Search results for "antibiotic resistance"
Results 1 - 10 of 219
|
Page 1 of 22
|
Sorted by: Relevance | Sort by: Date
|
Results per-page: 10 | 20 | 50 | All
|
[…]or stop taking something if we don’t need it. We are LOOOOOONNNNNGGG past protecting against antibiotic resistance!) RELATED ARTICLE: Study: Manuka honey kills more bacteria than all available antibiotics Enter Brad Spellberg, the chief medical officer for the Los Angeles County and University of Southern California Medical Center at the University of Southern California. He’s pretty sure we ARE smart enough to figure these things out with a little bit of clarity and instruction. He says: First things first: “It is absolutely false that continuing to take antibiotics after you feel completely better will reduce the emergence of antibiotic resistance. Quite […]
[…]of the insulin counter-regulatory hormones, glucagon and FABP4, and the development of insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia, and gradual weight gain. The relevance of propionate to insulin resistance and obesity in humans was also suggested in a large, long-term, dietary interventional study (DIRECT), in which the reduction in plasma propionate in response to a weight-loss diet was independently associated with improved insulin sensitivity.”1 Furthermore, the researchers wisely state in their study that there are alternatives that could be used for food preservation that would yield public health benefits, such as vinegar, essential oils and wheat starches. They also warn that repeated daily […]
[…]over use of antibiotics (which is a persistent problem in the US) raises the risk of developing antibiotic resistance in bacteria and other infections in individual patients. He says the reason patients are still sick is, “…complicated, and treatment shouldn’t involve antibiotics for months or years. It’s unnerving to both physicians and patients because nobody likes having something that we don’t understand.” He says more antibiotics just represent false hope. Lyme is more complicated than not, but there is help. I overcame Lyme and would love to give you my free ebook- click here and I’ll send it to you. Even though […]
[…]But a team of scientists led by the Hutchinson Center have discovered a key factor to this drug resistance and that might help doctors improve the effectiveness of traditional therapy. Senior author, Dr. Peter Nelson, of the Hutchinson Center’s Human Biology Division explains that cancer cells live in a complex “neighborhood” and where they live and who they live near, influence their response and resistance to therapy. The team found that when a normal, noncancerous cell living in the cancer’s neighborhood- the fibroblast- is exposed to chemotherapy, it sustains DNA damage which then drives the production of a broad spectrum of […]
[…]like vancomycin or daptomycin, we found cannabidiol has a very low propensity to induce resistance, which hopefully means it would be safe to use without causing resistance to rapidly appear.”1 RELATED STORY: 7 benefits and uses of CBD Oil (plus side effects) CBD was effective against every Gram-positive bacteria that was tested. However, according to the American College of Healthcare Sciences, the study revealed it would not work against Gram-negative bacteria because even though it has a thin cell membrane, it is not easy to penetrate, making it more difficult for antibiotic treatment. Dr. Andrew Edwards, a non-clinical Lecturer in […]
Is the Resistance To Smart Meters Justified? Two leaders of an anti-smart meter “action group” were recently arrested which got me wondering, what’s the big deal about smart meters? What I found will shock you… Well, it seems there are serious problems with both smart meters and the grid it’s supposed to connect us with. Spending billions to install smart meters while wasting millions by trashing existing analog meters doesn’t make economic sense. The utility companies will say each RF pulse is insignificant. But there can be up to 10,000 pulses in one day from a smart meter. Smart Meter […]
[…]the European Union. The government and consumer groups want farmers to stop using it, and other antibiotics, to fatten animals because the practice is helping to spread antibiotic-resistant superbugs. However, the FDA’s main concern is that consumers might be exposed to carcinogenic substances. Yes I know, that sentence- the FDA is worried about substances causing cancer- seems strange but as I always remind you, our message is spreading. The antibiotic is not used on people (thankfully, as studies have shown it to cause cancer in rats) in the US and because producers aren’t required to report to the FDA which drugs […]
[…]make sure to bring this to your doctor’s attention and have them select another class of antibiotics. Or better yet, if you aren’t in serious danger, wait on the antibiotic or use an all natural one. Source: WSB- […]
[…]pipeline, as one of his first environmental actions in office. The pipeline had faced widespread resistance from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, hundreds of other indigenous nations from across the Americas, as well as their non-Native allies. Now a new investigation by Antonia Juhasz reveals more details about how the private military contractor TigerSwan carried out extensive military-style counterterrorism efforts targeting the indigenous-led movement. Published by the news outlets Grist and Reveal, it is headlined “Paramilitary security tracked and targeted #noDAPL activists as ‘jihadists,’ docs show.” RELATED ARTICLES: 600,000 Gallons of Oil Spilled from a Texas Pipeline One Week Before […]
[…]an untried mode of action to focus on,” Dr Mylne told ABC. Because of people’s growing resistance(rightly so) to glyphosate(which was originally an antibiotic)the agro-chemical industry is on the lookout for new products that farmers won’t be worried using. In the last 15 to 20 years, nothing new has been discovered and time is money. This smells like trouble to me. Take a moment and watch this: Source: […]