What steps are you taking for a heart-healthy life?
@michaelccopelandsr712011 ай бұрын
I cut salt out. Plus plenty of smoke breaks. The kind that relieves stress. ;-P
@Jack_Redview11 ай бұрын
@@NousTrapperdon’t forget keeping your tin foil hat on at all times to prevent the satanic cabals from mind controlling you into voting for Hunter Obama. Right ?
@edcampbell817611 ай бұрын
Maintaining muscular mass, supplementing adequate levels of Vitamin D & Vitamin K2-MK4, & avoiding processed foods & seed oils.
@h7opolo11 ай бұрын
deep breaths instead of simmering anger. focus on love instead of hate.
@kariannecrysler64011 ай бұрын
I actively identify my fears & learn how to respond to them in healthy, helpful ways. Stress reduction/response in the big picture. ❤
@irishbearman104411 ай бұрын
I'm still alive because I went to see my doctor for a "bad cold". A week in the hospital with pneumonia and A fib. The years of smoking and drinking had taken their toll. I've been sober and smoke free for about four months, and more than happy to tell you. Take care everyone.
@ShonMardani11 ай бұрын
I think she is gonna die like her dad either because of her genes or being Indian or being black, other than that she was useless helping her dad who never had a steak.
@radiumescape963311 ай бұрын
Yeah but we dont know you so it dont matter
@ChairPacer11 ай бұрын
🎉 Gj man, I’m 2 years sober from drugs, 4 months from tobacco
@vikingthedude11 ай бұрын
A friend of mine smokes 20 cigs a day. He’s been trying to quit but even after 6 hours of not smoking he gets uneasy. Is there anything that has helped you stay sober that I could tell him about? I don’t smoke so I don’t have any advice for him
@irishbearman104411 ай бұрын
@@vikingthedude My doctor put me on patches, they really help with the cravings. Also avoid the triggers, myself I had to stop drinking at the same time, you know a beer and a smoke. Another was (is) driving I just could not have them in the car. Lastly self motivation I have five grandchildren I'm not done watching grow up.
@1964mcqueen11 ай бұрын
Its not about living longer. Its about being healthy longer. We have the ability to keep people alive much longer than in the past, but they are in pain, can't walk a block to save their life, and need multiple medications and someone to feed and clean them on a daily basis.
@kennethlgabriel9 ай бұрын
Dr. Peter Atia summed your summation up well: We are striving for life span AND health span. 💪🏾
@kathygann763211 ай бұрын
My father was diagnosed with high blood pressure so I asked him how he was going to change his lifestyle. Was he going to walk or exercise? Decrease alcohol and stop smoking? He answered “No, the doctor gave me a pill.”
@JustinLodes11 ай бұрын
Ha, insane isn’t it? A pill for every ill and people buy into the nonsense doctors and big pharma spew 24/7. I know people who take 20 to 30 different pills a day! It’s really dumb
@Todayisanewday.10 ай бұрын
My dad reacted the same way. He was diagnosed with cholesterol and I asked him which diet he was going to follow and he says “I’m following the diet of not starving” 🤦🏻♀️
@1ButtonDash8 ай бұрын
a banana a day. Watch your blood pressure improve!
@Sigma1_96911 ай бұрын
Touchy subject..4 years ago I quit smoking, 2 weeks later I suffered a massive heart attack and underwent quadruple bypass graft surgery, I've smoked most of my life and not really had any problems other than shortness of breath and some chest pains but after that surgery my outlook on things changed, I had to give up my job as a chef because it was too stressful, the changes don't stop there...
@sangeet910011 ай бұрын
so bad lifestyle requires keeping up too - is that your point?
@necroshy11 ай бұрын
Withdrawal symptoms are real!
@Sigma1_96911 ай бұрын
@@necroshy yes they are...as an addict, this I definitely know.
@islandbirdw11 ай бұрын
. I was a CHF case manager for a large health organization. I have worked in cardiology clinic and exercise for health programs. I think overall it’s looking at your risk factors. Great info on AHA website too about risk factors. This includes family history so you start there and then you look at ideal BMI (rather than standard weight) and if you have hypertension you want to monitor it looking for trend. Know your health goals like what does your doctor want to see plus or minus 10 just so you can keep your blood pressure in good range most of the time. If you have diabetes it’s important to be monitoring your hemoglobin A1C which reflects the average blood sugar over the past 3 months. Diabetics are at nearly DOUBLE the risk for heart attacks and strokes. Untreated hypertension used to be called “The silent killer”. This is one reason to have it checked from time to time or when you see your doctor. 🤷🏼♀️ I remember Jim Fisk.
