3ABN Today Live

Amen Doctors Answer Your Questions

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

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Series Code: TDYL

Program Code: TDYL230029B


00:00 [MUSIC]
00:04 [MUSIC]
00:09 [MUSIC]
00:11 >> Well, I must say if you missed the first hour of a man
00:14 you missed a lot. Yeah, thank the Lord will be repeated later
00:18 on and a couple of days from now and about 2 or 3 more
00:21 times. But we had such an information pack first hour
00:26 about what a man means. If you're just joining us, this
00:29 Adventist Medical Evangelism network, how to combine the
00:34 gospel ministry and medical ministry to open doors, getting
00:38 the gospel around the world alike. With doctor Shin said,
00:40 we don't want to have
00:42 healthy centers that, well, you will never, ever not. Everybody
00:45 wants to live a long time, but how much more beneficial would
00:48 be having fun on prized and said again, having a funded by.
00:52 That's right. That's what Christ has come to offer now
00:55 and the second hour, just before we go to our questions,
00:58 if you're just tuning in, you can send your medical questions
01:02 to live at 3 aetn dot TV. We have 5 doctors and yeah,
01:07 the range of different practices will let you know
01:09 what they practice live at 3ABN, TV for e-mail. Well,
01:13 if you text, though, 6, 1, 8, 2, 2, 8, 39 75 you can text,
01:18 though, is if you're driving, pull over his questions.
01:23 A vitally important. But Doctor Schwartz give some ground was
01:27 because a lot of times people say doctors once told me to do
01:29 this all.
01:31 >> And haha, excellent. We just have to make the case that
01:35 we're here giving general medical advice. We may get some
01:39 questions about specific doses of medicines are specific
01:42 problems, but we need to give a a general answer. It's not
01:46 going to be specific. You still need to consult with their own
01:48 personal physician about every health advice that that we talk
01:51 about. They can go into the details a much deeper than
01:54 weekend. Hopefully this is always a fun time to get
01:58 questions from all across the country around the world.
02:00 >> So before the front just stimulate the audience, that's
02:03 rejoining us that those that joined for the first time.
02:05 So they could cut that the breath and the depth of who's
02:08 represented here with stop and talk to Simmons.
02:10 >> Yes, so my area is medicine in General Dentistry.
02:14 >> Okay. And auction and work in medical oncology and
02:17 hematology and doctors felt pulmonary and sleep medicine.
02:21 Critical care, medicine as well. And home to on medicine
02:25 tend to listen an interventional cardiology.
02:28 Wow. So the heart. So by the time this program.
02:31 >> We should all be healthy. Yeah. Haha. All night.
02:38 >> Okay. I think this is for this act is C from Christopher.
02:42 This is an email. I'm Christopher Daniel right in
02:45 from India. Wow. I have hypo thyroid and taken 100 mcg
02:52 micrograms thyroid the fire oxide daily. I have been taking
02:57 this medicine for the past 7 years. I'm 60 years old.
03:02 Can this high post thyroid be rehearsed? I've tried various.
03:07 What is this?
03:08 Why? Yeah, everybody to treatments but no improvements,
03:12 OK? So that that's an indi. That's a great question.
03:16 >> Yeah. And again, I just want to highlight the we'll give
03:20 very general advice. Yes, so
03:24 hype authority is is actually quite common.
03:27 And we both have a yeah, hey, reaction both have it. But so
03:32 is very common and questions about thyroid medication.
03:36 People have lots of questions about their medication, how to
03:39 take it when to take it on the ticket with anything, the
03:42 things, you know, have first use and so forth. And I think
03:46 all of us wish we didn't have to take any medications through
03:49 and this is one area.
03:51 So
03:52 what I would say is that first of all, I'm understanding Kwai
03:58 this individual has hypothyroidism is probably key.
04:02 True. One of the things that's very common in terms of causing
04:06 hypothyroidism is where the body makes antibodies against
04:11 the thyroid and that's very calm. And that's the most
04:13 common we call it to immune. So if the immune system
04:17 functions, well, it will try to get rid of foreign things like
04:22 viruses and stuff like that, even national new system.
04:27 But sometimes the new system kind of goes crazy, aunt and
04:30 biggest attack, its own tissues. So if the problem is
04:34 that
04:36 the high post fire to some is because of autoimmune problem,
04:41 you probably likely not get off the medication. The other thing
04:46 I want to say is this I I kind of look at
04:49 at fire, oy disease a little differently because there is
04:54 the body produces spy roid me and to think of it like
04:59 something's gone wrong. So you missing it. So we introduce
05:02 you, get the medication is not really like you're taking
05:04 medication that's necessary as opposed to you know, if you
05:08 have something else in your taking a real foreign substance
05:10 to keep to treat something. Yeah, like a cash, a
05:13 medication, that's something different. But thyroid
05:16 medication by and large is fight. One thing I will say is
05:20 this individual said the taking
05:23 this medication for 7 news. Yes, and well, I would
05:28 encourage you to do is to check that your physician, make sure
05:31 you're getting at the right amount of thyroid and have that
05:37 checked at least once a year to make sure the dose is correct.
05:40 And and you should be fine.
05:42 >> Yeah, I have that too high poll and now I'm I'm fine is
05:46 going on every time I go back to the doctor. So no, you're
05:49 fine. And I have these natural pills. I take 2 and I get from
05:53 the health store. I'm OK.
05:55 >> Dentures. Haha. Haha.
06:03 >> Okay. 3 questions and dench's. If you cut and said to
06:08 me, here's the first one. I had metal plates and was
06:12 advised I should replace them with plastic plates.
06:16 Is it that FISA pull that I should do with that?
06:20 >> Well, it really depends on the patient's. Sometimes if a
06:24 patient develops allergy to the medal haul are part of the
06:27 alloys and the material, then they can use those metal trees.
06:31 And sometimes you don't know that a patient's allergic to
06:34 the material that after they use it to it could be that
06:37 they're developed an allergy to it. Some patients who I've had
06:40 them for years. But just like Monday mentioned our bodies can
06:43 go through different processes, some of that aging problems,
06:48 sometimes other medical illnesses, medications. Yeah,
06:51 because the body to react differently. And so it could be
06:54 something along those lines why they're recommending that.
06:57 Another thing is if they have, we can t from time to the
06:59 clasps, their teeth might not be able to hold them as well.
07:03 So they might be recommending it. So again, it depends on
07:06 what the patient's individual issue is and then they can make
07:11 the consideration. I the one a fine on the list to replace him
07:15 that he they tell patients all the time, but they want to make
07:18 sure they have is a good poster you bite. Also, usually we have
07:22 those dentures to ensure that they have a bite so that they
07:25 can maintain that facial structure and shoe efficient
07:30 needed to get the chance that they need. To that point,
07:33 we'll get him polygraph. Haha. Yeah. Things like corn
07:41 and some of those tough things that people chew on. Yes,
07:44 not lead us even. You know, you have to let the actions he's
07:48 the second one. Is it best to sleep with my dentist. Will
07:50 take them out. Take them out. I tell my patients all the
07:53 time. Would you sleep with your wet socks on every single day.
07:58 Light. They tissues need to breed. So take them all.
08:02 It is a foreign substance. So you need to take them all.
08:05 They need to be cleaned every day and the tissues would
08:08 agree. Yes, take them out at night. I have some females who
08:13 don't like the husbands to see them without teeth, but they
08:15 tell them take them out your husband's at work. Yeah,
08:19 you just want to take them all so that those tissues be a
08:21 little bit throughout the day.
08:23 >> You know, you mentioned that when this funny story came to
08:25 my mind many years ago, there was this couple's heaping and
08:29 then the and the wife always complain. You snore so much.
08:32 You make my teeth rattle.
08:33 >> Husband rip. I move them further from the bed. Haha.
08:39 Really? It's a reality of life that some people. How how and
08:47 the couple one of the teeth. That's another point. I'll say,
08:49 OK, he's a last question.
08:52 >> Can you offer some tips for caring for my dench's?
08:56 A lot of that's a pretty good one can keep them clean.
08:59 Haha patients always asks, what can they use? A lot of the of a
09:04 cop over the counter on things. Regular toothpaste is fine.
09:08 I have a patient. Actually. He introduced me to this.
09:10 She says white vinegar on to help keep them clean and
09:14 they're a mask, humid. So, you know, that's just the the House
09:18 charcoal powder. I mean, is black. But it could mean for
09:22 the 2. Yeah, these are some really easy things to use at
09:25 home to help keep them clean. Stay away from the Clorox and
09:30 all the other things these but you would be surprised with out
09:33 there. So, you know, just says regular healthy faith things
09:38 because you're going to put these back in show. And so you
09:41 don't want to get poison yourself.
09:43 >> All of these other things. Yeah, I never thought about
09:46 that. Cars. Can you imagine sold in the closet every day
09:48 you get an opinion.
09:49 >> Q, you know, taking away from life just because that is
09:52 a poison serial him. You know, the other issue is that I've
09:54 seen patients with these legit reactions up sa-ccr. I've had a
09:58 patient who used duct tape to the store, his mentor, his
10:04 tissue. He actually would come to see me for the doc. Take
10:08 dentures he came in because he developed a soft tissue allergy
10:12 to the glue of the he sit in it. So these are things that
10:16 the money inside to keep them holding. Yeah, that one.
10:20 Yeah. At the univ these things happen. You know that the easy
10:24 fix for patients, but it leave it the saliva and all that
10:27 minutes.
10:29 >> OK, let's move on. This is from Louise on the who's going
10:33 to answer this. My husband has been in the hospital for for
10:37 weeks. He has diarrhea. He's 83 years old, but has never had an
10:43 issue like this before. They have run several tests but
10:47 still have found have not found the cause. He feels fine except
10:52 for this problem. I would really appreciate any
10:55 suggestions you may have. Thank you. Pray for 3 ABN and
10:59 really enjoy watching the apps.
11:01 >> This is Louise one Sansa Louise, but the Diary of really
11:06 her husband.
11:07 >> Well, a bit
11:09 when you have diarrhea, one of the things that I'm sure
11:11 they've done this with Louise husband is a check the store to
11:15 see whether or not it's a result of what he's eating or a
11:18 result of what the intestines are sick reading. And though
11:20 those are some complicated tests but common causes of
11:24 diarrhea would be like if you're eating too much, not
11:26 absorbable sugar. Sometimes our kids will get that. If they
11:30 drink too much. Apple juice right or to to much gum that
11:33 has a sore but all in it. That's a non absorbable sugar.
11:36 The causes these particles to to have fluid come into the
11:41 intestine. Yeah. As opposed to going the other direction,
11:44 another potential cause of dire which is a little bit more
11:47 serious is if you can get what we called Clostridium difficile
11:51 a diary. I'm sure they've checked in for that as well.
11:54 That's a an infectious type of diary that you actually get
11:57 when you take too many antibiotics. That's a concern.
12:01 And we're actually seeing more of that in the hospital and and
12:05 resistance to this is this is a topic for a whole nother
12:08 discussion about the emerging bacteria. And and, you know,
12:13 organisms out there that are becoming resistant to the
12:15 battery of antibiotics that we have currently. But that's
12:18 another thing. So I'm sure the doctors are looking at that in
12:20 a four-week sounds like a long time, long time, but 3 inches
12:25 in the right place. And that's what's going on that this is a
12:28 deal pulmonologist. Yes, continue.
12:31 This is from any in Minnesota.
12:33 >> How can I increase my lung function? I get out of breath,
12:39 going up hills and stares exercise on most days. I do my
12:44 bike and I walk an hour and other people who have not been
12:48 exercising do not get those out of breath. Aside 2 on the same
12:53 hills slash stairs. I'm not overweight on the 140 pounds
12:58 and I am not on any meant. My ion levels all within range,
13:04 but they are only slightly above minimum.
13:07 >> Yeah. So shortness of breath is a it will have a good
13:11 discussion home because there's this seems like there's this
13:16 general understanding that shortness of breath means that
13:19 there's a problem with the lungs, but it actually can be 3
13:22 different possibilities. It could either be the lungs.
13:26 It could be the heart or can be what I call your muscles and
13:29 that sun a way of saying the conditioning. And so when
13:33 patients are referred to me for what we would call des Neon
13:35 exertion or shortness of breath when they do things, one of the
13:38 things that we do is to look at all at all of those things,
13:41 either by getting an echocardiogram to look at the
13:43 heart, but getting a pulmonary function tests. I think she
13:45 alluded to that there in terms of her lung function under her.
13:50 Her question was, is there anything that I can do to
13:52 improve my lung function? Yes, you know, lung function is
13:56 really a a result of static forces in in in your lungs and
14:02 the structure. So there's very little that you can do to
14:05 improve your lung function from it. From that standpoint,
14:09 I have heard of, by the way, some some interesting things
14:12 that people do, for instance, making sure that they breathe
14:14 through their nose or doing something called box breathing.
14:18 Have heard of that as well. This is where you breathe in
14:20 for 4 seconds. You hold it for 4 seconds. You exhale for 4
14:24 seconds and then you hold it out for 4 seconds. So it's like
14:27 a box home to go and and people. This is something
14:30 that's people talk about. I haven't seen a lot of data
14:33 actually seen that improve lung function.
14:36 So her question is, is there anything I can do? I don't know
14:39 of any data that actually shows that anything particular
14:41 improves lung function. But getting to I think the spirit
14:44 of her question, which is what's causing her to stand
14:46 exertion or shortness of breath, what she can do about
14:48 it. I think there's a number of tests that she should see a get
14:52 done from her specials to see exactly where that areas.
14:55 And then at the end of all of that, there's a sting that we
14:58 call cardiopulmonary exercise testing before we do a lot of
15:01 invasive measures and actually can tell you, diagnostic Lee,
15:04 this is your heart that's giving out. Is it your lungs
15:06 that are giving out or is it your muscles that are giving
15:08 out? And we can actually give you the answer and that kind of
15:11 stuff that's been around that is out of that green roof,
15:13 is it that helps that helps open up the lungs and make sure
15:16 that, you know, get collapse in certain areas along? We call it
15:19 at elect us us. But, yeah, it's something that's very important
15:23 for patients in the hospital because sometimes they don't
15:26 take deep breaths and or they have pain. And so they want to
15:29 take a deep breath and that kind of forces them to keep
15:32 those lungs nice and open.
15:34 >> I think the best that one of the best test that you can
15:37 actually have, yeah is to see a physician and get a very good
15:41 history. Yes, from because actually it's interesting
15:44 because 90% of diagnoses yeah made in the history. So I would
15:50 see that it is a good position to history and physical
15:53 examination.
15:54 >> Another was not where you end up is how you got there.
15:58 Yeah, yeah. It makes sense because years ago when I was
16:02 just cut all kinds of you know how poppet Haitians him talk.
16:06 He says
16:08 you have too much stress in your life. Nothing wrong with
16:11 your heart. Sometimes people have these conditions that
16:14 brought on by lifestyle because she gave statistics there that
16:18 for the most part, a person with all those finals, huh,
16:21 in pretty good health but could be other extenuating factors.
16:25 One of the other benefit says, hey, move out here with the air
16:28 is clean.
16:30 >> History live hunt reliving not. This is a quick question.
16:33 What's the difference between a man and pathways to health may?
16:38 >> So we consider pathways to be a sister organization.
16:42 We we have to see missions the same goals. But the scale is
16:45 different. If anyone has been to pathways event to mobilize
16:49 the entire cities. Huge up to news media is there covering
16:52 it. You have thousands of volunteers. Yes, sometimes tens
16:56 of thousands of people served the medical care. You take out
16:59 football stadium stadium. Why did you know? And so you so
17:03 it's it's medical ministry on a huge scale. And it really puts
17:08 our our work both as ministry in a church on the map. And so
17:13 it plays a very important role,
17:15 a man. And what we're doing in our clinics is smaller and
17:18 light weight. We're trying to mobilize the local congregation
17:21 in that community, local to that church. And we want to try
17:25 the community to that church. And so this is more like wait
17:28 smaller and we can do it multiple times many times
17:31 throughout the year. Pathways event is so large, generally is
17:34 hard to do more than annually.
17:36 >> You know, to pathways like steroids. Haha, I was just that
17:40 we need we love pathways. All right. I've been into
17:43 within the several of them received most of our airmen,
17:46 doctors that participate with them. Many of the pathway
17:49 doctors participate with a Nikon. It's absolutely it's
17:52 really synergistic. But just as John said, it's we talked about
17:55 $30,000 for today and then click. It's close to a million
17:58 dollars. Yeah, it was clear that it takes a huge for
18:02 structure. So it is a once a year sort of about the
18:06 difference between a visit and an invasion.
18:08 >> When the truck that pulled up with Yahoo sending on to it.
18:16 That's right. But what I like about the men
18:19 >> model is that you're getting the church to be the
18:22 continuity. Yes, because a pathways of healthy coming to
18:25 take over the Dodgers stadium when they leave. And there's
18:28 some extenuating impact for people to participate in local
18:32 churches. But you're teaching the church members specifically
18:34 how to make your church a place where people can find the
18:38 continuance of the hospital. And so I consider it to be,
18:41 you know, the work that they do, that pathway stays with the
18:44 team and us like twin blades and a pair of says it was more
18:47 important than the other. They serve different functions,
18:50 but they need to work together to have maximal impact, too,
18:53 OK?
18:54 But here's one for doctor Shin. Dear Doctor, John Shannon,
18:58 even to the dear John High and the nasty from Bulgaria,
19:03 a woman and 70's in their 70's. I'm suffering from chronic
19:07 arrhythmia for 2 years. My doctor on colleges, humid
19:12 colleges prescribe me. High drea 500 milligram capsules and
19:19 aspen protect.
19:22 I get them one per day for 2 years since 2021. My but
19:27 results our normal. And I'm feeling very well.
19:30 I'm living very a very healthy lifestyle. My question is,
19:35 is this disease is curable or
19:39 as it has some kind of leukemia will develop
19:45 to the worst.
19:46 I'm a nurse and I do my best for my health. So she's in the
19:49 medical field. Well, it felt to looking issues asking.
19:52 >> Sure. So I appreciate your question. The issues that I
19:56 don't think she's mentioned exact issue that she has said
19:59 she mentioned arrhythmias, but that's not to use and it could
20:03 be our white he age. Are you embarrassed me? Okay. So I
20:08 think she may be she's talking about policy. A new era like
20:12 the Knee of era. It's when you have a high of much too high
20:16 blood level. It could also I don't know she has condition
20:19 her platelets are high as well. It's a kind of a similar on the
20:23 same scale. But it's a it's a blood problem
20:25 where the type of blood cell that creates the stem cells
20:28 that create the blood become cancerous. If you want to just
20:31 divide out of control and you have too much blood now.
20:35 And so the Hyde Rihanna she's taking, is intended to keep her
20:39 blood levels low because if they get too high to become
20:41 thick and you can have strokes and things like that,
20:45 the issue is that
20:47 you keep it under control with the medication, but there's
20:50 always a chance, a small chance every year that he can
20:53 transform into something worse like a leukemia. It's kind of a
20:58 precursor is on the same spectrum. But at any year in a
21:02 small chance, it can turn into us more serious blood sort of
21:05 call that came in. So I think her her question was, you know,
21:09 will it ever transform into like the media? And that's
21:13 something that no one can ever predict. You know, her blood
21:15 levels have to be closely monitored by her physician
21:19 and and to see how well controlled her diseases and to
21:22 see if there's any signs that's transforming into something
21:25 more serious.
21:27 And even though there's this chance, what I would encourage
21:29 her to do is to not live in constant fear, OK, I have
21:32 patients who live with this, and they're just scared to
21:35 death that
21:36 any given moment is going to transform into leukemia.
21:39 We've got in the Lord's hands to try and you do what you can
21:41 do. She's living a healthy lifestyle. She's doing
21:44 everything she can do to abide by cars, natural laws of
21:46 health. She's availing herself of the best of science and her
21:49 doctors care as well and that she's done what she can bring
21:52 her loaves and fishes to Laura and let him do what she can not
21:55 do for so that that's true. Because, you know, when you
21:58 live in that worrying about tomorrow, it could affect other
22:01 ones. Yes, yeah, for sure.
22:04 >> This is an interest in this is from Rose
22:07 in August. Last year I weighed 146 pounds at present. My
22:12 weight is 112.
22:15 I have chronic kidney disease. 3, I don't. Yeah, OK, that was
22:22 just brought to my attention. Also, Mike calcium is 10.2.
22:27 I have been to an end to a chronology heart and vascular
22:32 endocrinology heart and vascular ahead and toss cappy
22:37 with inflammation was found. I saw a net. I don't know if I
22:41 were just okay. Haha. All of the tests are OK, a memo.
22:47 Ultrasound of pelvis, bone density C T scans with iodine.
22:53 Yet no one can tell me about my weight loss. Can you help me
22:58 rose?
23:00 >> That's interesting. Wow. She heating that could be part
23:03 of contribute to the way, but that's a lot of change.
23:06 >> Yeah. From a cancer doctor standpoint, when we talk about
23:10 unexplained, unintentional weight loss,
23:13 not that we want to always jump there. But one of the most
23:16 important things to rule out is an underlying cancer. Now,
23:19 obviously she has other illnesses that can contribute
23:22 to weight loss. I don't I'm not saying that she should jump
23:25 there, but if she's if she's 10, that her kidneys and all
23:28 these other things and they're not figuring out why she's
23:31 losing weight. And I would recommend that she talks her
23:34 doctor about ruling out and called malignancy cancer,
23:39 that we don't know where it is that might be hiding out
23:41 because that is a common cause of unintentional weight loss.
23:44 So should be you should do your due diligence to cover all the
23:48 bases. And I'm sure her primary care doctor has considered this
23:52 if if he or she has been working her up.
23:55 >> You can sometimes of her people scattered to one losing
23:57 weight. And this just seems like I can't do anything to
24:00 keep my way from little falling off. It doesn't happen to me.
24:03 Haha. Well, Honey, I'm glad that's us. An indication that
24:08 you show us the way for no reason yes to something was
24:12 also there. It's a problem that people say I'm outside awaiting
24:15 a civil how he said all. I want to tell you what I've
24:17 been through over the last year, medical merge. And yeah,
24:21 that really results from that. So no one would go to the
24:24 healthy weight email. He's won a text from Denise.
24:29 This one or that one, OK to text from Denise in. I have
24:33 chronic count. My euro capacity level has been elevated for
24:38 years
24:39 on 6. 28 23, my Eric acid level was a 0, 5, have tried some
24:44 natural remedies. Then one for me. I've also tried
24:49 chlorine whole culture to lead a chlorine Yahoo.
24:55 >> Haha Hicks, an area that I left when you have a medical
25:06 field as the words that exist, never use of my life. One of
25:09 them have the regular people.
25:13 >> I think we'll be back to the question. It's really it really
25:17 isn't working anymore. I feel bad when I take it. I'm afraid
25:22 to take.
25:24 >> Thank you. You're not currently I am on.
25:31 >> Print his own 40 miligrams for 10 days. And
25:33 when I go off to prison is on. The count comes back in about a
25:38 month or less. I know pregnant zone is bad for me to high take
25:43 Vera pie.
25:45 >> The ER PA and the from what we have done that too.
25:51 >> 240 E R tactic car to talk to Cardi a wow. I take another
25:57 100 DS 5 my all time. And with that he in the bank. You think
26:04 you've heard about this before? Says Yates Cti. Haha. Wow.
26:09 Yeah. What for get? 25 for high blood pressure. And I also have
26:15 stage 3 a kidney disease in. I'm also obese. I'm 65 years
26:21 old.
26:22 I'm a vegetarian, but not the gun to thank you for any
26:26 advice. You can kinda while that was a challenging
26:28 question, yes.
26:29 >> So there's a lot in the question of. But why did she
26:36 that? She began the question by saying that she had gout rest
26:40 and she mentioned that she was taking colchicine and she's
26:44 taking pride in his own as she's afraid to take Ella
26:46 Purnell. She taken some natural remedies. Yes, got is a real
26:50 condition. Yes, that needs to be treated.
26:53 So the issue is, first of all,
26:58 if there's an acute flareup, you treat that differently than
27:01 if its longstanding going on. But you want to prevent the
27:05 acute flare-ups. So and the different mechanisms you won't
27:09 get into that to them. The different mechanisms. Why
27:12 you're casting goes up.
27:14 You want ideally few uric acid to be less than 6 minutes.
27:18 Google.
27:21 >> So
27:22 >> if you're a flareup, you treat with an
27:24 anti-inflammatory. So culture scene is anti-inflammatory,
27:27 OK, steroids and to flip to predators are loose.
27:31 So all appear in all is one of the medications that we use
27:35 because some people could either be over produces of uric
27:40 acid or the under excuses. So typically we try to give
27:45 all appear in all
27:46 to prevent it. So if there's an acute flareup of go like that,
27:50 the joint is red, hot tend to you kept touch it.
27:54 You give something like coach is saying or steroids or even
27:58 like a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory motion on
28:01 that person. You get stuff like that. Initially you treat that
28:04 it calms down about a month and then you stop the maintenance
28:08 treatment. But just Lapeer in all
28:11 my recommendation would be anybody who has to get out.
28:15 Appreciate the fact that they're 2 different things
28:17 you're looking at. You're looking at the acute flare up
28:21 that needs to be chewed with anti inflammatory medications,
28:24 and then the maintenance to prevent the accused flare up
28:27 with something that cuts the production down. That's
28:30 important. She did mention that she had a chronic kidney
28:32 disease. Yeah. As you mentioned the stage 3 a I know what that
28:36 means. You're looking to technicality of it. I don't
28:38 know why she has it. But one of the issues, euro casted can be
28:43 affected by kidney disease as well. She's also taking a
28:46 medication hydrochlorothiazide. And so I would consult with a
28:50 physician and see if she should be on that medication if that
28:53 should be to be probably stopped.
28:55 >> Wow. What a thing to say. That mentioned the dark ages.
28:59 Yeah. It was considered to be a disease of royalty, people that
29:02 it rich. And then she mentioned that she is overweight obese.
29:06 And that does kind of set her up for this to occur. So it's
29:10 excellent that she's a vegetarian, but even doing
29:12 something like intermittent fasting and really trying to
29:15 give her body a rest and going on even more. So the plant
29:19 based diet could be less inflammatory.
29:22 >> What about this week? Its layaway? Because some
29:25 people are Fed Chair Ian Tony may add. But yeah, they don't
29:29 get the rights to. Yeah. Yeah. If you look at if you
29:32 look at food that causes goat, yeah, I'm ready to play
29:36 thinking of like me, right? Knee. So she's not vegetarian
29:40 eating dairy. I don't know that there's that much uric acid in
29:44 those kinds of things. They don't know what she's eating
29:47 right anyway. But but still a healthy diet is the best die
29:51 and plant based diet is the best diet to try to help with
29:56 most of these conditions and especially with chronic kidney
29:58 disease. And I I definitely recommend something like that.
30:01 >> Not totally, not medical. So this is something that you
30:04 guys say yes and on. Do you think she should see a bona
30:07 fide
30:09 tonight? The dietician, maybe somebody that could examine why
30:12 her diet is comprised of
30:15 that might be something.
30:16 >> The other thing that she could do, you know, in addition
30:19 to a dietician, maybe even seen a lifestyle center, I know I
30:23 think that would be really great because season they can
30:26 work with her to, you know, get are exercising, give her a
30:30 diet. That is when he when he promotes health because that's
30:33 what she wants to do
30:36 at the end,
30:38 the COVID got his eye, a dietician who really
30:40 appreciates.
30:42 >> All of, you know, all the above pretense of mixture of
30:45 medicine, which includes are a good, healthy lifestyle and
30:48 that Churchill component, yes, sure, because we have we have a
30:51 good friend Indian. She says
30:54 in her school of taking becoming an empty. She didn't
30:58 learn about no who are healthy lives. We learned about this
31:01 when she yeah went and learned about health reasons and got a
31:05 doctorate degree in that area. So it's not a natural part of
31:07 it. But I just remind our viewers and let's all get
31:09 somebody may have just joined us there answering questions.
31:13 How could I get my question to you if you want to, if you want
31:16 to send by e-mail, you can send a question to live at 3 A B and
31:20 TV live at 3ABN, TV. And if you want to text, 0, 6, 1, 8,
31:26 2, 2, 8, 39. 75 once again. 6, 1, 8, 228-3975. Send those
31:33 in. You've got 25 minutes more before. Yeah. So that you can
31:36 get your questions answered and thank you for being able to,
31:39 you know, read the words that I see an aha.
31:42 >> Haha.
31:49 >> Okay. This is asleep DOT to question, OK, TEX. I'm
31:52 Antoinette in live. The only Sony. A huge. Okay. Good
31:58 afternoon. I'd like to know how sleep apnea plays a part on a
32:02 stiff heart.
32:04 >> But stiff heart me now I might ask a doctor shortage of
32:08 help on this little bit but about sleep apnea and how it
32:11 actually can answer a little bit about the stuff part.
32:13 Sleep apnea is a situation where you stop breathing at
32:16 night. Yeah. And that's because that when you when you go to
32:20 sleep, the the wires from your brain, the nerves that innovate
32:23 your airway, which is not a solid, you know, pipe, it's is
32:26 flexible.
32:27 When you go to sleep, that that pipe becomes flexible as well.
32:31 And it becomes even more flexible. So when you take a
32:33 breath in, it can sometimes collapse and that can happens
32:37 intermittently. And so when you're you're actually asleep,
32:39 you're trying to breathe in, but no air is actually getting
32:42 into your lungs. And so as a result of that, your option
32:46 levels start to drop. And as a part of your brain at the back,
32:49 that's always awake. Always looking, always surveilling
32:53 regulating your heart rate, your breathing. All of this
32:55 notice is that the Austin levels going down this come
32:58 like the security guard at night, the city in the booth
33:00 and noticing some things happening. And so if you can
33:03 imagine he gets the broomstick and, you know, ceiling saying
33:06 and we've got a problem here, your oxygen levels are going
33:08 down
33:09 and that sets off a chain of events that that explains what
33:12 happens because not only does your brain arouse out of it
33:16 sleep. Yeah, it may at you actually may wake up completely
33:20 or you may just arouse out of a nice, deep sleep that you're
33:23 getting a lot of benefit from into a into a less deep sleep
33:27 estate
33:28 and that can cause excessive sleepiness, down the road,
33:31 maybe caulking to problems. That's one aspect of it.
33:34 But the other aspect of it is that your body releases
33:36 adrenaline and that adrenaline goes all throughout your body.
33:39 Your heart rate goes up, your blood pressure goes up and this
33:43 has an effect on the heart. You think will this is just a
33:46 one-time event? No, because let's finish the cycle. What
33:48 happens then is you do wake up your airway opens up. So it may
33:52 sound like this to tear someone who's in your room,
33:57 ice and they start breathing again. I do that really well
34:03 happy. I'm speaking of that. Not only my educated, but I
34:06 have myself so and you don't have to be overweight, have
34:09 sleep apnea. So that's that's one thing that's important to
34:12 understand. And so when that when that happens, the ocean
34:15 levels come back up,
34:17 the guy sitting at the back of your brain is is quite happy
34:20 because your actual levels are going up. The brain goes back
34:23 to sleep and then the airway starts to collapse again.
34:26 And the cycle repeats itself. So this can happen up to 20.
34:30 I've seen up to 100 times an hour. I'm now or it's to the
34:34 point where you literally cannot some people cannot sleep
34:37 and breathe at the same time. And and this causes a very
34:41 severe issues with that with the belong. So what happens
34:45 when auction levels drop? Is the blood vessels in your
34:49 lungs start to constrict? And when that happens, it puts
34:53 a back pressure on the heart and the heart has to pump
34:56 harder on the right side of the heart, which is responsible for
34:58 pumping and that can cause along with this adrenaline.
35:01 They get circulated over and over and over again.
35:03 A stiffening of the hearts. And and Brian. Yeah.
35:07 >> While but for the moment, we're in the middle of building
35:12 a dedicated heart for clinic for people that have stuff
35:14 hearts or weak hearts and that it into the middle of a is
35:19 sleep medicine because it's just so important affects so
35:21 many aspects of the heart. And so for people are not
35:25 getting good, sleep can lead to a tool for police and that
35:28 causes a reveals it can lead to Palmer, Hypertension that you
35:31 just talked about and it can lead to diastolic dysfunction
35:36 where the heart is very stuff that can squeeze normally,
35:38 but just doesn't relax very well. And so your heart
35:41 mystically spine. But if it's not relaxing very well, doesn't
35:44 have time to fill. And that leads to the very same some
35:47 things that somebody with a weak heart would get with
35:49 congestive heart failure. And this can be one of the
35:53 chronic causes that circulating chemical means and a lot of
35:56 other employment or mediators that go through can do that.
36:00 Other things can cause it to being overweight. Can cause a
36:04 having diabetes can cause and just leave him with aging and
36:08 personally can cause it. But those are all factors that
36:11 we should look into. All C pap help. Yes.
36:15 >> Yes. So what C pap is if you can imagine your airway is like
36:18 a flat tire and what C Pap does, is it just inflates the
36:22 tire just enough with just enough pressure that you can
36:25 brief back and forth. Now C Pap is just one of the treatments
36:28 is the most studies and has been out for the longest.
36:31 But there's other devices. Actually, there's a dental
36:34 devices that you can wear. If you if you want to try,
36:37 if you try snore, we can all do this year, try to score.
36:41 And then if you just put your 2 fingers behind the angle of
36:45 your mandible down here and push it out so that your bottom
36:48 teeth go in front of your top teeth like this now try to
36:51 store. It's a lot more difficult to try to breed much
36:55 better. And so just moving the jaw forward
36:58 to which the tongue was attached to brings the tongue
37:01 off the back of the throw and some people who have a
37:04 positional sleep out there where they're worse when
37:06 they're on their backs, this can actually solve the problem
37:09 without sleep. There's also another device that's been
37:13 recently approved by the FDA where they actually it's kind
37:16 of interesting. It's it's like a pacemaker, but it sits on the
37:18 other side. And so they don't interfere with the pacemaker
37:21 that that may be on the left side and its senses. Every time
37:25 you are about to take a breath and it's it stimulates the
37:28 muscle of your time to advance forward and come off the back.
37:33 Yeah, it's it's and it's for people who don't tolerate c pap
37:36 or maybe don't tolerate. But I guess what I would say
37:39 here is that if you are somebody who has excessive
37:43 daytime, sleepiness, if you're somebody who maybe haven't has
37:46 a headache in the morning, Corey or your bed partner tells
37:49 you that you don't breathe at night, he stopped breathing at
37:51 night and maybe you're falling asleep a little bit more easily
37:54 than you used to. These are all signs that maybe you ought to
37:58 go in and get checked out. What we used to do a number of
38:02 years ago is put people to sleep lie with a bunch of wires
38:04 hooked up to their head today. We have very easy to do tests
38:09 that you just basically put something on your head. You go
38:11 home, you bring it back the next day to the clinic. They
38:13 download it and they can make a diagnosis that way. Who the
38:17 heads sleep at me and he lost weight and he's gone. Yeah.
38:20 And that you can do that.
38:22 >> Yeah, I would like to add to that is really important to to
38:25 make sure you go to a dinosaur physician, his train because
38:30 there are devices that are made out there that they have
38:33 patients to move that will forward but use it over
38:36 extended period of time. It just articulated the teeth
38:39 and the teeth like to have their opposite connection.
38:41 And what happens is you start to see shifting inclusion
38:44 because the teeth over time start to come down. So some
38:47 point you see the right providers so they can make sure
38:50 you have full coverage and just a little thing about sleep
38:52 apnea road. We do a lot of studies now with kids, a lot of
38:55 these behavioral problems we're seeing being hatched to state
38:59 that Nina, some of that there was structural issues. So I
39:02 think if you have children who suffer from being tired or
39:06 irritable, having them exam and out of sleep apnea, some of
39:10 that can be structural sometimes in my dad noise
39:13 things like that that we just think they're rude or
39:15 disruptive, but they're not getting the sleep that they
39:18 need.
39:19 >> I wake up sleep deprived and every kid. Wow. That's amazing.
39:23 Tristan, thank you so much. How we fearfully and
39:27 wonderfully made me. You know what I think about that.
39:29 Regular that you guy that says not my head on the knot.
39:32 >> Through. Yeah. He come on guy. He's yeah. This one is for
39:40 the dock to Lindy
39:42 Tw in St. Louis. That's the name. What is good for what is
39:46 a good treatment for osteoarthritis and can it be
39:50 cure? OK? That is a great question. Because as we age,
39:58 we do lose some of the the material that got put into our
40:02 joints to keep them moving properly.
40:05 So the different types of arthritis and
40:08 a shoe at prices, I would say is definitely the most
40:12 difficult kind of a threat to us because the reason get us to
40:17 a threat to us is that so if you look at the joint, there is
40:21 a cartilage in the joint tense. So the joint moves smoothly by
40:25 the 2 different bones move smoothly against each other
40:29 with us to outright is that cartilage wears down down down
40:33 to its bone on bone. Yeah. That's cost us write us all.
40:37 So
40:40 basically, if you look at some of them had rheumatoid
40:43 arthritis, there's so much you can do for that. But for us to
40:47 outright just because it's bone on bone, you get the coverage
40:50 has been destroyed. There's no longer anything to lubricate.
40:53 And I'm looking at pain control or some other kind of
40:58 intervention. So
41:01 you could do physical therapy off. You could just take an
41:07 even ending flat at this not inflammatory condition. So the
41:10 anti-inflammatories don't work things like just Tylenol.
41:14 You know? Yeah, something like that time. If it's really bad,
41:18 depending on the joy
41:20 replacement may need to happen. I munir replay can is what the
41:25 replacement its knee replacement or hip. You should
41:29 read the most difficult as the weight-bearing joints. So the
41:33 hips and knees that sway you. We really notice it. And
41:37 unfortunately, there's it does not go away because you can't
41:40 rebuild. Now. I understand that there by some new technologies
41:44 out there, hear them advertised on the radio. I don't know what
41:47 they do, but they're supposed to help me grow tissue. I have
41:51 no idea if that's the case or not. But but basically it's the
41:54 destruction of tissue that makes the joint move properly.
41:56 That's the issue in this particular home about right.
41:59 >> Well, that's interesting because many questions and
42:02 here's another one, Daniel from Maryland. I'm having pain in my
42:05 lower back and tingling sensations in had pains in my
42:09 5. What
42:11 what do I do to relieve the pain? That's an open question.
42:15 >> Low fat. That's a that's an interesting question because
42:19 when whenever you say that and I'm not, I'm not a joint
42:21 doctor. But what if someone comes to my office and actually
42:24 someone to come to my office once with a very similar
42:26 complaint and and I sent them immediately to the emergency
42:31 room because they had other concerning symptoms, right,
42:34 as it turned out that they are actually had a infection in the
42:38 joint that was compressing the spinal cord. So that's one
42:41 thing that you want to make sure isn't happening. And one
42:44 of the the concerns there would be if they're losing the
42:46 ability to hold in their bowels or they lose about bladder
42:49 control. That's a sign that if you're having pain in the back
42:53 and you're having numbness and tingling going down the legs,
42:55 that something that you you want to take very seriously now
42:59 really realize that there's also other things that could
43:02 happen like a disk could be moving out slowly and it could
43:05 be pinching on. One of the nurse I out of Kuz is another
43:08 one of the nervous going through the back through the
43:11 muscles. It can be pinched and that can cause that. So
43:14 seeing a somebody who is a specialist in that area and
43:18 making sure that there's imaging if appropriate and
43:20 getting a good history as we talked about before, that
43:23 they're having, you know, someone's having fevers and and
43:26 sweat. So that's that's something very different than
43:28 if this has been going on for 2 years and hasn't changed.
43:32 Those are very different things so that that is a that's an
43:36 interesting question, tingling. Yeah, I do that. You have
43:39 anything to add to the better.
43:41 >> I think a lot more questions. But no, you're
43:42 right. So so back pain really divide it is a pain or is it
43:46 nor logic symptoms as well? If it's a complicated kind of
43:49 pain, you need to see somebody for that. That's true.
43:53 >> Okay. This is a hard question. This is misses.
43:56 Edwards in Chicago. My heart flutters a beat pretty fast for
44:02 a few minutes every night. Only one. I'm laying in the
44:06 lane position.
44:08 Even if I'm not moving fast prior to free tyrants, the bed,
44:13 please advise on the cause and solution. Should I be overly
44:17 concerned?
44:19 >> Okay. Well, this is that words that really good
44:22 question. Something we see very, very commonly. I actually
44:26 suspect that your heart may do that and other times during the
44:29 day as well. But it's when you're lying down. Yeah,
44:32 calm that you are most aware of that.
44:35 And so
44:36 it could be a very benign condition. Could just be some
44:40 irritable heartbeats that that can occur because the heart is
44:44 becoming irritable. There are things that can lead to that
44:47 such as lack of sleep, sleep apnea, such as caffeine and
44:52 alcohol use and things like that.
44:55 But it could also be a sign that there are more serious,
44:59 a worthy of such as a tool for pollution. It referred elation
45:03 is where the upper chamber of the heart kind of just quarters
45:05 out of sync with the lower chamber that may start with
45:08 little spurts and then eventually become more chronic.
45:10 Yeah. And so to really start that the only way we can tell
45:15 if it's a serious problem or if it's a benign problem is to
45:19 actually catch it in the act, which is to have a heart
45:21 monitor on what happens. And you can write down exactly
45:25 what time it happens and we can look and see what's going on.
45:28 And then either we can reassure you that it's OK,
45:31 we can look into it further. If it is a little bit more of
45:34 us are. It's a rhythm. It would want to do an ultrasound of the
45:36 heart. We call that an echocardiogram and just look
45:39 for any structural problem with the hurt.
45:41 But that should be checked out.
45:43 >> Should be changed. You know anything to that because
45:48 sometimes you know that you know what you do prior to going
45:52 to bed. It is very significant. Even some people.
45:55 And we talk about this among young people a lot, but I think
45:57 everybody's affected by it. If you have so much input
46:00 coming in or you do it, you you just try to just
46:04 you just watched, you know, 5 shows on television. You
46:06 watching in your videos like you said and just could you not
46:11 fall asleep? Your body has to take time to kind of that.
46:15 Yeah. And I think that what people do prior to that time is
46:17 very significant. Another body either
46:20 acclimate. So just a sense, as you know, you just wore me out.
46:23 Yes, I'm aware you out. So and so I'll get you back to what
46:28 you just did to make a soft body cause traumatize a lot of
46:30 times by general activity and sleep is important. Is the I
46:34 mean, I would just out there that that will.
46:37 >> With us, it's it's interesting to me as a sleep
46:39 specialist that we have learned in the last 20 or 30 years,
46:42 the importance of melatonin that secret from the brain,
46:46 the fact that it can be shut down with just the smallest
46:48 amount of light after 9 o'clock and 9 that we really ought to
46:52 have dark rooms that we shouldn't be up looking at
46:54 screens all day and then and then when I look back at the
46:59 spirit of prophecy and she wrote, she wrote so much about
47:02 being in the sun so much about being in the light. And yet she
47:05 says
47:07 try not to stay up after 9 o'clock at night. Turn out
47:10 every light. The staying up this turning of of night into
47:13 day is a wreck. Should health destroying have and how would
47:16 she have known that time? And she knew it. Exactly.
47:19 She did as the truth is that we're only foot were only
47:23 confirming this in the last 20 to 30. So you really should be
47:25 dark should be dark. So we see my wife has that little thing
47:29 that recharges the Airbus it.
47:31 >> Tiny green light. And I think they just want something
47:34 different that says if you could. Yeah, and I thought what
47:38 I thought to, but.
47:40 >> But there are photos of light that can actually
47:42 penetrate through the eye at the back of the retina and that
47:45 it's very sensitive. It will shut down melatonin production.
47:48 So wearing an eye patch, I know there's so much like the old
47:52 days talk radio's radios in general. I mean, you're my kind
47:56 of guy because when I got a hotel.
47:57 >> Have the microwave. Haha. Yeah. The you know, the
48:05 emergency lights. You can see where you find the bathroom.
48:07 Yeah. I put a towel over it. I got to make. That was not as
48:11 I possibly can. Yeah. And as I walk over here, tell me wash
48:16 right over the when it came to a new exhibit. What's all this
48:20 call? I just want to have a dark room. Yeah. It's a
48:23 different. Yeah.
48:25 >> It isn't new. You know, turn by turn. Okay. I had this is
48:30 Valerie from Illinois.
48:32 I had the 2 dose. Shouldn't Rick vaccine Shane Grix?
48:37 Yeah. Maybe 5 years ago. So it goes to set a lifetime
48:40 vaccine. Do I need to have that renewed from time to time?
48:44 I'm 69 years old that are currently yeah. Riggs said.
48:48 >> Cheat sheet. She's fine with the with what she had.
48:52 Okay. The 2 doses of BPA. Well, as could OK, he's won a
48:57 dental question. I have dental implants. After the first year
49:02 it took several visits to reset them
49:06 and prevent loose age. Is this common? What are the pros and
49:10 cons of implants?
49:12 >> So this is this is a question that's kind of the new
49:15 did because time analogy differs between patient and the
49:19 dentist. So patients cold, the crown and the implant, the
49:23 implant. So I'm not sure if she's had the Crown Cummings
49:28 and it needs to be tightened more if she had the actual
49:32 implants loosing and that something else, the disease
49:36 higher Donald related information. So there are 2
49:39 things here. If it was crowned, sometimes that has to do her
49:42 occlusion her bite, sometimes you have Brooks is sometimes a
49:46 lack of sleep. How was his people to grind their teeth and
49:49 you have crown screwed into these implants? It's putting
49:54 pressure on them. And, you know, I tell my patients all
49:56 the time defense a great we've done wonderful things. But the
50:00 best teeth were invented by God. It's best to keep the ones
50:03 that we ha ha. So, you know, we've got to be slower on the
50:08 extractions Nevada on the oral hygiene. Yeah, we don't have to
50:12 do this, but and we do have this issue. Sometimes patients
50:17 have to check in to what's happening path functionally and
50:20 sometimes that's grinding clenching the teeth and gums.
50:24 I'm assuming having to go back and have the tightened. I'm
50:28 going to lean on the side of it being the crown being
50:31 tightened, the screw loose men. We see that the implants,
50:35 hence we used temper icy minutes when we see meant the
50:38 end because we're all that the crowd come off. Then implant
50:41 break once it's integrated into Boone. So the patient, we
50:45 should talk to her Dennis of all night guard, maybe doing
50:48 some exercises to relax her jaw muscles before sweeping things
50:52 like that. And I love a pass to say it because I tell a lot of
50:55 my patients this what they do before they go to sleep at
50:58 night is so important to mom. Their whole body has so far.
51:01 A lot of my tmd patients which is the temperament double joy.
51:05 They have joint disorders and pain exercises to kind of relax
51:09 the muscles and spend a lot of time talking. A lot of people
51:13 have their self and are fed up against their cheek, which is
51:17 100 and DAX to their jaw. So there are things that
51:19 complicating these issues. So you talk to her Dennis and
51:23 see if that's an issue and probably get some type of my
51:26 car to something to help protect this teeth. Okay.
51:29 Good one
51:30 now. Thank you.
51:32 >> This is can. This is a question from Loma Linda.
51:35 No name. Can you decrease the risk of cancer with foods?
51:41 If so, which foods? This is all from Kenneth Luke and Joseph.
51:45 Sorry, Yes.
51:46 >> I I love that question. I actually even get it from my
51:51 cancer patients. They already have cancer and he sees a thing
51:54 I can do.
51:55 So I'm back in the 80's. The U.S. Congress Commission to
52:01 famous British epidemiologist name Sir Richard Oland Richard
52:05 Peto to discover what are the avoidable? The cop avoidable
52:11 causes of cancer. So some cancers you can avoid genetics
52:15 and things like that. But what cancers out there being caused
52:19 by avoidable things, the things you can modify
52:22 and they found diet as playing a big role. And according to
52:26 estimates about 35% of all cancers cars out there is due
52:31 to diet now. So they so this is back in the 80's. Now they
52:35 refresh those numbers in 2015, the National Cancer Institute
52:40 did, and they found that these estimates are still holding
52:43 true after all those years. So we can say at least a 3rd of
52:47 all cancers out there that are preventable are due to what you
52:51 put in your mouth. So the answer to the question of can I
52:55 do anything to prevent cancer by what I eat? The answer is a
52:58 resounding yes. Not supported by science. You now what is the
53:01 best food to put in your mouth to prevent cancer?
53:05 The short and simple answer is
53:08 plants plants already only foods. You can eat things that
53:13 can prevent cancer. There's no other substances you can put in
53:16 your mouth could help prevent cancer. And it makes sense
53:19 because if you even just look at our physiology to shape our
53:21 teeth, the length of our intestines and all of these
53:23 things, a try we were created to run on plants. Yeah. And the
53:28 Bible tells us that that's the diet those offered in the
53:31 garden of the plant based diet. So surprise, surprise when you
53:35 give your body right fuel,
53:37 it helps fight disease, including cancer.
53:41 It also has something to that real quick to eating at the
53:45 right time of day.
53:47 >> I'm has also been shown there was a study that was
53:49 done, speaking of intermittent fasting, so making sure that
53:53 you're eating at a certain time of day and leaving the stomach
53:56 to rest of the body to rest. There was a study that was done
53:59 looking at women who had gotten breast cancer. And if they had
54:03 left at least 15 hours of of the day, fasting, their
54:08 recurrence rate was reduced by 30% manso. So not only what you
54:13 eat, but also the timing. We're finding out a tremendous
54:15 amount of information about medicines and what we do to the
54:18 body. And when we do things to the body, it's very important
54:22 that we haven't taken into consideration before.
54:24 >> And I'll just add that fasting has been found to be
54:27 beneficial, even in patients who are who have cancer and are
54:32 undergoing cancer treatment. So there's some limited
54:34 evidence showing that people who fast before they undergo
54:37 chemotherapy and other treatments like that first will
54:41 report fewer symptoms and a lot of times and some some studies
54:45 have shown that there's potentially a greater efficacy
54:48 for the treatment that they're receiving. Either ways. What
54:51 we're seeing is that when you yet at the right times and not
54:54 you at the wrong times and you give your system a break,
54:58 there's a healing effect to that. So the use of food in the
55:01 right amount at the right timing like Doctor Shaw saying
55:03 I completely concur. Wow, beautiful. You know, running
55:06 out of a tie on tougher to talk to Schwartz because we talk
55:09 about medicine and ministry. And I think the appropriate a
55:12 lot of these questions have come in. We should pray for
55:15 some of these individuals that are just dealing with issues
55:17 that as you recommended their doctors and physicians coated
55:21 them and go through the testing. But I think at this
55:23 time going to be just for that to you, cut it down was issue
55:26 will take you, John. So just.
55:28 >> Growing up in a man being incurs myself to prove my
55:31 patients and trying to mentor other people to do the same.
55:36 Every single patient I see is at the end of the encounter.
55:39 I always say one of the things that are fun to do is to say a
55:41 prayer. Is that okay? I don't force it on them, but we've had
55:45 a lot of patient encounters that it would be great if we
55:47 could press. So let's let's bow our heads. Father God, we thank
55:50 you for the time we've had to meet with literally questions
55:53 from around the world. People struggling with so many
55:57 questions about their dental work, about cancer, about
56:00 steroid, about just various ailments with their heart.
56:03 You are the ultimate healer. We don't have the wisdom to do
56:07 that. But we know that through the principles that you've
56:10 given through could diet exercise and health in turning
56:13 to you that you want to make us whole. We pray that we could
56:16 have abundant life and Jesus. Amen.
56:19 >> Oh, man. Yeah. Well, thank you, Doctor Swartz, both of
56:23 you, Doctor Shaw. Well, we'll talk to Schenn and Doctor
56:27 Simmons, some ice in the correct P I good job. Always
56:30 good to have you here. Any time you come. Let me know medical
56:34 advice. Haha purging to some of the questions we could not get
56:39 to, but well, the of those for another program. But once again
56:42 to give you the Web site, you can go to this website quickly
56:46 so people can go to a man hit with snow.
56:49 >> Yeah. Im an STA Dot org. And if you want to support our
56:52 mission of what we do, but Im an SBA dot org slash donate.
56:55 You can see scan this QR code and we would prayerfully ask
57:00 you to consider standing with us, OK?
57:02 >> Well, friends got Bush until we see you again is from has
57:05 been a blessing. We look forward to seeing you in the
57:07 near future and the neighborhood
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Revised 2023-09-01