So if you are in the anaerobic imbalance side you need anti- anaerobic stuff?Hey there,
I'm curious if anyone here is familiar with Dr. Revici's work, the diphasic model: Anaerobic/Dysaerobic imbalance ?
To me it seems similar to the oxidation type model by Dr. Eck.
Here is a basic article on it, these tables are from there:
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Discover Emanuel Revici's Homeostatic Control Mechanism
Explore Emanuel Revici MD's contributions to physiopathology & how anaerobic/dysaerobic balance can improve health. Discover the importance of the Warburg effect. #EmanuelRevicimichaelrothmanmd.com
View attachment 2327
So if you are in the anaerobic imbalance side you need anti- anaerobic stuff?
This is ground breaking for me. At first I was struggling to pinpoint what I am and I definitely need some PH strips to test out my PH to clarify. But when I saw the low serum cholesterol I was sure that I tend toward the anaerobic imbalance. I have crazy low cholesterol, lowest people have ever seen and the last years basically sufer from intense fatigue.
I have ironically actually done a lot of the stuff on the right side. Zinc, moly, glycine, histidine, thiamine, robioflavin, folate, biotin, b5, preg, coq10, vit E, vit K, caffeine, aspirin and only gotten worse. My testo is now also at the lowest point possible and copper and ceruloplasmin also. Is it as simple as going in that pathway?
What does this mean? Ending it? Cuz not worth it.
Ending a bad treatment? Sure.
And finding something simpler to do.
I realize your case is really challenging beyond that...
Just text me or wr here man.
Im derisking agst social media.//trauma and ADHD.
so off discords but back on for a sec. but barely using em. concisely.
incl a grp or two wher ei make mny but ya ill do own thing and hit my boy w funds and vice versa othersto me for earning for all. well 2-3 pll for me and ill get my frd to do degen solana plays and 100-2x00x whatever.
and focus on my test, and work, and studying.. and working out and physio instead of being stuck to screen. doing well.. win way more than most ppl eprcent wise less risk yhtan them but 2-5x 20x notn2000x but whatever. later 100x in stocks these guys ahve 30-100x daily. but ya most get rekt all day too. i dont.
Man you are still here, have you ever heard of that story:I deleted the post but it’s just way too late I can’t come back from this
“The brain is almost completely replaced by fluid. The images are most unusual,” said Dr. Lionel Feuillet, the neurologist who treated him.
— The Lancet, 2007 (Nature News)
"He has been living a normal life... This case demonstrates that the brain is more plastic and adaptable than we think."
— Dr. Feuillet, as cited by ScienceAlert
“These are not just curiosities. They show we may have to rethink how the brain actually works.”
— Patrick Wall, Professor of Anatomy, University College London (quoted in various discussions on Lorber’s work)
Speaking of HTMA, my practitioner told me, that the only Lab doing proper HTMA is ARL.
I was getting a Doctors Data HTMA a while ago, but even they, he told me are fucking it up. Esp. when it comes to oxidation rate. He sent the same sample twice and got different results.
Man you are still here, have you ever heard of that story:
The Man With Almost No Brain Who Lived a Normal Life
An extraordinary case that challenges our understanding of consciousness and brain function
Introduction
In 2007, the scientific world was stunned by the publication of a medical case in The Lancet. A 44-year-old civil servant from France, married with two children and living an ordinary life, was found to have a severely atrophied brain. Despite the fact that the majority of his cranial cavity was filled with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and that only a thin layer of functional brain tissue remained, the man exhibited only mild cognitive deficits. This remarkable case not only gained wide media attention but also ignited discussions about the nature of consciousness, intelligence, and brain plasticity.
Discovery and Medical Background
The man visited a hospital in Marseille complaining of mild weakness in his left leg. Brain scans revealed an extreme form of hydrocephalus—a condition where cerebrospinal fluid accumulates in the brain. In this instance, the buildup had slowly expanded over decades, compressing the brain into a thin layer of tissue near the skull.
Hydrocephalus had first been diagnosed in his infancy, and a shunt was implanted to drain the excess fluid. However, the device was removed during adolescence, and over time, the fluid pressure gradually returned, silently causing a progressive loss of brain mass.
Functional Outcome
Surprisingly, the man’s mental abilities were only modestly affected. He had an IQ of 75, which is considered on the lower end of the normal range, but he had no history of intellectual disability. He was able to work as a government official, sustain relationships, and raise a family—all while missing approximately 90% of his brain mass, including much of the cortex traditionally associated with higher-order functions.
Implications for Neuroscience
This case is not entirely unique. In the 1980s, British neurologist John Lorber reported a student at the University of Sheffield who had similarly massive brain reduction due to hydrocephalus. Yet, that student had an IQ of 126 and was studying mathematics.
