Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:16):
It's seven five here at fifty five Karrosite talk station
in a very very happy Friday to you for me
Brian Thomas and from Insidia, George Brennaman Keith Tennenfeld, it
is time to Restore Wellness for a full hour of
power with Keith and George talking about variety different medical
or health related topics. They're all about that and check
out restore wellness dot org. Got lots of links there,
(00:39):
helpful hens, diet exercise takeaways, things you should look out for,
things that you shouldn't can put in your body, including
maybe tail and all. Welcome back, guys, It's great to
have you.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
Thanks, welcome to Friday.
Speaker 1 (00:50):
And Keith's nurse practitioners with a business called Root Cause,
which is in Harrison and George Brenneman's just taking a keen.
You can see Restore Liberty dot us George's political site.
But you stumbled upon health and wellness in your own private,
personal right, he decided to make it a cause for
you and everybody else.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
It started fourth of July week last year and the
book was lies I taught in medical school. And on
Wednesday we recorded a podcast with the author, doctor Robert Lovekin.
Speaker 2 (01:19):
So the book that kicked it all off for me.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
And this guy is about his mainstream doc as you
can get U c l A radiologists.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
And he goes through the story.
Speaker 3 (01:30):
Yeah, very well, very well funded by pharma and and
you know Nih and all those guys. And then he
got sick. You know, he had hypertension, he had some
liver issue his high class probably the who metabology diabetes.
And he started digging into it and wrote this book
with what he figured out. And the interview will be
up there in its finished form later today.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
Great, but it was. It was fun talking to him,
It really was.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
I bet Restore Wellness dot organs where you find that,
I see the mention of the podcast right there on
the top at your the most recent entry on your website.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
Well that's good.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
And obviously throughout the week they're doing this kind of
thing and regularly recheck it. Restore Wellness dot org. Make
sure you stay on top of things. So we got
you for a full hour. And if you don't mind,
let's start with talanol, because there's all these crazy reports
about pregnant women. After Donald Trump says you might want
to consider the downside risks of taking talanold when you're pregnant,
there may be some connection with autism. That's what they're
trying to find or link to. We find out after
(02:25):
these crazy women who are popping talanol in defiance of
Donald Trump's comments while they're pregnant. They're all over the internet.
It seems crazy, But talano has always come with a risk,
and we've known about the liver damage risk for a
long time.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
It's the one pain reliever that you can get over
the counter that has a problem if you take weight
too much and it's lower than like if you would
eat a bottle of aspirin, I'm sure you'd feel bad,
but thailand all actually affects the liver right exactly.
Speaker 4 (02:57):
You know, tilanol, motrin, and aspirin, those are your common
over the counter pain medications. A long time ago, they
found that aspurn causes rickets, so they avoided aspirin when
you're pregnant. Motren has always been an off label. You
can't use it when you're pregnant just because of the
bleeding risk. And then now you have talanol sitting there
and it's on the market now saying hey, they can
cause autism. John Hopkins and Mount SINAI did studies that
(03:19):
showed that there's probably a link to ADHD and autism
in the offspring of mothers who used talanol, and that's
kind of where this is all coming out of. There's
a Sweden study that shows something different, shows the opposite.
But I do think it's a great opportunity to take
one of these most commonly used medications and review them.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
You know, we have a lot of issues coming down
py exactly. It's funny they went back.
Speaker 1 (03:39):
Tyland apparently had its own like Twitter feed back in
the day. You know, they haven't posted since twenty seventeen
or twenty twenty one or something, but that stuff still
out there. Tilandill even posted something to the effective we've
never studied it on pregnant women's you might want to
think about that. And of course, you know, my wife
was of the mind and I think I've read this before.
Independent of my wife's comments, although she is a nurse
(03:59):
or was.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
That uh.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
Oh lost I lost my train, I will say, once
a nurse, always a nurse, So yeah, that's true, mister
nurse practitioner felt. But the comment that was made is
there could be a risk. They didn't say definitively right.
But you know, when you're considering your health as like, well,
you know there is a higher percentage risk of filling
(04:25):
the blank. Known studies like if you drink alcohol, that
you're gonna have a higher risk of this happening. At
least that's information you can bake into the cake. If
you're pregnant, I would think you're going to take a
keen interest in your health and what you put in
your body, because it's going to be put into the
body of your infant or your your But you were
talking about TDS side of it, the Trump derangement to
say that, you know, maybe I don't agree that there's
(04:46):
a risk or I don't think there's a high risk,
but to intentionally take that risk just because you hate
a politician, Yeah, that's that's bizarre, especially while you're pregnant.
Speaker 4 (04:55):
She did this, you know, this alleged person did this
while she was pregnant, and now she's you know, in demise.
And you know, if there's uh motrin will kill your kidneys.
There's a study that shows that you know, if you
take motor at a certain rate, your kidney function will decline.
At this point in time, I mean that's how bad
motrin can be up for your kidneys. Tilenol is the
same way, and I have had multiple patients when I
(05:15):
was working in the ICU. Tilent All overdose is whether
it be intentional or accidental, and that is no way
to die. That is the most one of the most
miserable ways to die is a liver failure. So stop
drinking two, I guess.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
But well, yeah, and I remembered it FDA approval that
talent Al would not be approved for over the counter
prescriptions if it went through a review process today. Interesting,
that's interesting. That was the comment that she had made.
It would be it would you have to be prescribed. Wow,
that's not whether that's true or not. Again, I have
actually read that, and I just can't remember what source
(05:48):
it is. I mean a lot of information I've read
over the years. I forget where I read it. But
she did chime in on that point the other day.
Speaker 4 (05:53):
And for the for the layman people out there, a
set of metaphine is also talent al. Some people will
be like, well, what's wrong with the set of metaphine?
And that is talent all just a generic version, just
like ibuprofen is the generic version of motrin. They are
the same drug instead of instead of metaphine and talent al.
So when you're looking at labels, make sure that you're
aware of what you're getting.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
All right, So you just use the information make an
informed decision risk analysis. You know, I am in so
much pain that I'm going to take the risk with
a toil and all right, a single talent, all to
see if it helps me with my pain. But I
would think that based upon the information that's come out
that it does perhaps carry a risk that you better
(06:32):
be in a lot of pain, so much so that
you want to take the risk.
Speaker 3 (06:35):
Again, if you're pregnant, if you're you want to take
the risk that we're talked to your liver. But then
also whatever it does to the baby, I mean, if
it is affecting the baby's brain functionality with ADHD, what's
it doing to the baby's liver. I mean, they have
no way to study that now, But you have to
think cause and effect on this. So if we know
for a fact that too much a set of benefit
attacks the liver. A baby's kind of small and you're
(06:59):
you're pumping it through the same blood system, you might
want to think twice.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
You know, it's an excellent point. I mean, we know.
I mean, there's nobody arguing that it doesn't impact your liver. Right,
This isn't a bonus contention. I mean you think that
this is like talking about defunding Social Security or something
like a third trail of policy.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
Oh my god, he said, maybe we should consider the
risk of taking town. But they hadn't done any research
along these lines before, had they. I mean, or they're
going back to the look they intentionally did not do
research on pregnant women, and or just look at the
researchers who's funding that research back in the day and
currently today.
Speaker 2 (07:30):
You know where's that coming from?
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Okay, and let me ask you a specific question on
studying medications and clinical trials on pregnant women. Can they
is that even ethical? Because the child, of course, can't
give some consent. I can see someone signing up for it.
We're going to pay you a fifteen hundred dollars if
you participate in this clinical trial, and they go over
the risk of being in the clinical trial. You can
weigh the benefit of getting paid versus the risks that
(07:54):
they've identified for you. But can you enter into a
clinical trial if you're pregnant. I don't know the answer
that question.
Speaker 4 (08:00):
There sometimes is it's it's kind of a retrograde or
retrospective study where they taken they ask questions to pregnant people,
did you ever do this? And if so, can we
study this outcome in you? So it's not something that
they intentionally gave to the pregnant lady.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
It's more of a.
Speaker 3 (08:13):
Retrospect, which is what they've done with the Thailand All studies.
None of them were they gave them. They were asking
the pregnant women, did you take take it? Yeah, And
one of the issues I saw in the reports was
people under report the fact that they've taken Thailand all.
So it may actually be higher.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
I don't know, you know, honestly, I can't remember the
last time I took any kind of the motor SNA
metfan anything. I can't remember. I'm sure I had, but
I don't ask me definitively, I couldn't remember. So that
the shaky quality of the data I think is legitimate. Well,
and that's true, but something is raising the rates.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
I mean.
Speaker 3 (08:45):
The other question is what's going on with vaccines and
you talk about not testing pregnant women for Thailand. All
the vaccines haven't been tested on anybody for anything, but
they're tested against other vaccines, not against placebos.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
And there's some you know obgens that are pushing vaccines
during pregnancy just so that you don't have complications during
your pregnancy. So they're getting you know, they're pregnant and
getting vaccine. So that's that's another sketch. The other thing
too that's going on is that when you're pregnant, the
liability issues that happen around around pregnancy is out of
the roof. That's why a lot of OB docs have
literally stopped their practice because malpractice is too expensive and crazy.
(09:21):
You can imagine why even pharmaceutical companies aren't going to
nearly touch them when it comes to medications. However, you know,
the same thing happened with the COVID vaccine, and look
look how that turned out. Where they stopped in COVID vaccine,
they stopped animal studies because animals were dying, and then
they gave it to humans, okay.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
And then they have a ton of data. And I've
talked to some of the researchers who have problems with
the COVID nineteen vaccine because of the complications of pregnancy,
losing babies, the menstrual cycle interruptions. I mean a lot
of women lost their babies because of the COVID nineteen vaccine.
At least that's what I've been told. Arch shows can't
get pregnant. I mean it's having a huge hormonal effect
(10:03):
on people. Again, these are studies that are out there
now because they forced it on the entire population. But
the fact that they didn't look at any of this
before it it's just crazy. Who's going to come out
and say sorry? You know who's going to come out
and say sorry?
Speaker 2 (10:17):
A good one. We'll pause on that note.
Speaker 1 (10:19):
George brunvand Keith Tennefeld in studio Restore Wellness dot organs
where you find him. And I want to mention foreign
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Speaker 2 (11:35):
Six fifty five KRC I heard I'm still getting.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Seven nineteen if about care see you talk Station Brian
Thomas with Keith Tennefeld of root cause of their Harrison's
nurse practitioner looking after folk's health is what he does
for a living in of course, George Brenneman, he dabbles
in health and he's created this site restore wellness dot org.
We you can get some great health related in from
We were talking about covidinating vaccines that generally speaking, but
let's put it over to Florida. There are vaccine mandates
(12:07):
and then there are vaccine options. So because something is
taken off of a mandated schedule doesn't mean that that
vaccine is not available to you if you and your
physician decide it's in the best interest of your child
or yourself, for example, to get a vaccine right, right,
And the whole thing in Florida was they made them
all optional, which again the Left is now taking that
(12:29):
and saying you're telling kids they can't have vaccines.
Speaker 2 (12:32):
No, no, no, no, they said the parent's got to take a
look at it.
Speaker 3 (12:35):
That's the leap that really irks me well, and in
the fact that some of these like the hepatitis B
that you can only get sexually transmitted.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
Why are we giving that to infants? Please? I that's
a great question.
Speaker 3 (12:47):
And the side effects of all the vaccines, I think
is still an open question, but at least somebody's looking
at it now.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
And the fact cause there may be side effects. Question
is is your baby likely to get hepatitis B? Answer
is clearly no. So if there may be complications related
to the vaccine, then why would you go down that
road If there's no risk even associated with not getting
it right?
Speaker 4 (13:16):
Again, it's a normal that's common sense, right. I don't
understand why why this isn't you know, common knowledge for some.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Of these people, I don't know actually, And how it
got on the list in the first place. It makes
no sense.
Speaker 3 (13:25):
I think they're saying, well, the mom might have it,
not know, Well, shoot tester before you inject the baby.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
There's thousands of things we test for in pregnancy.
Speaker 3 (13:33):
Yeah, it's it's crazy, but COVID opened the door for
everybody because that first of all, they called it a vaccine,
and then suddenly it's oh, not only can you get
the disease, you can give it to somebody else, and oh,
by the way, if you get five boosters, the odds
are pretty high you're going to have that disease all
the time.
Speaker 2 (13:48):
So I mean it sort of opened the door to
maybe we.
Speaker 3 (13:51):
Want to look a little harder on whether or not
all of these mandatory vaccines are required. And I know
when RFK started going after the measles vaccine, my wife
and I had the same reaction. The whole every kid
in the family got measles at the same time. Y'all
stayed home from school for a week and then it's done.
What they had chicken pox. It was like a right
of childhood passage. You got chicken pox, and basically the
(14:14):
parents would put everybody in the same roube.
Speaker 4 (14:16):
So they all have to go through it once. And
the question is was chicken pox a bio weapon in
the first place? If you want to do some conspiracy theory, now,
let's let's talk about with Florida. I think what was
really unique.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
A lousy bio weapons since you get over it a
couple of days, so.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
You never know the long term effects.
Speaker 4 (14:31):
But anyway, maybe that explains all the problems, uh jingles
the other here you go.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
There, it's a good one.
Speaker 4 (14:37):
Florida did a really clever thing that, if you think
about it, is they said, you know, my choice, my body.
And where do you hear that from right? You know
you hear that on the left. And so everybody's wait
a minute, they have a point there, and it's true
because if you're out there, you know, making people do
things against their will and their body, then that's going
to go against the left. And then at the same time,
I think parents should have the right to say, hey,
(14:58):
my children don't need to be injeck with this. Now,
this goes also covers, by the way, healthcare people, college kids,
and children they're school age kids. So if you're a
healthcare worker in Florida and let's say you have an
autoimmune disease and they're pushing a flu vaccine and you wonder,
maybe did I get the autoimmune disease from the previous
flu vaccines. I've seen people in my own clinic where
(15:20):
they are coming at me scared that they're you know,
that their hospital institution is making them get a vaccine
because they have a wicked immune system that's causing their
thyroid to act crazy. And I'm like, well, we got
to we gotta work on this potential thyroid or the
potential vaccine injury issue. So let's pause on these vaccines
for you and I can give them with reasonable information
(15:42):
and research behind it, a vaccine exemption. Now, I do
see in Florida that they're not necessarily making it like
mandated that you don't get them. It gives you that choice, right,
what a great way that And I think Ohio is
also supporting. There's there's a company or in Ohio, Ohio
and for Medical Freedom the supporting Florida's decision in this. Now,
(16:05):
I don't think it's law yet in Florida. I think
they're still going to go to They got to go
through the legal process.
Speaker 3 (16:09):
But you know, during COVID, it was you know, get
the vaccine because you're going to help stop the spread. Well,
that only works if the vaccine prevents the spread. Well
and then but again they forced it on children when
there isn't a single child, There isn't anybody under the
age of fifty that died from COVID unless they had
you know, four other complicating cold morbid conditions.
Speaker 1 (16:29):
Was and should have been the only justification for the
vaccine for those that otherwise are not at risk. A
young person was not going to end up in the
hospital contracting COVID. I mean so many people didn't even
know they had COVID. They went through it. Some people
experienced symptoms, but they're over it. They got natural immunity
a little bit. Now, if they weren't at any risk
of death hospitalization. If you were co morbid, regardless of age,
(16:53):
you know, maybe obese, maybe you suffering from some other
medical condition, then get the get the damn vaccine. Maybe
it'll help you out, but maybe it's yeah, I've got
to get it to protect someone else. Well, then you
get the vaccine.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
There was no science behind that, never was just like
the masks, but no signs behind that. I only bring
that up in context of like, well, your kid's gonna
get measles and spread it. It's like, well, if you're
worried about having spread the spread of measles, then go
ahead and get the measles vaccine. Right.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (17:16):
My question is if you had a choice to say
measles now, which is just a rash much like chicken pox,
that you go through and get it and go overcome it.
And there's a rare case with any virus that some
people can die or when you're fifty and sixty, you
now have diabetes, high cholesterol, heart disease, all because of
a potential vaccine that you received when you were a child. Well,
(17:36):
and we forget about the long term effects of certain
things like this.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
Like I said, they haven't come out and said certain
vaccines are causing certain I was just going to say,
that's not been definitively proven, but they're looking into it.
Speaker 2 (17:47):
It is a possibility.
Speaker 3 (17:49):
But if you look at the fact Amish community where
they have none they're talking about, Yeah, they don't have Alzheimer's,
they don't have mental illness, they don't have any kind
of autism ADHD, None of that existed that populay say.
Speaker 1 (18:02):
But in a controlled group, you would look at what
is their diet consists of? Do they drink alcohol, do.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
They that more important vaccine.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
All of those things could be determinative of why the
Amish community apparently are the healthiest people out there. You know,
be Amish and live for nine hundred years or something.
Seven twenty five more with Keith and George Restore Wellness
dot Org. It's seven twenty six right now with the
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Speaker 1 (19:22):
If fIF you FI have KRCD talk Station Happy Friday
Talking health with George Running and Keith Tennefeld at the
stadium Restore Welness dot Org. Uh, you know we have
the pivoting off a talent all in the the the
the the vaccine discussions, and it is I guess it's
a shot anyway. I keep reading more and more about azepic,
and I saw it was on your list. This is
the started out as a diabetes drug, right, help control diabetes,
(19:45):
and then they stumbled upon the rear It's like viagra.
They was a hard medication. They realized, oh my god,
this has an interesting side effect. Let's sell it. For
that reason, we a Zempic has become this magic pill.
It's their magic cure for weight loss. And it worked.
I know several people who have been using ozembic for
a while and damned if it doesn't work.
Speaker 2 (20:05):
Well.
Speaker 3 (20:06):
It was really interesting in the discussion Wednesday with doctor Lufkin,
he came out pretty much in favor of it, which
sort of surprised me. It's so new and I don't
know how much has been studied. But he made a
point about some of the mental side effects, about lowering
addiction tendencies, and he says that, you know, you lose
this appetite and suddenly you're looking at salads as maybe
(20:28):
I'll just eat a salad. And I think the point
he was trying to make and you can listen to
it in the podcast, was basically, maybe this is a
way to kickstart people into the right diet. And you know,
as you give him the drug and you say, hey,
by the way, you got to up your protein. You
might want to get some fat in your diet, stay
away from all the processed foods, I mean, and exercise,
you know.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
And think about exercise, which kind of led us to
this off air discussion on ozempic. I said, Key, you know,
the thing you need to do, and I'm joking here,
is come up with a pill that creates motivation, you know,
because you're looking at a guy who lacks motivation when
it comes to damn exercise. And I've been lamenting that
for such a long time. I feel like I got
my diet in order. I lost twenty plouns or so
(21:10):
since last year. I actually feel a lot better.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
Make up the weight. Still that weight thing.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
But then you said, one of the things they found
about ozembic it acts as a motivator of sorts. It
interacts with your dopamine levels or something.
Speaker 4 (21:25):
It just makes you make better decisions because evidently it
curbs your addictive cycles for why you're doing bad behaviors
such as eating instead of working out. And I'm not
quite for sure how it does that, But the big
deal is it's the feedback and the reward. Like if
you're looking in front of a mirror and you're seeing
yourself improved and you're like, hey, whatever i'm doing is
doing good.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
And that's how I felt after I got over the
keto flu part of the diet, because it's miserable and
I could have seen myself giving up because it sucked.
Right once you get out the other side and you
start seeing the results, like again, my weight loss is
what kept me motivated to continue the path. But you know,
I can see the stumbling block. I don't I don't
feel like going through this. It's just miserable and I
(22:05):
hate its. Individuals influence each other.
Speaker 4 (22:08):
For instance, you know us being here might have influencing
your decision making in a listener's decision, but also biofeedback wise,
is you're telling me a kee come up with a
motivation pill. So what I have really honestly done in
the last six to eight months is I have really
worked on motivating my clients. I have instead of spending
time on talking about their cholesterol and all this other stuff,
I have said, Hey, let's talk about you and what
(22:28):
are you doing and what's preventing you from motivating you
to make these right decisions. And I think when you
can get down into a little bit of the psychology
of this individual, it does come down to how well
are you taking care of yourself? How do you feel
about yourself then enough to take care of yourself, And
that's really a big motivator. And they often people will
tear up because they're like, you know, I've been neglecting
myself because of X, Y and Z. And then I
(22:50):
teach them that they're worthy and that they should love
themselves individually and uniquely, and that they deserve to eat
right and exercise, and it gives them that spark. So
I believe the pill of motivation is really just spending
some time with somebody and letting them know that they're important.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
Well.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
And you know what, I don't lack a really positive
influence at home. My wife is always regularly, you know,
not harping on it, not you know, giving me and
your bust in my hay, those that kind of thing,
but incentivizing and encourage me. Said Brian, I want you
around for a long time. I don't want you to
struggle or suffer and become ill down the road because
(23:26):
you don't exercise. And you think that plea coming from
a place of love will be enough to get me
off my butt now walking a dog or something like that.
You kids will do that too, well. My daughter and
her fiance might have a child someday then I maybe
you'll see the difference.
Speaker 3 (23:40):
It's like I want to be around and I want
to be able to get on the ground and play
with them and stand back up afterwards.
Speaker 1 (23:45):
And so you're saying that once I have a grandchild,
then my prayers will be answered, and then exactly right,
all right now, I don't think she's listening anyway. And
what Keith was saying about motivation, we did a podcast
last week, recorded it at the farm meeting we had,
and in there he talks about his motivation approach.
Speaker 3 (24:06):
So that's up on the website as well. I encourage
you to listen to that. It's like the whole sale half,
so it's worth it.
Speaker 1 (24:12):
I will definitely do that again. The website Restore Wellness
dot org. Well, since you mentioned cholesterol, Keith, and that's
something you look out for with your patients, I want
to ask you about statins when we come back. They
widely prescribed. I took them for I think about twenty years,
but it's been at least ten fifteen years since I
(24:32):
got off of them, and I did get off of
them for a very specific reason. And I'm wondering whether
my dad's medical problems as he for what he passed
away from may have had a problem, may have a
connection with that. We'll hear more from Georgie and Keith.
After I mentioned cross Country Mortgage, get in touch with
Suzette Low's Camp. I mentioned my daughter again when she
and Eric were looking to buy a house. They were
working with some bank and after a week or so,
(24:54):
they still hadn't gotten her answer, and she was lamenting
that to me, and I said, honey, let me give
you Suzette Low's Camp's number. She's with a Cross Country mortgage.
I guarantee you she can get things straightened out within
I think it was two days one phone call two
days later, locked in financing as she was so happy,
she goes, oh my god, I'm so glad you told
me to call her, and that's why I'm recommended to you.
She's got thirty five years experience in the mortgage business,
(25:16):
being with Cross Country Mortgage. She can help you in
any state in the Union, plus Puerto Rico not yet
a state, but she can help you there, no junk fees,
no application fees. She searches the world of mortgage lenders
and finds you the best possible circum best possible lender
for your circumstances. Personalized service outstanding, it will be. She's
just a really sweet lady, very wonderful to work with.
(25:38):
Reach her one of two ways call her or send
her an email, and I assure you she will get
right back. The phone number five one three three one
three fifty one seventy six five one three three one
three fifty one seventy six. You'll find her online via email.
So's that dot Low's camp losc kamps. Is that Dot
Low's camp at CCM dot com? Fifty five car the talk.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
Station picture this You're on a date seven thirty eight fifty.
Speaker 1 (26:03):
Five Karrasity Talks Station Talking Health, George Frenman, Keith Tenfeld,
Restore Wellness dot Org. I commented on Statin's and my
experience with them, because I think genetically, biologically, we just
run high on cholesterol levels. And I'm sixty. I just
turned sixty. But in my twenties, I think it was like, geez, man,
(26:26):
you're HDOLDL levels are really really high. I said, well,
runs in the family. My dad took statins and I
think he was on them almost the moment they hit
the market. He had a doctor friend that was his
best friend. So we're going back to the eighties, I think.
And his joke was, I'm I'm I'm a teflon coated
(26:47):
Now I don't have to worry about it. And he,
you know, he wasn't overweight, he didn't have any problem
with to diet. My mom was always great about cooking
quality and healthy foods. But he took him his whole life,
and lo and behold, he passed away. He obviously was
he diagnosed with Alzheimer's dimension passed away. And I always
had this thought, and I've read it before. Maybe Keith
(27:07):
or George you can comment on whether there's research on
that because it affects fat levels. Your brain is comprised
of fat, that somehow it might have an impact on
brain and the connection to Alzheimer's at least seems to
be a logical one along those lines. So that came
to a screeching hall. I actually changed physicians at one
point and he looked at me and said, you're thirty
(27:27):
something or whatever, why are you taking these statin rags?
Speaker 2 (27:30):
And it took me off of them. Count your blessings?
Speaker 3 (27:34):
Really, yeah, yeah, I was on him for about four
or five years, but I could barely move because every
bone in my body hurt, and my knees, my arms,
my elbows, I couldn't move anything. I stopped it, and
that goes away. The statins did that to you. Statins
do that to all.
Speaker 4 (27:50):
Lot of effect is rabbed in my alysis in a
rare situation where your muscle tissue actually breaks down and
the muscle fibers that are circulating to your system that
are broken down now can cause kid damage and all
kinds of their problems. So you know, statin is one
of those things where hey, doc, you you put me
on these statins and it's causing a lot of musclewaken
the muscle pain, and they sometimes say, well, we can
reduce a dose, or how about you just try it
(28:11):
for a little bit longer and it'll go away. Really,
what doesn't. What happens your body just kind of gets
used to it, and now you're kind of walking around
eventually and you're slow down slowly. And so I recommend
anybody who's on statins to really evaluate their energy level
because they can rob you of your energy pretty quick.
You might find yourself like I just don't have the
energy that used to have, or muscle pain or muscle
stigue when you are exercising, and take a look at that.
(28:33):
There's other things that you can do like coque ten
and redgiese rice, which are really really good for cholesterol,
but more doubting correct. But more importantly, let's talk about
what is high cholesterol. High cholesterol is poor metabolism. Your
body is metabolic rate to slow down and now the
fats are not being used anymore.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
Well, and I have I used to do commercials for
among the other things, was a business that did hormone
replacement therapy and they had all kinds of research. The
people in Europe only do hormone replacement therapy rather than statins.
Because you have your hormone balance right, then your cholesterol
levels naturally just align themselves properly.
Speaker 5 (29:10):
Right.
Speaker 4 (29:10):
Your metabolic rate goes up because you have more energy
because of the hormones, and actually you know you're out there,
you're exercising, you're doing the things that you really really enjoy. Plus,
though Europe is different because they have a whole different
carbohydrate mentality, their carbohydrates actually do a good job and
people can lose weight when you go to Europe and
eat their food. Wherever here we gain food because it's
very inflammatory, partly because of the gluten that is being
(29:32):
processed with.
Speaker 3 (29:33):
Well in our wheat is geoengineered to resist bugs, which
means it's poisoned to bugs, which means the outer coating
of the of the wheat is also poisoned to humans,
which is why you have all the bloating, the gas
and everything else. Seriously, our wheat is totally different than
what they use in Europe, and that's why, and they
will not allow ours no GMOs in Europe, not least
(29:54):
the ones that are at liast the ones that are
you know, we use here that Europe says, and you're
not allowed to use.
Speaker 4 (30:00):
And more importantly, though, you know what is cholesterol. It's
a total cholesterol that's compiled of your HDL, which is
your good cholesterol, your triglycerides, and then your LDL and
LDL is something that really isn't influenced well with your diet.
But triglycerized and HDL are triglycerides, are your sugars, your carbohydrates,
your pasta, bread, pizza, beer, sugar, pop, cereal crap that
(30:20):
you shouldn't be doing. Fried food in particular, don't eat
fried food. Anybody who's listenings, don't go get your French fries,
don't get your fried chicken. Fried fried. Fried is bad, bad, bad.
Unless you're doing a fried egg and butter or ghee
or something. It's all animal product. And then we got
to the HDL, which is your good cholesterol, which comes
from your omega three fatty acids, which is like your fish.
Think about our genetics. Where do we come as a
(30:42):
human species. We came from around the Mediterranean Sea. A
lot of fish. Fish is in the Bible. We need
to eat more fish. But now there were a bunch
of land growers that you know up here in the
Hills of Field Territory, we're not getting that fish. We're
getting carbohydrates. So eat your fish. And if you can't
eat your fish or you don't like fish, do your
Mega three fatty acids. That'll drive your HDL up, which
(31:03):
is good. So now your total cholesterol is even kind
of coming up, but so is your HDL. Your traegly
rides are going down, and now you're fine. Your clas
rawl could be a little high, but your HDLs are
protecting you, and your trigly rides are low, which is
also protecting you. And now you don't have to worry
about your LDLs, and you're feeding your brain well with
good fats.
Speaker 3 (31:19):
And you don't have to worry about having the prescription refilled.
I don't worry about potentially getting Alzheimer's. The other complications
associated with taking a drug and living with chronic fatigue
in the dirty secret I'd never heard before Keith oh Gollege.
Speaker 1 (31:30):
Yeah, statins caused that fatigue. And I'm praying there's some
listener out there who's on statins and has never been
able to track down why they're feeling that way, that
maybe now they have the answer.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
To that question.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
There are several books out there in the dirty secret
with the statins is there are two types of LDL.
There's a large floaty kind and there's a small dense kind.
Heart attacks and that are indicated by the small dnse kind.
Speaker 2 (31:58):
Guess what.
Speaker 3 (31:59):
Sins only reduce the large floaty So the only reason
we take statins is because you can measure cholesterol and
statins will reduce that number. But the catch is it's
not reducing the number that causes heart attacks. Every study
that's done of what's the effect of taking statins versus
not on heart attacks, it's like a one percent difference.
(32:22):
Instead of four out of one thousand dyeing, three out
of a thousand die.
Speaker 2 (32:26):
But all cause death.
Speaker 3 (32:28):
Meaning when you look at people taking statins versus people
not taking statins, the statin group has higher death rates.
If they looked at I always sorted statins in connection
with clogging of the arteries. Have they looked at specifically
do statans prevent the clogging of the arteries because that's
usually the predicate for well KEITHO will tell you, But
the inflammation is why your arteries get claused. The cholesterol
(32:50):
goes to train inflammation. Oh, inflammation is what's causing your
arteries to be inflamed. And then our good class comes
by and says, oh, that's in flame. Let me pack
that in.
Speaker 4 (32:59):
So always is reduce inflammation, and reducing inflammation is obviously
pretty basic. When you're doing exercise, staying away from toxins
and bad diet, there your inflammation goes down. Interestingly enough
that I was listening to you mentioned was that when
you have I had a guy. It was a patient.
He was normal, he had high cholesterol in his thirty
(33:20):
five rights, so they put him on statins. His cholesterol
looked great, his numbers were amazing. He was staying on
the statins. Guess what happened, had a heart attack. Oh jeez,
good figure. Right, your statins on statins, costar numbers look good,
and you have a heart attack.
Speaker 3 (33:33):
They're reducing the wrong cholesterol. And like you said, your
brain's forty percent cholesterol. You get rid of that.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
And that's to me, that was the creepy thing right there,
the connection between the fat levels and the fact that
your brain is comprised of fat.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
I just like, huge red flag, huge ris And again
fish is brain food.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
All right, let's pause we'll catch yourselves like crom Stop
or bad Guy of the Week, and then we'll return
with Keith and George after these brief words beginning with
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So online find them at Chimneycareco dot com. Chimneycareco dot com.
Five one three two four eight ninety six hundred. That's
two four eight ninety six hundred.
Speaker 2 (34:54):
Fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
Hi, this is Brian Thomas with doctor Nick seven fifty
one fifty five krcdtalk station in Happy Friday, a health
related discussion we've been having with Keith Tennenfeld and George Brunneman.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
It's Restore Wellness dot org.
Speaker 1 (35:11):
And real quick, Keith, you had mentioned off before we
go to the break here, let me wait real quick,
let me get Tivity Green from the cincint Police Department.
We're gonna cat yourselves a quick crime stopper back guy
of the week, Officer Tivity Green. Crime stoppers. Who are
you looking for this week? And a very happy Friday.
Speaker 5 (35:24):
To you by the way, Thank you, Good morning. Cincinnati
Police fifty three is looking for Jennifer Morgan. Miss Morgan
is wanted for felony trafficking and drugs, felony drug possession,
and misdemeanor of possession of drug paraphernalia. Jennifer Morgan is
a female White. She's thirty nine years old. She's five
three and one hundred and twenty pounds. Jennifer Morgan has
(35:47):
a history of drug trafficking and drug possession and was
last known to be homeless. If anyone has information on
where police can find Jennifer Morgan, please call crime Stoppers
at five win three thirty five two forty or submitted
ship online at crime desk Stoppers dot us.
Speaker 2 (36:05):
Sounds like she could really use some help. You know
where she is.
Speaker 1 (36:07):
Help her out by letting the police department know through
crime Stoppers, you'll be eligible for a cash reward if
your tip leads to arrest, and of course you'll be
doing her and society a huge favor. Thank you, Tiffany Green,
have a wonderful week, and thanks for everything this insane
police department does on behalf of the community. All right,
back to George and Keith. Other common we talked statins,
We talked to the zampiic and how about some other
(36:28):
common regularly prescribed prescriptions that carry along with it some
of these risks, like the fatigue that goes along with statins.
Speaker 4 (36:35):
Right, so we've got antidepressant medications such as your SSRIs
number one waking which doesn't help anybody's mental mindset. Number two,
it decreases your libido. So now your relationships, well, that's
enough right there. You can stop the discussions. That's the no,
thank you.
Speaker 2 (36:52):
The world gets wrecked with a bunch of depressed pieces
now because of that.
Speaker 4 (36:55):
But no, it's true though, I think about your decreasing
your libido and next you know, your enjoyment in the
relationship chip drops, and that's going to cause more depression too.
So think about your side effects and doing it. Another
one commonly prescribed is adderall. Adderall can increase your blood pressure,
can increase insomnia and nobody does well when they're not sleeping,
and then also increases palpitation. So you have these dis
(37:16):
rhythmic like speed, isn't it yeah, basicallytamine yeah, fetamines right,
And so you know what's interesting about that is sometimes
people think that that adderall can be basically a sugar problem,
people having sugar crashes, sugar high sugar loa, sugar high
sugar loaves. So you know, trimming up to diet and
getting well can also eliminate some of the mental fog.
Speaker 2 (37:36):
That you have is why you think it might adhd Okay, since.
Speaker 1 (37:39):
You mentioned sugar, I asked you a question you didn't
get to answer. But I have a great answer. Okay,
I sweeten The only thing that I think is close
to sugar is I use honey to sweeten my tea.
I make green tea. I used to drink those those
soda or those no calorie energy drinks, and I have
all kinds of stuff in it, and frightened me away
from those. Substitute something for it, and green tea is
(38:02):
supposed to be good for you. I boil up a
pot of green tea and then I sweeten it with
some honey. Am I doing myself a disservice?
Speaker 2 (38:08):
Now? First of all, green tea is fantastic.
Speaker 4 (38:10):
It's actually has an anti lowering cortisol effect, so you
think that it would raise cortisol, but it doesn't actually
lowers cortisol. At the same time, it gives you energy
and it's an antioxidant, So great choice on that. Number Two, honey,
local honey is fantastic because it gives you your local
allergen dose, so you become desensitized if you have allergies.
Number two, it's high in vitamins and pol eate number three.
(38:31):
It is a very punch of energy. It's like a
little nucleus power plant of energy. So when you're taking honey,
you're getting this kind of metabolic energy as well.
Speaker 1 (38:39):
Yeah, I feel like I've had three four cups of
coffee in the morning because I'll drink at least a
quart of it during well and prepping for the morning show.
Speaker 2 (38:47):
That's excellent.
Speaker 4 (38:48):
And so I'm a big fan of using honey as
you're sweetener. Now, too much sugar, blah blah blah. But
when it comes to honey, a little bit goes a
long way, and I encourage you to use it. I
use it in my coffee. Oh, I'm so I asked
that question out loud. Well, so you're not here permission
to drink your tea.
Speaker 2 (39:03):
I do, and I'm still on track.
Speaker 1 (39:07):
I thought it was I thought I was falling off
the no sugar wagon because you know, plain green tea
while I can drink it, it's just it's just not
the same.
Speaker 4 (39:16):
I love the taste of honey. Well, let's talk about realquie.
Another side effective some medications blood pressure. A lot of
blood pressure medicines can rob you of energy. Beta blockers
are one calcium channel blockers or another. And your beta
is your stimulation, it's your fight or flight, it's your
It kind of gives you that fight in the game.
And when you take a beta blocker, you don't feel
like fighting anymore, and then your energy gets dropped and
it will also lower your libido again. And so the
(39:38):
question is is how can we lower blood pressure naturally?
And there's tons of those ways out there. You can
you know, find us on the web. And at the
same time come and talk with this.
Speaker 1 (39:44):
Yeah, and going back to the biodenical hormone replacement therapy.
If don't be scared, if your libido is low, don't
be scared. We'll solve that problem. Okay, So might consider
that as well. Keith George, thank you for what you're
doing out there. You have no obligation to do this,
and I know you're genuinely concerned about America's health. And
by providing this information we get to talk about it,
(40:05):
we maybe cause people to maybe reflect, you know, do
that cost benefit analysis, and your words I think will
encourage people along a line. So keep up the great
work root called Jean Harrison, where you find Keith. George
and Keith can both be found at Restore Wellness dot org.
Stick around because after the top of the our name
is Phil Kirpen, the President of American Commitment, is going
to tell us how to stop the climate craziness. That
(40:28):
plus all my dear friend Patty Scott doing wonderful, wonderful
work for the folks that are in assisted living facilities,
our senior friends out there. It's hard for seniors. We're
gonna update from Patty at eight forty. I hope you
can stick around.
Speaker 2 (40:40):
Today's top headlines coming up at the top of the hour.
The changes every minute fifty five KRC The Knock Station