@MakisMedicine And yet all we hear about instead is miracle new chemo cures that are anything but cures once you delve into the studies.
#MakeIvermectinAccessible
@ValerieAnne1970 It's only shocking to people because the media that most depend upon for their information is suppressing this, no doubt because their funding comes in large part from the very industry that is also bribing our doctors.
Food isn’t just fuel—it’s stored solar energy, captured through plants, passed through ecosystems, and concentrated onto your plate.
What you eat is literally condensed light… shaping your metabolism, your mitochondria, your biology.
This is the lens most nutrition advice is missing.
More on this soon.
@drpaulmarik1@DrPaulEMarik The X account still exists. I actually followed it today, but then went to IMA to be sure that I had the right account, and found that I'd been duped!
@robertlufkinmd Hyperinsulinemia is upstream of so many conditions we pretend are separate diseases – fix the insulin signaling, and a shocking amount of “complex pathology” suddenly shares the same root.
A naturally occurring molecule called calcium alpha-ketoglutarate, known for its role in healthy aging, may help to restore communication between neurons and restore a patient’s memory. Could be a helpful adjunct to a comprehensive protocol like ReCODE. https://t.co/rAZdw7frbf
Absolutely agree. In addition, it's important to remember that food isn’t just macros; it’s information for our biology. Regeneratively grown produce reliably carries more vitamins, minerals, and protective phytochemicals, including broad-spectrum antibiotics and antifungals, than conventionally grown crops, turning vegetables and fruits into true “medicinals” rather than just calories. If we care about metabolic and cardiovascular health, how our food is grown belongs in the same sentence as what we eat.
@McCulloughFund I find that lumbrokinase tests better than nattokinase, though I then given them together. Also recommend Augmented NAC. Otherwise, I'm grateful for your getting this protocol out there.
Over 20 years, 2,315 healthy Finnish men (ages 42–60) were carefully tracked to study how regular sauna use impacted their health.
It was discovered men who used it 4–7 times per week had a 66% lower risk of dementia.
This is the complete breakdown of the study:🧵
Those at risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia, please take note. Dr Bredesen is highlighting yet another non‑drug, physiology-based tool—red light therapy—being integrated into targeted protocols aimed at slowing or reversing cognitive decline, not just masking symptoms.
For anyone with a family history, APOE4, metabolic syndrome, sleep apnea, or early memory changes, this is one more reminder that brain degeneration is not a single-lesion problem and will never be a single-pill solution. We now have converging evidence that multimodal, personalized interventions—metabolic optimization, sleep and oxygenation, movement, targeted light, nutrient sufficiency, cognitive training—can change the trajectory of cognitive decline when started early and applied comprehensively.
If your doctor’s only plan is “wait until it’s bad enough for a diagnosis, then start a medication,” you are being medically underserved. Seek out clinicians and programs that understand precision brain health and are willing to assess and address the full network of drivers—glucose/insulin, vascular health, toxins, infections, hormones, micronutrients, sleep and circadian biology—long before a devastating label is applied.
Red light therapy has been on the rise in recent years (and was used in our recent clinical trial as part of the overall protocol), and with good reason. New research has found that football players who used red light therapy prevented brain inflammation. https://t.co/fAKZUxy7A0
There are now remarkably strong clinical remission signals from case series and real‑world use of repurposed, off‑patent drugs like ivermectin, fenbendazole and mebendazole in advanced cancers. Given their low cost and favourable toxicity, the ethical response is not to dismiss these as anecdotes, but to urgently fund rigorous, publicly sponsored trials in the US (NIH) and UK (MRC/NIHR, Medicines Repurposing Programme) so patients aren’t dependent on self‑experimentation or industry’s lack of financial incentive. Public funding is the only realistic way to test these signals properly and, if they hold up, to integrate them into standard of care.
There are now remarkably strong clinical remission signals from case series and real‑world use of repurposed, off‑patent drugs like ivermectin, fenbendazole and mebendazole in advanced cancers. Given their low cost and favourable toxicity, the ethical response is not to dismiss these as anecdotes, but to urgently fund rigorous, publicly sponsored trials in the US (NIH) and UK (MRC/NIHR, Medicines Repurposing Programme) so patients aren’t dependent on self‑experimentation or industry’s lack of financial incentive. Public funding is the only realistic way to test these signals properly and, if they hold up, to integrate them into standard of care.