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I'm Hugo Lovheim from Umea in Northern Sweden. I will present some data from our work on this topic from the epidemiological perspective. | 16 |
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cancers like lung and brain cancers. >> Thank you that's very helpful. Now that we understand a bit more about that there are many types of brain tumors and different | 10 |
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But you want to replace that salt that you're typically adding to your food with other herbs and spices and that are just naturally salt free or lower in sodium. | 11 |
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or decrease the risk for disease. We've taught them how to clean their ears, promoted pneumococcal vaccination, and used the microbial data that we have | 10 |
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to get their drugs registered, and that gives you $1 billion plus for marketing? Whereas sometimes there may be a case of being less risk averse | 14 |
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as it can get without freezing then take them and place them elsewhere again both of them together and only in one should you put snow but not in the other and at that point he says check | 13 |
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and Andy Dobson looking at data out of Rwanda where they show this fascinating interplay between infectious disease burden, economic development, | 9 |
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The advantage of that is that because you're preserving your natural endothelium, that back layer of the cornea is still yours, | 8 |
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of a novel exon by this yellow bar in the presence of drug. And we can also confirm this by looking at the amount of inclusion as assessed by a splicing assay. And so here | 17 |
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And then I'd be lost without my team. And I've given you a 30, 40 narrative of the kind of science that I do. But I really want to emphasize that, you know, | 9 |
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is between 90 by 60 mmHg basically means milli meter of mercury, this is the unit of measuring blood pressure. So, 90 by 60 to 120 by 80 mmHg is the normal range of blood pressure, | 18 |
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and i want you to get an idea of that concept, not the details of the various syndromes. They're important because first of all they may be a greater problem to the patient than the mechanical | 11 |
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stage two is done here stage three and stage four subsequently I'll discuss that okay right then moving to the next question in HIV positive | 13 |
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Twitter or Facebook or Instagram, can help you in your recruitment. So I’ll give an example, and here it’s not necessarily something I’ve done. My lab studies the pathogenesis, the genetics, | 14 |
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if they're doing chemo or radiation, and there are wonderful Chinese herbs which also will be helpful in that treatment. | 9 |
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table in your book, I think on page 273 if I'm not wrong that shows you a benign this and a malignant counterpart, benign this and a malignant counterpart, and so forth, I don't want you to memorize that. | 10 |
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were some of the the tumors that NF patients experience occur. And there we're looking for delivery, | 10 |
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but there's still some fluid behind with some bubbles showing you that there's some air on top, but then there's some hearing loss without pain. | 10 |
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of protein expression, which could be useful if the levels of expression you need for the experiments that you're doing are very modest, alternatively you can need very, very high | 12 |
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So they're not all bad. But we still know high levels of reactive oxygen species are bad for you. Fast forward to just, I think, maybe last year, | 11 |
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and all of those things or the nature of epidemiological data and how it's collected. So I think we need to be much more systematic about bringing | 10 |
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in Texas and Florida are of the same strain and is the treatment adjusted to the particular strain, I suppose? | 12 |
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they would do that, they'll do that with gene editing, they will do that with trying drug delivery, they will do whatever is needed. | 7 |
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they don't get worse, they don't go on to dementia or Alzheimer's, sure you found it. But if you don't, that's the issue we're running into a mess. Where how would you do the trial design? | 12 |
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it affects the vasculature. There's a lot of literature about causing sensorineural hearing loss. What's your advice for families | 11 |
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in there, I'm not -- I don't. Do an MRI. Well, I don't know. Is that just a cyst? Is that volume averaging? I don't know. Come back -- come back in nine months, we'll get a new | 16 |
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And that is the translocation of GLUT4. And there's a key molecule, a so-called Rab GAP, TBC1D4, otherwise known as As160, | 8 |
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My God. So how do you -- [laughs] -- how do you think about therapy, then, if you're going to target cancer genes? My God. Should we be sampling a whole bunch of -- this is called | 14 |
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right um and it's mixed and it's a bc uh why uh legionella i i'm i'm a little bit rusty so forgive me but it's a it's a | 9 |
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there's the military database of serum. You know that all military get blood drawn when they enter the military. They gather their 20-year-olds and it's banked actually in Silver Spring, Maryland. | 14 |
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as I'll refer to them throughout the talk, are not some new processes invented by cancer. | 7 |
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And if you're really low risk, then the benefit for you may be a very high number needed to treat. | 10 |
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because they can't hear their own volume. And they also might be speaking at a really high pitch or low pitch and they might be mumbling or sound different to what other children | 9 |
