Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES

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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES

Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES

@espacetimeNOT

35 year focus on metabolism across cultures & thru time. I prefer private networks & I use LinkedIn & other social media to ascertain your identity.

Bear Valley, CO Joined Ocak 2017
2.1K Following1.1K Followers
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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES retweeted
Javier Gonzalez
Javier Gonzalez@Gonzalez_JT·
Therefore, D2O can be used to reliably assess human hepatic DNL in repeated measures designs with at least 3 weeks between measures Crossovers are powerful designs to efficiently detect small differences in hepatic DNL Thanks @TheBHF for funding doi.org/10.1152/ajpend…
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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES retweeted
William Lagakos
William Lagakos@caloriesproper2·
AI copy slop is taking over all of social media Content creators think it makes them look clever & witty, but it's so fucking obvious Best study is the one from MIT showing AI rots your brain
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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES retweeted
Simon Maechling
Simon Maechling@simonmaechling·
Some people refuse vaccines because they think they’re being tracked. Then pull a iPhone out of their pocket… …and use it to broadcast that belief to the world.
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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES retweeted
Keep Calm Fraud On
Keep Calm Fraud On@EmbraceFraud·
@slotkinjr @matthewherper @eringriffith @nytimes 1/ Well done! However there is a small flaw in your through explanation! THERE IS NOTHING STOPPING COMPOUNDERS FROM MAKING ORAL TERZAPETIDE. That the beauty of the law. As long as the label claim matches the content, there is jack FDA can do about it. The lawsuit will be tossed
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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES retweeted
Dr. Jon Slotkin
Dr. Jon Slotkin@slotkinjr·
I really did not want to be writing this morning. But this issue is too important. It’s been said that the last thing the weather person should do before going on the air is look out the window. The _day before_ @eringriffith profiled Medvi in @nytimes as the AI company of the future, the FDA approved Lilly’s new oral medication: orforglipron. *Not tirzepatide.* In fact, it’s not even a peptide. It’s the first non-peptide, small-molecule oral GLP-1 receptor agonist. Lilly owns tirzepatide. They invented it. If you could put tirzepatide in a pill, Lilly would do it. They would desperately want to. Instead, they spent millions and nearly eight years licensing a completely different kind of molecule, because oral tirzepatide is a biological impossibility. Tirzepatide is a 39-amino-acid, 4,813-dalton peptide. Your gut does not distinguish it from a piece of chicken. SNAC, the absorption enhancer that barely gets oral semaglutide to 1% bioavailability, is compound-specific. It failed with liraglutide, another GLP-1 peptide, and has no demonstrated mechanism for tirzepatide. There is no published human study of oral tirzepatide. There is no plausible mechanism. Medvi sells it starting at $279 a month. A RICO class action against its supply chain partners has already called the product modern-day snake oil. Lilly’s own strategy is the best witness. We can hear the lawyers now: “So doctor, what was your assumption on why Lilly was not pursuing oral tirzepatide despite that in not doing so they would instead pursue an entire entirely different type of molecule and possibly create market confusion with their new entrant?” The Times profile actually described an accountability architecture whose impact in part is that no single entity owns the patient and process. Medvi handles marketing. CareValidate provides the clinical workflow. OpenLoop provides prescribers and pharmacy fulfillment. The marketing layer can say the doctors make the decisions. The doctor platform can say the brand controls the messaging. The prescribers say the pharmacy fills what’s ordered. Everyone can point at everyone else. That structure explains a lot of the financials. Medvi reported a 16.2% net margin. Hims, with 2,442 employees selling the same drug categories, reported 5.5%. The 10.7-point spread represents in part everything Medvi may not pay for: extensive clinical oversight, advanced adverse event monitoring, satisfactory regulatory compliance, sound quality systems. The Times says they verified Medvi’s revenue. They did not seem to verify or note many other aspects. Six weeks before the profile ran, the FDA had issued Warning Letter #721455 for misbranding compounded GLP-1s. OpenLoop had disclosed a data breach: a threat actor claimed access to 1.6 million patient records, and multiple class actions were filed. The company’s ad network included fabricated physician personas, “Professor Albust Dongledore,” “Dr. Tuckr Carlzyn MD,” running over 5,000 Meta ads alongside a website disclaimer that these individuals “may be actors or AI portraying doctors.” The Times told the story of a man who used AI to build a billion-dollar company alone. The article was really a transcript of a Silicon Valley fever dream. A byproduct of regulatory lag and consumer desperation A billion dollars in pharmaceutical transactions running through an organization with no one seeming to care if a product can survive contact with the human stomach better than a chicken nugget.
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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES
GI Nutrition Foundation@GI_NutritionFdn

If people with #celiacdisease lack the microbes needed to break down certain fibers, they don't benefit from consuming them @VerduLab, @AlbertoCaminer7 & colleagues found patients with #celiacdisease had impaired microbial fiber metabolism in the small intestine, which was associated with depletion of the fiber-degrading taxa: ✅ Findings align with @DrHArmstrong research on β-fructan fibers' role in inducing inflammation if the microbes needed to ferment the fiber are not present ✅ While a high fiber intake is often recommended to newly diagnosed patients with celiac disease alongside the gluten-free diet to improve constipation, these findings suggest that it's first important to restore the gut ecosystem ✅ In mice, an inulin-supplemented diet increased small intestinal short-chain fatty acids and could be used as adjuvant therapy for the gluten-free diet to promote mucosal healing, when metabolizing taxa are present 📚 Read more: nature.com/articles/s4146…

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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES
@metapredict @nick_krontiris in the past, athletes on insulin pumps would need to shut off infusions of insulin or risk getting super low. why? I will look this preprint over very thoroughly; especially the references. very difficult to prove/disprove since its happening at cell level.
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Jamie Timmons
Jamie Timmons@metapredict·
@nick_krontiris Interesting! It's funny though that people think just stimulating glucose uptake is a therapeutic strategy. It's not, it's a temp effect - only so much ⬆️ in glycogen possible. There's a reason why there's feedback mediated ⏬ G uptake Turn over is key; or excretion via kidney
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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES
@nick_krontiris prior research claims the inside metabolism of the cell is over taxed & must have more energy so glucose channels open up & allow glucose to diffuse inside. do you need any of this research? I may be able to find it in my "cloud"
Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES@espacetimeNOT

Whoever wrote the part about glucose getting into muscle needs to do QUITE A BIT MORE RESEARCH. hello folks! NEWSFLASH! Glucose will cross into muscle WITHOUT INSULIN! 🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪 🦫🦫🦫🦫🦫👩🏽‍💻👩🏽‍💻👩🏽‍💻👩🏽‍💻👩🏽‍💻

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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES
Whoever wrote the part about glucose getting into muscle needs to do QUITE A BIT MORE RESEARCH. hello folks! NEWSFLASH! Glucose will cross into muscle WITHOUT INSULIN! 🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪 🦫🦫🦫🦫🦫👩🏽‍💻👩🏽‍💻👩🏽‍💻👩🏽‍💻👩🏽‍💻
Nick Krontiris@nick_krontiris

🧐

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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES
The desire for sweet tastes is part of our NORMAL hedonic drives. Did the food industry stay up at night plotting? NO. However sugar & salt was used to prevent bacteria growth. Now? @davidludwigmd book is correct: we can adjust to less sweetness
Brandon Luu, MD@BrandonLuuMD

“Cut out sugar and you’ll stop craving it” is not well supported. Reviews of RCTs and cohort studies find that changing sweetness exposure usually does not meaningfully reduce overall sweet preference long term. The sugar ‘detox’ idea is a myth.

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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES retweeted
Daniel J Drucker
Daniel J Drucker@DanielJDrucker·
Associations in humans suggest that Hyperglucagonemia in the face of higher hepatic lipid content in early #T2D is not due to differences in insulin sensitivity or glucagonotropic metabolites but could suggest hepatic glucagon resistance diabetesjournals.org/care/article/d…
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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES
Interesting
NEJM@NEJM

𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗘𝗳𝗳𝗲𝗰𝘁 𝗼𝗳 𝗚𝗟𝗣-𝟭 𝗥𝗲𝗰𝗲𝗽𝘁𝗼𝗿 𝗔𝗴𝗼𝗻𝗶𝘀𝘁𝘀 𝗼𝗻 𝗚𝗹𝘆𝗰𝗮𝘁𝗲𝗱 𝗛𝗲𝗺𝗼𝗴𝗹𝗼𝗯𝗶𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗹𝘀 Randomized, placebo-controlled trials of the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists have provided strong evidence to support their use — in fact, they have presaged a mini-revolution in how type 2 diabetes is managed. 👉 nejm.org/doi/full/10.10… Tirzepatide was the first dual GLP-1 and glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide receptor agonist approved for the treatment of type 2 diabetes on the basis of the SURPASS-1 (Tirzepatide [LY3298176] in Participants with Type 2 Diabetes Not Controlled with Diet and Exercise Alone) trial, a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of tirzepatide (administered in weekly doses of 5 mg, 10 mg, or 15 mg) paired with metformin for treatment of type 2 diabetes (seen in figure). Tirzepatide reduced glycated hemoglobin levels by as much as 2 percentage points and was superior to placebo at all dose levels. At 40 weeks, nearly 90% of participants had glycated hemoglobin levels of less than 7.0%, a change that was associated with profound weight loss. Read the Review Article “GLP-1 Receptor Agonists” by Clifford J. Rosen, MD, and Julie R. Ingelfinger, MD, from @TuftsMedSchool and the Maine Medical Center Institute for Research: nejm.org/doi/full/10.10…

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Eva D B Fain, BSN MPH RN CDE, CHES retweeted
Iñigo San Millán
Iñigo San Millán@doctorinigo·
After 30 years studying lactate, I have learned this: Lactate is not just a metabolite. It is a major regulator in the human body body. It can support metabolic health or contribute to disease. Same molecule. Different context. Lactate has been the most misunderstood molecule in biology. If you want to learn more about lactate and its multiple roles, link to my Substack article here 👇 @inigosanmillan/note/p-192080657?r=2nunp3&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">substack.com/@inigosanmilla
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