Agaricus

1.8K posts

Agaricus

Agaricus

@agaricles

If you can't stop it, might as well survive it.

Tham gia Eylül 2023
299 Đang theo dõi19 Người theo dõi
Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
@Eyaaaad This is a diagnosis of a condition that started in my body over 20 years ago. Had I not taken care of my body during the past few years, it would be a lot worse. Health issues will always pop up, no matter how healthy one is. The best thing is to get diagnosis early. Full story:
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson

Bad news #1: I have an autoimmune disease. My stomach is eating itself. Bad news #2: 2–5% of people have this, too. Likely more, because it hides. Good news: I'm going to try and solve it. Will share all. As a kid, I ate sugar cereal, drank sugary soda, and gobbled down fast food. I had a few healthy years in my early 20s but then became a young father of three and began building a business. Juggling that stress and grind, I let my health slip and gained 40 lbs. Within a few years I’d fallen into a deep, chronic depression. Somewhere in that timeline, my body began developing an autoimmune process affecting my thyroid and then my stomach lining. It’s called Autoimmune Gastritis (AIG). My hypothyroidism got diagnosed when I was 21 years old with a routine blood draw. That enabled me to begin proactive management, supplementing levothyroxine and Armour Thyroid. They are the hormones my body should be producing on its own but wasn’t. By taking these pills daily, my body was able to operate as though my thyroid was functioning properly. What I didn’t know was that something else was going on inside my body: my stomach had begun attacking itself. But there was no routine test to find out and I didn’t have any symptoms. I just discovered it in May. I'm unsure how long I've had it. AIG causes irreversible damage: nutritional deficiency, anemia, and over a long horizon, elevated cancer risk. When AIG is discovered today, standard medical care concedes defeat, stating that nothing can be done except managing the condition, no matter how awful or lethal the effects. Looking back over the past few years, I can now see the early signals we were picking up in measurement but hadn’t connected the dots. For 11 years, I’ve had low ferritin, without anemia. We continually tried to raise my iron levels with food and supplementation but nothing would work. We chased the obvious solutions first. A plant-based diet means all my iron is the hard-to-absorb, non-heme kind. Hard training, sauna, and hyperbaric oxygen all raise the body's demand for iron. But none of them explained the core failure: despite me taking iron orally, trialing every formulation, and using every timing trick, none of the iron would stick. What I didn’t fully appreciate until recently is how many stones my previous providers had left unturned. The low ferritin kept getting explained away but not fixed. I overhauled my medical team earlier this year. It was the rebuild to lay the groundwork for Immortals Care, our $1M a year protocol. With greater capacity, we revisited everything. On the surface, my low ferritin was easy to dismiss by most standards of care. My hemoglobin and hematocrit were normal. Ferritin measures stored iron, while hemoglobin measures circulating iron, and because the body drains its reserves first to keep hemoglobin normal, you can be fully iron deficient with a perfectly normal hemoglobin and hematocrit. This is why my low ferritin kept getting dismissed: the numbers that define anemia looked fine, so no one asked why my iron reserves wouldn't refill. My team pressed on that question. They first turned to a colonoscopy. I was 48 years old and overdue. It was good health hygiene to have while also serving a specific purpose of searching for a hidden source of blood loss such as a polyp or even cancer in my bowels. Either one of those would be an explanation of why the iron kept disappearing. At the same time, they began connecting the dots. Iron absorption depends on stomach acid, so one theory was that my stomach acid was disrupted. They also knew that thyroid and stomach autoimmunity often travel together, so often that the pairing has a name: thyrogastric syndrome. Put against my 27+ year history of autoimmune thyroid disease, the pieces pointed to a single hypothesis: my own immune system was attacking my stomach. To our surprise, my colonoscopy came back clean. A perfectly healthy colon, better than 95% of colonoscopies of men, according to the gastroenterologist. That ruled out the first concern and worst possible outcome: slow continuous bleeding from colon cancer, or pre-cancerous polyp. My team had exercised great foresight though, anticipating this possible outcome. In addition to a colonoscopy, they’d ordered an upper endoscopy to be performed at the same time. The combined procedure is a bi-directional endoscopy. Probes would look at my entire intestinal tract, up from below and down the throat. Additionally, we had several blood biomarkers measured ahead of the procedure to try and pick up on any signals that would give the gastroenterologist guidance for what to look for while doing visual inspections. Fifteen minutes before the procedure, my blood results returned, finding elevated levels of anti-parietal-cells-antibodies (APCA). They came back at roughly five times the upper limit of normal (103, against a ceiling of 20 Units/mL). It was a positive result confirming the suspicion of AIG being the culprit behind my low ferritin, the other type of gastritis, driven by a bacterial infection, was already ruled out, as we knew I am negative to H. pylori. Even before this finding, my team had ordered five biopsies to be taken from three regions of my stomach. The biopsies were the critical piece. Had they not been ordered, the bi-directional endoscopy would have been completed and AIG remained undiagnosed as there were no visual signatures of the condition in my intestines. Two days later, the results of biopsies came in, showing clear signs of early autoimmune gastritis: early atrophy confined to the