Posted on 09/02/2021 2:01:01 PM PDT by ConservativeMind
True, it’s a sticky situation…
Ew.
Yeah, I’m done now.
Me too. Nothing good happens from here. I’ve gone 23+ years on here without a time-out and I’m not about to start now!
LOL, I have had 7 in 11 years.
It's not like I haven't tried!
I’d say 2 were not deserved. The others…
LOL! I might have had 10” plus when I was younger, but not anymore. And my shoe size hasn’t shrunk at all.
At $1 per pill, only when it gets really bad.
Thanks for the tip! I will check it out.
Joe Biden took one of the little blue pills and couldn't sit down for hours.
There can be several types of neuropathy. The most common is diabetic neuropathy, then Parkinsonian neuropathy. However there are “idiopathic” neuropathies that are unresponsive to the therapies used for the other two.
I knew a lady who had the latter. She had a severe tremor in her right arm associated with it, and eventually had Gamma Knife brain surgery to fry half of her Hypothalamus, and that didn’t work for either condition.
I am interested about the Cialis neuropathy relationship, however, so if you know more, say so.
Depending on where you shop it can be really expensive or cheap.
Here’s a real puzzler about that. Years ago it was noted that people with Schizophrenia have a greater than normal amount in their blood; but people with Alzheimer’s have almost none.
And — that’s it. No other correlation despite intense research.
My understanding of alzheimer’s is that its another variation on the theme of high sustained sugar levels in the blood which induces inflammation—which causes cardiovascular diseases—and also neurodegenerative brain diseases. So too little nitric oxide would make for more breaks all over the cardiovascular system.
Naturally, I’m of two minds about Schizophrenia—but I’ll bet that special ops warriors have few cases of Schizophrenia. My theory has always been that these guys are people who like to dilute high levels of testosterone with adrenaline. That is, the pressure helps them regulate their internal chemistry. But it could be that they’re also trying to dilute nitric oxide with adrenaline. The work forces them to stay focused. My wag is that there are whole groups of people who thrive under pressure because the pressure enables them to to regulate their own chemistry.
I have a peculiar perspective on Alzheimer’s.
For years, dentists have noted that a high percentage of patients also have longstanding gum infections. This and other factors led them to suspect that the five types of common oral spirochete bacteria have been fed directly to the brain from these infected gums without having to cross the blood/brain barrier.
And the brain is not conducive to them, and they rapidly die, possibly forming the plaque associated with Alzheimer’s over the course of years.
But dentists also know that ordinary baking soda is deadly to these spirochetes. And that a combo of soda and table salt used to be common for brushing the teeth. It fell out of favor with modern toothpastes. And it was a decade or two later the number of cases of Alzheimer’s started to skyrocket.
So their recommendation was to use normal toothpaste four days a week, to get rid of tartar and dental plaque, and alternate with dry baking soda three times a week. The concentration of soda in ‘baking soda toothpaste’ isn’t strong enough.
Or add salt and baking soda to the baking soda tooth paste you are using and do it daily...it will taste better that way anyway.
Sounds like a good daily rinse with bicarb might also be efficacious. Flossing with some baking soda around the gums would work pretty good. Arm and Hammer has a few baking soda toothpastes, one of which adds peroxide to its mix.
haha....your post is good example of “Sar”-co-”Castic”
Redicul-isum...Cheers my friend, LOL!
I can’t say one way or another. My dentist said not to dilute the baking soda, but I don’t know the exact concentration needed. Just powdered on a toothbrush will kill spirochetes after just a five second exposure, though.
Interesting.
There is also a strong correlation of cardiovascular disease with gum disease.
The increased incidence of gum disease also coincides with the increased ingestion of sugar—especially since the 1970’s when graphed sugar increase consumption curves went nearly parabolic.
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