years she dealt with different loan servicing companies. One of them was navient. And one of the nation's biggest and as the ten year finish line approach to Baker was getting pretty excited and right then she didn't have a lot to be happy about her adult son in his twenties had been stricken with a degenerative disease. You know he was living at home with us on mm full-time care we were caring for him. <hes> we put my mother in a nursing facility and so this was a bright spot like this Kennedy great but that seventy six thousand dollars in student loans did not get forgiven because in the end Baker was told that she was in the wrong type of loan and so none of her payments over the past years counted towards debt forgiveness if somebody at the call centers would have just told her that ten years before she easily could switched into the right kind alone to qualify for forgiveness but she says nobody told her so that never happened and when this hit I just I didn't know whether to cry throw up. Get Mad. I just didn't know what to do. I honestly did not think the federal government would do this to someone the. The Union's lawsuit alleges that lots of other borrowers got bad information too and also that services aren't keeping track of how many payments people are making that are supposed to count towards loan forgiveness. The loan servicer navient said in a statement quote. We understand the frustration borrowers face in navigating complex federal loan program which is why we consistently advocate for policy reforms to simplify the system the lawsuit from the Teacher's Union wants the court to take more immediate action Christopher Christopher Peterson. They're asking for a court to order the Department of Education to go back to the drawing board and try to redesign this program to make sure that that the public that teachers but also firefighters nurses police officers that they're going to get a a reasonable the opportunity to have their debts forgiven. They were promised by Congress. The Department of Education is not commenting on the lawsuit yet. The Teacher's Union is also asking for an effective appeals process for people who believe that they've been treated unfairly. We should note that the department.

Department Of Education Debbie Baker Christopher Christopher Peters Google Congress Union Teacher's Union Department Of Ed United States Chris Arnold American Federation Of Teacher Federal Government Randi Weingarten Oklahoma Degenerative Disease Football Connecticut Official LIZ
What is a Vaccine Adjuvant?

One Life Radio Podcast

15:13 min | 4 years ago

What is a Vaccine Adjuvant?

