Sunday, January 26, 2020

The evil in your medicine



About a week ago, I listened to the podcast of Peter Attia, MD, with Kathrine Eban, the author of the book Bottle of Lies. It was one of the longest podcasts Attia has produced, and yet, I could not stop listening. It was a captivating and anxiety-inducing narrative about generics, the cheaper version of the brand-name medications.

As the minutes turned into hours, the discussion revealed the depths of a global crime with the main motivation being the GREED. 


After the podcast, I obtained the book and read it in three days. Several times through the book, I started crying (yes, I am a cry-baby). Several times, I had to stop reading because the words felt like punches to my chest and left me breathless. I was facing one of the most detailed and harrowing accounts of EVIL.

And here is some of the story.

First was the GREED of global pharma. The drugs were developed based upon huge intellectual and research effort, and yes, based upon lots of funds. But the profits exceeded the expenses beyond any imagination. The drug prices that pharmaceutical companies extracted from the patients and the US health system supported the companies’ manicured headquarters and campuses, the lavish caviar-and-champagne office parties, the helicopters and the multi-million-dollar salaries and bonuses of the executives.

The second layer of GREED story was revealed when the pharmaceutical companies in China and India were allowed to deliver the cheaper versions of the brand-name medicines – the generics. The lower price, however, compromised the quality of the medications. As noted in Kathrine Eban’s book, each drug is a poison, and its therapeutic range is rather narrow. Anything outside this range could damage or kill. If to the not-so-precise dosing of the generics, one adds impurities, carcinogens, fast degradation/decomposition or deregulated bioavailability of the active ingredients, then the result is a generic drug that acts as a placebo (the best case scenario), or functions as a lethal weapon. 


The death of the pharmaceutical manufacturing in the USA, the rise of pharma in India and China, the resulting genocide in the form of substandard or murderous generics, and the inability (unwillingness?) of the federal government to address this genocide are all documented in Bottle of Lies.

If you, your family and friends rely on any medication, you should listen to the podcast of Attia and read the book
Bottle of Lies.

What can you do when prescribed and dispensed a generic medication that might make you sicker, kill you or is just ineffective?

I hate to say that there is no hope or solution to this tragedy. But for most people who are not aware of what is happening, there is no solution. Many patients would end up poisoned or even killed by the medications. 


And yet, you may try to fight the established system by insisting that your doctor and pharmacy give you the brand version of the medicine. It will certainly cost you.

There is also the very first online pharmacy Valisure, that analyzes for reliability all drugs they dispense. They also keep a list of Indian and Chinese companies that they would never order drugs from. Learn more about this company from another podcast of Dr. Attia, this of his conversation with David Light.  


Finally, eat healthy, move, destress so that your dependence on drugs is decreased. Above all, read the book, be aware. Let your friends and family know the truth.


If you live in Europe, you will find this video revealing and troubling:  How Safe Are Our Medicines.

Thursday, January 23, 2020

Immune Defect As A Cause Of Alzheimer's Disease


Inflammation is an immune activity designed to protect the host from pathogens and noxious agents. In its low-intensity form, presence of an inflammatory process must be inferred from appropriate biomarkers. Occult neuroinflammation is not just secondary to Alzheimer's disease (AD) but may contribute to its pathogenesis and promote its progression. A leaky blood-brain barrier (BBB) has been observed in early AD and may play a role in its initiation and development. Studies of the temporal evolution of AD's biomarkers have shown that, in AD, the brain's amyloid burden correlates poorly with cognitive decline. In contrast, cognitive deficits in AD correlate well with synapse loss. Oligomeric forms of amyloid-beta (oAβs) can be synaptotoxic and evidence of their deposition inside synaptic terminals of cognition-associated neurons explains early memory loss in AD better than formation of extracellular Aβ plaques. Among innate immune cells that reside in the brain, microglia sense danger signals represented by proteins like oAβ and become activated by neuronal damage such as that caused by bacterial endotoxins. The resulting reactive microgliosis has been implicated in generating the chronic form of microglial activation believed to promote AD's development. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have yielded data from patients with sporadic AD indicating that its causes include genetic variation in the innate immune system. Recent preclinical studies have reported that β-hydroxybutyrate (βOHB) may protect the brain from the adverse effects of both the nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptor protein 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome and the deacetylation of histone. Consequently, there is an urgent need for clinical investigations designed to test whether an orally administered βOHB preparation, such as a ketone ester, can have a similar beneficial effect in human subjects.

Immune problems and inflammation may be at the heart of many chronic disorders.  Hopefully, β-hydroxybutyrate  will be helpful.  Doing everything possible to improve immune function and reduce (unnecessary) inflammation may be helpful as well.

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Flex your financial muscle





I have previously written about financial independence because it is my goal.  

I have always been thrifty; yet, in my early years no one told me that I could be more financially disciplined and more purposeful with my money. These days, however, I look around my house and instead of stuff, I see money I could have invested. I see days of freedom I would never recover.

How am I going to get rid of all the material junk? This is another question that frightens me. One day, I would like all my belongings to fit in two suitcases. And then a reasonable bank account would propel me into my adventure.

Luckily, some young people today are well aware of what they can achieve financially and how they can achieve it. Some of them even preach it online (see below)! Therefore, my child does not have to follow the road of extreme slavery that describes my everyday life.

For the past three or four years, I have listened to various podcasts on early retirement and financial independence; however, with time, these became a bit repetitive and boring.

Eventually, I switched to videos on investing. At this point, I do not need the impetus that is constantly drummed up in podcasts. All I need is to know more about the tools and the detailed implementation of a successful personal financial plan.

Here are some of the useful (and entertaining) video resources I have found in the past months:

Personal finances, taxes, investing: Money and Life TV with Mike the CPA

Investing, dividends, passive income: Joseph Carlson 

Investing, real estate, practical advice: Graham Stephan

Investing, passive income: Andrei Jikh


If you have kids, let them watch Graham Stephan and Adrei Jikh. After all, peer-to-peer advice is ranked higher than parent-to-child! 

I wish you profitable watching!