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who are overweight are also at increased risk. And if we jump back to when you talked about the immobilized individuals being higher risk, does that also mean that if you're quite active that | 12 |
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mentioned being medically fit. mentioned being medically fit. So, for my husband, this meant So, for my husband, this meant So, for my husband, this meant getting stronger by walking, getting stronger by walking, getting stronger by walking, being physically active and being physically active and | 5 |
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And the other thing, again it goes back to what's the etiology, if atherosclerosis, then the likelihood is even less. So it's probably FMD. | 10 |
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So this is kind of a ramping up or a super protocol of the typical advice of take a hot shower and get into bed. That is good advice. | 7 |
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that are causing anemia glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency or G6PD deficiency also causes a normocytic normochromic anemia and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria in which um you | 19 |
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risk of acquiring the HIV right and if you take the sequence after the blood transfusion the next one will be the needle sharing | 14 |
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THAT IS WHY I AM PROUD OF WHAT WE HAVE FOR THE FUNDING HERE. WE TEAMED UP TO REACH THOSE MOST IMPACTED BY THIS ISSUE. I WROTE AN OP-ED THAT YOU CAN | 7 |
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And it becomes somewhat challenging for us when someone says to me, Bavesh, I want a validation strain for extremely drug resistant TB that's | 8 |
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But for most people, if you do need corneal surgery, it is usually a problem either with the stroma or your endothelium, or both. | 10 |
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circulating tumor cells had a better outcome than patients with fewer than five circulating tumor cells. And this graph here is interesting. | 8 |
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ACEI stands for ACE Inhibitor and other I'll give you the names. And the fourth category are angiotensin receptor blockers, | 9 |
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procaine penicillin on board. And then, if you want to, you can email us and we can talk to you about where you want to go with the shots. | 8 |
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be a sign of having protein and in your case you did exactly what you were supposed to do you got tested in order to confirm that you have protein but now the question is is it a significant amount | 12 |
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scaling up the capacity um but as i was working on the the training programs i kept getting these clinical questions that would come up over and over again | 13 |
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where the core of therapy is based on fundamental mistrust.” Now it has long been argued that antibiotic resistance is driven by so-called “patient noncompliance,” | 12 |
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either intermittent fasting or even a three or four day water fast. And it is shocking. | 8 |
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And these are people who've tried everything and nothing's working. So 1/3 become seizure-free. Another third get a clinical benefit, | 7 |
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other imaging biomarkers that are now accepted by the FDA as a primary outcome, and one is area of atrophy. When we’re looking at trials where there’s atrophy, geographic atrophy in AMD, | 13 |
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and averaging their score after every exam to determine if a specific child did better. And this technique is like getting the score | 11 |
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but that's not really what's happening here. Yes, there's a reduction in inflammatory cytokines and there's an increase in anti-inflammatory cytokines, | 9 |
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(audience laughs) Here's fructose, nothing. It doesn't do any of those. Because the brain doesn't metabolize fructose. | 10 |
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compartment and and get you know the pelvic and this is what you uh uh hopefully end up with uh um we i actually was planning on doing a nephrectomy uh but then realize the kidney | 11 |
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for which he was later to become the Vice-Chancellor. I talked about Frank Fenner and his role in the rollout of the smallpox vaccine and, essentially, curing the world of smallpox. | 10 |
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It's not irritating, but it's very, very. It's soothing and it's much more economical. So, what else can we do? | 10 |
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and some factors that relate to survival and also to follow-up. But I’m going to jump into brain tumors now. Let me see. | 10 |
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and treat with radio surgery techniques. The reason that it's called radiosurgery, there's no surgery involved in any of this. | 8 |
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>> WELL, I MEAN, THERE HAVE BEEN LARGE STUDIES DONE IN THE PAST THAT GO BACK A NUMBER OF DECADES NOW THAT CLEARLY ESTABLISH THAT PEOPLE WHO HAVE BLOCKAGE IN THE LEG BLOOD VESSELS HAVE A VERY HIGH RISK OF HAVING BLOCKAGE IN THE HEART BLOOD VESSELS AND PROBABLY IN THAT 80% RANGE. | 15 |
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psychopharmacology CNS is central nervous system it could alter CNS energy metabolism that is making the mitochondria work better to make more ATP it could alter CNS neurotransmission we're | 14 |
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that I mentioned before that generally enhances their function, things like sleep and sunlight and good nutrition, et cetera, the sort of generic things for good health, | 9 |
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you eloquently said this is a lady who is from literally high desert california she's a hoarder she's got dogs and there are animals on | 10 |
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now in 2019 and 2020, we're hearing countries like Nepal, who people typically think of as this Himalayan country, now has to deal with dengue. | 12 |
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infectious disease physician did it take for you to chart the other day because i'm sure your workouts are pretty extensive | 11 |
