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Keyword: autophagy

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  • The Anti Parasitic Drug That is Cheap, Safe & Kills Aggressive Cancers – But Has Not Been FDA Approved.

    01/14/2024 4:23:29 AM PST · by Red Badger · 70 replies
    The Expose' ^ | OCTOBER 7, 2023 | PATRICIA HARRITY
    Yesterday the Expose published an article which highlighted just a few of the various diseases that were found to be potentially caused by parasites, including cancers. A recent review of nine published research papers by Doctor William Makis further supports the views in the article, but Dr Makis is more qualified to say “it is a reasonable hypothesis that COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine Turbo Cancer patients could benefit significantly from anti-parasitic drugs.” One anti parasitic drug in particular, Fenbendazole, however, has not been sanctioned for human use by the FDA, but despite lacking “official” approval, it is cheap, safe and more...
  • Study: D-mannose reduces age-triggered changes in urinary tract that increase susceptibility to UTIs (Makes urinary system act younger)

    12/17/2023 9:18:03 PM PST · by ConservativeMind · 25 replies
    Medical Xpress / Baylor College of Medicine / Developmental Cell ^ | Dec. 14, 2023 | Dr. Indira Mysorekar et al
    Aging poses a number of challenges to the body's well-being, one of the most important being an increased susceptibility to multiple diseases, including urinary tract infections (UTIs). The connection between aging and more prevalent UTIs is not well understood, but now researchers have found an explanation. Compared to the younger counterpart, the aging urinary tract in animal models changes how it functions at the cellular level in ways that seem to favor the establishment and recurrence of UTIs. Furthermore, the researchers also found that the sugar D-mannose reduces the severity of aging-associated decline in urinary tract functionality, suggesting that this...
  • Scientists Claim They May Have Discovered the Cause of Alzheimer’s

    12/15/2021 9:44:32 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 20 replies
    Epoch Times ^ | 12/15/2021 | Jack Phillips
    Researchers say that they may have discovered the molecular-level cause of Alzheimer’s disease.Scientists at the University of California–Riverside said in recent findings that the key to understanding Alzheimer’s may have to do with “tau” proteins that likely cause neurofibrillary tangles—which are found in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients. Previously, researchers suggested that amyloid plaques, which are a buildup of amyloid peptides, may be the cause.Both amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles are critical indicators that doctors look for when trying to diagnose Alzheimer’s.“Roughly 20 percent of people have the plaques, but no signs of dementia,” said UCR chemistry professor Ryan Julian...
  • Scientists say they might have discovered the cause of Alzheimer's: Researchers Focus on a Protein called Tau and how it’s linked to brain buildup

    12/08/2021 9:28:46 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 18 replies
    The Hill ^ | 12/08/2021 | Shirin Ali
    * Researchers at the University of California-Riverside published results of a study that analyzed donated brain samples.* They focused on the form of tau proteins, which can be either right-handed or left-handed.* Researchers discovered that those who had a “different handed” form of tau proteins along with brain plaque and tangles also had dementia. Scientists in California tried to study Alzheimer’s disease from a different perspective and the results may have led them to the cause of the disease. Researchers at the University of California- Riverside (UCR) recently published results from a study that looked at a protein called...
  • Molecule found in seafood plays role in protecting and improving cognitive function (TMAO preserves blood/brain barrier)

    12/07/2021 9:02:18 PM PST · by ConservativeMind · 11 replies
    Research at Nottingham Trent University investigated the role of trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) a molecule which is present in people's diets and produced by the body during digestion of fish. As foods containing TMAO are ingested, the molecule is broken down by bacteria in the gut. The breakdown product is taken up into the bloodstream and converted back to TMAO, which interacts with organs throughout the body. Importantly, the brain's circulatory and vascular system is exposed to TMAO, which interacts directly with the 'blood-brain barrier." This barrier works to prevent potentially harmful toxins in the body from reaching the brain. As...
  • How food intake modifies the gut (Why intermittent fasting works?)

