Author Topic: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)  (Read 352684 times)

ccp

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Body-by-Guinness

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)
« Reply #652 on: June 10, 2024, 08:00:44 AM »
This looks to be HUGE.

This is a subject of great interest to me.  With all the antibiotics lurking in our beef, poultry, and pork, our good intestinal flora is under regular assault. 

A particular brand of probiotics is my counter.

ccp

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Re: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)
« Reply #653 on: June 11, 2024, 06:14:04 AM »
Yes interesting

I am not clear how it targets only pathogenic resistant bugs however.

There are various mechanisms that drug resistant bacteria evade the effects of antibiotics and this drug must target these in some way.

I am still very cautious about good vs bad bugs and the concept of pro biotics

not that there is not something to it but I am still not aware we understand it very well to be making recommendations.   

of course, I am no expert in the field and I have not been keeping up with it except for a review course online the past yr.


Crafty_Dog

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Re: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)
« Reply #654 on: June 12, 2024, 05:10:56 AM »
I just go by personal empirical experience in selecting the particular blend that I use.

ccp

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CDC now recommending gays take doxycycline for every risky sexual behavior
« Reply #655 on: June 19, 2024, 11:38:32 AM »
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/73/rr/rr7302a1.htm?s_cid=rr7302a1_w

Why don't we simply make all antibiotics otc for this population to take with every sexual encounter?

DougMacG

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https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/73/rr/rr7302a1.htm?s_cid=rr7302a1_w

Why don't we simply make all antibiotics otc for this population to take with every sexual encounter?

It's as if there is something unnatural about this.

ccp

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saw this and think it does have potential
« Reply #657 on: June 22, 2024, 05:57:53 AM »
https://apnimed.com/apnimed-presented-positive-phase-2b-results-on-ad109-an-investigational-oral-drug-for-obstructive-sleep-apnea-for-the-first-time-at-ats-2023/

With the literal epidemic of obesity comes an epidemic of sleep apnea

Many tolerate the CPAP device and many hate it.
This drug, if it really works may well be a viable alternative.

private company
for now


Crafty_Dog

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WT: Donor pigs
« Reply #659 on: July 25, 2024, 07:47:12 AM »
Farm raises clean, gene-edited pigs to grow kidneys, hearts for humans

BY LAURAN NEERGAARD ASSOCIATED PRESS BLACKSBURG, VA. | Wide-eyed piglets rushing to check out the visitors to their unusual barn just might represent the future of organ transplantation — and there’s no rolling around in the mud here.

The first gene-edited pig organs ever transplanted into people came from animals born on this research farm in the Blue Ridge Mountains — behind locked gates, where entry requires washing down your vehicle, swapping your clothes for medical scrubs and stepping into tubs of disinfectant to clean your boots between each air-conditioned barn.

“These are precious animals,” said David Ayares of Revivicor Inc., who spent decades learning to clone pigs with just the right genetic changes to allow those first audacious experiments.

The biosecurity gets even tighter just a few miles away in Christiansburg, Virginia, where a new herd is being raised — pigs expected to supply organs for formal studies of animal-to-human transplantation as soon as next year.

This massive first-of-its-kind building bears no resemblance to a farm. It’s more like a pharmaceutical plant. And part of it is closed to all but certain carefully chosen employees who take a timed shower, don company-provided clothes and shoes, and then enter an enclave where piglets are growing up.

Behind that protective barrier are some of the world’s cleanest pigs. They breathe air and drink water that’s better filtered against contaminants than what’s required for people. Even their feed gets disinfected — all to prevent them from picking up any possible infections that might ultimately harm a transplant recipient.

“We designed this facility to protect the pigs against contamination from the environment and from people,” said Matthew VonEsch of United Therapeutics, Revivicor’s parent company. “Every person that enters this building is a possible pathogen risk.”

The Associated Press got a peek at what it takes to clone and raise designer pigs for their organs — including a $75 million “designated pathogen-free facility” built to meet Food and Drug Administration safety standards for xenotransplantation.