@DigitalSteel10 ай бұрын
Reducing inflammation seems to make a big difference, I went on an elimination diet and monitored tests for things like CRP, ESR, and WBC. Ended up on a very low carb diet that was mostly beef and salt, eggs, some seafood , cheese, only pickled/fermented veggies, and occasionally a little fruit. All of my health markers, especially triglycerides, HDL, blood pressure, and overall bodyweight are now significantly better.
@bcjammer8710 ай бұрын
This is the proper human diet. Very well done.
@dualshockedofficial9 ай бұрын
Nice man! Having the willpower to healthy is really something to be proud of. Especially in today’s world with all the unhealthy food options that are pushed on us.
@ds65411 ай бұрын
My heart health and test scores have remarkably improved because abt 1 year ago, I started following the WFPb (whole food plant based) lifestyle. Off all meds, reversal of pre-diabetes. I am working on building my microbiome, and study the research and read the books of Dr. Sunil Pai, Dr. Kim Williams, Dr. Will Bulsiewicz, Dr. William Li, and many others.
@JustinLodes11 ай бұрын
It’s a beautiful thing isn’t it? I did it for 3 years and cured so many ailments, starting eating anima foods again and the diseases and weight gain came right back. I’m going back to it hopefully soon and I want to live the rest of my life plant based. Its best for us, the environment, and obviously the animals who suffer so much for really no good reason at all
@JustAndreaEdna11 ай бұрын
I think a lot of people miss the connection between oral health and heart health.
@Ranveer_Singh_sangha0311 ай бұрын
Right
@medicwebber303711 ай бұрын
100%. My partner today, (I work in EMS), is married to a dental hygienist with all _kinds_ of certifications under her belt. She has spoken many _many_ times on the correlation between oral disease, (and poor oral hygiene in general), and cardiovascular issues. And it's not only the 'poor oral health leads to heart attacks' to consider. She's also had to reschedule people who were coming in for cleanings after having heart surgeries. The cleaning can inadvertently cause an infection and the risk to a recently stressed heart is way too high.
@Pluralofvinylisvinyls11 ай бұрын
The American diet is like 80% dairy. I don’t think flossing is gong to make that much of a difference
@47f011 ай бұрын
Like most American insurance companies, for example?
@casper537911 ай бұрын
I understand oral but how do you give him heart?
@josephdonais477811 ай бұрын
Healthcare is for the privileged in this country. The industry makes sure of it.
@lokoanormal11 ай бұрын
Neil, you are astonishingly brilliant in almost every single aspect (emotional intelligence might be the only exception 😂), but adding Chucky and Gary's contribution to the team is what keeps all episodes interesting. Every guest you guys bring widens my knowledge in a different aspect. Thank you for enlightening the world with humor in such a challenging moment of History.
@tony.99911 ай бұрын
Dr Lipi Roy is the best guest yet. 10 out of 10 for knowledge, communication and enthusiasm. I am hanging off every word. Great episode
@WSmith_198411 ай бұрын
This doctor is completely lying, she is absolutely lying about the harm being caused by the toxic gene therapies... No amount of head burying can change the facts and the harm they've all caused...
@thalesnemo284111 ай бұрын
She is a main stream politician !
@PaulUsypchuk11 ай бұрын
@thalesnemo2841 Are you a mainstream freedom fighter?
@thalesnemo284111 ай бұрын
@@PaulUsypchuk I see English is your second language!
@PaulUsypchuk11 ай бұрын
@thalesnemo2841 it is, . Are you triggered by that?
@ClintByrne11 ай бұрын
I'm happy you are having these conversations. I'd love you to have Dr Vinay Prasad on. I think a conversation with you world be enlightening.
@michaeljohn739810 ай бұрын
What a Wonderful, Lively and Humourous Discourse on a most Interesting and Important subject. Teaching with humour is most effective. Brilliant discourse. Thank you guys. Cheers from Michael. Australia.
@genx700611 ай бұрын
Stress is horrendous on the body.
@livinginthepacific8 ай бұрын
True story... Too much stress (and related health issues) forced me to retire at age 58 from real estate after navigating the '07-'08 mortgage crisis. Three years later, after moving to the tropics, my natural hair color had almost replaced much of my grey hair. There is nothing that compares to a stress-free lifestyle!
@rickchandler257011 ай бұрын
I had a triple bypass 2 years ago at 52 and I was very healthy. Mine was due to genetics. My mother died of a heart attack at 62. I wouldn’t have even known I had an issue if it wasn’t for working on my fitness. The day I went in for surgery, I felt great. Hard to believe I had a heart issue. But the surgeon said that if I wouldn’t have come in because I was having issues during my workouts, I wouldn’t have woke up one morning.
@JustinLodes11 ай бұрын
Heart disease is NOT genetic. And anyone (including doctors) that tell you otherwise I highly suggest you stop listening to them because they’re idiots
@Taco_Chewwwsday11 ай бұрын
Dr. Lepi Roy is eloquent and fantastic. An informative powerhouse. Thank-you!
@michaelccopelandsr712011 ай бұрын
Neil and Chuck for 2024!
@dankerman32111 ай бұрын
Went low carb, grain free diet. Lost 100 lbs and all my chronic issues disappeared. Added in cardio exercise 5-6 days a week. Now I'm 62 and competing in triathlons. The Standard American Diet, a.k.a. SAD, that dieticians push is the first step that is killing people. Statins are useless. Weight loss drugs are a temporary stop gap that fails. You are what you eat.
@Pun11611 ай бұрын
Drop the cardio down to one day and replace with weight training.
@ubserrano818011 ай бұрын
Great guest! She explained clearly for all of us that are not doctors.
@Phoca_Vitulina11 ай бұрын
Great episode! And I love Chuck so much
@anthonyjasi752811 ай бұрын
Department of Defense (DOD) had $1.80 Trillion distributed among its 6 sub-components this year. It’s so frustrating hearing there is little to no money available to go into research that would potentially save millions of lives and people can’t afford certain medications.
@shawnsimmons130811 ай бұрын
Chuck’s rant is exactly the same rant that I’ve been screaming since 2020 to my family, friends, and coworkers who were dumb enough to believe that politicians knew more than actual medical experts and then refused to take the necessary precautions to protect themselves and their fellow human beings. It’s hurts me so deeply to say that some of those folks who I ranted to ended up losing their lives because of the misinformation that was being spread by politicians.
@Bangin0utWest9 ай бұрын
Yeeeup
@taaskeprins9 ай бұрын
In the Netherlands the Minister of Health stated: "We gonna jab us out of the pandemic" and "you take the vaccine for granny". These statements were not opposed by any scientisist until a Pfizer spokesman declared that the vaccines will not prevent spread of sars-cov2 but will only make the symptons less severe. Scientists should have taken the stand and said that you cannot stop a fast mutating virus with a vaccine. That was already common knowledge. So the strategy should have been to offer the vaccines to the vulnarable people, centainly not mandating the jabs for healthy young people. Average covid mortality was 81 years in the Netherlands and the UK. I am not covid vaccinated but have no problems with a vaccine for a slow or non-mutating virus.
@johnkitchen469911 ай бұрын
Fascinating show. Cardio vascular essentially covers almost everything outside of cancer. Genetic predisposition is a major element which virtually cannot be overcome - delayed to a degree but not overcome. Simplistically healthy eating (not easy in the USA as food packaging is misleading - including the ‘heart healthy’ promotion), exercise (not over-exercise which brings its own problems) and a better work-life balance (again very difficult in the American work obsessed- or should that be oppressed - culture) can help. It probably makes life more enjoyable, too.
@dmac712811 ай бұрын
A-fib and atrial flutter are very similar. The difference lies on how the heart chambers are misfiring. In a-fib the chambers are beating in an uncoordinated manner. In atrial flutter, the atria are beating at an exact multiple of the base heart rate (2 to 4 beats of the atria to one beat of the ventricles) That's why the heart appears to beat at 200-300 bpm. Its quite scary but is treatable with cardioversion and catheter ablation heart surgery.
@nikatabg11 ай бұрын
Exactly how I feel Chuck 😊
@kariannecrysler64011 ай бұрын
I have an unproven theory: Blushing is good for the circulation and ultimately your health. The causes of blushes (embarrassment, excitement, shyness, etc) are overwhelming emotions creating responses in the body. Learning a level of comfort in the emotions that causes blushes helps me think more rationally by reducing the “gut” reactions as a first response choice. So I think everyone should be quick to blush & embrace their humanity fully for a healthier life.😊
@artemisma274611 ай бұрын
However, Blushing from alcohol is a sign of your body doesn’t have the enzyme to fully process alcohol, leaving the toxic semi processed aldehyde in your blood.
@kariannecrysler64011 ай бұрын
@@artemisma2746 I hadn’t thought about that. I don’t drink often enough to know that blushing occurs when drinking. I know ruddy skin happens in those who abuse alcohol intakes, is that the blushing part?
@KristenRowenPliske11 ай бұрын
@@kariannecrysler640 yes! Some people get a flushed face when drunk or while drinking.
@katherandefy11 ай бұрын
Agree so much about emotional regulation and acceptance. Important to embrace our own humanity absolutely. It grows our empathy for self and others. Life skills. ❤
@47f011 ай бұрын
You have a hypothesis. Come back when it's actually a theory.
