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Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta sick. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta sick. Mostrar todas las entradas

14 diciembre, 2016

How Does #Sugar Make You #Fat and #Sick?

By Dr. David Jockers DC, MS, CSCS



Video Transcript: How Does Sugar Make You Fat and Sick?
Ty Bollinger: You also mentioned insulin. I want you to speak briefly to the relationship that insulin and sugar have because some people think of sugar and they think of insulin as being totally separate. But there is a relationship and I would like you to try to describe that briefly.

Dr. David Jockers: Yeah, great question Ty. So when we take in sugar—really at any one given time we should have about one teaspoon of sugar circulating in our blood stream. So the average American, if they go to 7/11 or whatever and they get a Big Gulp, they’re consuming massive quantities [of sugar]. In fact, if you were to take, for example, a 12 ounce Coke there’s 12 teaspoons of sugar in that. There’s about a teaspoon per ounce in a soft drink.
That is toxic for the body. That will cause—that will literally if that’s elevated, if our sugar is elevated for that long with that much sugar in our blood stream, it will destroy us. It will kill us. Just look at somebody that’s got diabetic neuropathy, for example, uncontrolled diabetes. They’re going to have neuropathy. They’re going to have issues with their eyes—optic neuritis. They’re going to have all kinds of different health problems.
That’s an example of uncontrolled blood sugar. So our body has this response where it sends out this hero hormone called insulin. And insulin comes out and its job is to take the sugar out of the blood stream and put it into the cells. So the first cells that start to fill up are the muscle and the liver cells. Somebody that’s more active, that does more regular exercise will have more open reserves in their muscle and their liver for stored sugar called glycogen. And so they’ll fill those areas up. Somebody’s that’s less active will have less open stores.
Once the muscle and the liver are filled now the body will start to put—the insulin will start to put the sugar into the fat cells. So that will start to obviously increase fat cell development. That’s where you have this problem with insulin increasing weight gain, right, causing obviously problems with obesity. Other individuals like myself, Ty, I mean I could eat all the sugar in the world and I would never get fat. That just wouldn’t happen. However, I’d have no energy. I’d be diabetic. I’d have hypoglycemic issues and I’d have to take a nap all the time. And I’d end up with cancer.
So different metabolic types are going to respond differently to sugar. But basically insulin’s job is to clear the blood stream of the sugar so that way we don’t get these potent inflammatory responses. One of the problems with elevated blood sugar is the sugar molecule binds to proteins, enzymes in our system, and it causes something called advanced glycolytic enzyme development. So if you break that word down, an advanced glycolytic enzyme, which is basically a sticky protein, a sugar binded to a protein. A, it’s an advanced glycolytic enzyme, so AGE. And so, of course, what does that do to us? It ages us.
We want to restrict or reduce the amount of advanced glycolytic enzyme production. Insulin helps us with that. It helps, again, get the sugar into the blood stream. Now, as an altered effect of insulin, when insulin is elevated in your body, number one, your body is in storage mode. So it’s not going to be able to burn through fat stores effectively. Also it’s going to trigger inflammatory processes. It’s going to trigger other inflammatory molecules in your body and increase the inflammatory cascade in your system.
And so keeping your body very sensitive to insulin by reducing sugar consumption is very important for, number one, weight control. Number two, reducing the inflammatory processes in our body.

05 junio, 2016

How #Medicare #Doctors are Paid to Keep You #Sick


Video Transcript: How Medicare Doctors are Paid to Keep You Sick
Dr. Irvin Sahni: The bottom line is this. Doctors are incentivized the wrong way in my opinion; they’re incentivized the wrong way. So if you believe that the goal is to prevent disease to begin with rather than just simply treat it once it occurs. In other words, if you believe that being proactive is more important than being reactive, then you would agree with what I’m about to say.
If I see a patient who has Medicare, just because so many doctors see Medicare and the fee schedule is constant, I will bill Medicare based on certain variables. And some of those—it’s very complicated, of course, just like the tax code is very complicated.
But to simplify, there’s two very commonly used codes: it’s a 99213 and a 99214. A 99213 is just an evaluation visit, an existing patient I’ve been seeing them for years. And when he comes in I can bill a 992—a 12345, okay, almost never a one, almost never a five, things usually lay in the middle depending on what kind of doctor you are and how sick your patients are.
But an average, normal person comes in and I’m going to bill Medicare. If I bill Medicare at 99213 in Texas right now you get about 40 bucks. If I bill Medicare a 99214 I get about a 100 dollars – pretty big spread there. Sixty dollars is quite a bit. So if there’s something you could do to get an extra 60 dollars you’re going to do it.
One way I can convert a 99213 to a—it’s not totally simple. You have to have asked a lot of other questions, but the bottom line is at the very end you have to show medical decision making. It’s called medical decision making.
So I can sit there and ask a bazillion questions. But if I just say “take an aspirin” and I’ll never see