acid-producing lining, with the rest of the stomach still spared. My team had anticipated this, methodically tracing every line of evidence. We now had a formal diagnosis. I have autoimmune gastritis AIG. My stomach is eating itself. So this was never one problem. It was three, linked to one another: the iron deficiency, the autoimmune gastritis driving it, and the autoimmune thyroid disease alongside it. Iron and thyroid feed each other both ways, low iron impairs the conversion of thyroid hormone into its active form, and an under active thyroid impairs how the body uses iron. Each made the other harder to fix. Autoimmune gastritis affects an estimated 2–5% of people, and likely more, because it hides and is challenging to diagnose. It's usually silent for years, surfacing only once the stomach has atrophied enough to do real damage: iron deficiency first, then B12 deficiency, then anemia from both, and over a long horizon, raised stomach-cancer risk. In one study of people with precancerous gastric lesions, roughly 18% carried the autoimmune antibodies, and only about 1% had ever been diagnosed. And the earliest clue, low ferritin, is the one standard medicine waves through. Low iron stores get normalized and rarely investigated at all when anemia hasn't shown up yet. That blind spot is what hid mine for a decade. The good news: the iron deficiency is now corrected. I received a 1,000 mg Monoferric iron infusion. This was chosen for two reasons after considering multiple formulations. First, it can safely deliver a full dose of iron in a single infusion (1,000 mg), while older options like Venofer require several separate appointments to reach the same total. Second, certain other IV iron formulations can cause a drop in blood phosphate levels, an important mineral for bones and energy. Monoferric is much less likely to do this, which matters given how closely we track long-term metabolic and bone health parameters. As mentioned earlier, current medical standards treat AIG as something to be managed, not resolved. It's worth noting that many of you give me a hard time, inviting me to "live life" and engage in self-destructive behaviors like a "normal person". I'm cool with the playful ribbing. Also, had I not taken care of my health during the past five years, my situation could potentially be very serious. You too may have a lurking health issue that is undiagnosed and could increase in severity from unhealthy life choices, without your knowing. The absence of symptoms is not the presence of health. A gentle nudge that minding your health, no matter your situation in life, is good decision making. My team and I are going to try and solve my AIG. This is how we’re approaching it: First, routine monitoring keeps the disease in view: ferritin and iron, B12, the pepsinogen I/II ratio, gastrin, and chromogranin A. Gastrin is the dial to watch. If it climbs, the disease is advancing, and the risk of gastric neuroendocrine tumors climbs with it. Second, we’re doing advanced characterization of the disease. We’ll do a repeat biopsy to read the immune infiltrate, deep cytokine profiling, and T-cell subset analysis, to see which pathways are actually firing. That testing drives the intervention plan, including the experimental approaches we intend to develop. + If gastrin and chromogranin rise: damp the gastrin drive (netazepide) and tighten endoscopic surveillance. If the profile is Th1 / interferon-driven: target JAK/STAT. + If it's Th17 / IL-17-driven: target IL-17 and STAT3. + If regulatory T cells are failing: rebuild them (low-dose IL-2, induced Tregs). + If it's antibody- and B-cell-driven and antigen-specific: engineered cell therapy (CAAR-T). Which organizes into four tiers, from available today to frontier: Tier 1, now: protect and support; zinc-L-carnosine, and acid replacement (betaine HCl with pepsin) under physician supervision. This is specific to my case and not something to self-prescribe, especially given the cancer-surveillance considerations above. Tier 2, target the signaling , JAK/STAT, GSK-3, IL-17, and damp the gastrin drive (netazepide). Tier 3, reset the cells, induced regulatory T cells (iTregs). Tier 4, frontier: engineered T-cell therapy (CAR-T / CAAR-T), custom AI-designed antibodies, or synthetic proteins, that can specifically seek out inactivate or destroy the rogue immune cells attacking my stomach lining. To be clear: there's no approved cure for autoimmune gastritis today. Medicine treats it as something to manage, not solve. Tiers 2 through 4 are investigational preclinical evidence at best, and in several cases therapies that still have to be built. If you're working on autoimmune gastritis, antigen-specific tolerance, regulatory T cells, or CAAR-T for organ-specific autoimmunity, please reach out. Modern medicine has normalized too many conditions that erode our health, function, and comfort, shrinking the goal to monitoring and management while a cure is rarely even attempted. Most of these verdicts were handed down decades ago, in an era that predates nearly all of our current tech and science, and they have gone largely unchallenged. We want to change that. In the age of AI, multiomics, and custom-built DNA, proteins, and cells, no condition should be presumed incurable simply because no one has yet tried to cure it with today's stack. I’ll end on a personal note. We fill our days mostly on things that are trivial next to what we ultimately care about. We know, deep down, however, that in the noise of it all, health is easily forgotten until it’s the only thing that matters. We spend a fraction of our lives truly sober to the preciousness of life. We feel it when someone we love dies, when a child is born, when we come close to death ourselves, or when a diagnosis marks our limit. In those moments, we are sobered, and the rarity of it all becomes self evident. Imagine the existence we’d build together if that clarity didn’t fade. I wish all of you the very best. Care for yourself, care for others, care for the planet and care for our animal friends. Care for life as it’s the most precious gift there is.