Thousands of Americans each year die waiting for a transplant, and many experts acknowledge there never will be enough human donors to meet the need.

Animals offer the tantalizing promise of a ready-made supply. After decades of failed attempts, companies including Revivicor, eGenesis and Makana Therapeutics are engineering pigs to be more like humans.

So far in the U.S. there have been four “compassionate use” transplants, last-ditch experiments into dying patients — two hearts and two kidneys. Revivicor provided both hearts and one of the kidneys. While the four patients died within a few months, they offered valuable lessons for researchers ready to try again in people who aren’t quite as sick.

Now the FDA is evaluating promising results from experiments in donated human bodies and awaiting results of additional studies of pig organs in baboons before deciding next steps.

They’re semi-custom organs — “we’re growing these pigs to the size of the recipient,” Mr. Ayares said — that won’t show the wear and tear of aging or chronic disease like most organs donated by people.

Transplant surgeons who’ve retrieved organs on Revivicor’s farm “go, ‘Oh my God, that’s the most beautiful kidney I’ve ever seen,’” Mr. Ayares added. “Same thing when they get the heart, a pink, healthy, happy heart from a young animal.”

The main challenges: how to avoid rejection and whether the animals might carry some unknown infection risk.

The process starts with modifying genes in pig skin cells in a lab. Revivicor initially deleted a gene that produces a sugar named alpha-gal, which triggers immediate destruction from the human immune system.

Next came three-gene “knockouts,” to remove other immune-triggering red flags. Now the company is focusing on 10 gene edits — deleted pig genes and added human ones that together lessen risk of rejection and blood clots plus limit organ size.

They clone pigs with those alterations, similar to how Dolly the sheep was created.

Twice a week, slaughterhouses ship Revivicor hundreds of eggs retrieved from sow ovaries. Working in the dark with the light-sensitive eggs, scientists peer through a microscope while suctioning out the maternal DNA. Then they slip in the genetic modifications.

“Tuck it in nice and smooth,” murmurs senior researcher Lori Sorrells, pushing to just the right spot without rupturing the egg. Mild electric shocks fuse in the new DNA and activate embryo growth.

Mr. Ayares, a molecular geneticist who heads Revivicor and helped create the world’s first cloned pigs in 2000, says the technique is “like playing two video games at the same time,” holding the egg in place with one hand and manipulating it with the other.

The company’s first modified pig, the GalSafe single gene knockout, now is bred instead of cloned. If xenotransplantation eventually works, other pigs with the desired gene combinations would be, too.

Hours later, embryos are carried to the research farm in a hand-held incubator and implanted into waiting sows


Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: New Blood Tests
« Reply #661 on: July 30, 2024, 11:59:16 AM »


The Blood Tests That Can Flag Your Hidden Heart Disease Risk
Doctors say these tests can offer a better indication of potential problems than some better-known measures
By
Alex Janin
Follow
July 30, 2024 8:01 am ET


Two blood tests you probably haven’t heard of might predict your risk of heart disease better than standard tests do.

The first measures a protein called apolipoprotein B, or apoB for short, that contributes to artery-blocking plaque. The other test, for lipoprotein(a), measures a type of bad cholesterol.

High levels of each have been linked to increased risk of heart disease.

A growing number of specialists and primary care doctors say these tests can help give you a more precise and earlier indication of possible heart problems than more common tests for things like LDL, the best-known bad cholesterol marker. In some cases, these lesser-known tests identify at-risk people whose standard lipid tests look normal.

Proponents say the tests should supplement, not replace, your standard lipid panel, which is generally recommended every one to six years for adults.

Other doctors are wary of ordering the tests, citing a lack of consensus on what constitutes normal levels and whether and how to treat them—not to mention the extra cost. U.S. medical organization guidelines don’t universally recommend them.

How these tests could help
A growing body of research on apoB suggests it is a better predictor of heart disease risk than the better-known LDL cholesterol.