@Delcielo911 ай бұрын
Enjoyed listening to important info. in light-hearted mode. Thank you.
@thanoswasright724811 ай бұрын
If only I could afford healthcare here.. but atleast we have the best military! /s
@gamehulk11 ай бұрын
I love how the thumbnail is a little click-baity to draw the conspiracy theorists in, only to get educated by facts. Thank you much for this great discussion, and also for the cardiological terminology--as a Cardiology PACS admin it helps me to grow my knowledge of the terminology, like LVH.
@chrislewis460611 ай бұрын
From experience, most won’t get that far into it. But even if one does decide to do a little more of their own learning based on this presentation, the episode was worth it.
@jeffbarnard34811 ай бұрын
Except there wasn't any scientific facts, at all, they were just preaching. I didn't hear a shred of evidence how the mass trial testing was accomplished within such a short period of time. If you truly don't understand why the general public was uneasy then you need to relisten and be objective. Trials typically take a long time and don't require emergency orders. Science doesn't care about your opinions
@apreviousseagle83611 ай бұрын
Nothing that is legit has to be forced on the public.
@kdmcollegebd201210 ай бұрын
This is right up my alley of good info. I'm an RN who worked Cardiac Progressive until I got too I'm too work! Genetics! I like to keep my knowledge up to date!
@KwstantinosNtenezakos-ud6ir11 ай бұрын
Thank you dr.Tyson for your show you make my day greetings from Greece,i enjoy every one of your scientists you call,mr.chuck nice,and of cours your view and comments
@cher_sh9 ай бұрын
What I'm doing for continued heart health since MitralValve from years of murmur since birth at 2lbs, prevention of heart disease is reducing over extended cardio aerobics beyond my limits, minimize, reduce from hours of training to 45mins, two-three hours was a daily routine since 2009. I wasn't aware of the importance of visiting with cardiologist for monitoring limits with the murmur once had, now completely resolved, also incorporate as much proper nutrition and less improper nutrition possible. Avoid processed foods, (especially sugar substances). With my sautéed vegetables, polyphenol of quality olive oil is supposed heart healthy for instance, but not fried foods with canola, peanut, vegetable oil. Prevention prevention prevention. The moment a sharp chest pain occurs, please by all means call emergency, don't hesitate as did I for so many years I've "had" chest pains lasted for up to 4seconds, since childhood, up until age 57, on the edge of sudden death, I could no longer bear that lead to the 2020 heart care. ♥️
@prancey22711 ай бұрын
I absolutely loved Chuck's rant at the end
@livinginthepacific8 ай бұрын
Sorry to say, he made it political with that rant! 🙃
@Michael-Drizzt11 ай бұрын
I've gone into cardiac arrest during at least one of my seizures (the grand mal type) that I've had this year. Which is why I'm now on anti-seizure medication. Doctors couldn't tell me why they were happening, both MRI and EEG tests indicate that there's nothing abnormal going on. But because of my metabolism, I have to take 2-3 more medication than the average person and according to the results of the various blood tests that I've had, may still not be high enough to control them properly. Otherwise according to their examinations, my heart is in excellent condition.
@eddiecampbell351411 ай бұрын
What a treat! She was nice to have on!
@RaviS-gj7zp11 ай бұрын
Very very informative .... Thank you for this special edition. One request ... let each speaker talk and finish their sentences ... it is hard to understand if there is a lot of cross talk...thank you.
@lynnlobliner393311 ай бұрын
The stresses of life, whether we are low on the income scale or even at the top of it, go a long way toward causing cardio vascular disease, even w/o tobacco, alcohol or all the other bad things that are allowed to be put into food.
@jmanj391711 ай бұрын
21:40 Laughter is also good for your gut biome.
@christopherfegley42111 ай бұрын
Good for you chuck im glad to see a man with passion
@christopherfegley42111 ай бұрын
I'm glad to know we are stuck with you, Chuck. Fix that heart, bro
@craigparman614311 ай бұрын
Jim Fixx had an autopsy, about as scientific as it gets! It showed triple vessel coronary artery disease, modifiable with risk factor reduction! That’s not congenital heart disease. I’m old enough to remember the initial running boom and Jim Fixx as well. Thanks for the excellent series.
@ericwilliams102311 ай бұрын
Finally a face to Gary..i listen to the pod ,nice to see it
@rjsmith669811 ай бұрын
Dr Roy...a knowledgeable and delightful person, and apparently a big Leafs fan, with the sticker on the phone and 2 emblems on the walls. Go Leafs Go!
@colinellicott973710 ай бұрын
Love the rational dialogue backed by facts in an evidence based cauldron. Thx.
