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TheLiverDoc™

@theliverdoc323,476 subscribers

Doctor. Scientist. Author. https://t.co/vRivFzk37T https://t.co/8lHqoHPoRN

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The wife gets the husband to our outpatient for liver health check up. He's a daily drinker. He's been drinking for 15 years. His friends too. They are all doing fine. Him too. He does the tests. Just a bit of fatty liver. He says he's doing alright. We (me and my senior RMO) educate him how alcohol harms beyond the liver. He's not interested. We advised a psychiatrist review. He ignores it. Goes home. Drinks at night. Probably to teach the wife a lesson. In the morning he's back. This time on the ventilator. The ICU doctor sent me this. This guy is in for a long stay in the ICU and longer stay in the hospital. This can happen to anyone who drinks. Anyone. Anytime. Anywhere.

The wife gets the husband to our outpatient for liver health check up. He's a daily drinker. He's been drinking for 15 years. His friends too. They are all doing fine. Him too. He does the tests. Just a bit of fatty liver. He says he's doing alright. We (me and my senior RMO) educate him how alcohol harms beyond the liver. He's not interested. We advised a psychiatrist review. He ignores it. Goes home. Drinks at night. Probably to teach the wife a lesson. In the morning he's back. This time on the ventilator. The ICU doctor sent me this. This guy is in for a long stay in the ICU and longer stay in the hospital. This can happen to anyone who drinks. Anyone. Anytime. Anywhere.

592,169 görüntüleme

Dear friends, thanks to your wholehearted support! The Liver Doctor book is now: #1 in Bestsellers in Health/Fitness on Amazon #6 in Bestsellers in Overall Books on Amazon #2 in Hot New Releases on Amazon #2 in Movers and Shakers on Amazon HarperCollins I really appreciate your love and interest in my book. Let is take it to #1 so that people will read it and benefit from the content I wrote for you all, burning the midnight oil over 100s of days. This is not one of those only nice looking book you will have the chance to own, but a whole world of true medicine in true detective style that will affect you to the core. Like I quote in my Chapter Two: "Time does not fly, and we cannot go back. Time does not heal, we adjust."— From Chapter Two, Juniper's Last Whimper. The paperback copy is available for pre-order on Amazon India while the Kindle version is up for pre-order everywhere: I also have some announcements: I am available for interviews, podcast sessions, media features, talks and panel discussions based on my works and sorrounding this book in general. We can discuss science, pseudoscience, medicine, alternative medicine, and everything that I do and keep doing in the background of what this book has to offer. Interested parties, people (or persons) or groups, please contact me at: theliverdr (at) gmail (dot) com - please also CC Shabnam.srivastava@harpercollins.co.in

Dear friends, thanks to your wholehearted support! The Liver Doctor book is now: #1 in Bestsellers in Health/Fitness on Amazon #6 in Bestsellers in Overall Books on Amazon #2 in Hot New Releases on Amazon #2 in Movers and Shakers on Amazon HarperCollins I really appreciate your love and interest in my book. Let is take it to #1 so that people will read it and benefit from the content I wrote for you all, burning the midnight oil over 100s of days. This is not one of those only nice looking book you will have the chance to own, but a whole world of true medicine in true detective style that will affect you to the core. Like I quote in my Chapter Two: "Time does not fly, and we cannot go back. Time does not heal, we adjust."— From Chapter Two, Juniper's Last Whimper. The paperback copy is available for pre-order on Amazon India while the Kindle version is up for pre-order everywhere: I also have some announcements: I am available for interviews, podcast sessions, media features, talks and panel discussions based on my works and sorrounding this book in general. We can discuss science, pseudoscience, medicine, alternative medicine, and everything that I do and keep doing in the background of what this book has to offer. Interested parties, people (or persons) or groups, please contact me at: theliverdr (at) gmail (dot) com - please also CC [email protected]

79,663 görüntüleme

My dear friends 🩷, if you are seeing this, know that your love when I was hated, support when I was made to fall, voice when I was voiceless and my presence through you in my absence, are highly appreciated. Thank you 🙏 Lets roll, 3...2....1....✊🔥⚡️

My dear friends 🩷, if you are seeing this, know that your love when I was hated, support when I was made to fall, voice when I was voiceless and my presence through you in my absence, are highly appreciated. Thank you 🙏 Lets roll, 3...2....1....✊🔥⚡️

819,776 görüntüleme

A true physician concerned about public health and patient safety, will without fear, educate people on lack of evidence, documented harms and promoted frauds of alternative medicine systems. Do not fear when you stand for what is true.

