kidney disease

caption

Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-­Based Diets

"Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-Based Diets" Twenty patients with allergic eczema were placed
on a vegetarian diet for two months, and their disease scores, covering both
subjective and objective signs and symptoms were cut in half, similar to what you see
using one of our most powerful drugs. The drug worked quicker, within about two weeks, but since side effects may include kidney failure
and cancer the drug is considered a class 1 carcinogen,
the dietary option may be preferable.

But this was no ordinary vegetarian diet. This was an in-patient study using
an extremely calorically restricted diet. They were practically half fasting, so we don't know
which component was responsible for the therapeutic effect. What about using a more conventional plant-based
diet against a different allergic disease, asthma? In Sweden, there was an active health movement that
claimed that a vegan diet could improve or cure asthma. Bold claim. So in order to test this, a skeptical
group of orthopedic surgeons at the University Hospital followed a series of patients who were
treated with a vegan regimen for one year. Patients, participants had to be
willing to go completely plant-based and they had to have physician-verified asthma of
at least a year's duration that wasn't getting better, or even getting worse despite
the best medical therapies available. They found quite a sick group to follow.

Thirty-five patients with long-established hospital-verified
bronchial asthma for an average duration of a dozen years. Of the 35 patients, 20 had been admitted to the hospital
for acute asthmatic attacks during the last two years. Of these, one patient had received acute infusion therapy a total
of 23 times during the period, which is like an emergency intravenous. And another patient claimed he had been brought
to the hospital 100 times during his disease and
on every occasion had evidently required such treatments. One patient even had a cardiac arrest during an asthma
attack and had been brought back to life on a ventilator,
so we're talking some pretty serious cases. They were on up to eight different
asthma medications when they started. They were each on an average of 4.5 drugs
and still not getting better. Twenty of the 35 were constantly using cortisone, which
is one of our most powerful steroids used in severe cases.

So basically fairly advanced cases of the disease,
more severe than the vegan practitioners were used to. Still, how'd they do? Eleven could not stick to the diet for a year. But of the 24 that did, 71% reported improvement
at four months and 92% at one year, and these were folks that had not improved at all
over the previous year before changing their diet. Concurrently with this improvement, the patients
greatly reduced their consumption of medicine. Four had completely given up their medication altogether,
and only two weren't able to at least drop their dose. They went from 4.5 drugs down to 1.2,
and some were able to get off cortisone. Some said that their improvement was so considerable
that they felt like ”they had a new life.” One nurse had difficulty at work because
most of her co-workers were smokers, but after the year she could withstand the secondhand smoke
without getting an attack, as well as tolerating other asthma triggers. Others reported the same thing. Whereas previously they could only live in a clean environment
and felt more or less isolated in their homes, they could now stay out without getting asthma attacks.

And it wasn't just subjective improvements. There was a significant improvement in a number of clinical variables, including most importantly, measures of lung function, vital capacity,
forced expiratory volume, as well as physical working capacity, as well as a significant drop in sed rate,
and IgE, which are allergy associated antibodies. Bottom line, they started out with 35 patients who had
suffered from severe asthma for an average of 12 years, all receiving long-term medication, 20 including cortisone, were subjected to vegan food for a year, and in almost all cases medication was withdrawn or drastically reduced,
and there was a significant decrease in asthma symptoms. Despite the improved lung function tests and lab values, the placebo effect obviously can't be discounted
since there is no blinded control group, but the nice thing about a healthy diet
is that there are only good side effects.

Their cholesterol significantly improved, their
blood pressures got better, they lost 18 pounds, so from a medical standpoint, I figure why not give it a try?.

Video Transcript – As found on YouTube

Read
caption

Plant-Based Diet for Treating and Reversing Stage 3 Kidney Disease

"Plant-Based Diet for Treating and
Reversing Stage 3 Kidney Disease" Is it possible to ameliorate
chronic kidney disease using a whole food,
plant-based diet? In my last video
on kidney disease, I talked about how randomizing
people to cut just around 10 grams of protein from their
daily diet could cut their risk of dialysis and death
by a whopping 77%. That was cutting protein
across the board. But while animal-based
protein ingestion — meat, dairy, and egg white
protein ingestion — promotes an acidic environment
in the kidneys, inflammation, and stresses the kidneys to what's
called hyperfiltration mode, plant-based protein can be
alkaline-producing and anti-inflammatory and contain
kidney-protective properties. So, what if you have kidney patients
eat a plant-dominant low-protein diet, abbreviated adorably as PLADO,
I guess for plant-dominant. If you fashion up a plant-based diet
index score where you get points for healthy plant foods and get points deducted
for eating animal foods, those with serious kidney disease
with higher scores were found to have lower systemic inflammation.