@DeshanHoward11 ай бұрын
This was a great conversation topic with a great group of professionals. 💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾
@mickeybrumfield76411 ай бұрын
The most astonishing thing I've heard in a long time is that there are 60,000 miles of arteries in our hearts.
@47f011 ай бұрын
What's even more astonishing is that is not what you heard. She said 60000 mi. of blood vessels, which includes arteries, veins and capillaries.
@sangeet910011 ай бұрын
@@47f0 that's not a fact either - it's in the body, not heart
@47f011 ай бұрын
@@sangeet9100 - Just quoting the doctor @21:58- 60,000 miles of blood vessels in the heart. Doctor Tyson can be a stickler for details. He once nagged James Cameron into compositing a corrected starfield for the re-release of Titanic. You should tell him his guest doesn't know what she's talking about.
@sangeet910011 ай бұрын
@@47f0 an obvious slip of the tongue and she sure knows the fact
@keep-ukraine-free11 ай бұрын
Dr. Roy was great! (we should overlook the error on whether gene therapy affect progeny - somatic vs. germ line cells - not her field).
@MountainTopher11 ай бұрын
I quit smoking and eat healthier but still crave everything bad because of a chronic existential crisis.
@ooigfgnnkhjjnc11 ай бұрын
Who made this guy an expert on everything?
@h7opolo11 ай бұрын
11:00 chuck, smoking pot is inadvisable to ensuring optimally functioning cardiovascular health. eating pot is the way to go.
@bandaralnaser552011 ай бұрын
Great doctor.
@ttt502011 ай бұрын
I love her, bring her back soon! 🎉
@Go_North11 ай бұрын
30:08 I have never loved hearing a rant so passionate as the one Chuck did here 😂 You tell em!
@Liddy-lr5uy11 ай бұрын
I'm not sure if they've done this but I would love an episode devoted to Chuck getting things off his chest about fanmail
@derekjasinski850811 ай бұрын
Don't get the vaccine Don't trust the federal government or its agencies because they have been all lies they have done experiments on their citizens they have put everything into harm's way and they only look out for themselves personally and their families
@alexcarter880711 ай бұрын
The joke about covid-19 is that the "19" stands for the pounds you put on, sitting around at home. Not only was/is there the virus itself, but there's been almost a vast experiment in a great increase of sedentary-ness, binge eating and unhealthy eating, drinking alcohol, all sorts of things including increased stress. What I'm saying is a lot of his may not be because of the virus directly.
@Bangin0utWest9 ай бұрын
That's what she said the uptick in alcohol consumption during covid all of those are factors but if u do those things AND get covid it's not gonna be good
@kforest27459 ай бұрын
“Monday’s are when most heart attacks occur.” The same reason I used to experience sudden faint feelings on a Monday likely. It’s because the body slows down on the weekend and then has to quicken itself again come Monday. The body has to stay active on the weekends, not majorly active, but it has to keep moving just as it’s said that a sedentary lifestyle is poor. My body’s been used to working on its feet all its life, so I think my body was saying that it doesn’t have the ability to change pace as easily as it once did when it was younger so to keep a consistent pace is preferred.
@SuperDibbya10 ай бұрын
This episode was thoroughly enjoyable
@RUNOV.A11 ай бұрын
Hey guys from Kiev 🎉I'm appreciate to you 😮UKRAINE 🇺🇦
@say2dithan53711 ай бұрын
Am watching the show to the end
@Angie_cheeks11 ай бұрын
This is a science show 🗣️- Chuck ❤
@h7opolo11 ай бұрын
5:02 she missed one: excessive emotional stress 18:55 she got there eventually
@genx700611 ай бұрын
Specifically related to the workplace.
@ShonMardani11 ай бұрын
I think she is gonna die like her dad either because of her genes or being Indian or being black, other than that she was useless helping her dad who never had a steak.
@remarkablemoonwalker11 ай бұрын
A 28 year-old pro football player (soccer player) died yesterday November 11 while playing the game. His name is Raphael Dwamena. Great topic, NDT. Rip to the baller.
@J040PL711 ай бұрын
Since 2020, that's been happening a lot
@andrasbiro300711 ай бұрын
@@J040PL7 Happened a lot before too. I don't know if it got more common or not, but happened many times as long as I can remember. Doping is one likely cause.
@J040PL711 ай бұрын
@@andrasbiro3007 thing is, it started happening in top oficial games that players are tested and are 100% drug free, aside from the magic world saving 💉
@AQCE24511 ай бұрын
@@andrasbiro3007vaccine
@brianmoran196810 ай бұрын
What a wonderful discussion
@DaveLopez57511 ай бұрын
I’m 47, never done drugs, never smoke, rarely drink alcohol, I have done mountain biking for exercise no to compete, I have no coronary disease and no significant instances (3 total including me) of with heart disease in my entire family. I got CHF (congestive heart failure) for no reason in 2019 right before covid, got fixed with meds but this year I got heat exhaustion and I’m back on the chf wagon. Even my voice is bad and no one can explain it. My point is that it sucks and I have done some research and only Chagas disease comes up. So a lot talk about drugs, alcohol, bad habits but no parasites. More research is needed and it makes me wonder how many people try to overcome heart disease without anyone checking or researching potential parasitic infections that go undetected or ignored. Just a little rant. Thank you.
@joegomez313010 ай бұрын
How are you doing Dave ?
@DaveLopez57510 ай бұрын
@@joegomez3130 I’m finally making some progress. Able to eat more. I have a crazy mess of a body but I still love it haha!
@DaveLopez57510 ай бұрын
…and thank you for asking! Happy New Year!
@joegomez313010 ай бұрын
@@DaveLopez575 happy new years man ! I hope you continue to progress well !
@DaveLopez57510 ай бұрын
@@joegomez3130 thank you bud! Wishing you the best!!
@jeffnaslund11 ай бұрын
I went through a quadruple open-heart bypass in August 2020. I had afib during my recovery. That sucked!
@gbritaney11 ай бұрын
How are you feeling after the procedure?
@nathanmoore189311 ай бұрын
This is such a great channel.
@toxicoverlord38811 ай бұрын
I can't belive it. a new star talk just dropped it is an amazing day
@craighanson633511 ай бұрын
You all make learning fun.
@supercrass11 ай бұрын
Great episode. Thank you ❤
@nilo7011 ай бұрын
I always had good labs , BP was always low . I had a ultrasound on my Carotids and found out I I Severe Arteriosclerosis . What happened to me ? How was this not detected earlier ?
@jasonantigua682511 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear that buddy!
@seanwhitehall465211 ай бұрын
The problem is not that heart disease runs in your family. The problem is nobody runs in your family.
@sjpugsie10 ай бұрын
Thanks, great show today!
@kevincronk798111 ай бұрын
I keep being surprised COVID is still around, yesterday someone who I was at an 18 hour long tournament with on Saturday tested poeitive for COVID, now I'm worried I infected my band since I play a wind instrument, and I'm at college in a dorm with 2 roommates, the 3 of us live in 1 room there's not really any way to social distance. I'm especially worried because I've been procrastinating getting a booster, now I'm worried that might've been a huge mistake
@user-gt6ye8cr4z11 ай бұрын
take a test.
@kevincronk798111 ай бұрын
@@user-gt6ye8cr4z I just did, luckily it was negative
@jrockerstein11 ай бұрын
Zang Chuck!! More research is needed 🎉
@anthony..2311 ай бұрын
Gracias
@TreDeuce-qw3kv11 ай бұрын
Well after' Laughing' through this thoroughly enjoyable 47-minuts I'm totally relaxed and my heart is smiling..😊. Thanks for the fun and information.
@lorenabull11 ай бұрын
Excellent episode! ❤
@bored92606 ай бұрын
weird thing about discombobulation when your head feels like it’s not on straight and your center of balance leans to far away from your center gravity where you cannot walk straight. i laid flat on the ground and turn my head to the right, and i was trailing with vertigo… i turn my head to the left and it wasn’t that bad… mind you this was back in February or December🤷♂️… also when I decided to paint the shed in the hot weather for 8 hours… Apparently the AC was on and the house was cold giving me a fever shiver for about 5 minutes as my body was catching up with it… like someone dunk me into an ice bath and my body failed to regulate it’s temp. the first time this happen i was just walking around the house and it felt warm upstairs as i tried to fall asleep i felt nauseous and then got the chills… i sat on the couch and blogged about it on facebook noticing the blood underneath my eye lids had vanish from the blood vessels which looked palish pink lol…. with my lipid panel i am sure the vaccine sort of puts your progenitor cells to sleep 😂 I am pretty positive but after years of misery i feel better…
@jeremiahmilazzo144611 ай бұрын
I appreciate this so much from you guys ❤💓💗
@OzJd-202311 ай бұрын
Agree with Chuck at @29:11 on flu. Got it once real bad 10 years ago. Vaccinating ever since.
@vincenthaddad11 ай бұрын
You tell em Chuck! Great episode as always!
@bored92606 ай бұрын
my charts also show my lymphocytes dropped from good high, to close to caution low, to good low…
@Luckydog47410 ай бұрын
Please share the links to support your statements that the vaccines are safe. Thank you.
@gordonalexander484311 ай бұрын
Wow......unbelievable!
@user-fs6ou3fk9p11 ай бұрын
I was so sick with flu before I was vaccinated. I am a CMA and should have known better. I was so sick from the flu as was my family that we have never missed our flu vaccines since.
@taaskeprins9 ай бұрын
Had the flu very bad when I was 20. That was the Hong-Kong flu if I remember correctly, in the 70ties. Never had a bad flu ever since, just some mild ones. Never taken a flu vaccine.
@danr192011 ай бұрын
In spite of my cholesterol being 135 -145 the last 30+ years I needed a stint as one artery was plugged. Also ideal weight and diet. My grossly obese sister of course is fine.
@KristenRowenPliske11 ай бұрын
That’s genetics for you! But if you smoke, that doesn’t help.
@TheGingerDivine11 ай бұрын
My husband is a life long athlete who is so consistent in his health regimen. This year following a significant COVID illness, suddenly he’s an Afib patient having heart surgery. It’s been wild.
@glasses68511 ай бұрын
Genetics sucks. I've been thin my entire life and exercise regularly, currently in my 30s, but I've had hypertension since my 20s. I also have a heavyset (but not grossly obese) sister and her blood pressure is perfect - even on the low side.
@BM1982.V211 ай бұрын
Total cholesterol isn't the factor to look at. It can be an indicator but it's a weak indicator. You get a better Guage by looking at your ApoB. If your LDL and ApoB is normal you can still have heart problems if your remnant cholesterol is high. There's more than one factor involved and looking at LDL or total cholesterol alone doesn't give you the full picture.
@lathamhardee11 ай бұрын
@@BM1982.V2I recently had a 99% blocked LAD. Total cholesterol 144, LP(a) and ApoB were normal. HDL and LDL were both great according to Duke’s cardiologists.
@edmondov11 ай бұрын
Just enjoy life when you are young. What joy is there in being old for so long?
@stephenmacintosh918511 ай бұрын
I love Startalk ❤ Please invite British KZbinr Dr. John Campbell onto your show. His motto is follow the evidence and he provides reputable source data. His guests are eminent scienists in the relevant field. Sometimes the scientific data runs against the accepted narrative, how I wish it didn't. Everyone has an opinion on what has happened, dare to investigate both sides of the debate. It's not comfortable, it's worthy of concern. Neil and Chuck, you brighten my day. Thank you for Startalk.
@dylan365711 ай бұрын
Don't hold your breath
@rve42011 ай бұрын
His degree is in nursing but he pretends to be an expert in many things. He's had to backtrack and remove content for misleading people. Like stating vaccines are harming people more than Covid itself.
@sandal_thong863111 ай бұрын
This would have been a good show to discuss the film _Gattaca (1997)_ where a guy wants to be an astronaut but has a heart condition (as well as being in-valid, i.e. not genetically engineered). Someone said NASA is right to screen out such people. But once in space, wouldn't his heart be under less stress or strain than under gravity? Does anyone know if Neil has talked about Gattaca before?
@brookels6611 ай бұрын
My high school sophomore biology teacher showed us Gattaca. One of my favorite movies ever🤩
@TheDwightMamba11 ай бұрын
Launches into orbit are violent. So is reentry. It's not just the calm orbit thing. It costs more than you can imagine to get humans up there. Why wouldn't we only take the healthiest versions of us?
@sandal_thong863111 ай бұрын
@@TheDwightMamba Yes, those are good arguments. I don't think we learned whether he survived the launch. Didn't they run him through physical tests like a centrifuge before launch? I remember someone saying it costs your weight in gold to go to space. But perhaps they brought the costs down in this alternative society where launches are common. Still, the cost argument would also apply to tall people. All things being equal it would cost less to ship a short man (or woman) to space. But I don't think we'd have the same sympathies in a movie for a person who looks like a basketball or football player not being allowed to go to space. And a movie about white male astronauts being replaced by petite Vietnamese-American and Thai-American women might bring forth a certain nastiness I don't want to see. Still, though it's sci-fi, I think the going-to-space dream might be an analogy for other careers that might be denied to people who have inherited defects.
@TheDwightMamba11 ай бұрын
@@sandal_thong8631 I didn't mean healthy in the sense of size. I meant healthy organs.
@Bangin0utWest9 ай бұрын
Great point I never thought about taking off shredding your heart lol
@brianmoran196810 ай бұрын
So excellent
@tgifriday356311 ай бұрын
I had been eating too much fat, salt, and calories at early twenties. That explains why i was having hypertensive crisis (feeling of fainting and running out of breath) sometimes. It also causes bad mental health. But as soon as I take medicines telmisartan / amlodipine i started to relax my blood pressure. Feels a lot different.
@Yokai_Yuri11 ай бұрын
The u.s lihe mostly of trash food abd microwaved old food. This is why they develop many diseases throughout the years
@milesanderson30111 ай бұрын
Fat,salt, and "too many calories" had nothing to do with your condition. Your doctor is wrong. Sugar,processed foods, and especially seed oils or "vegetables oils" were the cause. As soon as we started blaming saturated fat as the cause for cardiovascular diseases that is when the diseases started to rise. Fat got blamed for what sugar did all along.
@tgifriday356311 ай бұрын
@@milesanderson301 Too much sodium causes water body retention that causes more pressure in blood veins. I looked thin as soon as i stopped eating fastfoods and instant noodles. Plus, my HYP is genetics. Of course, too much sugar is bad too, and so as unhealthy lifestyle.
@tgifriday356311 ай бұрын
@@milesanderson301 vegetable oil is healthy. What makes it unhealthy is using the oil repeatedly, by absorbing cholesterols in every meat being fried. Example, fastfoods.
@milesanderson30111 ай бұрын
@tgifriday3563 that is great that you cut out fast food! But sodium gets a bad rap from our dated modern health guidelines. Most people don't get enough salt. Seed oil companies pay lots of money for studies of epidemiology, often coming from Harvard University. Epidemiology is the lowest form of science studies in health and nutrition and only offers correlations. Vegetable oils are made from seeds and nuts. They are hydrogenized and highly processed and contain high levels of omega 6, glucose, and fructose. They oxidize cells, spike insulin levels, and cause inflammation. They are worse than sugar! If you look at the ingredients of most products in your grocery store, you will find some form of seed oil being canola, soy, sunflower, corn oil, etc. It's everywhere and so everywhere the rate of metabolic diseases is rapidly increasing. Sadly, for far more reasons that I have mentioned here, but mostly due to money. If you follow todays accepted guidelines for health and nutrition, you will likely end up with some form of metabolic mental or physical illness. "Low carb down under" is a great channel on KZbin that has a vast array of lectures from doctors of various fields. They are curing patients with real food and little to no medication. Which is less profitable than the latter. I highly recommend it.
@EcoFP3311 ай бұрын
I do hate being picky but the reflection in the Dr's glasses! I couldn't focus anywhere else. Amazing episode though
@rsomel662811 ай бұрын
I don’t like Mondays is one of favourite 80s track… :)
@frogz11 ай бұрын
dammit, okay chuck, im going to buy groceries right now, if the pharmacy is open i'll get a flu shot
@jamesf265611 ай бұрын
Dr. Roy was fantastic
@XennialGuy11 ай бұрын
Thank you Chuck! I needed your absolute confirmation that I've been right all along about vaccines saving lives! 😅
@IesKorpershoek10 ай бұрын
excess mortality all over the world is way up, here in the Netherlands the last figure is 15% excess mortality.
@maolcogi11 ай бұрын
I remember when I was in the Air Force I would be dumb and try so hard when doing "cardio" that I would intentionally push my heart rate to 200 BPM, anything over that was actually physically painful. This was like 15 years ago, I hope I didn't break anything. :O
@Mercuery11 ай бұрын
Same, when I was in my mid thirties, I would push real hard in my running/cycling sessions, regularly hitting and maintaining 190+ bpm. Especially longish 2+ hours cycling sessions. On one particular day, after a hard session in the morning, my heart rate wouldn't go down. It was always in the 160-180 bmp, all through the day, and all through the night, even when I was on my bed, trying to sleep. Couldn't sleep as my heartrate was super elevated. That high bpm lasted for 3 days and 2 nights. Didn't cross my mind to visit the Emergency department. I think I broke something that particular morning, sometimes I get skipped heartbeats after that episode, I am 51 now. I do still go running/cycling, but lesson learned, now I will never push myself to the absolute limit of my heart.
@zoznammic3 ай бұрын
Always nice to listen to an expert advising against alcohol while simultaneously finishing a bottle of wine 😅 anyway ... lots of good info and these are the videos that should be mandatory in classrooms, not the 10 "commandments"
@kevin921811 ай бұрын
If many covid issues are related to an immunological response rather than the infection itself, why would the vaccine not also trigger some of those issues? Much like when some people feel mildly sick, even develop fevers after getting various traditional vaccines.
@jonboz758511 ай бұрын
Good points. One reason why the virus, but less likely the vaccine, could trigger an undesirable immunological reaction is that modern vaccines are made up of virus sub-components, and not the complete virus that’s made up of hundreds/thousands of components. By selecting a single component, it’s possible to evaluate if that single component can have an unwanted effect in humans, while still eliciting a desirable, protective immunological response. The downside to sub component vaccines is that they are extremely targeted to a narrow range of virus structures, so if the virus changes that component, the vaccine is less effective.