最近,我有幸与Thomas Levy博士进行了一场深入的访谈,他是一位经验丰富的临床心脏病专家、律师和畅销书作家。Levy博士以其在正分子医学领域的杰出贡献而闻名,这次对话的核心围绕着他最新的观点:所有疾病的根源都是毒素。
Levy博士的新书《毒素导致所有疾病》大胆地提出了这一论断。他解释道,当生物分子被氧化,也就是失去电子时,它便失去了功能。各种疾病不过是由不同类型的生物分子,以不同的浓度组合而成的结果。维生素C,作为一种强大的抗氧化剂,能够重新提供电子,修复受损的生物分子,从而缓解疾病症状。然而,这仅仅是第一步,解决毒素问题才是关键。因为毒素是唯一的氧化剂,它们是所有氧化的根源。
因此,有效的治疗方案必须双管齐下:一是关闭毒素的来源,二是修复受损的细胞。Levy博士指出,口腔感染是人体内大多数毒素的主要来源,这包括感染的牙龈、根管、其他感染的牙齿以及感染的扁桃体。此外,先前积累的重金属和新冠疫苗的持续性刺突蛋白也扮演着重要的角色。解决这三个问题,才能有效地帮助患者康复。
在谈到维生素C的补充时,Levy博士强调了脂质体包裹的维生素C的优越性。这种形式的维生素C能够轻松穿过细胞膜,进入细胞内部,而无需消耗额外的能量。这与普通维生素C形成了鲜明对比,后者需要细胞消耗能量才能被吸收。他还指出,氯化镁比硫酸镁更有效地对抗病毒。
治疗任何疾病的最终目标,Levy博士认为,是使细胞内维生素C水平正常化。只有当细胞内维生素C水平恢复正常,细胞才能恢复正常功能,疾病才能得到根治。
为了进一步支持这一观点,Levy博士还介绍了一种有效的治疗方法:过氧化氢雾化疗法。这种疗法能够有效清除鼻咽部慢性病原体的定植,从而改善肠道健康。他分享了自己的亲身经历,以及许多患者通过这种疗法获得显著改善的案例。
此外,Levy博士还特别提到了食物中添加剂的危害,例如铁。他指出,过量的铁会造成严重的氧化损伤,对人体健康造成极大的威胁。
我完全认同Levy博士的观点,所有疾病都始于口腔。口腔是一个充满各种微生物的环境,在缺氧条件下,这些微生物会产生大量的毒素。过氧化氢雾化疗法,正如Levy博士所强调的,能够有效清除这些毒素,改善肠道健康。
我们还讨论了细胞内钙水平升高的问题,这是所有患病细胞的共同特征。优化细胞内维生素C水平和线粒体ATP的生成至关重要。维生素C和镁的组合,是强大的抗氧化剂,能够有效对抗氧化应激。
口腔感染还会导致心脏疾病,而维生素C则可以发挥重要的治疗作用。Levy博士甚至大胆预测,正确使用维生素C可以消除70%的处方药的需求。
最后,我们还探讨了心律失常和由持续性刺突蛋白引起的猝死问题。Levy博士指出,这些问题都与细胞内镁缺乏有关。通过补充镁,可以有效预防和治疗这些疾病。
总而言之,这次与Levy博士的对话,让我对疾病的发生机制有了更深刻的理解。他的观点,虽然大胆,却也为我们提供了全新的视角,值得我们深入思考和研究。 我们应该更加重视口腔健康,积极补充维生素C和镁等营养物质,并采取有效的措施来清除体内的毒素,从而维护自身的健康。
@Dr. Thomas Levy : 我认为所有疾病的根源都是毒素。我的新书名为《毒素导致所有疾病》,这并非夸大其词。当生物分子被氧化时,它会失去电子,从而失去功能。各种疾病只不过是不同生物分子以不同浓度和类型组合的结果。维生素C可以重新提供电子,修复受损的生物分子,从而缓解疾病,但前提是必须解决毒素问题。毒素是唯一的氧化剂。因此,治疗方案应针对两方面:关闭毒素来源并修复受损细胞。口腔感染是人体内大多数毒素的主要来源,包括感染的牙龈、根管、其他感染的牙齿和感染的扁桃体。此外,先前积累的重金属和慢性COVID疫苗的持续性刺突蛋白也是重要的毒素来源。解决这三个问题,就能帮助患者康复。脂质体包裹的维生素C优于普通维生素C,因为它能被细胞吸收,无需消耗能量即可进入细胞。氯化镁比硫酸镁更有效地对抗病毒。治疗任何疾病的最终目标是使细胞内维生素C水平正常化。过氧化氢雾化疗法可以清除鼻咽部慢性病原体定植,改善肠道健康,是治疗各种疾病的初始步骤。食物中的添加剂,例如铁,是有毒的。
@Dr. Chris Motley : 我认同Levy医生的观点,所有疾病都始于口腔。口腔中的微生物数量巨大,在缺氧环境下会变得剧毒。过氧化氢雾化疗法可以清除鼻咽部慢性病原体定植,改善肠道健康。升高的钙水平是体内所有患病细胞的特征。优化细胞内维生素C水平和线粒体ATP生成至关重要。维生素C和镁是主要的抗氧化组合。口腔感染会导致心脏疾病,而维生素C可以帮助治疗。正确使用维生素C可以消除70%的处方药的需求。心律失常和由持续性刺突蛋白引起的猝死与细胞内镁缺乏有关。
最近,我有幸与Thomas Levy博士进行了一场深入的访谈,他是一位经验丰富的临床心脏病专家、律师和畅销书作家。Levy博士以其在正分子医学领域的杰出贡献而闻名,这次对话的核心围绕着他最新的观点:所有疾病的根源都是毒素。
Levy博士的新书《毒素导致所有疾病》大胆地提出了这一论断。他解释道,当生物分子被氧化,也就是失去电子时,它便失去了功能。各种疾病不过是由不同类型的生物分子,以不同的浓度组合而成的结果。维生素C,作为一种强大的抗氧化剂,能够重新提供电子,修复受损的生物分子,从而缓解疾病症状。然而,这仅仅是第一步,解决毒素问题才是关键。因为毒素是唯一的氧化剂,它们是所有氧化的根源。
因此,有效的治疗方案必须双管齐下:一是关闭毒素的来源,二是修复受损的细胞。Levy博士指出,口腔感染是人体内大多数毒素的主要来源,这包括感染的牙龈、根管、其他感染的
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02:55 我认为所有疾病的根源都是毒素。
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07:20 我认为所有疾病都是由毒素引起的,这并非夸大其词。
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08:42 氧化是疾病,毒素引起所有氧化。
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09:14 治疗方案应针对两方面:关闭毒素来源并修复受损细胞。
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09:35 口腔感染是人体内大多数毒素的主要来源。
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10:51 三种主要毒素来源:感染(大部分在口腔)、先前积累的重金属和慢性COVID疫苗的持续性刺突蛋白。
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11:59 脂质体包裹的维生素C优于普通维生素C,因为它能被细胞吸收。
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13:42 脂质体包裹的维生素C优于普通维生素C,因为它无需消耗能量即可进入细胞。
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15:47 氯化镁比硫酸镁更有效地对抗病毒。
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20:41 治疗任何疾病的最终目标是使细胞内维生素C水平正常化。
◉
22:34 口腔中的微生物数量巨大,在缺氧环境下会变得剧毒。
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24:05 过氧化氢雾化疗法可以清除鼻咽部慢性病原体定植。
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26:16 过氧化氢雾化疗法是治疗各种疾病的初始步骤,因为它可以改善肠道健康。
◉
29:51 食物中的添加剂,例如铁,是有毒的。
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32:49 铁是剧毒的氧化剂,不应该添加到婴儿食品中。
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35:41 维生素C和镁是主要的抗氧化组合。
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35:55 升高的钙水平是体内所有患病细胞的特征。
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36:44 优化细胞内维生素C水平和线粒体ATP生成至关重要。
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42:26 口腔感染会导致心脏疾病,而维生素C可以帮助治疗。
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42:50 冠状动脉疾病是由口腔病原体在冠状动脉壁中播种引起的。
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44:50 所有炎症都是维生素C缺乏症,所有维生素C缺乏症都是炎症。
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46:43 动脉粥样硬化斑块是身体为了增强动脉壁而形成的。
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48:34 正确使用维生素C可以消除70%的处方药的需求。
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50:29 过氧化氢漱口可以治疗慢性病原体定植,但不能治疗感染的牙齿或牙龈。
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51:46 心律失常和由持续性刺突蛋白引起的猝死与细胞内镁缺乏有关。
00:00
If you're feeling low on energy, struggling with brain fog, or need a natural boost of hydration, Beam Minerals has you covered. Their products are plant-based and bioavailable, which means they're all natural and easy for the body to absorb. No harsh chemicals added. 语法解析
00:17
Bean Minerals are designed to support cellular hydration, aid detox, and restore essential nutrients to your body, helping you feel clear-headed, balanced, and revitalized to get up and make the best of your day. Head to beanminerals.com slash drmotley and use the code DRMOTLEY, one word in all caps, for 20% off to feel the difference minerals can make. 语法解析
00:40
Welcome to the Ancient Health Podcast, where East meets West in the world of medicine. I'm Dr. Chris Motley, and here we explore how modern Western science and traditional Eastern wisdom come together to unlock the body's full healing potential. Each week, we'll dive into powerful tools, techniques, and approaches from both sides of the world to help you optimize your health and live with vitality. Let's bridge the gap between ancient practices and cutting-edge medicine. Let's get started. 语法解析
01:08
Hello friends, welcome to the Ancient Health Podcast where East meets West and I'm your host Dr. Chris Motley and today I have somebody that I am very very fond of in this profession. Somebody who's very very brilliant and very smart and 语法解析
01:22
He is one of the main people that led me into learning more about cardiology, honestly, and how basically nutrition can affect the heart. And it's a very big honor. Dr. Thomas Levy is here to talk to us about Live On Labs, but I want to go through everything that we can. So, Doc, I really appreciate you joining me today. Pleasure to be here, sir. 语法解析
01:47
We had some computer glitches for everybody that's listening out there. We had a lot of computer glitches on my end. I don't know what's happening. But I was really, really excited to know that Dr. Levy was on the podcast because I got to meet him. 语法解析
02:03
In Las Vegas, we had this big conference and he was there talking to everyone. And I thought, well, maybe I can get my picture taken with him. And when he's authored, you've authored like over 13 or 14 books. And literally one of the leading doctors that I know that talks about cardiology and also like orthomolecular medicine. 语法解析
02:25
There's so many great accolades. Like literally you're in the hall of fame of orthomolecular medicine, which is like in itself, like it's great. And you're an attorney as well. And to me, you cover all grounds. But doc, can you talk a little bit about yourself? I love hearing stories about personal life and people out there wanna know about you. - Well, I guess you could say I was just another clueless mainstream cardiologist until about 1994. 语法解析
02:55