A true physician concerned about public health and patient safety, will without fear, educate people on lack of evidence, documented harms and promoted frauds of alternative medicine systems. Do not fear when you stand for what is true.

83,457 görüntüleme

I am sorry, but your understanding of supplements for hair and skin health is quite wrong. 1/ Multivitamins for health promotion is the biggest myth there is. A multivitamin a day improves health is a promotional gimmick from the wellness industry, health-illiterate influencers and poorly informed doctors. Daily multivitamins give you high-colored expensive urine and long term use increases risk of cancer. See here: 2/ Probiotics are sham treatments except in specific situations. See the WGO 2023 guidelines here: Its use is specific to: ➡️Prevention of antibiotic associated diarrhea. ➡️Shortening duration of acute infectious diarrhea in children by 1 day when given early during course of disease. ➡️Useful for treating "pouchitis" of inflammatory bowel disease. ➡️Reduction in risk of necrotizing enterocolitis in preterm babies. ➡️Using probiotics outside these indications is a waste of your money and time. 3/ Ginseng has no known benefits on the prevention or treatment of any disease condition known to humans. Many of the published randomized controlled trials on Asian ginseng may not be high-quality studies. Ginseng can also interact with your standard medicines and increase toxicity or reduce benefits. See here please: 4/ Omega-3 fatty acids. The only use identified from large quality studies and metanalysis is for treatment of high triglycerides and lowering of non-HDL lipid fractions. Please see this highest quality of evidence: Omega-3 does nothing as mentioned in the video. 5/ Collagen for wrinkles and fine lines, prevention of "aging" and improving "skin health" is actually a myth. Large metanalysis from 2021 showed improvement in skin elasticity and reduction in wrinkles. This one here: But, this metanalysis was done poorly. A rebuttal letter showed that conclusive benefits of collagen on skin health did not actually exist when reanalysed from proper statistical methodology - see here: Collagen will waste your money. 6/ Biotin for hair and nails. I am sorry to burst your bubble, because I know many of you are on this supplement, but it does not work. It is a waste of money. The American Academy of Dermatology Association states that biotin supplementation has no benefits on hair growth/loss or nail health. See here: Moreover, a recent review does not even mention biotin being useful in hair loss. See here: Instagram is full of these overgrown Amul-babies who have absolutely no idea about the science of healthcare or value the role of empirical evidence in advising healthcare options. Do not fall for such people or their garbage handles. And frankly, I think the guy in the video has just about average hair and skin. Not worthy of second-looks even with all that bottled stuff going in.

I am sorry, but your understanding of supplements for hair and skin health is quite wrong. 1/ Multivitamins for health promotion is the biggest myth there is. A multivitamin a day improves health is a promotional gimmick from the wellness industry, health-illiterate influencers and poorly informed doctors. Daily multivitamins give you high-colored expensive urine and long term use increases risk of cancer. See here: 2/ Probiotics are sham treatments except in specific situations. See the WGO 2023 guidelines here: Its use is specific to: ➡️Prevention of antibiotic associated diarrhea. ➡️Shortening duration of acute infectious diarrhea in children by 1 day when given early during course of disease. ➡️Useful for treating "pouchitis" of inflammatory bowel disease. ➡️Reduction in risk of necrotizing enterocolitis in preterm babies. ➡️Using probiotics outside these indications is a waste of your money and time. 3/ Ginseng has no known benefits on the prevention or treatment of any disease condition known to humans. Many of the published randomized controlled trials on Asian ginseng may not be high-quality studies. Ginseng can also interact with your standard medicines and increase toxicity or reduce benefits. See here please: 4/ Omega-3 fatty acids. The only use identified from large quality studies and metanalysis is for treatment of high triglycerides and lowering of non-HDL lipid fractions. Please see this highest quality of evidence: Omega-3 does nothing as mentioned in the video. 5/ Collagen for wrinkles and fine lines, prevention of "aging" and improving "skin health" is actually a myth. Large metanalysis from 2021 showed improvement in skin elasticity and reduction in wrinkles. This one here: But, this metanalysis was done poorly. A rebuttal letter showed that conclusive benefits of collagen on skin health did not actually exist when reanalysed from proper statistical methodology - see here: Collagen will waste your money. 6/ Biotin for hair and nails. I am sorry to burst your bubble, because I know many of you are on this supplement, but it does not work. It is a waste of money. The American Academy of Dermatology Association states that biotin supplementation has no benefits on hair growth/loss or nail health. See here: Moreover, a recent review does not even mention biotin being useful in hair loss. See here: Instagram is full of these overgrown Amul-babies who have absolutely no idea about the science of healthcare or value the role of empirical evidence in advising healthcare options. Do not fall for such people or their garbage handles. And frankly, I think the guy in the video has just about average hair and skin. Not worthy of second-looks even with all that bottled stuff going in.