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that early on in life they have a lot of potential. And so one of the reasons why I have a lot of optimism for hair cell regeneration is that, | 12 |
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They really had no effect. We didn't bother looking at hemolysis, because if any sample actually came to us and was actually grossly hemolyzed, | 7 |
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processing her hair. It feels like your natural hair. It moves like your natural hair, and it all comes pretipped right at the top, with a rubber tipping, so when it goes into | 10 |
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migraine activity in a portion of their brain that creates an abnormality of vestibular processing, and that creates symptoms that sound just like inner ear disease, because | 14 |
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LOVE HIM. I JUST WANTED TO BE WITH HIM NO MATTER WHAT. SO I WAS THERE. | 16 |
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I will focus on the gist of the information provided in the next three slides. They all address with a clinically meaningful changes were obtained with | 10 |
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of data collection, federal assistance, and resource allocation. The American Academy of Pediatrics recently published Lessons Learned | 9 |
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jesus of nazareth great answer and what would you guys be eating at that dinner uh | 12 |
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And they went on from there to publish in 1940 this seminal paper with Howard Florey as one of the key authors, describing penicillin | 8 |
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antibodies can cross through the placenta and look what happens over here it comes over in an attacks it attacks this baby's red blood cells and if these | 11 |
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This is my observation tracking some data but just, again, subjectively. So in this example, are you talking about people taking ketone esters or ketone | 9 |
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Chemotherapy patients have very, very low immunity. They're infected by many different bacteria and they grow and divide and develop resistance. Transplant patients, AIDS patients, even just aging populations-- | 15 |
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that has happened this year in particular, which has been really nice and I think we'll continue is that students have done their programme and then rather got research assistant | 10 |
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they're setting their circadian rhythms so being able to get out get sunlight get bright light you know if they're in a cave like atmosphere all day long that's going to contribute to excess | 12 |
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do not work as well as cochlear implants, but sometimes it's the only option we have available. And multidisciplinary team and according approach according, | 12 |
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But we'll put this up here with the exact percentages. All right. The age at diagnosis. | 8 |
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>> WELL, THAT'S A GREAT STORY. THANK YOU FOR SHARING YOUR STORY WITH US. I MEAN, HE PRESENTED WITH AN INTERESTING ARRAY OF SYMPTOMS. YOU KNOW, HOW COMMON IS THAT? | 10 |
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IN ITS CURRENT FORM. AT THE AGE OF 13, YOUR BRAIN IS STILL DEVELOPING. YOU ARE DEVELOPING YOUR SENSE OF SELF. | 6 |
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even if they've had brain surgery. It just doesn't stop their seizures. And so in the 1970s, the ketogenic diet was resurrected at Johns Hopkins for these treatment-resistant | 11 |
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It's not that they're not available, they are than normed and standardized. Next slide please. | 9 |
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Now, let's see if that is shown in the experiments, also, because eventually the proof of the pudding is in the eating, right? | 7 |
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And also, I wish I could draw for you guys, but if you think about an axis, like an x-y axis, and think about developmental chart. Like, say that you’ve got a line going out from that axis | 13 |
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of driving things down, as we had the ability to treat bacterial infection. And that continued to drive down. You see, in the latter part of the 20th century, | 9 |
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我们打个比方 就好像你们的存款。 如果你们的存款很高的话 每一年你们失去1% 1%, | 9 |
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on the right hand side part of the slide, but they're also composed of extremely O2 labile alpha subunits, and so, | 11 |
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来 林医生。 林医生 到底前列腺有什么用途?是。 OK 前列腺其实是看不到 也摸不到的。 它是在我们盆腔的深处, | 10 |
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at this point in time. This is very much an area that we as a field are still learning and growing. But it's exciting to think about what future larger studies will | 9 |
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as compared to the percentage of cases in which there is a lower amount of this particular protein, and that is what is shown in the graph here. The red line shows the cases where the protein... | 11 |
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nodes throughout the body will increase in size so not just cervical could be anywhere and this disease has been seen in patients after exposure to pesticides chemicals and organic solvents | 11 |
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So, the brain is really the most important organ determining who is perpetually hungry, who is easily satiated -- the variation between individuals in energy balance. | 10 |
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which is required to generate ribonucleotide and NADPH or the exozamine pathway, which is required for glycosylation of proteins. | 10 |
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藏在脊椎里的脊髓。 | 18 |
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we did compare both readout, Long COVID or fist questions. They're really similar attempts of the day, | 10 |
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primary CNS lymphoma okay so these are the manifestations that you come across when the CD4 count | 15 |
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that's the one disease with specific recommendations, especially if you're spilling protein in the urine, then ACE inhibitors and ARBs have a long history | 10 |
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