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إياد الحمود
الإعلان عن إصابة "براين جونسون" بمرض مناعي ذاتي مزمن (Autoimmune Gastritis - AIG). هذا المرض لا يوجد له علاج ولا يمكن الشفاء منه وفيه يهاجم الجهاز المناعي خلايا المعدة مما يجعلها تأكل نفسها. ما الغريب في الخبر؟ جونسون هو المليونير الأمريكي الذي اشتهر قبل سنوات بإنشاء برنامج "الخلود" الذي يجعله يعيش وكأنه خالد في الدنيا، وهو يقوم على دفع 2 مليون دولار سنوياً لعمل: - مئات الفحوصات بشكل دوري مع الأطباء - مراقبة حالته بالأجهزة - فحص جسمه يوميًا بمئات المؤشرات الصحية بدقة عالية - تناول أفضل الأطعمة - ممارسة أفضل الرياضات - سحب دم شامل: كل 3-6 أشهر - تصوير رنين مغناطيسي كامل للجسم - زيارة طبيب الأسنان كل 6 أشهر - زيارة طبيب العيون سنويًا - فحص الشامات سنويًا وأمور كثيرة أخرى يقوم بها ليكتشف المرض قبل وقوعه. وصف جونسون نفسه بأنه أكثر شخص صحّي في التاريخ لمن هو في نفس عمره (48 عام) وقال بأنه يسعى للخلود في الدنيا. لكن كل هذا لم يمنع إصابته بذلك المرض ولم تتمكن تلك الإجراءات من اكتشافه أو تفاديه.
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricles·
@CapnKibs You left out just how obviously astroturfed she is
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Kibs
Kibs@CapnKibs·
I know people rag on her appearance, but my primary grievance is she can't act to save her life, she has the emote range of a dried piece of wood. Coupled with the fact, directors have the tendency to try to make her powerful like in the Dune, and what you get is a pretentious piece of wood.
Real Ass Wigger@RAWigger

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Possum Reviews
Possum Reviews@ReviewsPossum·
There are two reasons you oppose nuclear power. 1) You're stupid. 2) You learned everything you think you know about nuclear power from The Simpsons.
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Video Game Nostalgia
Video Game Nostalgia@GameStalgiaX·
Never forgive them for what they took from us Cheat codes Game manuals Demo discs Couch co-op being normal Split-screen multiplayer Complete games at launch No day-one patches Unlockable characters Secret costumes Bonus modes Physical collections Cool disc art Simple console dashboards No account logins No battle passes No daily quests No always-online single-player games Weird experimental games Mid-budget games Licensed games with personality Buying random games based on the cover Gaming magazines Game rentals Main menus with soul The feeling of actually owning your games The excitement of a new console generation
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R.G. Wirmer Flagge
R.G. Wirmer Flagge@RGWFlagge·
@hayasaka_aryan they do not have the same cognitive structure to their brains as us. they don't understand self defense, like us, just as per capita eludes them. this is beyond blaming blacks for being stupid and violent, it's about recognizing they are not us and cannot be in our societies.
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricles·
@Eightsicks @hayasaka_aryan Yes, you were kind enough to attach your face to your profile. I look forward to the day we can add it to the Mural of Black Excellence below.
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GribblesGoBag
GribblesGoBag@GribblesGoBag·
@ZoomerHistorian "Sardines, you say? I'm also an esteemed moderate." - café chatter in the near future
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Zoomer
Zoomer@ZoomerHistorian·
Once the pendulum inevitably swings back I don't want to hear a single word from anyone about sympathy or kindness towards the third world horde My woke opinion that the criminals should be executed and the rest packed into shipping containers like sardines and dumped literally anywhere in the third world is going to be seen as mild soon. If third worlders were capable of thinking more than five minutes into the future they'd also see where things are going and just make plans to leave. It's so clear that this is all coming to a head. Only Remigration, the correct and peaceful option, can prevent the chaotic future they've brought upon themselves.
Al@Al6631413474629