459,203 görüntüleme

What happens when a bullsh*tting integrative holistic wellness coach meets the pseudoscience poster boy of India? Intense mental constipation and explosive verbal diarrhea. In todays edition of "This Does Not Happen", we discuss "Fasting, Gut Health and Gut "Reset." First, intergrated medicine is a fraudulent practice. And make no mistake, functional medicine is too. See here and here Fasting is overrated. For those who did not understand that Overrated meaning: valued too highly or have a higher opinion of (someone or something) than is deserved. There is nothing called as "gut health." Microbiome scientists have never identified or defined what a "healthy microbiome in the gut is," but have only figured out some beneficial gut bacteria. Every holistic coach, every alternative medicine practitioner, every half-baked gastroenterologist (*cough* Pal *cough* *cough*), every overconfident nutritionist and science-defying dietitian-influencer on the internet has abused the word "gut health" so much that it has started featuring on Ayurvedic, Homeopathic and Naturopathic products which science-illiterate people lap up wholesale. Trust me, none of them have any clue what the gut microbiome means and what its functionality & potential truly are. No one knows in fact and medical science is only figuring it out - one step at a time. The only time where medical science actually found value of a "gut reset" is the role of healthy donor stool transplant to treat severe, recurrent Clostridium difficile infections. Fasting does modulate the intestinal bacteria. But NOT so much that it RESETS the whole gastrointestinal system. It is quite stupid to think of it that way. Fasting was shown to increase populations of certain bacteria. But this is in no way a "detox" (another fraudulent wellness selling term) and no way a "reset." For example, when the gut is empty, mucosal slime inside intestines increase and a specific bacteria that feeds of the slime outcompetes other bacteria and increases - called Lachnospira. That is not a reset at all. Every study on fasting and "gut health" has been very basic, based on biochemical or molecular parameters and none clinically translated into beneficial interventions. Even the other commonly used term "autophagy" in the exercise/diet/nutrition/health-influencer circles is complete hocus pocus. Yes, autopaghy exists, but there is absolutely NO clinical evidence that such a process with fasting does anyone anything good. "Fasting and autophagy" related speculative benefits have NOT yet been demonstrated in real-world clinical trials involving people. Fast is you feel like it. If you can tolerate it. If you are pious and your religion warrants it. But dont think its resetting anything, other than your confirmational bias, which has been strengthened by your personal, anecdotal experience which is further strengthened by your exposure to videos that "hijack science sounding terms" narrated by "overconfident medical-science-pirates," who keep lying, day in and day out on the internet.