"Our special guest today. Neil Z Miller. He is a medical research, journalist and the director of the think twice global vaccine institute. He has devoted the past thirty years to educating parents and health practitioners about vaccines encouraging and form consent and non mandatory laws. He is the author of several articles studies and books on vaccines, including Miller's review of critical vaccine studies. Neil has a degree in psychology and is a member of Mensa international. And it is always an honor. And pleasure to have you on one life radio. Welcome back. How you doing today? Neil grew. Thanks for having me back today. I appreciate it. I always appreciate your work and what you're doing to educate the world about vaccines and their safety today. Specifically, we're speaking about aluminum. So let's start with this basic question for people that really might not know a lot about vaccines that they. There, there are avent's added to them in order to make them more effective or for the delivery. So what exactly are ad edge of events? And what types of events are there will the main Atrovent that's being used in vaccines. Today is aluminum, and there's different types of aluminum, but, but the reason that the aluminum is added to vaccine is because the, the attenuated germ, okay. So basically, you've got the, the, the German self the, the micro organism that is likely to cause the disease. They take that microorganism and they attenuated or weaken it. And that's the main component of the vaccine, but it doesn't induce enough antibodies by itself, generally speaking with some vaccine. So they add aluminum which really just irritates the immune system. The immune system recognizes the, the aluminum as, as really as foreign object. And so it, it, it helps to awake in a higher concentration of anybody tires. So that's the main reason aluminum is Najim added too many vaccines to help stimulate a stronger immune response, and increase vaccine efficacy. But aluminum is taxing. Absolutely. In fact, there's no known biological purpose value or function for aluminum in the human body everywhere. That now by the way, it is very pervasive. One of the most pervasive elements on the earth, but it has no biological function. And so it, it's a neuro toxin and in fact, that's, that's what the mainly what the study's find. That's what I summarized, you know, like I said. Aluminum is added too many vaccines, and so children that received these vaccines are getting multiple doses of aluminum in an injectable form. Now, some people say that Lumina m- is not a big deal that, you know, you, but, but the, you have to differentiate between or orally, ingested aluminum and injected aluminum, we're warned to not even use aluminum foil anymore unless you like parchment paper in between because of the taxes city of aluminum other studies now that are showing a link between aluminum and Alzheimer's disease aluminum dementia, it, definitely, there's no question. There's literally there's literally thousands of studies showing that aluminum. I'm talking studies outside of the world of vaccine just. Thousands of studies that show that aluminum itself is a neuro toxin and is also capable of, of causing immune immune now functions. It's going next with this because I had read that numerous studies provided credible evidence that aluminum adversely affects important biological functions. Like neuro degenerative diseases and auto immune disorders up -solutely, that's the biggest problem is because it c- see when you when you ingest aluminum now luminous is dangerous to any kind of life-form, whether it's an animal, or human, and well we're animals as well, but. And that is dangerous. But when you ingest it as long as you don't ingest too much at once setting that most of that aluminum when I say most we're talking ninety nine point seven percent. You can you can eliminate it through the normal home in Tori functions of the body. But, but when, when that aluminum is injected the studies are showing that it lodges itself into different different organs of the body, and, and they're finding injected aluminum over a year later. They're finding it's still lots in different parts of the body, including the spleen and the brain it bypassed. Now here's the here's the interesting thing is some studies show that it's actually the smaller concentration. Of aluminum that are more dangerous, because they don't because the blood brain barrier does not block it. It's able to, to bypass the rain barrier and go directly into the brain. So this is off the record doctor medical doctor. Obviously, I'm not gonna say his name he didn't want it. He didn't he he, he doesn't even want to talk about it on the air, but told me off the record that there's no way that you can inject a child body with, with aluminum and it into a muscle and it not make its way to the brain. That's, that's absolutely. That's absolutely true. That's what the studies are showing. So, you know, I mean, I don't know why you can't speak on the record because he scares. There's plenty of studies that, that document that down fact in my book, and my latest book Miller's review of critical vaccine studies where I summarize over four hundred studies that are critical vaccines. I have a chapter in there on aluminum, and in that chapter, I summarize, I don't know one or two dozen probably about two dozen studies that, that document is the, the, the hazards of, of aluminum vaccines. For example. Here's a study that, that was conducted by Dr Chris Shaw. And Dr siege CJ, Thomas genyk aluminum in the central nervous system, toxin human as humans and animals vaccine edge in auto, immunity. This in summary, this study found that aluminum vaccines can cause autoimmune and early jiggle damage so that that's pretty common and just to tell you how common vaccines are for example, in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and many other nations, infants and children, receive high quantities of Lumina for moldable injections of several vaccines. For example. Okay. The following vaccines contain aluminum, the tetanus vaccine would, you know, the that's combined the P? So, for example, they give babies diptheria tennis