When I met Dr. Hal Huggins in Colorado Springs, Colorado, who, for those who don't know that name, he's really the first significant biological dentist on the planet. And to make a long story short is it just turned out that we enjoyed each other's company, had a few lunches. He invited me to his clinic that he had in Colorado Springs. And I saw stuff that medicine told me wasn't supposed to happen. Dr. Huggins, 语法解析
03:30
would take out root canals and mercury and put people on diets with other supplements and use lots of vitamin C in the process. I saw MS patients taking steps for the first time after two weeks and over a year and many other things. But this one time when I first got there, I saw a little old lady with a neurological syndrome, not very mobile, getting hours of arduous dental work 语法解析
04:02
But she started getting more and more animated, more and more energized as the work went on until she finally told her caregiver she wanted to go out to dinner and chew on the other side of her mouth somewhere in Colorado Springs that night. I said, wow, this does not compute. And about that time, Dr. Hungers walked into the operatory. I said, OK, Hal, what's going on? And he pointed at the ID bag. And I said, OK, I know about IVs. What's in it? 语法解析
04:35
And he said 50 grams of vitamin C. Well, I was like every other low information individual on the planet. I mean, vitamin C, orange, that's about the only thing that meant to me at that time. I wasn't taking a single supplement of any time at that time to my detriment, I might add. But literally in the blink of an eye, my life changed because I'm not in the habit of denying what I'm witnessing. 语法解析
05:05
And what I was witnessing was something that medicine said couldn't happen. And that literally at that instant began my four years of research leading up to my book on vitamin C, infectious diseases and toxins. It's just and then another 25 years of associated topics. And here I am. 语法解析
05:28
Wow. To me, when you see that kind of animation, when you start to see people heal and it defies what you've previously learned, I think that… It took a dentist to teach me medicine. I realized I had no medicine at all until this biological dentist came along and taught me. I mean, I say that with all humility. 语法解析
05:49
And truly, Doc, when you learned that and you saw that happening, what did it do when you went back to practice? I mean, what was it like after the first day you went back and you're like, okay, I've got to shift everything and things were coming to you and you're like, how can I change it with the new knowledge I found? Well, I didn't. I quit my practice and started working with Dr. Huggins as a consultant immediately. Amazing. So you started doing, and that's how you got into this whole realm of functional orthomolecular medicine? That's it. Yes, sir. 语法解析
06:20
Oh, heavens. So when you started to do that, did you start to see as you started seeing miracles, did that start your journey into like creating new protocols for the patients? Like what were some of your main protocols? I know like that you helped these patients with some of these chronic conditions. Well, the it basically just brought out all the points that are now emphasized. Maybe I didn't appreciate them as well. That was fine. 语法解析
06:52
25 years ago, you develop a little different evolving perspective as time goes on. But, for example, the title of my new book coming out in a few months is Toxins Cause All Disease. And I don't know, there might be some people that will look at that and say, well, that's interesting, but that's got to be an exaggeration. And it's not. It's not an exaggeration because, and this helps explain everything else. 语法解析
07:20
When you oxidize a biomolecule, you take an electron away from it. Protein, sugar, fat, RNA, enzyme. And when you take that electron away from it, it ceases to function. So it becomes a non-player. And when you get a large number of biomolecules all not functioning and just accumulating space in the cell and inhibiting the other active biomolecules interacting, 语法解析
07:50
The unique array of biomolecules determines the disease. There is no disease other than oxidation. Oxidation is disease. You hear about oxidative stress causing disease. Well, that's close. It doesn't cause disease. It is the disease. You have nothing else going on in any disease process other than a unique array of biomolecules, different concentrations, different types, no role or function. That's the disease. And 语法解析
08:21
That's why things like vitamin C can come in, redonate electrons, and regenerate life into those biomolecules and resolve the disease, except when you haven't addressed the toxins. Because that begs the next question. If oxidation is disease, what causes oxidation? 语法解析
08:42
Or what are oxidizing agents? They're one thing and one thing only, toxins. That's the only thing that oxidizes is toxins. So oxidation is disease. Toxins cause all oxidation. So that means you design your protocols toward two things. Turn off the faucet and do repair. You repair the oxidized biomolecules and you turn off the toxin faucet. And in the case of Dr. Huggins, that was… 语法解析
09:14
and still is, the most important sorts of toxins in most people's bodies are infected gums, root canals, other infected teeth, and infected tonsils. Because infections are the single greatest source of toxins. All right? And that's the only reason, that's the only way an infection hurts you. 语法解析
09:35
There's no other magical way of effects to purchase. It's just continually producing molecules that are oxidizing biomolecules that you need. You know, sometimes it might be biomolecules that are located in an artery wall or the continued oxidation process. 语法解析
09:51
Causes the rupture of a blood vessel. You say, oh, I died from the blood vessel rupturing. Well, no, you died from the oxidation that was unchecked that ultimately resulted in that blood vessel rupture. Just like just like just like oxidizing, just like rusting metal. OK, that's oxidation, too. And if the oxidation goes unchecked, you eventually erode completely through the battle until you have no framework at all. It's no different inside the body. 语法解析
10:22
And so that developed basically the structure that I have now in my new book, which is I just told you what disease is. And the three major sources of toxins are infections, nearly all of which are in the mouth, previously accumulated heavy metals, and the persistent spike protein from the vaccinations of chronic COVID. 语法解析
10:51
You take care of all of those three, you've got to help the person. But leave any one of them unaddressed. And if you're not fighting a losing battle, you're fighting a battle that you're not going to be as successful as you could be. Wow. Doc, this is really, really great. I mean, the information truly, the… 语法解析
11:12
the fact that all the diseases start in the mouth. And again, I'm not taking away from each section. I love it that you're talking about taking vitamin C. One quick thing, I want to talk about the mouth infections, but with like live on labs, I love that they have like the very bioavailable forms of vitamin C. Absolutely. 语法解析
11:31
When you started finding vitamin C, some people will ask me, like, Doc, what are the best forms of vitamin C? And like, which one should we use? Is there a difference, Doc, according to your studies? Like, which one is the best? Well, you have to break it down into regular non-encapsulated forms of vitamin C and the liposome encapsulated. The liposome encapsulated is unique because it gets you a delivery inside the cell. Regular vitamin C doesn't do that. 语法解析
11:59
The other forms of vitamin C are just unencapsulated. That's ascorbic acid, sodium ascorbate, magnesium ascorbate, a whole bunch of ascorbates. Ascorbate is the anion, and that's the active part of a vitamin C molecule. So you're going to have hydrogen ascorbate, ascorbic acid, sodium ascorbate, calcium ascorbate, magnesium ascorbate. They all 语法解析
12:25
give you the benefits of vitamin C, but you're also getting your cation along with it. And so you need to, whenever you're supplementing, if you have, like magnesium is a good thing. You have magnesium chloride, magnesium 3 and 8, magnesium citrate. And people say, well, what type of magnesium should I supplement? 语法解析
12:46
And you say, well, you need to look at what you're dealing with. What is the anion and what is the cation? What's the cation? Magnesium. But look at your patient and see which of the anions are going to be of greatest benefit in your particular patient because lots of people have different problems. You know, you have magnesium glycinate, so a lot of people need glycine. Magnesium chloride is especially powerful as an antipathogen, so it's the one I usually recommend because it's 语法解析
13:15
Even if we're not in the middle of a pandemic anymore, we're sort of bracing for them to give us the next one, right? So it's good to take that and be as prepared as possible. So those are the principles. And so I have found that the liposome encapsulated vitamin C that you saw there is just head and shoulders better than regular vitamin C. Why? Because… 语法解析
13:42
Nearly all disease is cellular dysfunction inside the cell. I mean, yeah, you can have stuff going on outside the cell in the extracellular space, but the action is in the cytoplasm. And regular vitamin C that you either take orally or even intravenously is not encapsulated. 语法解析
14:03
And this is the biggie. You need to consume energy to get that vitamin C inside the cell. With the liposome, even though you're taking it orally, it gets absorbed, assimilated in the lymph and blood, and eventually reaches the cell and either passes through tiny pores in the cell or by reverse pyelocytosis merges into the cell wall. And meaning that you get the vitamin C without the consumption of energy. And if you think about it, 语法解析
14:33
Everything in biology is about energy. All right. That's electrons. Electrons is energy. Energy is electrons. And if you can get an energy providing substance like vitamin C, for example, from point A to point B without consuming energy in the process, then you're way ahead of the game. And that's what the liposomes do. 语法解析
14:55
So it can actually get drawn in and get into the cell wall either way without you having to consume extra energy. I mean, that really opened up my eyes. And I mean that because I've always wondered there are some things I thought I knew, Doc, about why you would use a different form. But I love the whole the whole fact about anions and cations. I like magnesium chloride. That is a great suggestion. And I'm going to start implementing it with my patients. 语法解析
15:20
Like literally tomorrow. Let me tell you how dramatic that is, too, with the magnesium example, because vitamin C and magnesium, those are the two biggies. There's a lot of other important stuff, but those are your two biggies. Vitamin C and magnesium with magnesium chloride, for example, in viral cultures, magnesium chloride knocks out the virus. In those same viral cultures, magnesium sulfate increases virus growth. 语法解析
15:47
So that all has to do with the anion, okay? That doesn't mean magnesium sulfate is bad for you. It's probably the one that's used intravenously most of all. But the point being is magnesium chloride as a monosupplement. You may or may not know that back in the 40s, Dr. Klenner, Frederick Klenner was able to cure 60 out of 60 cases of folio with a combination of injectable and oral vitamin C. 语法解析
16:17
Wow. How can you beat that? In three to five days, 60 out of 60 complete cures in the middle of a polio epidemic in, in Reachville, North Carolina. Well, it's amazing, but about the same time in France, they had a Dr. Nouveau who had about 15 cases of different stages of polio. And it still blows me away, but unless it's a lie, and that is using just polio, 语法解析
16:45
just oral magnesium chloride solution, he was able to cure 15 out of 15 at the same sort of time frame. So that's how potent good magnesium chloride is. And that's why it's always important to do a little due diligence, a little research on these different supplements and decide for yourself or their patient's body or whoever, is there a particular thing I want to target 语法解析
17:13
with the anion i mean i got the cat eye and i want to get as much magnesium in there as possible but what's the anion doing as well i don't think many of us would actually ever think about that aspect of it doc i i know that many people i i wouldn't think about it as like i should and i think the people that are listening to this are uh wondering about like the best products to take and so when 语法解析
17:37
Maybe I don't want to steer this in the wrong direction, Doc. You can bring it back to any way you want. No, take it where you want, sir. When we talk about supplements, 语法解析
17:46
And I want to get back to the oil area, but is that what makes difference like with your studies? Because there's so many different types of supplementation, like quality of supplementation. That's what we have to be really careful about. And I think that's why I love your product with my patients because they're clean and they test really well. Is that something that you had to really investigate even back when you first started this, like the quality of the supplement and how it was made? 语法解析
18:12
For the liposomes, yes. For other supplements, no. I mean, people say, what type of vitamin C or magnesium or this or methylene blue or whatever should I take? And I say, I don't know. I'm not in the manufacturing facility. I can't tell you whether they're being fraudulent or not and lying to you, okay? I mean, you get the scientific laboratory breakdowns with this and the other and 语法解析
18:39
I've used this for a long time. It had no problems, but I can't tell you that those other things aren't fine. That's the regular supplements. But for the liposome supplements, Livon just took off like a rocket 20 years ago. And all the greedy, unethical supplement manufacturers around the world said, we have to cash in on this. And so they just started making a lot of supplements and calling them liposomes. 语法解析
19:12