What happens when a bullsh*tting integrative holistic wellness coach meets the pseudoscience poster boy of India? Intense mental constipation and explosive verbal diarrhea. In todays edition of "This Does Not Happen", we discuss "Fasting, Gut Health and Gut "Reset." First, intergrated medicine is a fraudulent practice. And make no mistake, functional medicine is too. See here and here Fasting is overrated. For those who did not understand that Overrated meaning: valued too highly or have a higher opinion of (someone or something) than is deserved. There is nothing called as "gut health." Microbiome scientists have never identified or defined what a "healthy microbiome in the gut is," but have only figured out some beneficial gut bacteria. Every holistic coach, every alternative medicine practitioner, every half-baked gastroenterologist (*cough* Pal *cough* *cough*), every overconfident nutritionist and science-defying dietitian-influencer on the internet has abused the word "gut health" so much that it has started featuring on Ayurvedic, Homeopathic and Naturopathic products which science-illiterate people lap up wholesale. Trust me, none of them have any clue what the gut microbiome means and what its functionality & potential truly are. No one knows in fact and medical science is only figuring it out - one step at a time. The only time where medical science actually found value of a "gut reset" is the role of healthy donor stool transplant to treat severe, recurrent Clostridium difficile infections. Fasting does modulate the intestinal bacteria. But NOT so much that it RESETS the whole gastrointestinal system. It is quite stupid to think of it that way. Fasting was shown to increase populations of certain bacteria. But this is in no way a "detox" (another fraudulent wellness selling term) and no way a "reset." For example, when the gut is empty, mucosal slime inside intestines increase and a specific bacteria that feeds of the slime outcompetes other bacteria and increases - called Lachnospira. That is not a reset at all. Every study on fasting and "gut health" has been very basic, based on biochemical or molecular parameters and none clinically translated into beneficial interventions. Even the other commonly used term "autophagy" in the exercise/diet/nutrition/health-influencer circles is complete hocus pocus. Yes, autopaghy exists, but there is absolutely NO clinical evidence that such a process with fasting does anyone anything good. "Fasting and autophagy" related speculative benefits have NOT yet been demonstrated in real-world clinical trials involving people. Fast is you feel like it. If you can tolerate it. If you are pious and your religion warrants it. But dont think its resetting anything, other than your confirmational bias, which has been strengthened by your personal, anecdotal experience which is further strengthened by your exposure to videos that "hijack science sounding terms" narrated by "overconfident medical-science-pirates," who keep lying, day in and day out on the internet.

379,968 görüntüleme

Went to the beach. Saw the sunset. Had dinner at a shack by sundown. This is Cherai. The sea is warm and the breeze is light. Come to Kochi.

Went to the beach. Saw the sunset. Had dinner at a shack by sundown. This is Cherai. The sea is warm and the breeze is light. Come to Kochi.

44,517 görüntüleme

Dear friends (and trolls) thank you. For 300K. I appreciate your support (and harassment) and love (and hate). As ChatGPT o3 puts it: "As of today the largest personal Twitter account by an Indian practising doctor is “The Liver Doc” () with 300000 followers. The next-closest Indian clinicians are less than half that size, so yes—right now he tops the pile." Thank you for the opportunity to (learn) and teach medical science - busting one myth at a time, at this time, when India is poised to become the pseudoscience capital of the world.

Dear friends (and trolls) thank you. For 300K. I appreciate your support (and harassment) and love (and hate). As ChatGPT o3 puts it: "As of today the largest personal Twitter account by an Indian practising doctor is “The Liver Doc” () with 300000 followers. The next-closest Indian clinicians are less than half that size, so yes—right now he tops the pile." Thank you for the opportunity to (learn) and teach medical science - busting one myth at a time, at this time, when India is poised to become the pseudoscience capital of the world.

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Videos

theliverdoc's profile picture

Good morning. Please do not feed your child, cow's milk directly from the animal's udder. Raw milk consumption has become a "trad fad" among the 'educated fools' now because of poor understanding of germ-theory of disease, but this level of child m*rder is a whole different level of human stupidity. I am not sure if that smiling father of the baby understands how dangerous this is. Can anyone please track down this clown muscle brain and see how the child is doing? Always consume pasteurized milk. Some of the microbes that can harm you from raw milk are nightmarish, but those that can harm you from the cow's udder skin is downright hellish. Here is an example of what can happen to your child if you give them raw milk. A child drinks a glass of raw milk, seemingly wholesome, but laced with invisible E. coli bacteria that unleash a deadly Shiga toxin. Within days, the child is gripped by severe cramps and bloody diarrhoea as their intestines shred from the inside. Then, without warning, their red blood cells rupture, their platelets vanish, and their kidneys grind to a halt. Urine stops flowing, their skin turns pale and bruised, and they lie motionless in an ICU bed, tubes snaking from their neck into a dialysis machine that replaces their failed organs. Seizures may strike as toxins reach the brain. All of it - this slow, horrific spiral, set in motion by a single untreated glass of milk. and Be a rational and science-tempered parent to your children so that they grow and flourish. Seriously, someone please find this d*mbfck.