@visegrad24 Prayers for his family ♥️

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LindyMan
LindyMan@PaulSkallas·
Humans are unique in nature in that they can throw with accuracy and force. Other animals never expect it happening. It is an effective defensive (and offensive) technique we have developed. It arrived relatively late in our development. But once our shoulder changed, we became a projectile species. We started thinking about distance differently. Eventually we developed arrows, guns, missiles, airplanes, rockets. And here we are.
Daily Loud@DailyLoud

UPS driver throws a 30-pound box at a dog sprinting at him at full speed, then tries to fight the owner

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Serf
Serf@TheRoyalSerf·
This world then the next
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricles·
@hoodsy The Confederates were never traitors, and even Lincoln and his subordinates knew as such. There is a reason none of the Confederate leaders, not even Jefferson Davis, were charged. Because even Lincoln knew the northern courts wouldn't find any of them guilty.
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wiz
wiz@hoodsy·
When the last Confederate veteran died in the 1950s Ulysses S. Grant III, grandson of that guy there on the left and chairman of the Civil War Centennial, remarked that his death was "cause for great national mourning." This hand-wringing and pearl-clutching over "treason" is a mid-to-late 20th century invention largely drummed up by people whose families hadn't even arrived before the Civil War, and to whom Americanism as an identity remains largely a mystery. It's stolen valor over an event they don't even really understand.
Jim Stewartson, Decelerationist 🇨🇦🇺🇦🇺🇸@jimstewartson

Uh. The White House is officially elevating the Confederacy to be part of American “unity.” This is Robert E. Lee SURRENDERING. The treason of this government is endless and must be put down like the last rebellion.

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Serf
Serf@TheRoyalSerf·
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RazörFist
RazörFist@RazorFist·
This "dying in office, refusing to resign, perpetually leeching off the taxpayer tit" perseveration will not stop until we penalize those who perpetrate it. Rolling back legislation they voted on. Refunding campaign donations. Public Service is a SERVICE. Not a barony.
Leading Report@LeadingReport

EMS dispatch radio traffic indicates Sen. Mitch McConnell was “unconscious” when emergency responders were dispatched to his Washington home on June 14, neighbors said they saw him loaded onto a stretcher and transported by ambulance, but his office has not confirmed it was him, per Reuters.

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Maw
Maw@TheEbonyMaw·
I just don’t understand any other explanation about why they keep doing this other than the fact that they’re simply evil.
Insider Wire@InsiderWire

#BREAKING: Tim Walz pardons immigrant convicted of sexually abusing a 10-year-old and blocks his deportation.

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The Dank Knight 🦇
The Dank Knight 🦇@capeandcowell·
It’s going to take public executions to right this ship and we all know it.
Insider Wire@InsiderWire

#BREAKING: Tim Walz pardons immigrant convicted of sexually abusing a 10-year-old and blocks his deportation.

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The Third Editionist
The Third Editionist@StalinKilled40M·
@CitizenAmedia There’s an alternate universe where the Japanese are perpetually guilt-ridden basket cases and the Germans are liberalized but unabashedly nationalistic because MacArthur was put in charge of the European Theatre and Eisenhower the Pacific.
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Sean W. Malone | That’s just, like, your opinion.
I think the US/Japan relationship pisses off certain groups of people because it's perhaps the most resounding evidence you could get that it is possible to simply leave old grievances in the past and choose peace & cooperation for the future. A lot of people need those grievances to be perpetuated in order to capture and hold onto power. But... The actually healthy option is to let them go. If anything anyone did to your grandfather or great grandfather is ruining your life today, that's a choice you've made and you should try making a better choice tomorrow, instead.
鈴森はるか 『haruka suzumori』 🇯🇵@harukaawake

🇯🇵 What a good portion of my replies look like recently. "omg pearl harbor, hiroshima, WW2!!! they nuked you!"

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Rebeca Gonzalez
Rebeca Gonzalez@RebecaGonz18011·
@hayasaka_aryan Women are naturally empathetic. Stop trying to make them more masculine you fucking low testosterone faggots. They're supposed to be the ones begging you not to go to war and fight.
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Paul
Paul@WomanDefiner·
We need to have a discussion about how the last 60 years of civil rights based education has rendered a large % of the Black community basically insane. This woman killed her grandchild to get back at the mom for being White. She thinks White people are demons. She thinks this is her getting revenge on all of White civilization wronging her and not giving her what she's owed. She shot a baby and hours after this is her response in the interrogation room. She even says Elon owes her money because he stole tesla from black people.
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Wokal Distance
Wokal Distance@wokal_distance·
A white man named Michael Hudson wrote a poem that was rejected 40 times when submitted under his real name, when he submitted it under the name Yi-Fen Chou (a Chinese woman's name ) it got published in a prestigious journal and for the 2015 edition of The Best American Poetry.
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