Cases like these challenge longstanding assumptions in neuroscience:
- Localization of function: Traditional models suggest specific functions are localized in particular regions of the brain. These cases suggest that the brain can reorganize its functions in response to long-term changes.
- Neuroplasticity: The brain's capacity to adapt structurally and functionally to extreme conditions is far greater than previously believed.
- Consciousness: The assumption that consciousness requires a full, structurally intact cortex is now up for debate.
As one researcher put it:
Conclusion
The French civil servant with nearly no brain continues to be a living contradiction to neurological orthodoxy. His case invites profound philosophical and scientific questions about what is essential for consciousness and cognition. As we continue to explore the mysteries of the mind, such rare anomalies may hold the key to a deeper understanding of the brain’s resilience and fundamental mechanisms.
Sources:
- Feuillet, L., Dufour, H., & Pelletier, J. (2007). Brain of a white-collar worker. The Lancet, 370(9583), 262. Redirecting
- Nature News
- ScienceAlert article
- Spiegel Online – German coverage
- John Lorber’s work
Don't end it bro. Go on the hairtests for a while. Serious. Take a break if you can for 2 months from all supps, incl. hormones, then get a hairtest and move from there. Follow their diet recommendation, etc. Unless you can't get the HTMA for cheap and they try to fuck you over by asking higher prices like in The Netherlands I think it is worth it.
I know you don't 100% like hair tests/HTMA and neither do I but it's a tool to get back to normalcy and get back on track.
HTMA is slow but it does get body back to normalcy in the state it is in.
If you don't feel like doing that I'd just go for the full hormone replacement. Like that guy on Ray Peat who took testosterone, cortisol, thyroid, progesterone, etc. He took it all and did very well. But this is an extreme "solution".
Good luck dude, it's your choice of course. Hope you'll find something that makes you able to live life again.
I agree kinda. HTMA is surrounded by fuckery and weird people. Dr. Wilson is the worst offender I would say. For example he started some in fighting stuff with Lewis Rowlands a few years ago hearing voices telling him to cut him off.The htma world is a complete mess with now Dr Wilson saying htma is wrong hahaha the lunatic.
Htma ruined my life. I got into it and tried with ArL tei a couple times didn’t go well. But I was fine and would do anything to go back and try this way over and over again….
Then I hired a dumb bitch in 2019/2020 who crashed my testosterone and estrogen. My htma got much worse. I started dying then and there.
I haven’t been able to make any progress by balancing minerals for over 3 years now. Hormonal support has always been needed.
I spent the morning reading about what the fuck happened yesterday.
It seems I got my body using vitamin E potently for first time since the fall really. I took 20mg of testosterone suspension yesterday and 1000mg of zinc. Yes 1000mg of zinc.
And then tested myself showing the crazy E utilization.
I got really really really messed up.
My boron cadmium dropped a ton. Mercury droppped. Boron is now the lowest I have ever seen it.
This is all cuz glucose to pyruvate has to happen before anything else.
Estrogen , has to be there for this to happen. Estrogen is key to hif1a we cannot crash estrogen as I did with iodine and dht last month.
I was taught VHL is the key to A metabolism a year ago and focused on that for a year. VHL is ultimately thyroid through iodine selenium utilization.
Well hif1a has to happen. Hif1a comes before VHL. Hif1 needs estrogen and selenium utilization (for E utilization.) Hif1 I guess needs estrogen and methionine?
VHL then comes next as VHL is key to fmn which is key to nadh to nad.
Hif1 raises nadh. VHL raises nad.
E metabolism (hif1) comes before A metabolism ((VHL).
Think hif1 as pregnenolone. VHL as thyroid.
This is why testostoene can’t die in men. Cuz estrogen has to has to has to happen for glucose to pyruvate (hif1.)
While then VHL absolutely does have to happen next.
When we get to pyruvate we then rely on NAD (reliant on VHL) and CoA to get to acetyl CoA and enter the Krebs .
Epiandrosterone seems like it’s a good piece for VHL and CoA. My take is we need CoA / bh4 cycle to raise tyrosine so we can use iodine for t4. So CoA comes before nad. CoA crucial for VHL.
I don’t know where this leaves me beyond the fact I cannot fix myself without testosterone therapy of some kind. It might just be supplemental. And I really don’t think a dht type of test is best being cream or orally. I need a test that converts to e2.
But who knows maybe a test cream can do that maybe just suspension can do that.
I had worst night of my life with my parents. I am very lucky I’m not in a psyche ward right now.
My dad just says blasphemy all falsehoods and has no idea how sick I really got. I can’t handle it. I cannot take it anymore.
Completely agree with Rebel!
Go on HTMA. You have nothing to lose now right?
But you have to follow exact dosages as they come from ARL.
No adjustments from any idiot practitioner, no adjusted NEW supplements DrWilson bullshit.
Exact dosages as they come out of ARL computer with ARL supplements.