TheLiverDoc™

4,157,795 görüntüleme • 10 ay önce

theliverdoc's profile picture

I am sorry but Dr Pal Manickam, the Gastroenterologist from California, is becoming not just a health misinformation menace, but also a subtle "hate-monger" with his divisive attitude towards dietary choices in India, also known as Bharat, a Union of States and marriage of [dietary] cultures and traditions. Claims: 1. Eating red meat (beef and pork) causes colon cancer 2. Nitrosamines (from nitrites/nitrates) in red meat causes colon cancer 3. Cancer screening in USA above age of 50, but not in India 4. Kerala has maximum number of colon cancers in India 5. Kerala has maximum number of colon cancers because Malayalees eat a lot of beef. A lot. Response: 1. Eating red meat does not cause colon cancer Higher red meat consumption was shown to have a correlation with increased risk for colon cancer, but the evidence for independent association was weak and remains weak Eating red meat does not increase risk of colon cancer. Excessive consumption of red meat/ processed meat (excessive not yet fully defined across populations) was confusingly correlated with increased risk of colon cancer 2. Studies have only looked at nitrites and nitrates [and hence nitrosamine formation] causing stomach cancer and not colon cancer. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) also focussed on nitrosamines and stomach cancer, but the potential role for dietary nitrate/nitrite in colon cancer is not conclusively proven. Meat-based diets (specifically processed meat, not fresh meat) have a well described higher risk for cancer, but it is not readily attributable to nitrite consistently in all studies. Most studies are on ground and well water and not meat. And the strongest study to show cancer link and nitrite consumption is in mice, not humans The biggest source of nitrate exposure is dietary consumption of certain types of vegetables that are naturally high in nitrate. This is a clear case of investigator bias, looking at any possible way to force the data into a specific conclusion (like Dr. Pal is doing in the video). The IARC maintains the tone of its conclusion, but only to reiterate its validity in a theoretical state, while acknowledging that the epidemiology does to support these conclusions. Nitrites are just one reason processed meats may contribute to bowel cancer, and their relative importance is uncertain. Other factors that may contribute include iron; PAHs (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) which are formed in smoked meats; and HCAs (heterocyclic amines), which are created when meat is cooked over an open flame – and which also are tumour-promoting. So its not just red meat, but the cooking method signficantly affecting health outcomes. 3. India does not have a national level screening protocol because the proportion of colon cancer among all cancers in India is only 3% which would lead to wastage of medical resources on a low-incidence cancer detection protocol. But in the USA, colon cancer is the second most common cause of cancer death. Overall, the lifetime risk of developing colorectal cancer is about 1 in 23 for men and 1 in 26 for women - which is much much higher compared to India and that is why they have screening protocols in place - not because they eat more red meat than Indians. 4. Kerala has the highest crude incidence rate of all cancers followed by Mizoram. Not colon cancer. All cancers. Highest colon cancer rates and burden of colon cancer are observed in Goa and Orissa, not Kerala. & While the discussion on beef and colon cancer is ongoing in the video, a segment of the clip shows a news item "concerning increasing cases of colon cancer in Kerala" - this is that news piece - - and read what it says: it talks about only younger age group and colon cancer. "Experts opine that underlying factors leading to the rise in cases, especially at this age, could be lifestyle, environment and genetic factors" - they do not mention beef at all. The report also says: "Though we have no authentic records to show the statistics of rising cases, we have been observing a trend here. Our changing lifestyle is most likely to blame for the rise in colorectal cancer cases amongst younger people, though hereditary reasons are also a major cause." - again, no mention of beef eating. 5. Lakshwadeep is India's biggest meat eater followed by north-east states such as Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Nagaland and Manipur followed by Kerala. MEAT EATING. Not beef eating. Specifically looking at the largest beef consuming state - it is Meghalaya, where more than 80% of the population consumes this meat, not Kerala. Kerala is the largest beef consuming state in the context of male population only. [ 6. Oh by the way, about pork and colon cancer --> the risk was not increased consuming high amounts of pork: and there is only one study showing colon cancer risk in women in Japan, not India and that too who consumed pork >/= 3 times/week compared to </=1 time: Add-on: The risk for colon cancer is not red meat alone (with weak evidence), but more importantly (with stronger evidence), alcohol use, smoking, family history of cancer, presence of inflammatory bowel disease, obesity and polyps or adenoma of colon. These have been very conviniently ignored by the Gastroenterologist from California. Summary - red meat causing colon cancer is not convincingly proven. Increased intake of processed red meat more than higher intake of unprocessed red meat is weakly linked from evidence point of view to colon cancer risk. Nitrosamine in red meat as cancer causing in humans is not proven. Kerala does not have the largest burden of colon cancer in India, nor it is the largest consumer of beef. There is no realistic evidence that eating pork increases risk of colon cancer. These are actual facts. And I am not even a Gastroenterologist from California. I am a Hepatologist. From India.