    12/07/2021 8:45:19 PM PST · by ConservativeMind · 23 replies
    With more than 10% of the world's population obese and 40% overweight, obesity constitutes one of the most crucial health challenges. However, existing therapeutic options remain scarce and poorly efficient. Few years ago, scientists discovered that the absorptive surface and function of the gut change due to certain external stimuli, such as exposure to cold. Increasing the food amount elevates the intestinal absorptive surface and function. Mechanistically, this is due to the enhanced expression of PPARα, a regulating protein necessary for the overeating-induced increase in the capacity of the gut to absorb calories. Furthermore, if high amounts of food increase...
  • Weight Loss Surgery 'Best Treatment' for Fatty Liver Disease (Pantethine, intermittent fasting, and weight loss (keto) can address it, too)

    11/26/2021 3:39:40 PM PST · by ConservativeMind · 13 replies
    Medscape / JAMA ^ | Nov. 23, 2021 | Pam Harrison / Steven Nissen, MD et al
    Weight loss surgery significantly lowers the risk of major adverse liver outcomes as well as major acute cardiovascular events (MACE) in patients with biopsy-proven nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), compared with similar patients who didn't have surgery, new research shows. "This is the first study in the medical field reporting a treatment modality that is associated with decreased risk of major adverse events in patients with biopsy-proven NASH," senior author Steven Nissen, MD. As the authors point out, obesity is the main pathophysiologic driver of NASH and weight loss — however achieved — is currently the primary treatment for NASH. "However, bariatric...
  • Low-frequency intermittent fasting prompts anti-inflammatory response

    11/22/2021 7:49:25 PM PST · by ConservativeMind · 25 replies
    Medical XPress / Intermountain Healthcare / American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2021 ^ | Nov. 13, 2021 | Joseph B. Muhlestein, MD; Heidi T. May; Viet T. Le; Tami L. Bair et al
    Intermittent fasting may not only be a hot dieting trend, but it also has broader health benefits, including helping to fight inflammation, according to a new study. Previous research has shown that intermittent fasting, an eating pattern that cycles between periods of fasting and eating, may improve health markers not related to weight. Now, the new research shows that intermittent fasting raises the levels of galectin-3, a protein tied to inflammatory response. "Inflammation is associated with higher risk of developing multiple chronic diseases, including diabetes and heart disease. We're encouraged to see evidence that intermittent fasting is prompting the body...
  • Want to Lose Weight? Try Intermittent Fasting For Weight Loss, Says Study

    10/17/2021 3:25:56 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 51 replies
    MSN ^ | 10/14
    Intermittent fasting is the new health trend that is slowly but steadily encroaching on the number 1 spot. It promises weight loss, improves metabolism and reverses many lifestyle-related diseases. Now a new study review led by University of Illinois Chicago researchers says that intermittent fasting can produce clinically significant weight loss as well as improve metabolic health in individuals with obesity. The findings of the study were published in the journal Annual Review of Nutrition. "We noted that intermittent fasting is not better than regular dieting; both produce the same amount of weight loss and similar changes in blood pressure,...
  • Can Intermittent Fasting Really Help You Lose Weight and Live Longer?

    10/17/2021 3:14:18 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 21 replies
    Yahoo News! ^ | Mon, October 11, 2021, | Arricca Elin SanSone
    Maybe you’ve tried intermittent fasting (IF) to shed a few (pandemic!) pounds, since the hope and potential for weight loss is what this eating plan is best known for. And yes, scientists are looking into whether or not it really is effective at helping people slim down. But some studies show that IF—in which you only eat during a specified time period—may have other possible long-term health benefits as well. “The goal with IF is improving metabolic health, reducing the risk of certain conditions such as diabetes, and increasing longevity,” says Laura Kelly, C.N.S., L.D.N., an advanced genomic nutritionist at...
  • Interrupting high-fat, high-calorie diet with regular 'fasting' cycles helps mice live longer, healthier life (28 day bad diet OK with 6 good days)