in plus vaccine that can. Aluminum the, the hib vaccine for influenza type b that contains aluminum hepatitis A contains aluminum hepatitis b contains aluminum and, and the pneumococcal vaccine contains aluminum. Now, they're giving these vaccines, for example. They're giving DTA. They're giving the protest fact seen at two months of age. They're also giving the, the hepatitis b vaccine, two months of age, they're giving the pneumococcal vaccine at two months of age, and they're giving the hib vaccine at two months of age. So these are four separate vaccines, each containing their own, high concentrations of aluminum. So, so it's so they're getting four high doses of aluminum, when they get their vaccine to two months of age. Then this is repeated again at at, at four months of age. And then again at six months of age. And so it's extremely. Concerning extremely dangerous and a recent study came out in his shown that today fifty four percent of all children, have a chronic ailment, which includes things like attention deficit disorder, which I have summarized studies showing that attention deficit disorder has been linked to the vaccines. And so, so these chronic ailments, people have to look around and say, what do you mean fifty four percent? We're talking with an half of all children today have kind of illnesses. Where's this coming from? Well, I'm working on a paper right now that has found evidence that all of these conditions. Okay, fifty four percent of the of children, have these chronic ailments. These are these are twenty two different ailments, okay that these children have, and all twenty two of these ailments, can be linked to vac. Seen damage. Well, so, so this is something needs to really, really get a handle on and really just recognize that when, when we say that when, when you hear people saying that vaccines, save lives. Well, if you look at. We know that with some flaxseeds they reduced the incidence of the disease. There's no question that when the measles, vaccine was introduced it reduced the number of cases of measles. But what are the trade offs? That's always what we need to look at. What are the trade offs, and, and the studies document that there's increased rates of diabetes increased rates of, of allergies increased rates of autoimmune diseases increased rates of, of learning disabilities, increased rates of so many different types of diseases. So we have to look at everything in from the larger picture, we can't just say that, that this particular vaccine was introduced lower the number of cases of disease at what cost, that's what always needs to be looked at. I'm reading the paper, according to the American Academy pediatrics, which is the AP aluminum is now being implicated as interfering with a variety of cellular metabolic processes in the nervous systems and another tissues. And so, you know, if the pediatric community knows this information. Why are they still pushing the agenda that all vaccines are proven safe? You know, I, I think that I think that there's just so much influenced by by big pharma, and you have to understand the regulatory agencies and I'm talking about the CDC the FDA and on international level, even the World Health Organization. These these workers Asians have been captured by by big pharma. They've been captured by the pharmaceutical industry and and what do I mean by that? I mean that there's so much evidence and document this in some of my papers and document. This in in. There's there's so much evidence right now that for example, in my in my book Miller's review of critical vaccine studies in the chapter on, on mercury mercury in vaccines. And by the way, there's still mercury Invex in vaccine or giving this to pregnant women and two infants. How ridiculous is that, that, but, but the point I'm making is the CDC in the year nineteen ninety nine they conducted their own study to look at at, at whether or not mercury in vaccines is dangerous. And, and they found that babies that got mercury in vaccines. What they did is they took a large group of kids, the and half of the kids got got got vaccines, with mercury and the other half of the kids got the same vaccines, except without the mercury, and then they've they've fast forwarded to, to, to several years later, and then they added up. How many kids in the wound group were eventually diagnosed with autism, and that the kids that got that those mercury containing vaccines were had had eight they were eight seven point six times more likely to be to have been diagnosed with autism. So, so we're talking about I high statistically significant study conducted by the CDC showing that mercury in vaccines will cause autism. Okay. So, so my point is, is that they did not remove mercury. They required it. They required. More people to actually get needed some from some scenes, and then required. More children to receive it and pregnant women to receive it. So, so what is the why am I mentioning this? Well, because it's important for everybody to know but also because it shows some insight into the fact that the that the CDs. C which is supposed to be a regulatory agency looking after for the health of every children has been captured by big pharma has been captured by the industry. They are just a marketing arm of the industry in my opinion, from for my research, the CDC and the FDA, and we'll help organization too, because there's a lot of evidence that the World Health Organization is covering up a lot of a lot of dangers associated with vaccines. So, so people need to realize that when you've got the, the American Academy of pediatrics you'd think, don't they don't they care about these children, the number that the thing that the Dr Blaylock he's, he's a neurosurgeon a brain surgeon. He, he did a forward to my other one of my other books fact, the vaccine safety manual doctor Blaylock in that foreword. He has he presented. He said amazing forward. He's, you know, it's an. Amazing bit of information. Yeah. One of the important things that he says, and he provides evidence for is that the vaccine program itself is sacrosanct above everything else, even above children's lives. The vaccine program must be saved at all costs. It