Up to 20% of patients with normal LDL cholesterol levels will have high levels of apoB, says Dr. Marc Penn, a cardiologist and a medical director at laboratory testing company Quest Diagnostics.

“You’re actually getting a much better assessment of the number of particles that are carrying cholesterol in the blood that could potentially lead to atherosclerosis” when measuring apoB, says Dr. Shriram Nallamshetty, a preventive cardiologist at the Palo Alto VA Medical Center.

Similarly, high lp(a) levels, which are thought to start between 30 and 50 mg/dL and affect roughly 20% to 30% of people, have been linked to increased risk for heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular diseases.


The apoB protein binds to the surface of round lipoprotein particles that carry triglycerides and ‘bad’ cholesterol to help form artery-blocking plaque.  ILLUSTRATION: QUEST DIAGNOSTICS
You can lower your apoB levels by taking certain drugs, like statins, and through dietary changes, such as limiting saturated fats.

Your lp(a), by contrast, is genetic and doesn’t change much over the course of your life. But if tests show high levels, you can lower your heart-disease risk in other ways, such as with medication or changes to diet and exercise.

Buddy Touchinsky, a chiropractor who runs an integrative medicine practice in Pennsylvania, decided last year to start running both tests on every patient. Last year, Touchinsky’s own lp(a) test revealed a level significantly above the high-risk threshold.

“If I would have started more aggressively treating this 20 years ago, maybe I wouldn’t have any plaquing in my arteries at all,” says Touchinsky.

Touchinsky was able to bring down his apoB level by reducing his consumption of foods like red meat, butter and full-fat dairy, upping his exercise and taking a low-dose statin, as well as another cholesterol-lowering drug called ezetimibe.

Who should get them
Doctors disagree about who should get these tests.

“Some people are doing everything they can to be healthy already and have a lot of anxiety,” says Dr. Nalin Dayawansa, a research and interventional cardiology fellow at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. “A lot of that information is just noise and wasted money if it doesn’t directly influence what you do.”

The American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association don’t recommend them for everyone. Instead, they recommend lp(a) testing for adults with a family history of premature heart disease, or if you have atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease that isn’t explained by common risk factors like smoking.

These groups say that measuring apoB may have advantages for some people, especially if you have high levels of triglycerides, or fat, in the blood.

DougMacG

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Health Thread, Mental Health, The times they are a changin'
« Reply #662 on: October 13, 2024, 01:19:40 PM »
73% of Boomer males: "No matter what psychological challenges I face, I will not let them define me." 

72% of Gen Z females: "Mental illness is an important part of my identity."

https://x.com/eyeslasho/status/1844932708474016215

Body-by-Guinness

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Grain of Salt Sized Implant Restores Vision
« Reply #663 on: October 28, 2024, 04:56:57 PM »
My wife has eye issues that make driving among other things difficult, which this piece holds out some hope for:

OPICSEXPERTSEVENTSVIDEOS
The Clinically Blind See Again With an Implant the Size of a Grain of Salt
Shelly Fan
By
Shelly Fan
October 28, 2024
 
Seeing is believing. Our perception of the world heavily relies on vision.

What we see depends on cells in the retina, which sit behind the eyes. These delicate cells transform light into electrical pulses that go to the brain for further processing.

But because of age, disease, or genetics, retinal cells often break down. For people with geographic atrophy—a disease which gradually destroys retinal cells—their eyes struggle to focus on text, recognize faces, and decipher color or textures in the dark. The disease especially attacks central vision, which lets our eyes focus on specific things.

The result is seeing the world through a blurry lens. Walking down the street in dim light becomes a nightmare, each surface looking like a distorted version of itself. Reading a book or watching a movie is more frustrating than relaxing.

But the retina is hard to regenerate, and the number of transplant donors can’t meet demand. A small clinical trial may have a solution. Led by Science Corporation, a brain-machine interface company headquartered in Alameda, California, the study implanted a tiny chip that acts like a replacement retina in 38 participants who were legally blind.