But does that actually translate
into living a longer life? Apparently so. Even a 10% increase in the
proportion of plant-based protein was associated with a significant
reduction in all-cause mortality. Even just eating more servings of
fruits and vegetables, like two a day compared to two a week,
is linked to living longer. Without fully functioning kidneys, there are concerns about
phosphorus and potassium overload, though, on a plant-based diet. But the phosphorus in plant-based
foods is not as much of a problem as the phosphorus additives
in processed and animal foods. And the risk of potassium overload
from plant-based diets appears overstated and not supported
by the evidence.

But you don't know about
ameliorating chronic kidney disease using a whole food, plant-based
diet until you put it to the test. Here's a case report of a 69-year-old
man with type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and
stage 3 chronic kidney disease, resulting in elevated phosphorus
and potassium in the blood, Interested in changing his diet
to improve his medical condition. That's my kind of patient! He was on 12 different medications,
eating a diet that may actually be slightly better than
the average American: some whole grains and beans, but then his doctor advised to try
eating whole food, plant-based.

So, oatmeal with fruit and flax,
beans and greens, whole wheat spaghetti and
veggies, fruit as snacks. Counselled to eat as much as he
wanted from whole healthy foods; no carb counting, no calorie counting,
no portion size restriction — improving the quality of food rather
than restricting the quantity of food. He adopted the whole food,
plant-based diet, packed with carbs, yet rapidly reduced his insulin
requirements by more than 50%, and subsequently saw
improvements in weight, blood pressure,
and cholesterol. Because eating healthy
can have such a rapid effect on improving your body's
insulin sensitivity, immediate adjustments
in insulin dosing were made. Within four days, his insulin dose
was able to be reduced from roughly 210 units of insulin
a day down to 70 units daily, and an oral blood-sugar lowering
medication had to be stopped due to rapidly improving blood sugar. He also was able to stop his
carvedilol, the hydrochlorothiazide, amlodipine, sitagliptin
within the first two months due to improving blood pressure
and blood sugars.

His insulin dose was
steadily titrated downward. His pravastatin dose was cut in half,
and he lost about 50 pounds. Okay, so what happened
to his stage 3 kidney failure? He was no longer in
stage 3 kidney failure! Doctors watching this will understand
what all these numbers mean. Here's a graph of his GFR, which
is a measure of kidney function, declining for years before shooting
up after he started eating healthy. He experienced an increase
in estimated GFR of 73%, suggesting that the improvement
in estimated kidney function was greater than what would be
expected from weight loss alone.

For example, lose about 60 pounds
from bariatric surgery, and you only get
about a 12 to 15% boost. Bottom line: for individuals
with chronic kidney disease, especially those with obesity,
hypertension, or diabetes, a strict, all-you-care-to-eat
whole food, plant-based diet may confer significant benefit. I mean, apart from the
kidney-specific outcomes, overall mortality is significantly
lower among kidney patients who eat more plants. And that's critical because most
kidney patients don't even make it to dialysis because they die first, most often from
cardiovascular disease.

Let's hear from the patient. "At the outset, it seemed like
this was going to be a difficult and restrictive way to eat, but I began feeling different
almost immediately and we had to decrease
my insulin after ONE day. It seemed like almost overnight I had
more energy than I'd had in years. Weight I'd been trying to lose for
a decade began dropping off. As the weight came off, I felt lighter,
and more able to move my body again. This lifestyle change has been
the greatest gift I've ever received. I am off most of my medications,
I've lost over 70 pounds, and I've regained control
over my health. I feel empowered
by this lifestyle change, and I finally feel like I'm
in charge of my health, not just an unlucky victim shuffling
from one specialist to the next.

My only regret was that
I didn't know about this sooner.".