TheLiverDoc™

1,921,155 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce

Weekend bonus. Share with your drinking buddies. #alcohol #alcoholawareness
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theliverdoc's profile picture

I dont usually debunk what health-illiterate spiritual gurus mutter about medicine and nutrition, but this video was shared with me for some fact checking and also because it has got millions of views and 60K likes. And it is utter nonsense. The video features Jaggi Vasudev, self proclaimed spiritual leader also known as Sadhguru - who was featured in The Joe Rogan podcast (not that it makes him any credible, but it can project his nonsensical takes on healthcare onto millions worldwide) There are many utterly and absolutely inacurrate claims made in this video. Claim: There is a poisonous chemical called citatine in brinjal. Fact: There is no such thing as citatine. Brinjal (or egg plant), along with potatoes and tomatoes belong to the family of nightshade and genus Solanum. Solanum group contain Solanine in the unripe fruit/vegetables. These are natural defences present in these plants against animals. When stored under ambient temperature and when ripe enough, the chances of solanine poisoning is almost zero. Reports of poisoning and fatality were because people consumed bitter green tomatoes or green skin potatoes. Peeling skin of potatoes almost nullifies the risk of solanine poisoning. See more here: Claim: Citatine (actually he must have meant solanine) damages the hypothalamus region of brain. Fact: There is no evidence to show that solanine affects the hypothalamus region of brain. The most common site of toxicity from solanine is on the gastrointestinal tract - burning sensations in the mouth, nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps and diarrhea and nothing on the hypothalamus in the brain. Claim: Hypothalamus is the important part of the brain which helps in decision making. Poison in brinjal attacks this part and makes you dull. Fact: The prefrontal cortex (PFC) and hippocampus are the most critical parts of the human brain for decision making and not hypothalamus. The hypothalamus helps manage your body temperature, hunger and thirst, mood, sex drive, blood pressure and sleep - and has nothing to do with decision making. Claim: Eating a whole garlic will kill you. Fact: No it wont. It will drive away vampires and non-vampires because literally no one can stand that breath. And probably give you a heartburn you'll never forget. Also nobody is going to eat a whole garlic unless it is reality TV where you are getting paid for it. Claim: If you eat one egg plant (brinjal) a day for a year, you will become a far duller person. Fact: If you keep listening to people like Jaggi and watch Jaggi videos and enjoy seeing Jaggi dancing during Navaratri, it is more like that you are already a very dull person without any critical thinking skills. Last point: The classification of foods into Satvic (pure, light), Rajasic (spicy, stimulating) and Tamasic (heavy, dull - such as Brinjal) is according to the primitive untested observations-based religious mumbo-jumbo from ancient Ayurvedic scriptures which also feature the annoyingly hocus-pocus "hot and cold" foods classification - it is utter nonsense. Never for a second believe the nutritional pseudoscience of Ayurveda. Many people suffer from Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) because they following this nonsense classification. Foods are actually classified by origin, chemical composition and predominant function. Sadhguru Jaggi is not a doctor. He is a conman who speaks good, fluent English, and lies, rather confidently.

TheLiverDoc™

1,538,764 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce

theliverdoc's profile picture

Please hear me out: DO NOT visit chiropractors for any health-related issue. Stay FAR away from them. This is dangerous. This is from an Instagram account of a chiropractor from Delhi who has >250K (misled) followers. I am quite worried that this nonsense is gaining popularity in India now. Chiropractic is a pseudoscientific practice that has absolutely no evidence for any claims made. Its origins lie in folk medicine practice of "bone-setting." You can still see "bone-setters" in suburban and rural areas in India. They are quacks and remnants of a bygone era. A quack who goes by the name Daniel David Palmer, who used to perform magnetic healing, discovered chiropractic practice in 1890s. While attending a Spiritualist Meeting, [he claims that] the idea of chiropractic came to him from the spirit of the deceased medical physician named Dr. Jim Atkinson. The ghost of Dr. Atkinson gave him the principles of practice of a new therapy which considered "body as a 'machine' whose parts could be manipulated to produce a drugless cure." - and voila! Chiropractic was born [that is how scientific this BS is]. Chiropractors dont realize that their practice evolved from the spirited mind of a looney. In 1906, Palmer was prosecuted under the new medical arts law in Iowa for practicing medicine without a license, and had to go to jail. Chiropractors propose that mechanical disorders of joints especially the spine affect health and manipulation (spinal adjustments) improves health - this is of course nonsense. Manipulation of joints and soft tissue (like in this video) are also performed. Apart from the spine, chiropractors also manipulate the patient and family into parting with their hard-earned money and they do it pretty well. Chiropractic practice is termed an "unscientific cult" [much like Ayurveda and Homeopathy]. Multiple systematic reviews and meta-analysis have shown that chiropractic practices have no [conclusive] clinically relevant benefits and can sometimes cause real harm [at times severe harm] to patients. See here here here here and here There is not sufficient data to establish the safety of chiropractic manipulations. It is frequently associated with mild to moderate adverse effects, with serious or fatal complications in rare cases. Several deaths have been associated with this technique. See here here and here Chiropractors are not doctors and they have no knowledge of the human anatomy and physiology. I suggest that no one visit a chiropractor for any health-related problems at any point in their life time.

TheLiverDoc™

1,142,929 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce

theliverdoc's profile picture

Can people in power/ authority kindly stop with this absolute BS on "fasting killing cancer cells" and citing religious nonsense to appeal to peoples emotions? Fasting is really quite dangerous for cancer patients in real life. Let me explain and bury this myth once and for all, especially for science illiterates like this guy. [1] The most common argument is that fasting "starves" cancer by cutting off its sugar (glucose) supply. While it is true that cancer cells consume vast amounts of glucose, they are biologically aggressive survivalists. If you stop eating, your body eventually switches to burning fat and breaking down muscle for energy. Cancer cells are highly adaptable; when glucose is low, many types of cancer can mutate to feed on other fuel sources, such as lactate, amino acids (from your muscles), or fatty acids. You cannot simply "starve" a tumor without starving the patient first. [2] Fasting is dangerous for cancer patients because of cancer cachexia - a wasting syndrome where the body loses muscle and fat rapidly. Cachexia is responsible for up to 30% of cancer deaths. Cancer puts the body in a hyper-metabolic state (burning energy fast). If a patient fasts, they risk accelerating muscle loss and weakening their immune system. A weak body cannot tolerate life-saving treatments like chemotherapy or radiation, nor can it fight off infections. [3] Most claims about fasting curing cancer come from studies on mice or cells in a petri dish. In a dish: You can kill cancer cells with almost anything (lemon juice, bleach, starvation, even shooting a bullet at it at close point or using a grenade to destroy the entire lab) because they have no immune system or body to protect them. In a human: The biology is infinitely more complex. Human metabolism, hormonal fluctuations, and tumor micro-environments mean that what shrinks a tumor in a mouse often fails completely in human trials. [4] Proponents often cite "autophagy" (the body's cellular recycling process triggered by fasting) as the cure. They claim it cleans out cancerous cells. Science shows that autophagy is a double-edged sword. -In all people, autophagy is a normal physiological process - whether fasting or not, which help in cleaning up damaged cells. -But in patients with cancer, once a tumor exists, cancer cells can actually hijack autophagy to survive stress (like chemotherapy) and repair themselves. In this context, fasting could theoretically help the cancer survive the treatment intended to kill it. [5] "Cancer" is not one disease; it is over 200 different diseases characterized by uncontrolled cell growth. Some cancers are driven by hormones, some by genetic mutations, and some by viruses. A fasting protocol that slows down one specific type of breast cancer might have zero effect on pancreatic cancer, or worse, accelerate a different type. The most lethal aspect of this misinformation is the delay in treatment. Cancer is a time-sensitive disease. While a patient spends months trying to fast the cancer away based on religious or alternative advice, the cancer often metastasizes (spreads) to other organs. Once cancer spreads, it often moves from being curable to being terminal. Relying solely on fasting wastes the critical window where medical intervention could have saved a life. Suggesting a single "ancient cure" for 200 complex genetic diseases is scientifically illogical... ...and generally stupid, as this video proves.