Dubbed the PRIMAvera trial, the volunteers wore custom-designed eyewear with a camera acting as a “digital eye.” Captured images were then transmitted to the implanted artificial retina, which translated the information into electrical signals for the brain to decipher.

Preliminary results found a boost in the participants’ ability to read the eye exam scale—a common test of random letters, with each line smaller than the last. Some could even read longer texts in a dim environment at home with the camera’s “zoom-and-enhance” function.

The trial is ongoing, with final results expected in 2026—three years after the implant. But according to Frank Holz at the University of Bonn Ernst-Abbe-Strasse in Germany, the study’s scientific coordinator, the results are a “milestone” for geographic atrophy resulting from age.

“Prior to this, there have been no real treatment options for these patients,” he said in a press release.

Max Hodak, CEO of Science Corp and former president of Elon Musk’s Neuralink, said, “To my knowledge, this is the first time that restoration of the ability to fluently read has ever been definitively shown in blind patients.”

Eyes Wide Open

The eye is a biological wonder. The eyeball’s layers act as a lens focusing light onto the retina—the eye’s visual “sensor.” The retina contains two types of light-sensitive cells: Rods and cones.

The rods mostly line the outer edges of the retina, letting us see shapes and shadows in the dark or at the periphery. But these cells can’t detect color or sharpen their focus, which is why night vision feels blurrier. However, rods readily pick up action at the edges of sight—such as seeing rapidly moving things out of the corner of your eye.

Cones pick up the slack. These cells are mostly in the center of the retina and can detect vibrant colors and sharply focus on specific things, like the words you’re currently reading.

Both cell types rely on other cells to flourish. These cells coat the retina, and like soil in a garden, provide a solid foundation in which the rods and cones can grow.

With age, all these cells gradually deteriorate, sometimes resulting in age-related macular degeneration and the gradual loss of central vision. It’s a common condition that affects nearly 20 million Americans aged 40 or older. Details become hard to see; straight lines may seem crooked; colors look dim, especially in low-light conditions. Later stages, called geographic atrophy, result in legal blindness.

Scientists have long searched for a treatment. One idea is to use a 3D-printed stem cell patch made out of the base “garden soil” cells that support light-sensitive rods and cones. Here, doctors transform a patient’s own blood cells into healthy retinal support cells, attach them to a biodegradable scaffold, and transplant them into the eye.

Initial results showed the patch integrated into the retina and slowed and even reversed the disease. But this can take six months and is tailored for each patient, making it difficult to scale.

A New Vision

The Prima system eschews regeneration for a wireless microchip that replaces parts of the retina. The two-millimeter square implant—roughly the size of a grain of salt—is surgically inserted under the retina. The procedure may sound daunting, but according to Wired, it takes only 80 minutes, less time than your average movie. Each chip contains nearly 400 light-sensitive pixels, which convert light patterns into electrical pulses the brain can interpret. The system also includes a pair of glasses with a camera to capture visual information and beam it to the chip using infrared light.

Together, the components work like our eyes do: Images from the camera are sent to the artificial retina “chip,” which transform them into electrical signals for the brain.

Initial results were promising. According to the company, the patients had improved visual acuity a year after the implant. At the beginning of the study, most were considered legally blind with an average vision of 20/450, compared to the normal 20/20. When challenged with an eye exam test, the patients could read, on average, roughly 23 more letters—or five more lines down the chart—compared to tests taken before they received the implant. One patient especially excelled, improving their performance by 59 letters—over 11 lines.

The Prima implant also impacted their daily lives. Participants were able to read, play cards, and tackle crossword puzzles—all activities that require central vision.

While impressive, the system didn’t work for everyone. The implant caused serious side effects in some participants—such as a small tear in the retina—which were mostly resolved according to the company. Some people also experienced blood leaks under the retina that were promptly treated. However, few details regarding the injuries or treatments were released.

The trial is ongoing, with the goal of following participants for three years to track improvements and monitor side effects. The team is also looking to measure their quality of life—how the system affects daily activities that require vision and mental health.

The trial “represents an enormous turning point for the field, and we’re incredibly excited to bring this important technology to market over the next few years,” said Hodak.



https://singularityhub.com/2024/10/28/the-clinically-blind-see-again-with-an-implant-the-size-of-a-grain-of-sand/

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)
« Reply #664 on: October 30, 2024, 07:17:12 AM »
My wife stresses greatly with driving at night and avoids it.

I will share this with her.

ccp

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eye chip and glasses
« Reply #665 on: October 30, 2024, 09:37:04 AM »

Body-by-Guinness

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Hard to Profit from Good Metabolic Health
« Reply #666 on: October 31, 2024, 08:36:18 AM »
Six minute vid where an MD states the healthcare industry is set up to ignore and avoid simple fixes offered by practicing good metabolic health and instead take an interventionist approach where cutting, medicating, and the interventions favored by big pharma and big gov are favored:

https://x.com/jordanbpeterson/status/1838748074597917096

ccp

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Re: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)
« Reply #667 on: October 31, 2024, 09:57:46 AM »
a lot of "we need to do" _____ what?

we can outlaw all plastics sugar meat salt etc.

that should be easy

every single corner of the US has a restaurant that would have to close down

we can outlaw cars and have everyone go back to walking and bicycles


Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)
« Reply #668 on: November 01, 2024, 10:39:11 AM »
a lot of "we need to do" _____ what?

we can outlaw all plastics sugar meat salt etc.

that should be easy

every single corner of the US has a restaurant that would have to close down

we can outlaw cars and have everyone go back to walking and bicycles

Is this in response to the metabolic health video I posted? If so it seems we watched two different videos.

ccp

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Re: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)
« Reply #669 on: November 01, 2024, 10:49:49 AM »
yes

the woman in the video pointed out many concerns but no specific remedies.

I am saying the problems she points out involve the whole economy

so what does she propose we do?

just asking.

Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Health Thread (nutrition, medical, longevity, etc)
« Reply #670 on: November 01, 2024, 11:52:31 AM »
yes

the woman in the video pointed out many concerns but no specific remedies.

I am saying the problems she points out involve the whole economy

so what does she propose we do?

just asking.

Focus on metabolic health proactively rather than interventionist health reactively, and have medical schools offer metabolic health coursework so that MDs, particularly GPs, have the tools to counsel patients on effective metabolic health strategies that will delay or obviate the need for surgical or pharmacological interventions down the line was my takeaway.

Body-by-Guinness

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Sugar and its Impact on Health
« Reply #671 on: November 01, 2024, 02:42:36 PM »
Only read the abstract, but it seems quite interesting, particularly the impact of prenatal sugar. When I was a kid, sugar was considered bad for teeth, but beyond that ubiquitous. Wish I’d had more sense about this stuff 50 years ago when sugar habits get established:

Abstract

We examined the impact of sugar exposure within 1000 days since conception on diabetes and hypertension, leveraging quasi-experimental variation from the end of the United Kingdom’s sugar rationing in September 1953. Rationing restricted sugar intake to levels within current dietary guidelines, yet consumption nearly doubled immediately post-rationing. Using an event study design with UK Biobank data comparing adults conceived just before or after rationing ended, we found that early-life rationing reduced diabetes and hypertension risk by about 35% and 20%, respectively, and delayed disease onset by 4 and 2 years. Protection was evident with in-utero exposure and increased with postnatal sugar restriction, especially after six months when solid foods likely began. In-utero sugar rationing alone accounted for about one third of the risk reduction.

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adn5421

ccp

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weight recurrence after GLP-1 drugs
« Reply #672 on: November 15, 2024, 12:56:37 PM »
I am not sure why this is surprising

It is not isolated to GLP 1 drugs.

Most people regain the weight after any "diet" or other medicine:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-14082287/ozempic-weight-loss-weight-on.html

These medicines are not miracle cures they are miracle treatments.  Yes people can have side effects or they do not work for everyone.   

Who would have guessed?    :roll: