anotherx
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@bryan_johnson @_katetolo not to mention you can develop endometriod ovarian cancer from it
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Examining Kate’s 1%
She has suspected endometriosis. This affects at least 1 in 10 women, likely more.
Here she’s getting an ultrasound.
Historically you needed surgery just to diagnose it (incisions are made in the abdomen). We're doing a non-invasive route.
Typically women live with endometriosis for 7-10 years before being diagnosed. It’s the leading reason women aged 30 to 34 get hysterectomies (permanent surgery to entirely remove the uterus).
This condition is where endometrial-like tissue starts growing outside the uterus, in ovaries, bowel, bladder, even the diaphragm. This tissue inflames, scars, and glues organs together.
Our first step is to find out if @_katetolo has it.
Initial measurements we’re doing:
+ trans vaginal ultrasound
+ pelvic MRI w and w/o contrast
+ hormonal labs
All during the early part of her cycle to get the clearest picture.
During her ultrasound, a slim probe, about the width of two fingers, 10-12 inches long (although only a small portion is inserted) is covered with a protective sheath and lubricant and gently inserted into the vagina (patient has to empty their bladder first). This creates real-time images of the uterus, ovaries, and surrounding pelvic structures. While inserted, the probe is turned 90 degrees to evaluate all the various structures, angles and views. There is no radiation exposure.
The technician is looking for scarring, ovarian cysts, adhesions, and for organs that are fused together with tissue. This ultrasound can confirm endometriosis but it cannot rule it out.
What endo does to the body:
+ 90% report pelvic pain
+ 50% report severe fatigue
+ 26% report infertility. However many sources cite 30 to 50 percent.
+ 50% experience pain during sex.
+ Many have pain with ovulation, bowel movements, and urination
+ Severe bloating called “endo belly” where the abdomen visibly distends
There are a handful of theories about why endometriosis develops but the honest answer is no one is quite sure.
We’ll keep you posted on her results.

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@BobbyFreiler Can you point to one case where someone healed their hernia naturally?
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My no. 1 regret in life is the 4 surgeries I’ve had.
Knowing what I know now, I wouldn’t have done a single one - I would have healed with herbs, fasting & fruit instead.
Let me break them down:
1. Knee surgery at 12.
This was a sports injury. The doctor said the meniscus tear wouldn’t heal on its own. We did the arthroscopy. I was back on the field in 3 months.
What I’d do now: rest, fruit fast, herbal protocol, slow re-loading.
The meniscus heals by itself in the right conditions.
2. Knee surgery at 22.
It was the same knee, this time a different injury.
Now I think it was the first surgery’s compensation pattern that caused the second one...
What I’d do now: same protocol. Slower, deeper. Let it take 12 months instead of forcing it back in 12 weeks.
3. Wisdom teeth out at 19.
It's routine, everyone does it.
The dentist said they’d crowd my other teeth.
Four molars, gone in a single afternoon.
Years later I learned wisdom teeth are part of your detoxification network. Pulling them creates dead spots in your jaw - cavitations = that store toxins for life.
What I’d do now: leave them in, manage with herbs, alkalize the body so the surrounding tissue stays healthy.
4. Hernia repair in my 30s.
This was connective tissue weakness, and the doctor said it would only get worse.
We installed mesh. Mesh that, by the way, is now the subject of a class action because of how often it migrates and causes complications.
What I’d do now: lift smarter, fast, eat for tissue regeneration, give it 6-12 months. Hernias do heal naturally.
The pattern across all 4...
Doctors only get paid when you accept their recommendation.
That doesn’t make every doctor evil. But it means you, the patient, have to take ownership of your health, question the system, and become your own Health Operator.
Last year I tore my knee again, lifting heavy.
I didn’t go to a doctor or get an MRI.
I rested, took the herbs I trust, focused on calcium-rich greens, slept 9 hours a night, sat in the sun, walked daily.
12 months later, the knee feels better than it has in a decade.
I’m not anti-surgery. If my arm was hanging off, I’d want a surgeon in the room. If my son broke a bone, we’d reset it.
But there’s a difference between necessary surgery and the kind I had.
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@planert41 @PTwittwit if you did a good job by the time they are 3 it becomes so easy
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@PTwittwit Got a 3 year old. But yeah kid also only started sleeping through the night maybe 2 months ago so prob also just body catching up on 2+ years of waking up every 2 hours 🤣
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Dads with young kids
Is it normal to just feel tired and burnt out all the time?
It’s like you don’t even really get the weekend to recover because it’s all just kid stuff the moment you wake up
Arguably the only personal time you have is when they nap (and you’re already dead tired by that time) or the hour after they go to bed but before you pass out
Just trying to figure out if I’m doing something wrong
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recent study showed that waiting 50 days after a breast cancer biopsy increases the risk of metastasis. Every day you wait gives the tumor time to recover from the disruption and become more aggressive. At our institute, we treat during the biopsy itself. The needle is already in the tumor. Why would you remove it and wait?
From my book. "Anytime you do a needle biopsy, you disturb the cancer. Think of it as getting the cancer mad. Those healing growth factors are very helpful for your recovery, but even more helpful for the cancer." Our company Synchron has created a biopsy needle that can detect cancerous cells in real time.
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@therobbieharvey My wife, 30, had endometriosis for 8 years before finally getting diagnosed. Unfortunately, it was too late, and she developed endometrioid ovarian cancer. She has since undergone surgery and is currently undergoing therapy
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Bindi Irwin, daughter of the famed 'Crocodile Hunter' Steve Irwin, posted a heartbreaking life update. She revealed her battle with endometriosis, detailing multiple surgeries and the ongoing fight for better women's health awareness.
She said in the post that doctors have removed more than 50 endometriosis lesions from her body since early 2023. She also had a chocolate cyst taken out that was sticking her ovary to her side, along with an appendectomy and hernia repair.
But here's the part where I'm sure many of you will relate. She went years where doctors didn't believe her.
Irwin explained she dealt with severe, constant pain for a full decade before getting a proper diagnosis. Doctors had brushed it off as something women just have to live with, leaving her feeling weak and insecure as a teen and young adult. She described being trapped in her own body during that time.
This comes as March, designated Endometriosis Awareness Month, draws to a close. In her post, Irwin called on people to keep the invisible condition in mind year-round and show compassion to the millions affected. She stressed that raising awareness for endometriosis and women's health overall can stop others from suffering quietly.

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Most people have never heard of pirfenidone. It was FDA-approved for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis in 2014. But it blocks TGF-beta, one of the two primary drivers of both cancer and aging. Studies show it helps treat NSCLC, pancreatic cancer, colon cancer, liver cancer, breast cancer, and mesothelioma by breaking down the fibrous protective barrier that shields tumors from the immune system. Beyond cancer, its ability to reduce oxidative stress, scar tissue, and chronic inflammation in aging tissues suggests real potential in regenerative medicine.
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We are about to publish the LARGEST human ivermectin-cancer study ever conducted.
After 6 months, many patients reported their cancer was GONE.
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Defiant Ghost@TheDefiantGhost
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