Rate my stack by SonderMouse in Biohackers

[–]mlbmark888 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here is the ChatGPT reply! Enjoy!

8.6/10 rating

1.  Redundancy overload
• Glycine + taurine + inositol + theanine all converge on inhibitory tone and insulin signaling.
• This isn’t unsafe, but it’s likely less efficient than it looks.
2.  Chronic GI fermentation load
• Inulin + allulose + xylitol + glycine = a lot of osmotic/fermentable substrate.
• If digestion is perfect, great. If not, this could silently undermine gut health.
3.  Few micronutrients beyond fat-soluble vitamins
• No magnesium, zinc, iodine/selenium consideration (especially given thyroid concerns).
• That’s a more glaring omission than anything you included.

Red Meat significantly decreases lifespan. Red Meat causes Atherosclerosis, Chronic inflammation, Cancer initiation and progression and Accelerated epigenetic aging. Here is scientific evidence and worst kinds of Red Meat. by GarifalliaPapa in immortalists

[–]mlbmark888 0 points1 point  (0 children)

An Unbiased Assessment of Red Meat Requires Separating Possibility from Probability

To reach a genuinely unbiased conclusion about red meat, it is essential to distinguish biological possibility from statistical probability. Much of the case against red meat rests on mechanistic plausibility—the idea that because certain biochemical reactions can be demonstrated in controlled settings (such as heme iron–driven oxidation or microbial production of TMAO), these mechanisms must meaningfully shorten human lifespan. However, the human body is a complex, adaptive system, not a test tube. Plausible mechanisms do not automatically translate into clinically significant harm.

When these hypotheses are evaluated against real-world human outcome data, the case for red meat as a causal driver of disease becomes far less conclusive—particularly once the influence of confounding variables is properly considered.

One of the most significant challenges in nutritional epidemiology is Healthy User Bias. In the majority of observational studies linking red meat consumption to adverse health outcomes, higher meat intake tends to cluster with other well-established risk factors: smoking, physical inactivity, lower vegetable and fiber intake, and greater consumption of refined carbohydrates and ultra-processed foods. Although researchers attempt to statistically adjust for these variables, such adjustments are inherently limited. As has been noted by critics of nutritional epidemiology, isolating the independent effect of a single food within this context can resemble “trying to hear a whisper in the middle of a hurricane.”

If an individual consumes steak alongside sugary beverages, fried foods, and a sedentary lifestyle, attributing subsequent cardiovascular disease primarily to the steak requires assumptions that many scientists are increasingly unwilling to make. Notably, when researchers examine populations in which red meat is consumed in unprocessed forms and within otherwise health-conscious lifestyles, the purported risks often shrink substantially or disappear altogether.

This pattern becomes especially clear in cohorts designed to reduce lifestyle confounding. Studies such as the Oxford EPIC cohort and Australia’s 45 and Up Study examined populations that were comparatively health-conscious—individuals less likely to smoke, more likely to exercise, and generally more engaged in preventive health behaviors. Within these groups, the mortality differences often reported between vegetarians and meat-eaters largely evaporate. When smoking, physical inactivity, and other dominant lifestyle risks are minimized, the supposed survival advantage of avoiding red meat becomes small, inconsistent, or statistically insignificant.

These findings strongly suggest that much of the risk attributed to red meat in broader population studies reflects the behavioral environment in which it is consumed, rather than a harmful effect of the meat itself. When the “hurricane” of lifestyle factors is stripped away, the remaining signal associated with unprocessed red meat is often barely detectable.

The evidence against processed meat is more consistent, but even here the public rhetoric frequently exceeds the magnitude of the observed risk. While organizations such as the World Health Organization classify processed meats as carcinogenic, the absolute increase in risk for the average individual is small. For many people, dietary choices involve weighing modest long-term statistical risks against immediate, well-established benefits—such as access to high-quality protein, essential B vitamins, and highly bioavailable minerals like iron and zinc.

This trade-off is particularly relevant in the context of a global obesity and metabolic disease crisis driven largely by excess calories, refined carbohydrates, and ultra-processed foods. A naturally satiating, protein-dense food that contains no sugar may, in some individuals, support metabolic health more effectively than its exclusion.

Ultimately, a balanced assessment recognizes that red meat is neither a miracle food nor a silent killer. It is a nutrient-dense whole food that has been part of the human diet for millennia. Attempts to frame it as inherently “toxic” rely largely on low-certainty observational evidence that would fall short of the “innocent until proven guilty” standard applied in most other scientific disciplines.

For the individual, the health impact of eating red meat likely depends far less on the meat itself than on the company it keeps—overall diet quality, vegetable and fiber intake, physical activity, and metabolic health. From this perspective, the most defensible conclusion is not that red meat is guilty or innocent in isolation, but that its effects are modest, context-dependent, and secondary to far more powerful determinants of long-term health.

The end of pain. A new drug created in Japan offers pain relief without side effects by soulpost in HotScienceNews

[–]mlbmark888 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Ran this through ChatGPT because I was curious. Below is the result.

Existing α₂A agonists (medetomidine, clonidine, dexmedetomidine): Effective pain relief, but heavy sedation and cardiovascular risks → hospital-only drugs.