Video Transcript – As found on YouTube

Read
caption

Plant-Based Diet for Treating and Reversing Stage 3 Kidney Disease

"Plant-Based Diet for Treating and
Reversing Stage 3 Kidney Disease" Is it possible to ameliorate
chronic kidney disease using a whole food,
plant-based diet? In my last video
on kidney disease, I talked about how randomizing
people to cut just around 10 grams of protein from their
daily diet could cut their risk of dialysis and death
by a whopping 77%. That was cutting protein
across the board. But while animal-based
protein ingestion — meat, dairy, and egg white
protein ingestion — promotes an acidic environment
in the kidneys, inflammation, and stresses the kidneys to what's
called hyperfiltration mode, plant-based protein can be
alkaline-producing and anti-inflammatory and contain
kidney-protective properties.

So, what if you have kidney patients
eat a plant-dominant low-protein diet, abbreviated adorably as PLADO,
I guess for plant-dominant. If you fashion up a plant-based diet
index score where you get points for healthy plant foods and get points deducted
for eating animal foods, those with serious kidney disease
with higher scores were found to have lower systemic inflammation. But does that actually translate
into living a longer life? Apparently so.

Even a 10% increase in the
proportion of plant-based protein was associated with a significant
reduction in all-cause mortality. Even just eating more servings of
fruits and vegetables, like two a day compared to two a week,
is linked to living longer. Without fully functioning kidneys, there are concerns about
phosphorus and potassium overload, though, on a plant-based diet. But the phosphorus in plant-based
foods is not as much of a problem as the phosphorus additives
in processed and animal foods. And the risk of potassium overload
from plant-based diets appears overstated and not supported
by the evidence. But you don't know about
ameliorating chronic kidney disease using a whole food, plant-based
diet until you put it to the test. Here's a case report of a 69-year-old
man with type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and
stage 3 chronic kidney disease, resulting in elevated phosphorus
and potassium in the blood, Interested in changing his diet
to improve his medical condition. That's my kind of patient! He was on 12 different medications,
eating a diet that may actually be slightly better than
the average American: some whole grains and beans, but then his doctor advised to try
eating whole food, plant-based.

So, oatmeal with fruit and flax,
beans and greens, whole wheat spaghetti and
veggies, fruit as snacks. Counselled to eat as much as he
wanted from whole healthy foods; no carb counting, no calorie counting,
no portion size restriction — improving the quality of food rather
than restricting the quantity of food. He adopted the whole food,
plant-based diet, packed with carbs, yet rapidly reduced his insulin
requirements by more than 50%, and subsequently saw
improvements in weight, blood pressure,
and cholesterol.

Because eating healthy
can have such a rapid effect on improving your body's
insulin sensitivity, immediate adjustments
in insulin dosing were made. Within four days, his insulin dose
was able to be reduced from roughly 210 units of insulin
a day down to 70 units daily, and an oral blood-sugar lowering
medication had to be stopped due to rapidly improving blood sugar. He also was able to stop his
carvedilol, the hydrochlorothiazide, amlodipine, sitagliptin
within the first two months due to improving blood pressure
and blood sugars.

His insulin dose was
steadily titrated downward. His pravastatin dose was cut in half,
and he lost about 50 pounds. Okay, so what happened
to his stage 3 kidney failure? He was no longer in
stage 3 kidney failure! Doctors watching this will understand
what all these numbers mean. Here's a graph of his GFR, which
is a measure of kidney function, declining for years before shooting
up after he started eating healthy. He experienced an increase
in estimated GFR of 73%, suggesting that the improvement
in estimated kidney function was greater than what would be
expected from weight loss alone. For example, lose about 60 pounds
from bariatric surgery, and you only get
about a 12 to 15% boost. Bottom line: for individuals
with chronic kidney disease, especially those with obesity,
hypertension, or diabetes, a strict, all-you-care-to-eat
whole food, plant-based diet may confer significant benefit. I mean, apart from the
kidney-specific outcomes, overall mortality is significantly
lower among kidney patients who eat more plants. And that's critical because most
kidney patients don't even make it to dialysis because they die first, most often from
cardiovascular disease.

Let's hear from the patient. "At the outset, it seemed like
this was going to be a difficult and restrictive way to eat, but I began feeling different
almost immediately and we had to decrease
my insulin after ONE day. It seemed like almost overnight I had
more energy than I'd had in years. Weight I'd been trying to lose for
a decade began dropping off. As the weight came off, I felt lighter,
and more able to move my body again.

This lifestyle change has been
the greatest gift I've ever received. I am off most of my medications,
I've lost over 70 pounds, and I've regained control
over my health. I feel empowered
by this lifestyle change, and I finally feel like I'm
in charge of my health, not just an unlucky victim shuffling
from one specialist to the next. My only regret was that
I didn't know about this sooner."

Video Transcript – As found on YouTube

Read
caption

How Not to Die from Kidney Disease

"How Not to Die from Kidney Disease" Kidney failure may be both prevented
and treated with a plant-based diet, and no wonder; kidneys are
highly vascular organs. Harvard researchers found three
significant dietary risk factors for declining kidney function: animal
protein, animal fat, and cholesterol. Animal fat can alter the actual structure
of our kidneys, based on studies like this, showing plugs of fat literally clogging up
the works in autopsied human kidneys. And the animal protein can
have a profound effect on normal kidney function,
inducing what's called hyperfiltration, increasing the workload of
the kidney; but not plant protein.

Eat a meal of tuna fish and you can see
the increased pressure on the kidneys go up within 1, 2, 3 hours after the meal,
in both nondiabetics and diabetics. So we're not talking adverse
effects decades down the road, but literally within hours
of it going into our mouth. Now, if instead of having a tuna
salad sandwich, though, you had a tofu salad sandwich, with the exact same amount
of protein, what happens? No effect. Dealing with plant protein
is no problem. Why does animal protein cause the
overload reaction, but not plant protein? It appears to be due to
the inflammation triggered by the consumption
of animal products. How do we know that? Because, if you give a powerful,
anti-inflammatory drug along with that tuna fish, you
can abolish the hyperfiltration, protein leakage response
to meat ingestion.

Then, there's the acid load. Animal foods—meat, eggs, and dairy—
induce the formation of acid within the kidneys, which
may lead to tubular toxicity, damage to the tiny, delicate,
urine-making tubes in the kidney. Animal foods tend to be acid forming—
especially fish, which is the worst— then pork and poultry, whereas plant foods tend
to be relatively neutral, or actually alkaline, base-forming
to counteract the acid. So the key to halting the progression
of chronic kidney disease might be in the produce market,
rather than the pharmacy.

No wonder plant-based diets have been
used to treat kidney disease for decades. Here's protein leakage on the
conventional low sodium diet, which is what physicians
would typically put someone with declining
kidney function on. Switched to a supplemented vegan
diet, then back to conventional, plant-based, conventional,
plant-based; turning on and off kidney dysfunction
like a light switch, based on what was
going into their mouths..

Video Transcript – As found on YouTube

Read
caption

Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-­Based Diets

"Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-Based Diets" Twenty patients with allergic eczema were placed
on a vegetarian diet for two months, and their disease scores, covering both
subjective and objective signs and symptoms were cut in half, similar to what you see
using one of our most powerful drugs. The drug worked quicker, within about two weeks, but since side effects may include kidney failure
and cancer the drug is considered a class 1 carcinogen,
the dietary option may be preferable.

But this was no ordinary vegetarian diet. This was an in-patient study using
an extremely calorically restricted diet. They were practically half fasting, so we don't know
which component was responsible for the therapeutic effect. What about using a more conventional plant-based
diet against a different allergic disease, asthma? In Sweden, there was an active health movement that
claimed that a vegan diet could improve or cure asthma. Bold claim. So in order to test this, a skeptical
group of orthopedic surgeons at the University Hospital followed a series of patients who were
treated with a vegan regimen for one year.

Patients, participants had to be
willing to go completely plant-based and they had to have physician-verified asthma of
at least a year's duration that wasn't getting better, or even getting worse despite
the best medical therapies available. They found quite a sick group to follow. Thirty-five patients with long-established hospital-verified
bronchial asthma for an average duration of a dozen years. Of the 35 patients, 20 had been admitted to the hospital
for acute asthmatic attacks during the last two years. Of these, one patient had received acute infusion therapy a total
of 23 times during the period, which is like an emergency intravenous.

And another patient claimed he had been brought
to the hospital 100 times during his disease and
on every occasion had evidently required such treatments. One patient even had a cardiac arrest during an asthma
attack and had been brought back to life on a ventilator,
so we're talking some pretty serious cases. They were on up to eight different
asthma medications when they started. They were each on an average of 4.5 drugs
and still not getting better.

Twenty of the 35 were constantly using cortisone, which
is one of our most powerful steroids used in severe cases. So basically fairly advanced cases of the disease,
more severe than the vegan practitioners were used to. Still, how'd they do? Eleven could not stick to the diet for a year. But of the 24 that did, 71% reported improvement
at four months and 92% at one year, and these were folks that had not improved at all
over the previous year before changing their diet. Concurrently with this improvement, the patients
greatly reduced their consumption of medicine. Four had completely given up their medication altogether,
and only two weren't able to at least drop their dose.