Neil Z Miller CDC Hib Vaccine Hepatitis B Vaccine World Health Organization Director American Academy Of Pediatrics Mensa International Doctor Blaylock FDA Alzheimer Tetanus Najim Dr Chris Shaw AP United States
Brain health: Low-protein, high-carb diet just as good as low-calorie diet

02:55 min | 4 years ago

Brain health: Low-protein, high-carb diet just as good as low-calorie diet

"Scientists Dr Devon wall pointed out, and he says, and I quote, we have close to a hundred years of quality research extolling the benefits of. Calorie restriction as the most powerful diet to improve brain, health and delay the onset of neurodegenerative disease. However, the majority of people have a hard time restricting calories, especially in the western societies. Like, the US where food is so freely available so plentiful it shows a lot more promise, then we have been able to replicate the same kind of gene change in the part of the brain responsible for memory that we also see when we restrict calories. However, a low protein high carbohydrate diet are by no means a new fad. One of the senior scientists behind. This study said numerous cultures including people in Japan in the Okinawa area and many parts of the Mediterranean have long observed this mix and show better longevity and less degenerative diseases compared to low carb high fat eaters, the traditional diet in Okinawa and other blue zones where people live longer generally into their past one hundred years of age, and they're still active right up until that time the traditional diet in Okinawa is around nine percent protein, which is similar to the university study. We're talking about here and a with sources, including lean fish soy plants and very very little beef. In other words, you go to these blue zones where people live long. Anger. They had the greatest longevity in the world. They're not eating beef. They're not they're eating fish. They're eating a Mediterranean style diet, which is high in unrefined unprocessed, high fiber complex carbohydrates, and when I say complex carbohydrates. That's what I mean, not messed with carbohydrates that have lots of fiber protein and other nutrients in them, so high carb diets could be just as effective as low calorie diets which had been studied extensively in promising a long life, at least in the animal model, and these researchers believe in the human model, and it can also provide good heart health and good digestive health and certainly good brain health. So when you hear people trying to confuse you try to tell you that carbs are bad. Remember, they are if they're refined. If there white if they're if they are the fast acting the high glycemic. Index the ones that have been messed with by man,

Okinawa Dr Devon Wall Neurodegenerative Disease United States Mediterranean Japan One Hundred Years Hundred Years Nine Percent
Degenerative Disease, Scotland and Chief Veterinary Officer discussed on Midday News Break

Midday News Break

00:39 sec | 5 years ago

Degenerative Disease, Scotland and Chief Veterinary Officer discussed on Midday News Break

"The first in ten years correspond, Catherine drew reports in question was found to have been infected of Scotland's chief veterinary officer, she Lewis said it was too early to say whether disease came from the food safety. Bony in Scotland says people should not be alarmed as there are strict controls. Place to protect consumers BSE is a fatal neuro degenerative disease. In cattle. The maybe two humans who have eaten infected flesh. Millions of cattle were slaughtered in the nineteen nineties during attempts to the disease, which is known to have killed around two hundred and twenty five people in the UK and western Europe. The

Degenerative Disease Scotland Chief Veterinary Officer Catherine Europe Lewis UK Ten Years
What is autoimmune arthritis? Symptoms and treatment

Houston Morning News

01:06 min | 5 years ago

What is autoimmune arthritis? Symptoms and treatment

"Shara fryer here with Dr Francis Williams, a Rheumatology specialistic Kelsey CBO clinic, Dr Williams what's the difference between arth rightous and rheumatoid arthritis. Well, Cheryl arthritis is really a generalized term, referring to inflammation of the bones and joints. For example, osteoarthritis is the more common form of arthritis. Typically occurring in older patients. It's a degenerative disease with localized symptoms usually due to overuse and the natural aging process, whereas rheumatoid arthritis can affect younger patients even in their twenties. It's an auto immune disease, meaning your body at Texas self it can produce symptoms affecting your entire body. Like what it may start with low grade fevers followed by stiffness and swelling in the fingers and rich it progress to larger joints, such as knees and shoulders often accompanied by excessive fatigue is there a cure. There is no known cure. But we have treatments to help manage symptoms, reduce pain and minimize the disease. Progression left unmanaged, rheumatoid arthritis can lead to disability and reduced life expectancy. So it's important patients. See a doctor with plenty of knowledge about this disease such as rheumatologist yes

Rheumatoid Arthritis Degenerative Disease Kelsey Cbo Dr Francis Williams Hurricane Harvey Kelsey Seebold Kelsey Gulf Coast Harvey Shara Fryer Texas Medical Center Texas Cheryl Forty Years