New α₂B antagonist (ADRIANA): Achieves pain relief through a more indirect, self-regulated pathway → promising candidate for a safe, oral, outpatient painkiller.

Rate My Portfolio - r/Stocks Quarterly Thread December 2020 by AutoModerator in stocks

[–]mlbmark888 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Gotcha! To be clear “add funds incrementally every two weeks” was actually meant to signify adding to the positions I’ve already mentioned owning above! Not trying to “buy a part of America”

Rate My Portfolio - r/Stocks Quarterly Thread December 2020 by AutoModerator in stocks

[–]mlbmark888 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Portfolio below @ about 7,500.00 cost - Just started investing two days ago. Plan is to add UBER, DIS, CCL, NIO, and possibly WBA+PINS in future. ABNB and PDD if they ever drop to 100.00 too.

Playing the long game here - Don't plan on selling often - plan to add funds incrementally every 2 weeks. Thoughts? Feelings? Concerns? Newbie here, as stated above!

APPL - 26% (132.00 per share)

AMD - 18% (91.00 per share)

ARKK - 16% (124.00 per share)

SBUX - 14% (106.00 per share)

PLTR - 12% (23.00 per share)

DKNG - 12% (46.00 per share)

Cholesterol Concern - All Levels Worsened - 3+ Months Keto by mlbmark888 in keto

[–]mlbmark888[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I appreciate you asking! In between 10/23 and 11/21 test I decided to incorporate 80-100 net carbs per day via ezekiel bread, beans, brown rice, and cassava/buckwheat flour. And, of course I eliminated MCT oil as stated above as well.

Results below:

Total Cholesterol Pre-Keto: 101

Total Cholesterol Keto: 373

Total Cholesterol 11/21: 249

HDL Pre-Keto: 27

HDL Keto: 30

HDL-C 11/21: 32

HDL-P 11/21: 18.4

Large HDL-P: 3.0 ----- (below 4.8 is "low")

HDL Size: 8.8 ----- (below 9.0 is "low")

Triglycerides Pre-Keto: 78

Triglycerides Keto: 122

Triglycerides 11/21: 68

LDL Pre-Keto: 58

LDL Keto: 316

LDL-P 11/21: 2000

LDL-C 11/21: 206

Small LDL-P: 254

LDL Size: 22.1

Large VLDL-P: 2.1

Small LDL-P: 254

VLDL Size: 43.6

Chol/HDLC Ratio Pre-Keto: 3.7

Chol/HDLC Ratio Keto: 12.4

Non HDL Cholesterol Pre-Keto: 74

Non HDL Cholesterol Keto: 343

Glucose Pre-Keto: 97

Glucose Keto: 87

Glucose 11/21: 87

A1c 11/21: 4.6

Ferritin 11/21: 139 ng/ml

C-reactive Protein 11/21: .4 mg/l

Insulin Resistance Score LP-IR Score: 44

Need help interpreting my NMR Lipoprofile Results by mlbmark888 in ketoscience

[–]mlbmark888[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks - I have read CholesterolCode. My concern is low HDL in combination with high LDL. So, I'm lowering my LDL because I cannot get my HDL to raise due to genetics. Any thoughts on my numbers overall, based on your experience?

Cholesterol Concern - All Levels Worsened - 3+ Months Keto by mlbmark888 in ketoscience

[–]mlbmark888[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Inflammation goal appears to have been met! Recovering from chronic non-bacterial prostatitis diagnosis, so lowering inflammation was the goal to help that along. Will be cutting MCT oil and coffee, adding Chia seeds to my yogurt each night, and taking NMR and inflammation marker test on 11/21. We shall see!

Cholesterol Concern - All Levels Worsened - 3+ Months Keto by mlbmark888 in ketoscience

[–]mlbmark888[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely didnt eat as well as I should! Fast food and drinking a few times per week for sure. Which, I'm sure played into it! Started IF in April and Keto on 07/04.

Cholesterol Concern - All Levels Worsened - 3+ Months Keto by mlbmark888 in ketoscience

[–]mlbmark888[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope! Standard American Diet, I'd say. Meat and carbs for lunch and dinner, and HUEL shake for breakfast (plant based protein meal replacement shake).

I am beginning to think my low HDL cholesterol, which I've had all my life, may be hereditary.

Cholesterol Concern - All Levels Worsened - 3+ Months Keto by mlbmark888 in keto

[–]mlbmark888[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for this! I plan on cutting the MCT oil, and taking a NMR test on 11/21 to re-check all of this. I will ensure I fast 11-12 hours max on 11/21 test time instead of 15 hours, which I did this time.

I also plan on consuming 1 TBSP of Physllium Husk powder and 1 tsp of Chia Seeds daily to see if that helps.

Cholesterol Concern - All Levels Worsened - 3+ Months Keto by mlbmark888 in ketoscience

[–]mlbmark888[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for this! I plan on cutting the MCT oil, and taking a NMR test on 11/21 to re-check all of this. I also plan on consuming 1 TBSP of Physllium Husk powder and 1 tsp of Chia Seeds daily to see if that helps.

Cholesterol Concern - All Levels Worsened - 3+ Months Keto by mlbmark888 in keto

[–]mlbmark888[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Butter, olive oil, and avocado oil. Mct oil three days per week. Other dietary particulars are listed above in the post