They went from 4.5 drugs down to 1.2,
and some were able to get off cortisone. Some said that their improvement was so considerable
that they felt like ”they had a new life.” One nurse had difficulty at work because
most of her co-workers were smokers, but after the year she could withstand the secondhand smoke
without getting an attack, as well as tolerating other asthma triggers. Others reported the same thing. Whereas previously they could only live in a clean environment
and felt more or less isolated in their homes, they could now stay out without getting asthma attacks. And it wasn't just subjective improvements. There was a significant improvement in a number of clinical variables, including most importantly, measures of lung function, vital capacity,
forced expiratory volume, as well as physical working capacity, as well as a significant drop in sed rate,
and IgE, which are allergy associated antibodies.

Bottom line, they started out with 35 patients who had
suffered from severe asthma for an average of 12 years, all receiving long-term medication, 20 including cortisone, were subjected to vegan food for a year, and in almost all cases medication was withdrawn or drastically reduced,
and there was a significant decrease in asthma symptoms. Despite the improved lung function tests and lab values, the placebo effect obviously can't be discounted
since there is no blinded control group, but the nice thing about a healthy diet
is that there are only good side effects.

Their cholesterol significantly improved, their
blood pressures got better, they lost 18 pounds, so from a medical standpoint, I figure why not give it a try?.

Video Transcript – As found on YouTube

Read
caption

Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-­Based Diets

"Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-Based Diets" Twenty patients with allergic eczema were placed
on a vegetarian diet for two months, and their disease scores, covering both
subjective and objective signs and symptoms were cut in half, similar to what you see
using one of our most powerful drugs. The drug worked quicker, within about two weeks, but since side effects may include kidney failure
and cancer the drug is considered a class 1 carcinogen,
the dietary option may be preferable. But this was no ordinary vegetarian diet. This was an in-patient study using
an extremely calorically restricted diet. They were practically half fasting, so we don't know
which component was responsible for the therapeutic effect. What about using a more conventional plant-based
diet against a different allergic disease, asthma? In Sweden, there was an active health movement that
claimed that a vegan diet could improve or cure asthma. Bold claim. So in order to test this, a skeptical
group of orthopedic surgeons at the University Hospital followed a series of patients who were
treated with a vegan regimen for one year.

Patients, participants had to be
willing to go completely plant-based and they had to have physician-verified asthma of
at least a year's duration that wasn't getting better, or even getting worse despite
the best medical therapies available. They found quite a sick group to follow. Thirty-five patients with long-established hospital-verified
bronchial asthma for an average duration of a dozen years. Of the 35 patients, 20 had been admitted to the hospital
for acute asthmatic attacks during the last two years. Of these, one patient had received acute infusion therapy a total
of 23 times during the period, which is like an emergency intravenous. And another patient claimed he had been brought
to the hospital 100 times during his disease and
on every occasion had evidently required such treatments. One patient even had a cardiac arrest during an asthma
attack and had been brought back to life on a ventilator,
so we're talking some pretty serious cases. They were on up to eight different
asthma medications when they started. They were each on an average of 4.5 drugs
and still not getting better. Twenty of the 35 were constantly using cortisone, which
is one of our most powerful steroids used in severe cases.

So basically fairly advanced cases of the disease,
more severe than the vegan practitioners were used to. Still, how'd they do? Eleven could not stick to the diet for a year. But of the 24 that did, 71% reported improvement
at four months and 92% at one year, and these were folks that had not improved at all
over the previous year before changing their diet. Concurrently with this improvement, the patients
greatly reduced their consumption of medicine. Four had completely given up their medication altogether,
and only two weren't able to at least drop their dose. They went from 4.5 drugs down to 1.2,
and some were able to get off cortisone. Some said that their improvement was so considerable
that they felt like ”they had a new life.” One nurse had difficulty at work because
most of her co-workers were smokers, but after the year she could withstand the secondhand smoke
without getting an attack, as well as tolerating other asthma triggers. Others reported the same thing. Whereas previously they could only live in a clean environment
and felt more or less isolated in their homes, they could now stay out without getting asthma attacks.