TheLiverDoc™

191,898 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

theliverdoc's profile picture

This is the boomer uncle who Raj Shamani invited to his podcast to talk on medical and health. The guy who said "Ghee" (also called clarified butter) is a fat burner. Ghee is heavy on saturated fats and every single nutrition and cardiology clinical societies recommend limiting saturated fats. See here: American Heart Association Presidential Advisory on Dietary Fats For lack of a better description, protoplasmic masses without neuronal cohesion, like this guy here, Mr. Prashant Desai, who has absolutely no training in medical and healthcare, who flaunts toilet paper value nutrition certificates for his video background and without an ounce of scientific temper, talking absolute rubbish on nutrition and diet are the ones the public must stay away from. Look at this video. Nutrition and diet specialist Prashant Desai is holding up a bottle of alcohol and claiming that is causes "non-alcoholic" fatty liver. I mean it is like trying to convince the public by holding up a cat and saying its a dog. Basic IQ anyone? Mr. Desai further says non-alcoholic fatty liver never existed in children before 1980. This is absolutely wrong. Fatty liver had been identified in overfed children as early as 1849. His claim that fruit juice is the same as alcohol is also nonsense. He has no actual idea how nutrient metabolism works. Metabolism of alcohol and that of fruit juice (fructose) is completely different. High fructose intake is associated with increased risk of fatty liver disease. Even fresh fruits have fructose in them. The added sugars cause more harm than the natural sugars in your recommended daily portion of fruits/ fruit juices. See here: Alcohol metabolism and fatty liver: Fructose metabolism and fatty liver: Listen to certified clinical nutritionists and doctors. Reject fearmongering nutritional quacks like these. Their narratives harm the public health.

TheLiverDoc™

847,707 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce

theliverdoc's profile picture

The presenter asks Virat Kohli, the star Indian cricketer - "Why did you become a vegetarian?" His answer is mind-boggling. He starts with his source of advice - an Accupuncturist. Accupuncture is a pseudoscience. It has no meaningful principles or reasonable action. It is not based on scientific knowledge and is a form of quackery. Large systematic reviews confirm that there no good evidence of benefit, which suggests that it is not an effective method of healthcare. Virat then speaks about his cervical spine disc prolapse. He then speeds towards his stomach where he claims that eating meat was making stomach more acidic, because of which the calcium from his bones were leaking off. So the solution - make it alkaline. So he quit meat and became vegetarian - to make his stomach less acidic, more alkaline, to prevent calcium loss in bone and thus, cure his cervical spondylitis. This is pure and unadulterated nonsense. The stomach is acidic and will remain so whether you want it or not. Acid production is the unique and central component of the stomach's contribution to the digestive process and also plays a role in protecting the body against pathogens ingested with food or water [ You cannot make the stomach alkaline, unless you ingest enough alkali - which will of course kill you. Calcium does not leech away because the stomach is acidic. Eating meat does not cause calcium loss. In fact, increasing the protein intake from 1 g/kg body weight to 2 g/kg, given as meat, did not have an adverse effect on calcium metabolism. [ Going vegetarian does not mean one becomes gauranteed calcium sufficient. Vegetarianism is a culturo-religious factor and not a norm. People choose it because of various personal reasons and it is not one based on strong evidence from medical science. It is not superior to other diets, except of course, is better than veganism, which is the most inferior form of diet from scientific standpoint. Cervival neck disc bulge is not treated by going vegetarian. There are actual scientific guidelines for it. See here: and here: And no one should ever ask an Accupuncturist for any advise on health, because they themselves have no clue about human anatomy or physiology and they are not real healthcare providers. They are quacks. I like Virat Kohli. The guy is a national treasure. But I am sorry to say that he is very health and science-illiterate and a prototype of the beggarly scientific temper that define majoirty of Indians in today's India. Doctors, scientisits, science communicators, (real) health influencers, we need to do better.

TheLiverDoc™

1,006,437 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce