- Joined
- Oct 13, 2010
- Messages
- 10,787
Here's a link my wife put on fb wall today: Healthy Oils, Healthy Fats
It took some doing, but I've converted her.
It took some doing, but I've converted her.
I have CAD (Coronary Artery Disease aka plaque in my heart veins). I have been able to stabilize that plaque (stop the growth), and truly believe that I will achieve regression (heart disease reversal) within the next 12 months. The program that is working for me is one developed by a preventive cardiologist out of Milwaukee named Bill Davis. His program is online at Track Your Plaque Heart Disease Prevention and Reversal Online I work that program with the aid of my local preventive practitioner (an Internist) who believes in it 100%. It is not mainstream medicine, but for me, mainstream medicine wasn't working. It's a bit overwhelming at first, but like everything, it gets easier to absorb if you keep working it.
Red Yeast Rice lowered mine by like 25%...I bought it online with no issues. Do your homework for sure.
.
Hello everyone,
New guy here. As I sport some new plumbing as a quad bypass owner[2008], this discussion has a high level of interest to me.
In the news recently is some reporting about medical findings for Otzi, the mummy found in an Italian pass in 1991. He had hardening of the arteries, genetic indications of heart disease risk, knee and ankle problems [maybe too much exercise] and arguably a "paleo" diet. He lived > 5000 years ago. Researchers speculate that if he had not succumbed to whatever killed him, he would have gone soon anyway via heart attack.
Heart disease is not modern...
Iceman Was a Medical Mess - ScienceNOW
Interesting article. I know essentially nothing about medical archeology, but throughout this article Iceman is referred to as Neolithic. At one point he is also referred to as "a hunter-gatherer". So unless there is some way to ascertain spectroscopically what his diet was, we are just guessing at what his medical condition may or may not tell us about anything at all.In the news recently is some reporting about medical findings for Otzi, the mummy found in an Italian pass in 1991. He had hardening of the arteries, genetic indications of heart disease risk, knee and ankle problems [maybe too much exercise] and arguably a "paleo" diet. He lived > 5000 years ago. Researchers speculate that if he had not succumbed to whatever killed him, he would have gone soon anyway via heart attack.
Iceman Was a Medical Mess - ScienceNOW
He had hardening of the arteries, genetic indications of heart disease risk, knee and ankle problems [maybe too much exercise] and arguably a "paleo" diet.
The Iceman's Last Meal - ScienceNOWThe cavities, Seiler said in his talk, confirm that the Iceman ate a diet abounding in carbohydrates, such as bread or cereal, and reveal that he possessed a "heavy bacterial dose on these teeth."
So unless there is some way to ascertain spectroscopically what his diet was
Alan, thanks for this information.I'm pretty sure there is.
I'm sure I know less than you on the subject, but I do know that they can analyze skeletal remains and determine the type of diet they lived on by the chemicals in the bones, and use these results to track the places that nomadic peoples have lived in.
In others words, not only can they tell whether he lived mostly on meat or veggies, they often have an idea of the region that the plants grew in.
Neolithic, not Paleolithic, his diet was "...abounding in carbohydrates", and he was genetically predisposed toward arteriosclerosis. Looking at some of the other stories about this find, it seems his diet is believed to have also contributed to excessive tooth decay, periodontitis, gallstones, and arthritis.
I don't know if a diet that truly replicates what Paleolithic man ate is possible in modern times, but it does seem that the modern way of eating (high carb, grains, refined/processed foods) doesn't work well our genetic predispositions.
4 cm is ~ 1.575 inches.The patient had a 4 cm (yes - that's 10 inches)
4 cm is ~ 1.575 inches.
10 inches = 25.4 cm.
I advised my friend to get her aunt of the statin ASAP. She saw her GP yesterday and he agreed she needed to stop the statin because she was displaying known side effects. Aaaaaaaaaaaaargh!!!!!!!!!
Ronstar said:Can I borrow your calculator? Mine must be off. Actually it was the reverse - It was a 10 cm (4 inch) aneurysm.
Can I borrow your calculator? Mine must be off. Actually it was the reverse - It was a 10 cm (4 inch) aneurysm.
How about the "two handfuls" measurement? Is that accurate? (That's a lotta goop in 4".)
My boss said that the surgeon reached in with both hands and plopped the gunk on the table. I don't know - maybe the doctor had small hands.