    10/14/2021 6:16:30 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 6 replies
    Medical XPress / University of Southern California / Nature Metabolism ^ | Oct. 14, 2021 | Jenesse Miller / Amrendra Mishra et al
    In a new USC study on the health effects of a low-calorie diet that mimics fasting in the body, researchers found regular five-day cycles of the diet in mice seemed to counteract the detrimental effects of their usual high-fat, high-calorie diet. The findings point to the potential of using a fasting-mimicking diet as "medicine," according to the researchers. A fasting-mimicking diet, or FMD, is a low-calorie diet that "tricks" the body into a fasting state. One group of mice ate a high-calorie, high-fat diet (with 60% of their calories from fat) and became unhealthy and overweight. A second group of...
  • Intermittent fasting makes fruit flies live longer—will it work for people? (Overnight for 20 hours extended lives by 13-18%)

    09/29/2021 1:05:13 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 33 replies
    Intermittent fasting and time-restricted feeding in general limit food, but not overall caloric intake, to specific hours of the day. (In contrast, dietary restriction, which also has been shown to increase longevity, reduces caloric intake.) "Because intermittent fasting restricts the timing of eating, it's been hypothesized that natural biological clocks play a role," says Mimi Shirasu-Hiza, Ph.D. The researchers put their flies on one of four different schedules: 24-hour unrestricted access to food, 12-hour daytime access to food, 24-hour fasting following by 24-hour unrestricted feeding, or what the researchers called intermittent time-restricted fasting or iTRF (20 hours of fasting followed...
  • Intermittent fasting can help manage metabolic disease

    09/23/2021 10:49:25 AM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 50 replies
    ScienceDaily / The Endocrine Society / Endocrine Reviews ^ | Sept. 22, 2021 | Emily N Manoogian, Lisa S Chow, Pam R Taub, Blandine Laferrère, Satchidananda Panda
    Eating your daily calories within a consistent window of 8-10 hours is a powerful strategy to prevent and manage chronic diseases such as diabetes and heart disease, according to a new manuscript published in the Endocrine Society's journal, Endocrine Reviews. Time-restricted eating is a type of intermittent fasting that limits your food intake to a certain number of hours each day. Intermittent fasting is one of the most popular diet trends, and people are using it to lose weight, improve their health and simplify their lifestyles. "People who are trying to lose weight and live a healthier lifestyle should pay...
  • Diabetes then & now (Doctors have known since 1800 that either low carb or fasting reversed diabetes)

    09/06/2021 2:34:30 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 98 replies
    Doctor’s Review ^ | March 2009 | by DR. VINCENT WOO, JACKIE ROSENHEK & SUSAN USHER
    …19TH CENTURY: DIETS AND DIABETIC DOGS Diet became the rage around 1800 after John Rollo confirmed the existence of excess blood sugar in people with diabetes, concluding that low-carb, high-protein diets worked best. Seventy years later, French physician Appolinaire Bouchardat discovered during a food shortage that starvation worked well for his patients. By the 1880s, periodic fasting and starvation were the norm. German medical student Paul Langerhans first identified islet cells in the pancreas in 1869. In 1889, Josef von Mering and Oskar Minkowski removed the pancreas of a dog and voilà! — instant diabetes. Scottish endocrinologist Edward Sharpey-Shafer made...
  • More than weight loss: Intermittent fasting may help protect older adults from injury

    08/18/2021 1:14:11 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 13 replies
    Study Finds ^ | AUGUST 17, 2021
    An intermittent fasting diet could help protect older people from falls and other injuries by building up their muscles, a study has discovered. Intermittent fasting, also known as time-restricted eating, could also be a cost-efficient intervention to prevent type 2 diabetes, fatty liver disease, and liver cancer, a team from the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in California says. Fasting for a longer period could also better protect against infectious diseases like COVID-19 and even save people from dying of sepsis. Intermittent fasting is a dietary regimen that’s growing in popularity. The diet holds people to eating between an eight-hour...
  • Intermittent-Fasting Diets May Prevent Infections, Study Finds

    08/07/2021 1:59:39 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 11 replies
    UPI ^ | AUG. 5, 2021 | Brian P. Dunleavy
    Intermittent-fasting diets may help prevent infections in those who practice them, a study published Thursday by the journal PLOS Pathogens found. Mice orally infected with a bacteria responsible for most stomach viruses that were put on a fast for 48 hours before exposure had fewer signs of bacterial infection compared with those that were fed, the researchers said. The mice in the study were infected with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, which causes gastroenteritis, an infection humans experience as abdominal cramps, diarrhea and vomiting, researchers said. However, when fasted mice were infected with Salmonella intravenously, they did not have similar protection...
  • Fasting may help ward off infections, study in mice suggests (Starve a gut infection?)

    08/05/2021 1:44:24 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 24 replies
    Medical XPress / Public Library of Science / PLOS Pathogens ^ | Aug. 5, 2021 | Graef FA, Celiberto LS, Allaire JM, Kuan MTY, Bosman ES, Crowley SM, et al.
    Fasting before and during exposure to Salmonella enterica bacteria protects mice from developing a full-blown infection, in part due to changes in the animals' gut microbiomes, according to new research. When people or animals develop an infection, they often lose their appetite. However it remains controversial whether fasting protects a host from infection, or increases their susceptibility. In the new study, mice were fasted for 48 hours before and during oral infection with the bacteria Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, a common cause of foodborne illness in people. Fasting decreased the signs of bacterial infection compared to fed mice, including nearly...
  • Study finds time-restricted eating may reduce diabetes-related hypertension (intermittent fasting)

    07/02/2021 8:19:22 AM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 18 replies
    A new University of Kentucky College of Medicine study suggests that time-restricted eating may be able to help people with Type 2 diabetes reduce nocturnal hypertension, which is characterized by elevated blood pressure at night. The study found that imposing time-restricted feeding prevented diabetic mice from developing nondipping blood pressure. The practice also effectively restored the disrupted blood pressure circadian rhythm in mice that already had nondipping blood pressure. Normally, blood pressure falls at night and increases upon awakening, in line with the body's circadian rhythm. In some hypertensive patients, the typical nighttime decrease does not occur. This "nondipping" blood...
  • Fasting lowers blood pressure by reshaping the gut microbiota

    05/04/2021 7:58:04 AM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 31 replies
    ScienceDaily.com-Ana María Rodríguez, Ph.D./Circulation Research ^ | April 29, 2021 | Baylor College of Medicine/Dr. David J. Durgan and associates
    At Baylor College of Medicine, Dr. David J. Durgan and his colleagues are dedicated to better understand hypertension, in particular the emerging evidence suggesting that disruption of the gut microbiota, known as gut dysbiosis, can have adverse effects on blood pressure. …”Previous studies from our lab have shown that the composition of the gut microbiota in animal models of hypertension, such as the SHRSP (spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rat) model, is different from that in animals with normal blood pressure," said Durgan, assistant professor of anesthesiology at Baylor. "This result told us that gut dysbiosis is not just a consequence of...
  • Is your fasting blood glucose higher on low carb or keto? Five things to know

    03/16/2021 7:42:38 AM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 12 replies
    Diet Doctor ^ | October 12, 2020 | Anne Mullens, BSc, BJ
    This past spring, after 18 months of great success on the keto diet, I tested my fasting blood sugar on my home glucose monitor for the first time in many months. The result shocked me. I had purchased the device, which also tests ketones, when I was diagnosed with pre-diabetes in the fall of 2015. As I embarked on low-carb keto eating, I tested my blood regularly. Soon my fasting blood sugar was once again in the healthy range. I was in optimal ketosis day after day. Not only that, I lost 10 lbs (5 kg) and felt fantastic —...