And it's been a travesty ever since. So that's why, even though I'm a consultant at the company, I continue to say, you know, buyer beware because they know supplements, they know liposomes are good, but they just don't know how to make them or they don't care to go to the effort to make them. With all the greedy, keep going, Doc. That was really, like when we had the greediness, like I love talking about this. So what I'm saying is, it was a testament to live on as to how good their product was because, 语法解析
19:43
I can't give you precise statistics, but I would guess for you that with most supplements, maybe 15% of people that start a new supplement continue to take it indefinitely. And they just give up after that because no big deal, didn't turn on lights for me or anything like that. But I bet you, I bet you 80, 85% of people that take the live on vitamin C never stop. 语法解析
20:13
Okay, that's how quickly you see a difference in your health because you're getting the vitamin C inside your cells. And that ultimately, when you're trying to prescribe protocols for treating anything, absolutely anything, your ultimate goal is to normalize intracellular vitamin C levels. If you're going to accomplish that, you have a normal cell and you have no disease in that cell at all. 语法解析
20:41
So that's always the goal. You always try to look, how do I normalize vitamin C inside that cell? And there's a lot of different things you can do that can augment not just the liposomes, but your magnesium form, insulin, hydrocortisone, cortisol, all of those things interact to help optimize vitamin C inside the cells. But that's the goal. That's the goal. You accomplish that in all the cells of a diseased tissue, there is no more disease. Wow. 语法解析
21:12
And you could put that like, and that's one thing, doc. I, when I first took this, um, I remember, cause I always had this, like this sinus congestion on my right side. And I was so impressed because everybody listening, when I took this, like it literally dried up my sinuses within like an hour and a half. Like I took the whole packet. Cause I'm a really, you know, I get really picky doc. I'm just like, I wonder if it really works really well. And it dried it up. And I could tell like, it literally, my mental clarity was higher. And, uh, 语法解析
21:41
I've never really had a vitamin C do that, truly. I think there's one of the things that I love about this product, and it's clean, it's like not sugary either. 语法解析
21:49
And when we talk about like the disease portion, I do want to steer down this. This is such a great product. And you're talking about like in the past when you had you worked with biological dentistry. I do want to hit a bit on that. Like when we talked about like all diseases, like all toxins create the disease with the mouth. Maybe it's a very general thing to ask, but the diseases start in the mouth. What makes the mouth healthy? 语法解析
22:12
so prone to get infections? I know we could say vitamin C levels, but is it just because we're just catching a lot of junk in our mouth or it just becomes the breeding ground? Well, as physiology and fate would have it, you have more microbes in your mouth than coming out your rear end. I mean, it's a teeming environment of microorganisms 语法解析
22:34
most of which are harmless, but when you put them in an anaerobic, oxygen-deprived environment, they become highly toxic. Then they transform anaerobic bacteria, the viruses, et cetera. We have microorganisms everywhere, all right? But when we change the microenvironment and encourage the growth of a particular pathogen, that's why things just sometimes seem to pop up out of nowhere. I mean, you have, for example… 语法解析
23:06
Someone sneezes in your face, you get a huge exposure to whatever, it's a virus, and you get a cold, you get the flu, whatever. That's one thing. That's a concentration volume thing. You just got so much at once, you couldn't deal with it. On the other hand, you have enough pathogens in your body that if you do something else that temporarily undermines the immune protection in your tissues, then that can spontaneously turn into an infection as well. 语法解析
23:35
In doing the research, I saw that somebody was administering magnesium by nebulization. And then I saw something else that showed nebulization with hydrogen peroxide. And I didn't know a lot about hydrogen peroxide, but I knew it killed pathogens pretty easy. I knew to a limited degree that it was a natural substance inside the body. So one day I nebulized hydrogen peroxide for 10 or 15 minutes. No problem. Very easy. Mm-hmm. 语法解析
24:05
And this is when I'm 65, 66 years old. The next day, I had the most perfectly normal, profoundly satisfying bowel movement of my life. I said, oh, my God, what happened here? What happened here? Obviously, something I did yesterday did something. And that's when I realized that I did my research and everything, that nearly everybody, unless they direct a specific therapy against it, 语法解析
24:39
has a chronic pathogen colonization in their nose and throat. Oh, yes. Not a cold, but a chronic pathogen colonization because when you do get a cold or you do get the flu, in addition to everything else, you get bugs that start sticking to your mucous membranes. And once they do, within 24 hours, they become coated with a biofilm and you can no longer get rid of it. Certainly not with regular antibiotics. 语法解析
25:09
Hydrogen peroxide, on the other hand, strips off the biofilm, kills the pathogen. And then I realized that it was the chronic swallowing of these pathogens and their metabolic bipods, all of which are toxic, all of which are oxidizing agents into the gut. So the gut was literally being poisoned 24-7. And then I did a little further research and I came across the fact that the intestinal cells, you have stem cells in the intestines. 语法解析
25:43
that literally replace the lining cells every three to five days. So if you stop poisoning your gut, within three to five days, you've got a new gut. Okay? And you no longer have leaky gut. You no longer have an abnormal microbiome. And because of that, I'm really putting a lot into a short story here. Because of that, you're talking about protocols. I advise everybody that I don't care what you're treating. It does not matter. 语法解析
26:16
An initial part of that treatment protocol should be peroxide nebulization because this screws up your gut. And everybody these days talks about how an abnormal microbiome in a leaky gut leaks out the pathogens and the toxins throughout your body and all your tissues, brain, heart, everywhere else. So you need to always give yourself the opportunity to normalize your gut. 语法解析
26:42
And I've had an enormous amount of feedback on this. I've had, I saved the emails. I just want to make my presentation. I'm not going to put words in this lady's mouth. I'm going to show you what she said. And I had reports that a young boy with Crohn's disease for many years, completely bedridden, started nebulizing the hydrogen peroxide within a couple months. He was completely normal. Another chronic diarrhea, same thing. A lady, 语法解析
27:14
wrote me and said her entire family, husband, sons, children, were in and out of the hospital intensive care unit with black mold poisoning. They had to move out of their house. They started nebulizing hydrogen peroxide. It all went away. You have a lot of serious problems that are easily remedied when you understand the principles of why you're sick. Doc, this is amazing because with nebulizing the hydrogen peroxide, 语法解析
27:43
I mean, I know many people are going to ask us, would you put like a food grade hydrogen peroxide, like the percentage, like there's like the strength of it. And like, would you go get a nebulizer like at Walgreens or something like that? You know, if you're going to do it on a regular basis, the purer, the better. But having said that, I mean, if you're starting to feel something coming on or this, that or the other, 语法解析
28:05
Don't wait for the food grade hydrogen peroxide to come in the mail. You go down to Walmart and get a 80 cent bottle, 80 cent pipe of 3% hydrogen peroxide and that doesn't trick it just fine. Wow, okay. It's really amazing that you mentioned these with hydrogen peroxide because when you talk about cleaning the brain, is this doc, why? Because I do Chinese medicine and I do some analysis with tongue and pulse and some biofeedback. 语法解析
28:35
For some patients that come in, they'll have quite a bit of strep in their throat. I know they have. And then we'll get some verification because they'll do like throat swabs because some regular testing will not show up, but we use some other labs that try to initiate, but they always have really bad gut lining and they have such bad, like, you know, like we've talked like 语法解析
28:54
ulcerative type issues and such and then when you clean up the throats this is what I noticed it's like they say my stomach gets better and I will test their pulse points and once I clean the sinuses out I need to try the hydro peroxy but we use herbs I will say oh that's why the stomach's getting better because you're allowing the body to replace those stomach cells that's that's what's happening fuck this is great every swallow is a new poisoning 语法解析
29:19
wow because because they're just re-inoculating every time they do it and that's why some people when they're always like what and they they're sucking it back in and they're just swallowing it over and over again now to make it a little worse unless you're just eating organic food all of the enrichment of foods we have these days is with things that are toxic they enrich with iron iron is highly toxic and 语法解析
29:51
I did a video on this 30 years ago, even though it's been going on since 1940. It's been going on for 80 years, but I did the video 30 years ago. When you take traditional cereals, grind them up and water, slosh them around, run a magnet over, you pull out metallic iron filings. Whoa. This is what the idiots in 1940 decided was good for us. They saw populations around the world, starvation populations, 语法解析
30:25
that weren't getting anything in their diet and had a high incidence of iron deficiency anemia. So they said, what do you have to make sure? Nobody gets iron deficiency anemia in America. And they start putting freaking metallic iron filings inside our food. All right. And it continues to this day. I have some people that know Mr. Kennedy, and I'm hoping to bring this to his attention because I think this could really kickstart 语法解析
30:56
the public's trust in him to discover how their food is being poisoned and even open the door more fully for him to talk about other different food additives that are highly toxic. Is that, Doc, this is amazing. So with the iron, is that why you start to see individuals that have like higher amounts of, you know, aluminum, mercury? Are they, is there… 语法解析
31:23
incidents where they were using some of those types of filings or some kind of like you know aluminum in foods and such because i heard one when that they found like aluminum high in certain amounts of flour like they would find a high aluminum is that what that was happening they're putting in the in the foods i don't know that they're putting that in the foods i know for a fact they're putting the iron into the foods after i made the video a lady from australia emailed me and said couldn't believe the doctor the video dr levy but 语法解析
31:52
I worked in a cereal factory, and when they put them in the oven and started finishing up with the cornflakes, every time they put in a cup full of metallic iron filings into the oven. Yet you have people, quote-unquote, scientists, quote-unquote, that will try to rationalize that taking a metallic form of something can still end up being good for you. I mean, we're… 语法解析
32:26
We're ruled by idiots, what can I say? That is crazy. When you have those… Metallic iron, iron itself is highly, highly toxic. It's an oxidizing agent. This is the other thing too. They put it in everything. They put it in baby formula. They put it in baby foods. It's not normal. 语法解析
32:49
for a baby to have colic, okay? But if you put, if you dump iron in the baby's food, what do you think is gonna happen? You're just having a reaction to the severe oxidation taking place in the gut. So many people doing this from day one, just like me at age 65, never know a normal bowel movement. They never know a normal bowel movement. It's that simple. - If you're not sleeping well, you are not alone. 语法解析
33:19
We can't control all the stress in our world, but the one thing that we can do is supplement to help our sleep. Magnesium is important for good sleep and for 600 other biochemical reactions in the body. Magnesium Breakthrough is the only product I've seen with all seven forms of magnesium in one bottle. So you get more bang for your buck. You'll get the top seven forms of magnesium to help you sleep better, manage your stress, and to strengthen your hormones all in one bottle. 语法解析
33:49
So if you're hunting for quality magnesium and great supplements, you can get discounts with my code, Dr. Motley. This exclusive deal is only for you, my audience. You won't find it on Amazon or not even the company website. You can only find it at buyoptimizers.com slash Dr. Motley and use the code Dr. Motley. That's all capital letters, D-R-M-O-T-L-E-Y. 语法解析
34:14
This company is best in class. And if for some reason you feel differently, you can get a full refund on your supplements up to one year after your purchase. No questions asked. Again, go to buyoptimizers.com slash Dr. Motley and use the code Dr. Motley. And these are such good, I mean, bombs in my life, Doc. I mean, that you're bringing this. This is so good. I mean, I could go, want to go different directions. I mean, there's so much we can talk about. 语法解析
34:43
Okay, so with the toxins, 语法解析
34:45
And we have, like, you could have, like, the iron that you found in foods. Like, you get all these things that can oxidize or rust our insides out. Yeah, you rust your insides. You're rusting your insides. That's what I'm taking from what you're saying. Like, you're basically rusting your insides out. With, like, we have the lipospheric glutathione. I really love the lipospheric glutathione. Is when we're taking, like, the vitamin C, the glutathione, when you're taking some vitamin D, are those combinations… 语法解析
35:13
with the oxidation, do you think vitamin C is like, do you have a little combo yourself like you think with the lipospheric that you would love to use to help with that oxidizing, that rusting in the internal? Like with every patient, you're like, you need to take this. My main combination is the vitamin C and the magnesium. I have what I call the super eight. Vitamin C in the best form possible, magnesium in the best form possible, vitamin D3, 语法解析
35:41
and vitamin K2. All four of those work to normalize calcium levels inside your cells. Now, elevated calcium levels are the characteristic of every sick cell in your body. 语法解析
35:55
Any cell that is sick has increased oxidative stress to that increased calcium levels. And all four of these agents, especially magnesium. This is why magnesium is so therapeutic. Magnesium is a direct calcium channel blocker that works to bring calcium levels down inside your cell. And then to top it off, these four things that all work to. 语法解析
36:18
We all work to bring calcium levels down. Each one independently, independently decreases all-cause mortality. The more you supplement, the less likely you are to die from anything. All right. So that's the first four. The second four, what else is, I guess you could say, just as important as optimizing vitamin C inside your cells? 语法解析
36:44
is optimizing ATP production in your mitochondria. That's your primary energy-delivering molecule, ATP. What you have inside the mitochondria is the electron transport chain. It goes from NAD to FAD to coenzyme Q10 to cytochrome B10. 语法解析
37:06
C oxidase, all right? All the electrons from the Krebs cycle eventually reach that electron transport chain and go through that to generate large amounts of ATP. So like any other chemical reaction, the more you supply good substrates, the more you stimulate and keep the reaction going, all right? So if you have anything going in a sequence and you run really short on one substrate, you don't shut down or you slow down the whole process, right? 语法解析
37:36
The other four supplements are designed to optimally stimulate the electron transport chain. The first one is niacin or niacinamide. I prefer niacinamide because too many people get the niacin flush and they'll just quit. The niacinamide, you take it, it's the direct precursor to NAD. You hear a lot about supplementing NAD. That's fine and good, but it's inefficient and very… 语法解析
38:04
pricey way to go about it. Nothing wrong with taking NAD, but it's inefficient and pricey. Take the niacinamide, you make all the NAD you need. Then the next stage, flavonab, FAD, is fed by vitamin B2, which is phylloflate. You say, well, how much? Well, the niacinamide, at least 500 milligrams, but guess what? In the 1960s and 1970s, they had a physician who would routinely cure schizophrenia. 语法解析
38:36
by giving them six grams of niacinamide a day. Six grams? Six grams a day, okay? And it would reverse chronic schizophrenia completely. All right? That's how important these elements are to energy production inside your brain. Now, the vitamin B2, for example, if you take a multivitamin, multimineral, oh, I take vitamin B2, it's in my B complex, you get two or three or four milligrams. Well… 语法解析
39:05
you need 400 a day. So you take a capsule of 400 milligrams of B2 a day. Number three is coenzyme Q10. Lots of people realize that Q10 is good for you. They don't completely understand why, but they know it's a good supplement. There, it's a matter of dose. You can get good effect 语法解析
39:26
With the lower doses on all of these, but you can get so much more good effect when you really bump up the dosage rate. So a lot of people that do take coenzyme Q10 will take one or 200 milligrams a day. You should really push it to six, seven, 800 to a thousand milligrams a day of coenzyme Q10. Wow. And then finally, there's the last stage, which is fed imethylene blue. 语法解析
39:52
Methylene blue comes in and directly donates an electron at the end of the electron transport chain, massively upregulating ATP production without even having to undergo the mandatory oxidative physiological stress of going through the first three stages. When you do all of these together, this first four for the calcium, the second four for the ATP production, and 语法解析
40:19
everybody gets better. I'm not saying everybody cures whatever disease they have, but everybody gets better. Everybody feels better. And I have seen crazy cures on things that I wouldn't have had a cure for otherwise. A couple cases of sudden deafness just hit them harder with this protocol. We can sue their hearing again. So amazing. So it's it's amazing. 语法解析
40:47
I mean, and when you have these protocols to me, I like protocols. And I think everybody listening does to like to like have a simplistic protocol and have explanations, because when we're talking about the, you know, many people are talking about NAD and FAD. And I love the research you've done, because in the past. 语法解析
41:07
I remember one of my friends who does some of my genetic labs and they were saying, “You have a really big deficiency of B2.” And this was a while back when I had really bad Lyme infections and parasite infections. And when they started me on the B2 and the B3, the niacinamide, I mean, like you said, I cannot believe the amount of energy my legs got. And people think that's just, “Oh, your legs are like…” No, I had such bad infection, it was hard for me to stand up treating people. 语法解析
41:35
And when I started to start taking certain types of bees, it made the most profound changes. So that's why I like the research on Live On and what's the research in your books. With the people who just teach me so much, we got to have you on again. One thing, though, that I really want to touch on, like you're talking about turning on the mitochondria, turning on energy for people who have chronic fatigue. 语法解析
41:56
One of the things I really wanted to touch on was the importance of vitamin C and the heart, because is there a correlation like with heart infections, heart disease, you being a cardiologist, infections coming from the mouth, going into the heart and vitamin C and these protocols helping that? Because there's so many people out there that come in, Doc, that have, I have heart palpitations. I have tachycardia. I've got a weak chest. I got tightness. Can you touch a bit on that? 语法解析
42:26
100% on that. All coronary artery disease that will eventually result in a heart attack comes from arterial wall scurvy. And that scurvy is caused by a seeding of pathogens in the coronary arterial wall that come from the mouth. That's it. They actually have a study where they did 38… 语法解析
42:50
angiograms on 38 patients with known chronic coronary artery disease. Okay. And they did something called anathorectomy where they go in and scrape the plaque out, you know, just physically, mechanically open it up. And in all 38 patients, they examined this plaque and they found over 50 different oral pathogens inside those plaques. 语法解析
43:14
And we're talking about bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, the whole ball of wax. And of course, people without coronary disease had no pathogens anywhere. Now, where does the vitamin C come into play? Well, when these pathogens, you chew and you release these pathogens and toxins 24-7 into the bloodstream, into lymphatic circulation, and they… 语法解析
43:39
They accumulate in the coronary arterial wall because that's the first place where you go from venous to arterial pressure and you mechanically blast them into the wall. Okay, so you just go low pressure, low pressure, low pressure, left atrium, low pressure, into the left atrial, boom, high pressure, hard into the arterial wall. That's where they seed. Now, once they do that, 语法解析
44:08
Something else that's not unknown is cardiologists will tell you, yes, inflammation causes all coronary disease, but they're not interested in wondering why coronary arteries are suddenly becoming inflamed. 语法解析
44:23
I mean, you got to take another layer of the onion down. And the thing is, is all inflammation is vitamin C deficiency. All vitamin C deficiency is inflammation. They describe the same physiological state. If you have very low vitamin C, that area is inflamed. If that area is inflamed, you have very low vitamin C. So the pathogens come in, they grow in the arterial wall. 语法解析
44:50
It's all pro-oxidant. They consume all the vitamin C. And then you end up with an inflamed blood vessel. And then that causes an acute immune response. In the acute immune response, response to that inflammation, guess what the first immune cell is that comes to the immune response? The monocyte. The cell with the highest concentration of vitamin C in the body. 语法解析
45:17
So you're literally bringing the immune system, a delivery system for vitamin C there. I'm going to tell you right now, make a broad general statement here. The entire role of the immune system is to restore vitamin C levels to normal where they're deficient. That's what the immune system does. And everything else is tangential. Okay. Now… 语法解析
45:44
If that happened, but you didn't continue bugs in the artery, that would resolve it. But it's not because you don't resolve the mouth. So it continues. And so the acute response becomes chronic. And the chronic response is what causes the atherosclerosis because the body has compensatory mechanisms. Now, most docs know that you need vitamin C for strong collagen, intense cell strength, connective tissue. 语法解析
46:13
Well, when you eliminate all the vitamin C in the arterial wall, the wall becomes weak. All right. And what does a weak wall do? A weak wall sets you up for gradual dilation and rupture, aneurysm rupture. Well, the body is going to do everything it can to keep from dying. So what does the body do to strengthen the arterial wall in the absence of new vitamin C? Well, the only thing it can do is make the wall thicker. 语法解析
46:43
And that's what the atherosclerotic plaque is. It's thickening the blood vessel wall to make it less prone to rupture. And obviously when it grows big enough, it blocks off and you have the heart attack. Wow. Doc, this, I'm not kidding. I'm going to ask Christy, my producer, we got to have you back on because I like talking to you. Dr. Lee, you got that. 语法解析
47:06
I'm a mechanical person. I love when you talked about high pressure, thickening the arteries. This is what the listeners want to hear is like, why does it actually happen? Like we're not described or told this in our normal, you know, medical visits. And I mean, that alone tells us like the need for vitamin C in this form of like the lipospheric vitamin C. And again, it, to me, it's just, you would think that in our culture that vitamin, 语法解析
47:37
something as quote simple as vitamin C could help us with so many things, but we've forgotten how important it is. Like we don't see that every day. Like when we go to a doctor's visit, right doc? It's like, it's not told us we should take vitamin C. Well, no, you're thinking like a doctor who gives a day. Most doctors don't. 语法解析
47:55
All right. Then I say that because they willfully deny patients vitamin C or the intensive care unit when their families are begging for it. So when that patient dies, they deserve to go to jail. So I've got no love lost for most patients. 语法解析
48:12
traditional physicians. And the last thing they want is something that's going to completely disrupt their practice and the way they do it, as well as undermine the financial benefits. Vitamin C properly utilized, I'm going to tell you, would eliminate the need for fully 70% of all prescription medicines. 语法解析
48:34
but we know that's not going to happen, right? It's not going to happen, Doc. I mean, I'll just say that, like, you're the man. You know these things, but they wouldn't allow that to happen at all. We just need to keep nipping in on the fridge. Nipping in on the fridge. Yeah, that's right. And… 语法解析
48:50
I want everybody out there who is listening with these bombs of knowledge and truth that when we look into using the lipospheric Livon has great products. I mean, I love not only the magnesium, I love the acetylcarnitine. And I think that would be a really good podcast to do as well, Doc. If you came back, we talked about more even about energy production. I really love the 语法解析
49:14
to talk about the oral issues with the mouth. And I know many people out there when asking, I know your time's precious. I know by the way, we had some hangups, but I was going to ask you, with taking the, like the, you have great B complex and the alpha lipoic acid, I can't brag about it enough. I literally have seen individuals with alpha lipoic acid reduced in my world, like the heart signals in Chinese medicine, 语法解析
49:38
amazing results when you put a little l-carnitine and the alpha lipoic acid together. But some people out there will ask though too, when we start putting the vitamin C in, you use the hydrogen peroxide. To start on the mouth, do you suggest anything like, does that take care of most of the microbes? I know like that's a really random broad question, but would you tell people to do something else to the gums? 语法解析
50:02
Or do you think the hydrogen peroxide gargling with it or doing a mouth rinse? Is there anything else they could do? - No, that's just gonna take care of mucous membranes, maybe the tongue. It's not gonna take care of an infected teeth or deeply infected gums. Now, water picking with water and some hydrogen peroxide can resolve even advanced gum disease. And it's only advanced gum disease that really causes teeth to end up getting infected. 语法解析
50:29
And when you do that early enough, you can prevent the infectious processes from advancing. But no, that's good for the chronic path to colonization, which you seem to realize is fed by other chronic infections in your mouth that never get obliterated. That's why you resolve that, and you and your bowels do better for colonization. 语法解析
50:55
days to weeks to months and then they deteriorate again, well, you may not have had a cold or a flu in the meantime, but you've recolonized the chronic pathogen colonization from the chronic infections in your mouth that you've never been able to resolve. Okay, this is… 语法解析
51:12
Dr. Lee, this has been really, really good. I want to go again at some point, if we can coordinate it. I just do want to go deeper because I love that you're a cardiologist and you know all about blood vessels because to me, Let me give you something else before we go. Yeah, yeah. I love this. Okay. Because I wrote a book on magnesium and I'm only now really beginning to understand it. But when we're talking about arrhythmias, when we're talking about sudden death from persistent spike protein, all these other things, 语法解析
51:46
That will never happen unless you have a magnesium deficiency inside your cells. You cannot generate an extra beat if the magnesium inside your mitochondria is normal. Okay, that's number one. Number two is, how do you do that? Well, I'll tell you that in a moment, but the point is the way you know the tests you need to do. 语法解析
52:12
Not blood magnesium, not red blood cell magnesium, not tissue specimens. The way you know you have a normal or acceptably normal intracellular magnesium level is by having a completely normal Holter monitor test. You measure all the beats and you have no extra beats at all. 语法解析
52:34
you're doing good. On the other hand, when you start having extra beats, you're magnesium deficiency deficient and you're a setup for other arrhythmias. And if there's a question of persistent spike protein, potentially fatal arrhythmias. So it's kind of like the heart is the sentinel organ for magnesium deficiency by virtue of the effect on arrhythmias. And you'll never… 语法解析
53:01
Like, for example, we know thousands, thousands, thousands of soccer players in Europe have dropped dead on the field over the past four years. Okay. Well, what are two things soccer players do that really nobody else does to the same degree? These are all young guys. Well, in addition, of course, to getting the vaccinations and a lot of them having circulating spike protein ready to aggravate the heart, not cause arrhythmia, aggravate it, is 语法解析
53:32
What do they do more than anybody else? They sweat and sweat and sweat and sweat and sweat. You waste an enormous amount of magnesium when you sweat. What else do they never do? Well, they're young, healthy dudes with few exceptions. None of them supplement anything. So you're continuing to waste magnesium. You're not taking any magnesium supplementation. So all of them are primed for arrhythmias. And then when you add to that pool, the 语法解析
54:01
specificity of the spike protein for the conduction cells in the heart then you have people dropping dead this is fantastic doc this is information um because when you talk about the people that have gotten sick and then dropped dead uh side note when you talk about magnesium i'm just saying personal experience i remember when i had horrible lime lime levels uh in the body i 语法解析
54:33
i remember i keep getting the the heartbeats that were really so hard like it would almost be like irregular heartbeats and i thought it was just me getting older but it's amazing you say that because when i started doing a um i did a powder magnesium and i started doing heavy amounts of that and then my heart started feeling like stronger like i remember that feeling in my heart like it actually felt like i had charge in my heart i was like like i hadn't had in so long and i can't imagine like you say the athletes like they hadn't supplemented and 语法解析
55:00
I can't recommend enough. The one thing that I really love, Doc, you're right. The importance of the information behind it, but the packets, you know, people will always say like, oh, well, how do I know how it tastes? To me, I know it could have a good taste or bad taste. It doesn't bother me. You could put it in juice, couldn't you? Like you put in some, like if you want to. Yeah, spin it up and mix it up and drink it down. I take it not straight. Yeah. 语法解析
55:26
Doc, this has been so, I mean, eye-opening and very informative. And please come back on for me. And I really appreciate it. And I want everybody out there to follow you and to see your information and to get to your videos. Can you tell them where they can go on the net or where they can go on social media to watch your videos? Well, a large number of the videos are on YouTube. You just go to YouTube and just type in my name. You'll see YouTube. 语法解析
55:54
30, 40, 50 or more videos. So those are all there. All my articles are on my website, tomlevymd.com. Okay. And I have no problem with people sending me emails as long as they understand I'm not going, I can't and will not and do not do consultations. 语法解析
56:15
but I can give you some information. A lot of times you might have a situation where I can point you in a certain direction, maybe refer you to somebody or tell you, I'm sorry, I can't help you, but I don't hide my email. And that's T-E-L-E-D-M-D at yahoo.com. Okay, everyone, I want you to please check out 语法解析
56:37
dr levy's information and i want you to you know if you love this information which i do i just i nerd out on this things doc um please send us a comment uh like and subscribe but we're gonna have you back on because i really love the the mechanistic uh viewpoints you have which makes so much sense to me so guys uh dr levy thanks so much i'm not kidding thank you so much for having being on here today with us and guys we'll have him back on so don't worry we're gonna ask him more information check out his videos 语法解析
57:06
And until next time, everyone, just let us know if you have anybody that can use this information for this podcast to them. But let us know if you enjoyed it. Let us know if this is the kind of information you want. I appreciate it from all of us here at the Ancient Health Podcast. Take it easy. Thank you, Dr. Levy. I appreciate it. Take care. Enjoyed it. 语法解析
57:24
Before we wrap up, please remember that the information shared in this podcast is for educational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing, or other professional healthcare services, including the giving of medical advice. No doctor patient relationship is formed through this podcast and the use of information here or materials linked from this podcast is at your own risk. The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. 语法解析
57:51
Always consult with your health care provider before making any changes to your health regimen and do not disregard or delay seeking medical advice for any condition you may have. Our content may include sponsorship and affiliate links to which we earn a small commission on sales made through those links. 语法解析
58:09
Thank you for joining us today on the Ancient Health Podcast. We hope you've gained valuable insights into the harmony between Eastern and Western medicine. If you've enjoyed today's episode, be sure to subscribe, share, and leave us a review. 语法解析
58:22
Remember, true health is about balance, mind, body, and spirit. So stay tuned for more episodes where we continue to explore how ancient wisdom and modern science can work together to help you thrive. Here's to your health, balance, and well-being. I'm Dr. Chris Motley, and I look forward to our next episode together. 语法解析
Edit:2025.04.09