Don't add anything don't leave something out.
Don't take any medication while on it. Also months before first test you have to be off everything.
This is ignored by I would say 90% of people.
Everybody thinks he can improve it.
No you can not!
Take it and ignore how you feel.
And if you don't follow this rules then don't even start it. It will make you much worse...
That's my strong suggestion for you.
You deserve it to make a comeback consider it. Good luck!
Completely agree with Rebel!
Go on HTMA. You have nothing to lose now right?
But you have to follow exact dosages as they come from ARL.
No adjustments from any idiot practitioner, no adjusted NEW supplements DrWilson bullshit.
Exact dosages as they come out of ARL computer with ARL supplements.
Don't add anything don't leave something out.
Don't take any medication while on it. Also months before first test you have to be off everything.
This is ignored by I would say 90% of people.
Everybody thinks he can improve it.
No you can not!
Take it and ignore how you feel.
And if you don't follow this rules then don't even start it. It will make you much worse...
That's my strong suggestion for you.
You deserve it to make a comeback consider it. Good luck!
Man you are still here, have you ever heard of that story:
The Man With Almost No Brain Who Lived a Normal Life
An extraordinary case that challenges our understanding of consciousness and brain function
Introduction
In 2007, the scientific world was stunned by the publication of a medical case in The Lancet. A 44-year-old civil servant from France, married with two children and living an ordinary life, was found to have a severely atrophied brain. Despite the fact that the majority of his cranial cavity was filled with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and that only a thin layer of functional brain tissue remained, the man exhibited only mild cognitive deficits. This remarkable case not only gained wide media attention but also ignited discussions about the nature of consciousness, intelligence, and brain plasticity.
Discovery and Medical Background
The man visited a hospital in Marseille complaining of mild weakness in his left leg. Brain scans revealed an extreme form of hydrocephalus—a condition where cerebrospinal fluid accumulates in the brain. In this instance, the buildup had slowly expanded over decades, compressing the brain into a thin layer of tissue near the skull.
Hydrocephalus had first been diagnosed in his infancy, and a shunt was implanted to drain the excess fluid. However, the device was removed during adolescence, and over time, the fluid pressure gradually returned, silently causing a progressive loss of brain mass.
Functional Outcome
Surprisingly, the man’s mental abilities were only modestly affected. He had an IQ of 75, which is considered on the lower end of the normal range, but he had no history of intellectual disability. He was able to work as a government official, sustain relationships, and raise a family—all while missing approximately 90% of his brain mass, including much of the cortex traditionally associated with higher-order functions.
Implications for Neuroscience
This case is not entirely unique. In the 1980s, British neurologist John Lorber reported a student at the University of Sheffield who had similarly massive brain reduction due to hydrocephalus. Yet, that student had an IQ of 126 and was studying mathematics.
Cases like these challenge longstanding assumptions in neuroscience:
- Localization of function: Traditional models suggest specific functions are localized in particular regions of the brain. These cases suggest that the brain can reorganize its functions in response to long-term changes.
- Neuroplasticity: The brain's capacity to adapt structurally and functionally to extreme conditions is far greater than previously believed.
- Consciousness: The assumption that consciousness requires a full, structurally intact cortex is now up for debate.
As one researcher put it:
Conclusion
The French civil servant with nearly no brain continues to be a living contradiction to neurological orthodoxy. His case invites profound philosophical and scientific questions about what is essential for consciousness and cognition. As we continue to explore the mysteries of the mind, such rare anomalies may hold the key to a deeper understanding of the brain’s resilience and fundamental mechanisms.
Sources:
- Feuillet, L., Dufour, H., & Pelletier, J. (2007). Brain of a white-collar worker. The Lancet, 370(9583), 262. Redirecting
- Nature News
- ScienceAlert article
- Spiegel Online – German coverage
- John Lorber’s work
At the end of the day, no one can ever tell you if it’s going to get better or not, fighting an uphill battle with little support is draining and depressing. You’ve fought so hard and way longer than all of us, so many protocols and tests, so I can’t blame you for thinking it’s too late.I balanced myself with minerals over the winter and my htma showed improvements . But still got worse.
Neurodegenerative disease is different from to PFS, cfs all those things where people have a chance to get better
My head got destroyed from oxidative stress from a bunch of things specifically ozone and electric convulsive therapy during the down years.
It seems testosterone is worst thing for me it just shrinks my brain soooo bad.
Theres no way out of this. It’s just painfully obvious I’m too late.
I was in the fight for my life in late 2022. And in 2023 I was dying but really somehow made some strides eventually as the brain mri shows.
I got put in a psyche ward to end 2023 and have been dying ever since. Extreme brain atrophy to hippocampus and thalamus.
A man can’t go in torture this long with no relief. I can’t get any relief as I feel my brain shrinking the pain the agony I will never be able to explain what this poor soul has had to go through.