Interesting and Humour - page 4786

 
Valeriy Yastremskiy:

Well I didn't say they are, it's easier to live without them))))

All your sadness is from knowledge and understanding not needed))))

yeah, well, it's easier to live as a fool...

 
Valeriy Yastremskiy:

I work in a medical centre

Make sure you use celery) and don't forget the pumpkin)


 
Aleksey Nikolayev:

Be sure to use celery) and don't forget the pumpkin)


They don't have the certification they need. But pumpkin helps if you don't forget about it))))

 
Uladzimir Izerski:

Medicine and religion are a business. There's no getting away from it.

With these words I would close this [another] emotional topic.

 
Edgar Akhmadeev:

One should not just read the list, but watch the explanations. And especially the introduction for those who have always drank it and it worked for them. Here is at least the list

https://encyclopatia.ru/wiki/%D0%A0%D0%B0%D1%81%D1%81%D1%82%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%BB%D1%8C%D0%BD%D1%8B%D0%B9_%D1%81%D0%BF%D0%B8%D1%81%D0%BE%D0%BA_%D0%BF%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%BF%D0%B0%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%82%D0%BE%D0%B2

I've read several such articles by experts in evidence-based medicine (as they present themselves, I haven't seen the credentials). Bloggers, journalists and rewriters don't count.

Exactly. I'd also add raspberry tea for colds.

A clever man said, "If you don't drink it, you'll be sick for seven days. "If you drink it, you'll be sick for a week.

There's cerebrolysin on that list, but no cerebrolysate. Here's the paradox.

***

Also took it, stupidly poked at this list and hit it:

  • Cytoflavin: inosine (see above) + succinic acid + vitamins PP and B2): indicated for everything that comes to mind (neurasthenia,encephalopathy, CVD,stroke, irritability, etc.). All right two vitamins, but succinic acid in our organism is already in abundance, no cases of its deficiency have been described and can not be (see biochemistry textbook); in pharmacology and food industry (additive E363) it is approved simply as an acidity regulator[178]. For the stated indications, the works are only descriptive:[179],[180],[181], etc. Cochrane Reviews 0; FDA 0; RXlist 0; WHO 0; FC (-).

How is it that there have been no cases of succinic acid deficiency when even Yandex knows about the symptoms of deficiency? And there are some cases of this deficiency.

And the cherry on the cake:

Reader, remember:
  1. There's no cure forthe common cold.
  2. You can't prevent a cold with pills/ ointments/ candles/ herbs/ drops/ honey/ garlic/ vodka/ beer/ beer with vodka and pepper.
  3. Immunity is stimulated byonly one thing-a disease, either asan inoculation or as a full-blown illness.
 
Dmitry Fedoseev:

Cerebrolysin is on this list, but no cerebrolysate. Well, that's a paradox.

Why the paradox? There isn't one complete list of popular harmless but useless drugs. There are too many of them.

Everyone wants to make money from drugs. And if they are proven safe, they are allowed. And efficacy is proven within the scientific community or say for inclusion in the list of life-saving medicines.

By the way, in articles by experts in evidence-based medicine, the emphasis is not on the presence of a medicine on the list of RF, USA, Europe, WHO, etc., but on the presence or absence of reliable efficacy studies.

 
Dmitry Fedoseev:

How is it that there have been no cases of succinic acid deficiency when even Yandex knows about the symptoms of deficiency?

The Yandex knows everything. Evidence-based medicine specialists are suckers.

I won't speak for succinic acid, but I do know that the vast majority of micronutrients and vitamins are almost impossible to absorb from medicinal forms, outside of food. And, for example, most vitamins (not C and B) are not absorbed without fat, so greens are recommended with butter or mayonnaise (and yes, mayonnaise is rehabilitated). Yes many health benefits work much better in combination. For example, turmeric is 5 times more effective with black pepper.

 
Edgar Akhmadeev:

Why the paradox? There is no FULL list of popular harmless but useless medicines. There are too many of them.

Everyone wants to make money from medicines. And if they are proven safe, they are allowed. And efficacy is proven within the scientific community or say for inclusion in the list of life-saving medicines.

By the way, in articles by experts in evidence-based medicine, the emphasis is not on whether a drug is on the list of RF, USA, Europe, WHO, etc., but on the presence or absence of reliable efficacy studies.

Yes, excuses are our everything. Paradoxically, Cerebrolysate is a kind of analogue of Cerebrolysin, but it's not as good as Cerebrolysin.

 
Edgar Akhmadeev:

Yandex knows everything. Evidence-based medicine experts are suckers.

I won't say for succinic acid, but I do know that the vast majority of micronutrients and vitamins are almost impossible to absorb from medicinal forms, outside of food. And, for example, most vitamins (not C and B) are not absorbed without fat, so greens are recommended with butter or mayonnaise (and yes, mayonnaise is rehabilitated). Yes many health benefits work much better in combination. Here, for example, turmeric is 5 times more effective with black pepper.

Yandex doesn't know everything, but evidence-based medicine experts do seem to be suckers. But rather than suckers, they're bastards.

Vitamin shots have been used, are being used and will continue to be used to treat certain diseases, and effectively. So to deny vitamins at all is a dumb thing to do.

 
Dmitry Fedoseev:

Vitamin supplements have been used, are being used and will continue to be used to treat certain diseases, and effectively. So to deny vitamins at all is nonsense.

I have read articles on research over the last few years proving that the outdated myths about vitamin C shock doses are untenable.

On the subject of "methods being widely used" - there are plenty of facts to be told about old-fashioned treatments. How I treated my ulcer in the clinic, which I cured myself later with a new methodology, for which I won the Nobel Prize relatively recently. How my sister searched all over Moscow in search of a medicine prescribed by a retired doctor, but it turned out to be discontinued many years ago.

I remembered these wise words, though a little off-topic (we discussed folk and ayurvedic remedies above): "People with an average life expectancy of 70+ years admire the medicine of people with SPF of 30".

Generally, the topic is boring. We are not medics. No matter what anyone says, no one can prove anything.

Reason: