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Moriarty's avatar

Even after a briefer analysis of the 2 other (not Lyme) papers, I found it to be already lengthy and becoming complex so I decided to avoid making it overly complex, but there is a significant overlap with many effects of Covid, with all 3 papers, from both an immunological perspective, to a direct physiological damaging one.

As I wrote on my Twitter, Kofi donations (buying me a coffee) go towards buying a new computer. Any support is appreciated, don't feel obligated to do so. Everything remains the same.

I may write a very short post on AI tomorrow, although it covers bacteria, I didn't want to mix it with this one.

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GeoffPainPhD's avatar

More on US Bioweapon Lyme and link to Pfizer Jabs.

https://geoffpain.substack.com/p/us-bioweapons-lyme-disease-and-pfizer

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KimD's avatar

From all of my reading I've concluded that high cholesterol is a symptom, not the cause of arterial plaque buildup. It is high because it's trying to combat that plaque. Am I wrong in that conclusion?

Also I would like to share that my mother who lives in CT was able to cure her Lyme using Cold laser. She heard about a doctor who was trained in it, and was able to locate where it was in the tissues and target the treatment there. This was a few years ago and had not returned. Thought maybe you can look into that and share with your readers who suffer from it.

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Moriarty's avatar

You are not wrong, there is a (long) chicken and the egg argument that has been going on for decades. To add to the complexity, high cholesterol is often preceded in many cases by high glucose, pre-diabetes, your body compensate the excess sugar into going through a series of very complex metabolic conversoin to make the excess sugar into cholesterol, as means to minimize the damage of too much sugar in your blood stream (arguably worse than cholesterol, especially over the long-term).

Cholesterol is necessary for health (neurological, especially) too, but as with everything, anything in excess is bad. Some argue that higher cholesterol is a way for the body to "plug" micro leaks inside your veins.

Thank you for sharing that, it is a first, and I will look into it.

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OneDayAtATime's avatar

Moriarty, re: pre diabetes, do you have any opinion on the efficacy of IV NAD to reset metabolism. Of course dietary change is necessary and the this course of treatment is expensive.

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Moriarty's avatar

IV NAD is a great tool to manage an assortment of metabolic shifts and dysfunction among many other ills, but it is a stop gap in the case of excess sugar. Either Berberine and/or Metformin are excellent for that especially allied with dietary change.

Instead of IV NAD, which I recommend especially if necessary, I would suggest some dietary change and adding exogenous ketones, you can buy BHB powder, the main ketone, in bulk and deal with a pre-diabetic state in a more definitive manner, plus BHB has so many benefits.

Adding Berberine would also compound it.

Restoring NAD pool in a more economic manner, ergo supplements, is a better long term solution IMO. Unless the person is wealthy and can taken the brunt of monthly or biweekly Meyers IV bags with NAD, glutathione, B vitamins, Vitamin C (a better combo IMO, people feel renewed).

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OneDayAtATime's avatar

Thanks.

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Moriarty's avatar

I forgot to add one, and I will try to soon write about it especially significant in Long COVID.

Thiamine.

Just add high dose thiamine. And I mean high. 500 mg or more. 1000 even.

Benfothiamine if you want faster cognitive effects. But just try this one 🙏🏻

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pchelovod's avatar

Interested in your thoughts on a supplement regime I'm trying. I have a number of risk factors for heart disease. I'm taking serrapeptase and lumbrokinase for endothelial health and blood thinning, and on a hunch, I've started about 5ml oral DMSO per day, hoping it'll make any biofilms harder to hide behind. Any thoughts?

(And btw, it was your brain stack post that really kick-started me to look at supplements seriously.)

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Moriarty's avatar

Serrapeptase and Lumbrokinase, on their own, will deal with biofilms, dissolve, and break them down, and both have potent anti-inflammatory action.

To your supplement stack, I would personally add Magnesium, any form you prefer, perhaps selenium, undoubtedly Vitamin D+k2 (2000 IU of the first, 100 mcg of the later), both for long-term cardiovascular health and immune support/boost. Olive Leaf Extract 20% ole, a really strong supplement for endothelial health.

I am happy my brain stack led you to look at supplements seriously =). Btw look into Gingko Biloba (in the brain stack) and endothelial, neurological health. If I were to add another one, it would be that, to your choices. =)

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pchelovod's avatar

I've been paying attention , JP, and am already taking almost all of those except for the olive leaf extract (in my original question I was trying to focus just on key details for cardio health). Many thanks!

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Moriarty's avatar

A lot of my suggestions for COVID comes from a first principle approach so there is significant overlap with protecting specific parts of the body and the Covid stack.

I would add creatine too. 😊 And nothing beats exercise 😅

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TAS's avatar

Im not finding your twitter acct on x?

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Moriarty's avatar

https://x.com/ThingsHiddenn

I am still there, but wouldn't be surprised if I am shadow-banned, or completely suppressed.

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TAS's avatar

The link worked. Thank you.

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Tammy Brantley's avatar

Is polymeric implying lab-made?

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Moriarty's avatar

No, here it just means they form longer strands, often inter connected. Imagine a bunch of sugar strands put together.

The polymeric PG implies big chunks, which the cells have a really hard time digesting.

Normal PG are smaller, have different chemistry in a way and are easier to digest.

Albeit there is extensive discussion on the likelihood of Lyme being lab-made (and given that it shares many similarities with SARS...).

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5d
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Moriarty's avatar

As someone who has MULTIPLE readers who suffer from clinically diagnosed Lyme, some with severe cases, this time I am just deleting your comment.

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Sylvie's avatar

Dr.Sam is not saying the symptoms and the associated suffering is not very real. You are pointing the finger at the wrong culprit.

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Dingo Roberts's avatar

I didn't see your original comment, but this comment smacks of the same patronizing gaslighting that I've seen too often, all because the evidence runs contrary to what they want to believe.

I've had Lyme twice, bullseye rashes and typical symptoms. Her "answer" would have been to "reject the label and attend to each individual's situation. Focusing on whether they may have been bitten by a tick in the past few months is probably not going to provide the answer to restoring health."

Doxycycline worked both times.

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Sylvie's avatar

Did you watch the video first?

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