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While listening to NPR radio yesterday, a guest discussed the differences in allowable drugs and chemical between the US and the EU. OVerall, US is more lenient. |
Related to the Broken Brain 2 seminar, Dr Hyman podcast today is with Dr. Perlmutter. Early on, he mentions that November study that not only do the Alzheimers drugs not work, but can make it worse. https://drhyman.com/podcast/
How to Prevent Alzheimers with your Fork. He is quite vocal that Alzheimer's is largely a preventable disease. Mark Hyman still interrupts too much for me, but Dr. Perlmutter can talk a lot over him. :lol: |
Over and over many of the chronic diseases come back to diet.
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Thanks, Janet. Excellent session; although, they need to apply virtual duct tape to Mark's mouth and teach him to listen to his guests and allow them to expound. |
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releas...90812144930.htm
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Hurmm... Interesting about amino acids "flipping" in long-lived proteins, first time I've come across that. |
It is interesting research. I like the knee-jerk reaction that a drug is needed to stimulate autophagy to achieve recycling. Typical. Perhaps more research might confirm that we can address stimulating autophagy naturally, but scientists are inclined to report a solution that is also profitable. How else will they get their research funded?
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sleep. diet. (bicycle helmet).
take care of your brain! |
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Which is why we needed the NIH funded. My understanding is that only taxpayer money paid for that research. |
Talked to a friend with MS last night, while its not Alzheimers, it seems to have similarities; he has decided to stop his $2k treatments despite how well this makes him feel. Gave him Dr Terry Wahl's information and told him her story of recovery. He is excited to have a look at it.
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New MS study results out a few days ago. A Phase 1 trial, using Wahl's Paleo plus. https://multiplesclerosisnewstoday....eo-diet-and-ms/
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After reading Dr. Wahl's book I went on a hunt about auto-immune treatments. Once you've worn out the cortisol and the body no longer responds, now they bring out the big guns which are really a devil's bargain. They often bring about considerable resolution of symptoms, but at the expense of suppressing the immune system. From what I read, which is just a sampling of what came up with my key words, a LOT of people get ten years of pretty smooth sailing and then some combination of exposure and vulnerability brings a health catastrophe. This all evolved from the science of organ transplantation. In which case it is usually life or death... and thus, an easier choice. If, as I now believe, we are better off treating these kinds of issues with diet and lifestyle changes, there is a lot of needless suffering going on that people can't really choose. |
New article in JAMA.
In Alzheimer Research, Glucose Metabolism Moves to Center Stage https://jamanetwork.com/journals/ja...Jwjt1L-mNXmZKS8 After the amyloid hypothesis, diabetes drugs, and insulin devices, come up empty...they try a ketogenic lifestyle! Quote:
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It would be funny if it weren’t so sad. If that doctor who used coconut oil on her early onset Alzheimer’s husband had those improvements on a drug, we’d be living in wall to wall advertisements for it. It would be $5,000 a month and rich people would be popping them like peanuts. I’m a fan of Pete Egoscue, whose system of exercises have helped so many. It springs from the same, simple, principles as keto: give the body what it needs, and it can heal itself. |
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Dr Terry Wahls and Dr Sarah Myhill, along with some other sources, are increasingly convinced that all autoimmune is the same disease; and mitochondrial dysfunction is the cause. Tell me a Non-infectious, Non-acute illness that doesn’t have its roots in mitochrondria, then high insulin, then inflammation, and then the body’s attempts to protect itself from it. This chain of events was crucial in me putting my edge-of-lupus situation, a year ago, into remission. My experiments over the holidays caused a flare. So I know where the problem lies. |
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releas...01116112846.htm
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2792615/ Garlic? Quote:
This study used garlic extract in mice. Not added to food, looks like either injected or force-fed orally. Separation from food is important because that might change food intake or pattern of intake. They don't give a fresh garlic dose that I can see, to see if realistic amounts could be taken as food. Anyways, decrease of MAO-B is included in the data. On the depression front--the garlic extract dose-dependently decreased immobility in a forced swim test. Happier mice try for a longer time to find a way out when placed in water over their head, depressed mice give up sooner. |
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