And it wasn't just subjective improvements. There was a significant improvement in a number of clinical variables, including most importantly, measures of lung function, vital capacity,
forced expiratory volume, as well as physical working capacity, as well as a significant drop in sed rate,
and IgE, which are allergy associated antibodies. Bottom line, they started out with 35 patients who had
suffered from severe asthma for an average of 12 years, all receiving long-term medication, 20 including cortisone, were subjected to vegan food for a year, and in almost all cases medication was withdrawn or drastically reduced,
and there was a significant decrease in asthma symptoms. Despite the improved lung function tests and lab values, the placebo effect obviously can't be discounted
since there is no blinded control group, but the nice thing about a healthy diet
is that there are only good side effects.

Their cholesterol significantly improved, their
blood pressures got better, they lost 18 pounds, so from a medical standpoint, I figure why not give it a try?.

Video Transcript – As found on YouTube

Read
caption

Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-­Based Diets

"Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-Based Diets" Twenty patients with allergic eczema were placed
on a vegetarian diet for two months, and their disease scores, covering both
subjective and objective signs and symptoms were cut in half, similar to what you see
using one of our most powerful drugs. The drug worked quicker, within about two weeks, but since side effects may include kidney failure
and cancer the drug is considered a class 1 carcinogen,
the dietary option may be preferable. But this was no ordinary vegetarian diet. This was an in-patient study using
an extremely calorically restricted diet. They were practically half fasting, so we don't know
which component was responsible for the therapeutic effect. What about using a more conventional plant-based
diet against a different allergic disease, asthma? In Sweden, there was an active health movement that
claimed that a vegan diet could improve or cure asthma. Bold claim. So in order to test this, a skeptical
group of orthopedic surgeons at the University Hospital followed a series of patients who were
treated with a vegan regimen for one year.

Patients, participants had to be
willing to go completely plant-based and they had to have physician-verified asthma of
at least a year's duration that wasn't getting better, or even getting worse despite
the best medical therapies available. They found quite a sick group to follow. Thirty-five patients with long-established hospital-verified
bronchial asthma for an average duration of a dozen years. Of the 35 patients, 20 had been admitted to the hospital
for acute asthmatic attacks during the last two years.

Of these, one patient had received acute infusion therapy a total
of 23 times during the period, which is like an emergency intravenous. And another patient claimed he had been brought
to the hospital 100 times during his disease and
on every occasion had evidently required such treatments. One patient even had a cardiac arrest during an asthma
attack and had been brought back to life on a ventilator,
so we're talking some pretty serious cases. They were on up to eight different
asthma medications when they started. They were each on an average of 4.5 drugs
and still not getting better. Twenty of the 35 were constantly using cortisone, which
is one of our most powerful steroids used in severe cases.

So basically fairly advanced cases of the disease,
more severe than the vegan practitioners were used to. Still, how'd they do? Eleven could not stick to the diet for a year. But of the 24 that did, 71% reported improvement
at four months and 92% at one year, and these were folks that had not improved at all
over the previous year before changing their diet. Concurrently with this improvement, the patients
greatly reduced their consumption of medicine. Four had completely given up their medication altogether,
and only two weren't able to at least drop their dose. They went from 4.5 drugs down to 1.2,
and some were able to get off cortisone. Some said that their improvement was so considerable
that they felt like ”they had a new life.” One nurse had difficulty at work because
most of her co-workers were smokers, but after the year she could withstand the secondhand smoke
without getting an attack, as well as tolerating other asthma triggers. Others reported the same thing. Whereas previously they could only live in a clean environment
and felt more or less isolated in their homes, they could now stay out without getting asthma attacks. And it wasn't just subjective improvements.

There was a significant improvement in a number of clinical variables, including most importantly, measures of lung function, vital capacity,
forced expiratory volume, as well as physical working capacity, as well as a significant drop in sed rate,
and IgE, which are allergy associated antibodies. Bottom line, they started out with 35 patients who had
suffered from severe asthma for an average of 12 years, all receiving long-term medication, 20 including cortisone, were subjected to vegan food for a year, and in almost all cases medication was withdrawn or drastically reduced,
and there was a significant decrease in asthma symptoms. Despite the improved lung function tests and lab values, the placebo effect obviously can't be discounted
since there is no blinded control group, but the nice thing about a healthy diet
is that there are only good side effects.

Their cholesterol significantly improved, their
blood pressures got better, they lost 18 pounds, so from a medical standpoint, I figure why not give it a try?.

Video Transcript – As found on YouTube

Read
caption

Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-­Based Diets

“” Treating Asthma and Eczema With Plant-Based Diets” “Twenty people with allergic dermatitis were positioned
on a vegetarian diet plan for two months, and their disease scores, covering both
subjective and objective symptoms and signs were halved, similar to what you see
utilizing among our most powerful medicines. The drug worked quicker, within concerning 2 weeks, however since side results may consist of kidney failure
and cancer cells the drug is thought about a course 1 carcinogen,
the dietary option might be better. However this was no regular vegetarian diet regimen. This was an in-patient research making use of
an incredibly calorically limited diet plan. They were almost half fasting, so we put on'' t know which component was accountable for the restorative impact. What concerning using a more standard plant-based diet regimen versus a various sensitive condition, bronchial asthma? In Sweden, there was an active health and wellness activity that claimed that a vegan diet regimen can boost or heal bronchial asthma.

Vibrant insurance claim. So in order to test this, a cynical team of orthopedic doctors at the Teaching hospital followed a collection of clients who were treated with a vegan program for one year. People, individuals had to be ready to go entirely plant-based and they had to have physician-verified bronchial asthma of at the very least a year'' s period that wasn ' t getting far better, and even becoming worse in spite of the most effective medical treatments available. They found fairly an unwell team to follow. Thirty-five individuals with long-standing hospital-verified bronchial asthma for an average period of a loads years.

Of the 35 individuals, 20 had actually been admitted to the medical facility for severe asthmatic attacks during the last two years. Of these, one individual had received severe infusion therapy a total amount of 23 times throughout the duration, which resembles an emergency intravenous. And one more client asserted he had been brought to the hospital 100 times during his condition and on every celebration had evidently called for such therapies. One patient also had a cardiac arrest during a bronchial asthma attack and had actually been brought back to life on a ventilator, so we'' re chatting some rather significant cases. They were on up to 8 various asthma drugs when they began. They were each on approximately 4.5 medicines and still not improving. Twenty of the 35 were regularly making use of cortisone, which is among our most powerful steroids used in extreme cases. So basically relatively innovative instances of the condition, much more serious than the vegan practitioners were used to. Still, exactly how'' d they do? Eleven could not adhere to the diet regimen for a year.But of the

24 that did, 71% reported enhancement at 4 months and 92% at one year, and these were people that had actually not enhanced in all over the previous year before changing their diet plan. Simultaneously with this improvement, the patients significantly lowered their usage of medicine. 4 had actually completely surrendered their medication completely, and just 2 weren'' t able to a minimum of drop their dosage. They went from 4.5 medications down to 1.2, and some were able to get off cortisone. Some stated that their renovation was so significant that they felt like “they had a new life.” One registered nurse had problem at work because a lot of her co-workers were smokers, however after the year she can hold up against the pre-owned smoke without getting an assault, as well as enduring various other asthma activates. Others reported the exact same point. Whereas previously they might just stay in a tidy atmosphere and felt basically separated in their homes, they could now remain out without obtaining bronchial asthma attacks.And it wasn ' t simply subjective improvements. There was a significant renovation in a number of professional variables, including most notably, actions of lung function, vital ability, compelled expiratory volume, as well as manual labor capability, as well as a significant decrease in sed price, and IgE, which are allergy connected antibodies. Profits, they began with 35 patients who had dealt with severe bronchial asthma for approximately 12 years, all receiving lasting medicine, 20 including cortisone, went through vegan food for a year, and in virtually all instances medication was taken out or significantly decreased, and there was a considerable decline in asthma symptoms. Despite the improved lung function examinations and lab values, the sugar pill effect clearly can'' t be discounted since there is no blinded control team, yet the wonderful aspect of a healthy diet plan is that there are just excellent side impacts.

Their cholesterol dramatically enhanced, their high blood pressure got better, they shed 18 pounds, so from a clinical point ofview, I figure why not provide it a try?.

As found on YouTube

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New Vegan Studies: Lower Depression, Plants Vs Leukemia, When Activism Backfires, Etc.

New Vegan Studies: Lower Depression, Plants Vs Leukemia, When Activism Backfires, Etc.

A roundup of vegan-related research that has come out in 2023 so far!
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Study links yet to come, had to leave the computer for a while so sorry for the delay!

Intro/Outro Song: Sedução Momentânea by Roulet:
http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Roulet/Beats_dAmor/Roulet_-_Beats_dAmor_-_07_Seduo_Momentnea

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