Weird Medicine: The Podcast - 609 - Whitlow, We Hardly Knew Ye

Episode Date: October 17, 2024

Dr Steve, Dr Scott, and Tacie discuss: vaginal infections and their treatment hurricane news PPI, GERD and Thyroid Medication A testicular nightmare What is pH? Fluid Family News and more Ple...ase visit: simplyherbals.net/cbd-sinus-rinse (the best he's ever made. Seriously.) instagram.com/weirdmedicine (instagram by ahynesmedia.com!) x.com/weirdmedicine stuff.doctorsteve.com (it's back!) Do you love coffee? Jeremy can be a nut sometimes, but his coffee is serious business and seriously great Visit Coffee Brand Coffee from HERE and get a discount on small-batch roasted coffee beans, grinds, and K-cups CHECK OUT THE ROADIE COACH stringed instrument trainer! roadie.doctorsteve.com (the greatest gift for a guitarist or bassist! The robotic tuner!) see it here: stuff.doctorsteve.com/#roadie Also don't forget: Cameo.com/weirdmedicine (Book your old pal right now because he's cheap! "FLUID!") Join the "Fluid Family" in the "Waiting Room!" Subscribe and hit the notify button at YouTube.com/@weirdmedicine! GoFundMe for Brianna Shannon (Please help Producer Chris' daughter fight breast cancer!) Most importantly! CHECK US OUT ON PATREON!  ALL NEW CONTENT! Robert Kelly, Mark Normand, Jim Norton, Gregg Hughes, Anthony Cumia, Joe DeRosa, Pete Davidson, Geno Bisconte, Cassie Black ("Safe Slut"). Stuff you will never hear on the main show ;-) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You see? You see? Your stupid minds. Stupid. Stupid. If you just read the bio for Dr. Steve, host of weird medicine on Sirius XM103, and made popular by two really comedy shows, Opie and Anthony and Ron and Fez, you would have thought that this guy was a bit of, you know, a clown. Why can't you give me the respect that I'm entitled to? I've got the theory of crushing myself against. I've got to bolivide stripping from my nose I've got the leprosy of the heart valve exacerbating my incredible woes
Starting point is 00:00:37 I want to take my brain out and plastic with the wave an ultrasonic ecographic and a pulsating shave I want a magic pill all my ailments The health equivalent is citizen cane And if I don't get it now in the tablet I think I'm doomed then I'll have to go insane
Starting point is 00:00:53 I want to requiem for my disease So I'm paging Dr. Steed Dr. From the world famous Cardiff Electric Network Studios in beautiful downtown, OJ City. It's weird medicine, the first and still only on centered medical show in the history of broadcast radio. Now a podcast. I'm Dr. Steve with my little pal Tacey, my partner in all things. Hello, Tacey.
Starting point is 00:01:16 Hello. This is a show for people who had never listened to a medical show on the radio or the internet. If you have a question, you're embarrassed to take to your regular medical provider. If you can't find an answer anywhere else, give us a call. 347-76-4-3-23. That's 347 Poo-Head. Follow us on Twitter at Weird Medicine and visit our website at Dr.steve.com for podcasts, medical news and stuff you can buy. Most importantly, we are not your medical providers.
Starting point is 00:01:39 Take everything here with a grain of salt. Don't act on anything you hear on this show without talking to it over with your health care provider. Please check out stuff.com. Stuff.com.com. Scroll down. You can see the Rody robotic tuner, or you can go to roadie, r-o-a-d-d-de-I-E dot Dr.steve.com. and find it there. They have the Rodey coach
Starting point is 00:02:00 that will teach somebody how to play a stringed instrument or you can get the Rodey robotic tuner. It's getting ready to be time for buying gifts for the holidays. That's a perfect under $200 gift for someone
Starting point is 00:02:15 who plays an instrument. Brian May from Queen said these bloody bastards came out with this at the end of my career. So he loves it. So who will I to argue with Brian May, for God's sake? Check out Dr. Scott's website at simplyerbils.net.
Starting point is 00:02:34 Check us out at patreon.com slash weird medicine. Everything goes there first. And then including just the behind the scenes video stuff, all goes to Patreon. Cameo.com slash weird medicine. I'll say fluid to your mama. And that's it. All right.
Starting point is 00:02:51 Very good. Thank you very much. Don't forget Dr. Scott's website at simplyerbils. net. That's simplyerbils.net. Also, check me out at normal world. My female ejaculation video should be complete and ready to run in the next week or two and tells the truth about squirting in female ejaculation. And if you want to read about it and just see the answer, go to Dr.steve.com and go to the search section of the website
Starting point is 00:03:25 and just ask for female ejaculation. You can read the whole thing there. I used to talk to Brian Redband, and we're going to talk to Joe Rogan about it a long time ago before Joe got so huge. So I'm too small potatoes for him now, but back in the day, I just didn't have an excuse to go to L.A.
Starting point is 00:03:46 when he was first starting out, and he asked us several times to come. Doesn't want you anymore? No, I mean, well, I hadn't asked in a long time. I'm going to say he's too bad. I mean, he's got Trump and Kamala on his show. Why would he want me, you know? To fill in the spots.
Starting point is 00:04:03 Anyway, well, if you want to talk about female ejaculation, we can do that because I have, you know, there's a lot of mythology about it, and I have the right answer. It's the answer backed up by science. There is coital incontinence, and there is female ejaculation. There are two different things, and some women do both. some do none and some do one or the other, which is where all the confusion comes from. So anyway, hey, Tase, why is a woman like a pinky toe? I don't know. Well, number one, there's three reasons.
Starting point is 00:04:38 They're cute. Number two, they provide much needed stability and balance. Number three, you don't appreciate them until you bang them on the coffee table. Yay. That's funny, too. All right, very good. That's with a joke for the day. So anyway, do you have any topics today?
Starting point is 00:04:59 Well, I have a couple, but I can't remember. It's been a while since we've done a show because of things. Yeah, we'll talk about that in a minute. I have a couple, but I can't remember if I've done common vaginal infections or not. No, you have not. All right. Okay, we can do that one. It's Tacey's Time of Topics.
Starting point is 00:05:22 A time for Tacey to discuss topics of the day. Not to be confused with topic time with Harrison Young, which is copyrighted by Harrison Young and Area 58 public access. And now, here's Tacey. Well, hello, everybody. Hello. It is very hot in here, so forgive me. And I've also had two glasses of wine. Excellent.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Vaginal infections can be caused by bacteria, fungi, parasites, or viruses. Correct. Some of these things normally live in your vagina without causing any problems. But sometimes they can grow out of control causing an infection in your vagina and vulva the area surrounding your vagina. Things that can trigger this or increase your risk include being sexually active, especially if you've recently changed your partner. Using vaginal hygiene products like douche's soup, soaps. Soup! Soup!
Starting point is 00:06:22 Yeah, don't put soup in your vagina. Vaginal washes and wipes, taking antibiotics, sometimes contraception, including the IUD, having a health condition that affects your immune system like diabetes or HIV, or taking a long-time steroid medicine. Yeah. Okay. So steroids, you know, suppress some of the activity of the immune system and so that can allow things to start to grow. We'll see people who take steroids, get yeast infections in their mouth even.
Starting point is 00:06:56 It's called thrush. So that can be a problem. And, you know, the crazy thing is, I think this is proof that our creator has a sense of humor because the bacteria that makes a healthy vaginal wall is the same bacteria that makes yogurt. And it's also the same yogurt, I found out, that makes Tabasco sauce. Because they ferment pickles in lactobacillus. Okay. So, but don't put Tabasco sauce in your vagina, but you can put plain yogurt in your vagina to try to re-populate the vaginal walls with good bacteria.
Starting point is 00:07:39 We've had people do that before. One of the problems is you get something like bacterial vaginosis, which is a gardenerella bacteria that sort of takes over, and you can treat it with antibiotics, but then sometimes the antibiotic will also kill some of the good bacteria. So it's always good to repopulate that area with good bacteria. And we don't recommend douching at all. Yeah. Yeah, douching is bad.
Starting point is 00:08:08 It just doesn't help. And if you have a weird odor down there, you should get that checked because it may just be an infection of some sort. Fishy odor odor can be caused by bacterial vaginosis. we would diagnose that by getting fluid from the vagina, looking at it under the microscope, and seeing if there are white blood cells that have bacteria all studded on them. You know, just growing all over them are called Clue cells, and that's an indication of this bacterial vaginosis that we would, again,
Starting point is 00:08:40 you can treat with an antibiotic, but you could try to treat it with a little yogurt and try to just shift the bacterial flora in the vagina a little bit. something more advantageous. But anyway. Yeah, it seems like sometimes when you're doing things that you hope would help, don't seem to help. Sure. Well, it's like that patient I had a long time ago came in and said, well, Doc, I'm golded. And he had an infection called erythrasma on his junk.
Starting point is 00:09:13 And erythrasma is a bacteria can't be treated with an antifungal. And when you diagnose it by looking at it under black. light, and it glows a very beautiful salmon pink, unlike a jock itch, which doesn't glow at all. And this person was putting bleach on it, and he thought that it was doing something because it burns. You know, it must be doing something because it burns so bad. And it was like, no, you were just bleaching your skin. It doesn't do anything for the infection, although you would think it would. But anyway, go ahead.
Starting point is 00:09:44 Okay, so a vaginal infection isn't the same as a UTI or a cystitis. Correct. A UTI affects your bladder or the tubes that carry urine out of your body. Your vagina is part of your reproductive system. This is separate from your bladder and urinary tract. Okay, types of vaginal infection, bacterial vaginosis. This is the most common vaginal infection. It happens when bacteria that normally live in your vagina grow out of control.
Starting point is 00:10:11 Correct. Okay, stop that. Chlamydia. This is the most common STI in the UK. It's caused by a type of bacteria. So you got this off of a British website? Must have. Common symptoms include increased discharge,
Starting point is 00:10:24 bleeding between periods or after sex and pain when you pee or during sex. No. Genital herpes. These are caused by the human papillomavirus and spread through sexual contact. The warps appear around your vulva's cervix vagina or anus. Genital warts. These are caused by the human papillovirus and spread through sexual contact. The warps appear around your vulva's cervix vagina.
Starting point is 00:10:48 your vulva, cervix, vagina, or anus. Gonorrhea. See, that's the things that are coming out of your mouth. Would you stop? An STI caused by bacteria, gonorrhea can cause an increase in discharge and pain around your lower abdomen. It might hurt when you pee and you may get bleeding between your periods. So a lot of this is telling me that if you're bleeding between your periods, maybe it's not,
Starting point is 00:11:13 it's worth getting checked out. Yeah, yeah, yeah, the first time for sure. You can have spotting between periods and you can have pain, you can have, you know, ruptured cyst, or you can have, you know, what's it got, Mitchell Schmerts, where you have pain between your periods and it's when you ovulated, then you can sometimes have vaginal bleeding from that as well. So if you don't know the cause of abnormal bleeding, whether it's from your rectum, vagina, your nose, or anywhere else, or else you should get it checked at least the first time until you know that it's something benign. Go ahead. Thrush, this is a common fungal infection.
Starting point is 00:11:56 It includes itching or soreness around your vulva and sometimes a thick, white vaginal discharge. A bit like cottage cheese. Yes, it is. It looks like cottage cheese. That's one of the ways you can diagnose it. It's white and kind of clumpy.
Starting point is 00:12:10 I've never heard it called thrush in the vagina, but maybe in the UK they do. We just call it a vaginal yeast infection. Trichomoniasis. I've seen this. It's a nesty-a caused by a parasite. Yep. If you have trichomonosis, you may have a yellow-green, foul-smelling, and possibly frothy vaginal discharge.
Starting point is 00:12:28 It looks like nanor pudding. Oh, good. If you've ever been in the South and you've ever had banana pudding, that's what it looks like coming out of your vagina. And you look at it under the microscope and you go in and you recoil because there are these things in there kicking around. They're bigger than one-cell, you know, they're not one-celled organisms. and they, you know, they have legs and they kick around. It's disgusted. Oh, nice.
Starting point is 00:12:53 It's possible to have more than one infection at a time. Correct. You can have vaginal symptoms such as itching without having an infection. It's also normal and healthy to have some discharge from your vagina. The amount in consistency of this discharge can change at different times. See your GP if you think you may have a vaginal infection. You can also book an appointment directly. with a, oh, they call it different,
Starting point is 00:13:20 janitorinary medicine, geniturinary. Okay, spell it. G-N-I-T-O-U-R-I-N-A-R-N-A-R-I-N-A-R-W. Genitoh-Urinary medicine or sexual health clinic. Right. If you think you have an S-T-I. Mm, lovely.
Starting point is 00:13:40 All right. Okay, so they talk about treatments if you want to go over that. I don't care. I don't care. I didn't think you would. That's fine. I mean for the... What treatment are they?
Starting point is 00:13:51 Antibiotics, antiviral medicines for genital herpes, creams, ointments, and solutions for genital warts, any fungal tablets for thrush. Correct. Trichomonas, we treat it with, if I remember correctly, metronidazole. I have not treated that in a long time. The trick with metronidazole is you cannot drink with it. and what it does is it causes a reaction called the antibuse reaction where if you drink alcohol, it will not be fully metabolized. It will metabolize part of the way to this intermediary molecule called acid aldehyde.
Starting point is 00:14:37 And when you have a buildup of that, it'll make you sick, give you a headache, and make you just feel like crap. and they'll give people ant abuse to keep them from drinking because then when they drink it's like the Ludovico technique it makes them feel sick so they have an aversion to it. But if you're taking metronidazole, it can do the same thing, so you can't drink on that stuff. Some people try using home remedies such as live natural probiotic yogurt
Starting point is 00:15:03 and tea tree oil to ease symptoms of thrush, but there's no evidence to say whether these things can help. Hmm. Tea tree oil and other essential oils may irritate your skin and actually make your symptoms worse. Yeah, don't use tea tree oil on the mucous membrane, right? Yes. Prevention. Many condoms.
Starting point is 00:15:23 Many condoms. Many condoms. Common vaginal infections are passed on through sexual contact with an infected partner. These include chlamydia, gonorrhea, trichomonosis, genital warts, and herpes. Using a condom can provide good protection. against many STDs. You should also have a test for these before having sex with someone new,
Starting point is 00:15:45 and they should, too. There was a study that showed that eating 150 MLs of yogurt containing, you know, the lactobacillus, it's got to be live culture, for two months reduced bacterial vaginosis episodes by 60%.
Starting point is 00:16:03 But who wants to wait two months? Right. I get it. But if you have chronic bacterial vaginosis, then then you would be happy to reduce your incidence by 60%. So if you're going to instill it into the vagina, use a vaginal applicator like a monostat applicator and use plain cultured yogurt. Make sure it's got live cultures and it's plain.
Starting point is 00:16:31 You don't want to be putting strawberry yogurt in your vagina. And you can just then suck it up into that applicator like you would monostat and then bloop it into the vagina and hold it there as long as you can. And it will seep out, so be prepared for that. So either do this at night at home or, you know, you're going to have to wear a pad or something. But I've had a lot of people. When I was in primarily primarily, lots of people who swear that they were cured with that rather than taking the... antibiotics. I would give them a choice. Bacterial vaginosis is just, you know, it's a lifestyle thing. It's not threatening. So if they wanted to try the yogurt first and then it went away, then
Starting point is 00:17:17 fine. If it didn't, then we could try the antibiotics. I also have a very scientific article sent to us by Stacey Deloge. Okay. It's maybe a little too much. It's called brain goop that traps hunger neurons drives obesity. How stupid. Okay. We don't have to do it. What is it? I mean, it's very, it's very technical. Oh, wow, that is very interesting. Please tell me more. It's time to go to the bathroom, everyone. What?
Starting point is 00:17:45 If you want me to do it, it would be a good time for people to go to the bathroom. Oh, I see. Okay, I got it. Well, just give us the Reader's Digest version. Well, there really isn't. Okay. Well, why don't we? I mean, it's so technical.
Starting point is 00:17:58 It's almost like it's okay. Yeah, well, what we'll do is we'll feed it into the AI and say, summarize this for, you know, a freshman college crowd, and usually that does pretty good. And then it'll summarize it for you. Okay. All right. Good. Well, thank you.
Starting point is 00:18:13 Anything else? Nope. All right. Good deal. You want to answer some questions? Sure. Number one thing. Don't take advice from some asshole on the radio.
Starting point is 00:18:20 Oh, thank you, Ronnie B. Couldn't agree more. All right. Good morning, folks. I hope everything's getting somewhat back to homeowner. Well, we'll talk about that in a minute. Got a little bit of a rudimentary question for you. what does pH stand for?
Starting point is 00:18:38 I've heard of pH. I know this interaction with things, but I don't know what pH actually stands for. Yeah. What's a couple of other, I mean, BP, blood pressure? That one's easy. Yep. But initials that you hear that us poor old stupid laymen don't know what that really means.
Starting point is 00:18:57 Bye. Yeah, thanks, man. Well, pH stands for potential of hydrogen. And what it indicates is, I mean, it's a measure of acidity. And it is a logarithmic scale, so a change of one point. So like going from seven to six means a tenfold increase in hydrogen ions. And you can do some math with it. You can do some stuff.
Starting point is 00:19:25 So, you know, neutral is a pH of seven. Things that are really, really basic will have a pH of 14 and things that are. are really, really acidic, will have a pH close to zero, and then everything is in between. So stomach acid has a pH of what, taste, usually? I don't know. I don't remember. It's been forever. Okay.
Starting point is 00:19:47 Well, it's like three or four. And that is one of our protective mechanisms, too, is having a highly acidic stomach. The problem is it causes acid reflux and ulcers and those kinds of things. and when you take medications to increase the pH, in other words, decrease the acidity of the stomach, you allow more bacteria to get into your intestine than you normally would because they're not being killed by the stomach as efficiently. And those are people that end up with a thing called SIBO,
Starting point is 00:20:22 which is small intestine bacterial overgrowth syndrome, where bacteria from your food and things like that and your environment, make it through the stomach into the small intestine, which should be relatively sterile, and cause a slime layer inside the small intestine. When you have that, you can have what we call post-pranthial distress or symptoms after you eat, post-meaning after prandial, meaning eating. And those people will have bloating, diarrhea, abdominal pain after they eat. And that's actually pretty treatable, but as long as you continue to take things like pantoprasol or previsid or those kinds of things and keep your stomach pH up, it's prone to recur because the conditions that caused it in the first place, which is the stomach not acting as the complete defense that it could be are still there.
Starting point is 00:21:20 So, you know, your body requires a slightly basic pH. at 7.4, and it's very tightly held. So if someone comes in with a pH of 7.5 or 7.6, we know that they are alkalotic, and it could be from respiratory alkalosis. In other words, they're retaining carbon dioxide like COPDers do, or they may have metabolic alkalosis because they're, for whatever reason, peeing out or crapping out acid, and so their body ends up being slightly basic. You know, you can drink acid, you know, acidic things, and for a very short period of time,
Starting point is 00:22:08 you may transiently decrease your pH by maybe a tenth of a point, but then it will rapidly come back to normal because the body really likes to maintain that pH at that 7.4 without varying. And if someone comes in with a pH of 7.1, something is really wrong. I think the lowest pH I ever saw on a person that was still alive was 6.8. And that was a person with severe diabetic ketoacidosis. That's where, and a lot of times that's how type 1 diabetics are discovered. They come in and they feel like shit and they may even be pre-comatose and they're peeing like crazy.
Starting point is 00:22:50 They're thirsty and you check their blood sugar at 700 and their pH is 7.2 or something. That is a medical emergency. Back in the day, and I mean, you know, in Henry the 8th time and up until, you know, maybe, I don't know, 100 years ago, people who had that would die. And now we have the means of treating that using insulin and fluids and lots of fluids. These people are all dehydrated. They're contracted. You dump a lot of fluids in. You get an insulin drip going.
Starting point is 00:23:24 and then when their blood sugar gets back to normal, well, the weird thing is you don't cut down the insulin. You keep it going. You add glucose to the fluids. Because if you stop it, the insulin, too quickly, even though their blood sugar is normal, go right back into ketoacidosis. So it seems weird.
Starting point is 00:23:42 Why would you add glucose? Well, now you're allowing the body to start working normally again. And so you give them glucose in their fluids and insulin in their drip, and then you run both of those things up and down until you get them normal and you keep them that way for a day and then you can start thinking about
Starting point is 00:24:00 switching them over to a regular insulin regimen. Remember, type 1 diabetics are people that are no longer producing insulin. All right. All right. All right. Very good. So that's pH and there you go.
Starting point is 00:24:15 So thank you. Stacey Deloge. That's an excellent question. Very basic science question. Let's do this one because it's come up. already. Hi, Dr. Steve and company.
Starting point is 00:24:26 This isn't a medical question, but I know that you all are located in East Tennessee and I, and I think a lot of other listeners are curious how you all are doing after the hurricane passed through the area.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Yeah. I know there's been a lot of flooding and damage. I hope you all are safe. Just like to know an update. Yeah, thanks, man. Love the show and thank you all are well and dry
Starting point is 00:24:49 and let us know what the report is from there. Yeah, thanks. So, yeah, we should talk about this. Where we are, first off, we were fine. We didn't lose electricity. We never lost Internet. It was rained like crazy, and there was a lot of water around.
Starting point is 00:25:08 A lot of wind. A lot of wind. Now, just south of us, two towns south of us, it's not there anymore, basically. And we had, I have a friend who is the spouse of one of us. of my partners, and I want to say a whole lot, but who ended up on the roof of the building of the hospital because the hospital flooded so quickly that it went from a couple of inches of water on the floor of the hospital to completely inundated. In other words, they were on the roof and the water was at the level of the roof and they had to get a helicopter to get
Starting point is 00:25:46 them off. They were carrying 600-pound patients up the stairs. Yeah, and had Some of them in boats and floating them up. And it was nightmarish. I don't know about the 600-pound business, but it was, you know, it was a nightmare. A lot of people who were there have PTSD. There are a lot of people who still have not been found. Maybe in the hundreds of people, there are towns that don't exist. And these are mountain towns.
Starting point is 00:26:20 You would think that in the mountains, the water would just kind of fall off the mountain and you would never have flooding. They had no warning. Right. And there was no warning. The thing about this one was we've heard this all before. We've heard it hundreds of times. You know, we're going to have a bad, you know, a lot of rain from this hurricane that's coming in.
Starting point is 00:26:40 We're inland. So why would we ever worry about a hurricane? But it dumped so much water. And then we had a dam break that was just south of us. and that water flowed north, and that was a nightmare, and that really contributed to a lot of this. And, you know, the rivers that we fish in and play in and all this stuff tried to basically kill us that day. So we, it's bugged us because these are our brothers and sisters down there, plus we have a little bit of survivors' guilt too, and the recovery efforts are still going on, and it's really traumatized this whole. part of the country.
Starting point is 00:27:23 So Upper East, Tennessee, northwest, well, northeast, sorry, northwest, North Carolina, Asheville area, Weaverville, all those areas. I mean, it's just, it was a nightmare. Now, my brother lives in the mountains of North Carolina where I grew up, and he's, they were fine where they were. They just had a lot of wind and stuff. But I saw. It was just unexpected. Nobody expected this. On Facebook where a lot of people were getting the text that said, seek higher ground a week after the hurricane actually happened because they had already lost cell power.
Starting point is 00:28:05 Right. Oh, and that's the other thing. Thank you for bringing that up, is that we, I never want to hear anybody make fun of me about my ham radio hobby ever again because ham radio was the only thing and still is in some places the only thing. The only thing where communication was happening, health and welfare, just, hey, I'm okay. I just can't get out of here because there's no roads. They've all been washed out. So one hospital was inundated. We had two others that were closed for that period.
Starting point is 00:28:37 And, you know, it's got patients in there. What are you supposed to do? I mean, multiple towns are gone. Yeah. Multiple. Yeah. So it was, it's bad. It's still bad.
Starting point is 00:28:47 I'm not going to get into the politics of it. I'm going to let other people do that, but there's a lot of, you know, there are some conspiracy talk going around, and then there's also some real, you know, people with real experiences where, you know, the Civil Air people, some of them said that they were grounded, you know, trying to get supplies into people by, you know, certain groups and stuff like that. So I don't want to get into all of that because I don't know the truth of it. We're not there experiencing that on the ground, but the truth will eventually come out, whether it's, it'll be, but it's too late for a lot of people. Yeah. But it's just literally minutes away. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:31 The heroing, the stories that we've heard from the people that survived, absolutely harrowing. And the stories of the people that didn't make it are just tragic. You know, people trying to get out of there and just got swept away, and that was the end of that. And, again, nobody expected this. I mean, yes, there are warnings. How many times have we had warnings? But not like this. I mean, this was an actual hurricane where we live.
Starting point is 00:29:59 Right. Which we never had. Right. It's one in a hundred years. Yeah. And we hear about this. We get these warnings all the time. Oh, you know, there's going to be flash flooding.
Starting point is 00:30:11 And it never happens. Never. And so people were just kind of blasé about it. well, here we go. It's another bunch of shit that we're being told by the weather, you know, by Noah. And this time they were right. And, you know, the thing, I remember, I think when I was a kid, it was probably me, but somebody, you know, well, I'm not lying this time. And if you tell, it's like Tacey's mom, a lot of this stuff out of her, even if it's just 10% out of her mouth is bullshit, you can't trust anything that she says.
Starting point is 00:30:45 we taught our kids. If you lie once, then we're always going to wonder if you're lying this time. So just don't lie. And when the weather gets all wound up because they love it, you know, I've seen it before where there were, you know, tornado watches and they get on there and they're doing they're around the clock coverage and they love it. You can tell how excited they are. We've had some bad storms.
Starting point is 00:31:12 Yes, but I'm just saying, you know, we've been told this. but not a hurricane never right never so everybody just ignored it for the most part until it was too late I mean I drove to a town to have a birthday party yeah because it was sunny where we were right and until it wasn't
Starting point is 00:31:31 and then 20 miles away it was devastation right a complete devastation so anyway so we're okay and but we there's where the area is not out of the woods No. By any means. It's going to be a long time. It swept the interstate away.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Yeah. I mean, how do you sweep away a whole interstate? I mean, a check out. Big chunk of it. Now, they've got detours so we can go around now. But good war. There's no place to go to. Right.
Starting point is 00:32:00 Right. Yep. So, anyway, that was incredible to me. Just seeing an area that I've driven through hundreds of times. Yeah. under 20, 30 feet of water, maybe higher than that. And then wondering what's going on underneath there and then seeing it. And it's like, oh, my God, you know, once the water receded.
Starting point is 00:32:25 And then, you know, the interstate's just not there. Bridges aren't there. There's a town west of us that for a while didn't have any. And it was, you know, it's surrounded by rivers and stuff. And all the bridges were gone. And so they were having to drive, you know, hours to get to places that normally used to take them. That's why we're ATV people. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:49 That's right. People wonder about that. Yeah. Them Southerners and their ATVs, well, don't laugh about that either. But no more bullshit about my ham radio. It was literally, and I've said this before, when nothing else works, when the cell towers don't work, and you don't have satellite, you know, you don't have Starlink. They did bring Starlink in, which was great. And I appreciate, you know, the Starlink people very much for that.
Starting point is 00:33:16 But you don't have Starlink set up yet. You don't have cell phones. All the telephone, your landlines are down, powers out. Ham Radio is where it's at because it still works. But the saddest thing is how people are helping. Yeah. Yep. No, I know.
Starting point is 00:33:39 I know. it's yeah it's we're still very emotional about this because these are our brothers and sisters close by but yeah people are helping were you gonna well I mean
Starting point is 00:33:54 I don't want to cry on the radio that's okay it's all right we've cried before on this radio but you know I belong to a St. Pete site and when they got hit by they got hit by two and then Milden right after They're like, fuck, you don't come. Right.
Starting point is 00:34:12 There was like, fuck, tourists stay away. Yeah, and then our place is like, please come and help us. Yeah. Yeah. So you hear a lot of stuff about FEMA and Tima and all that stuff. Like I said, I don't have boots, my own boots on the ground, but the truth will eventually come out about whether there were delays in helping us because of politics. That's what some people think. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:34:40 I don't know if that's true or not. I think that for the longest time, the extent of the devastation wasn't widely known. No, because you couldn't get there. Right. Right. When communications are completely wiped out, it's hard for people to know what's going on unless you get up in the air and look at it, which you couldn't do until this thing was completely done. So it was, yeah, anyway, it was bad. So I used to be over a certain number of hospitals, and now I'm over one last, which is also tragic.
Starting point is 00:35:15 Thank God all those people, you know, survived. Yeah, because I don't think they thought they would. No, no. Yeah, and they're still traumatized by it. So anyway, so yes, thank you for your thoughts and prayers. And as far as we are concerned, Dr. Scott and Tacey and I and BM John and all. all the other people that you know, everybody's fine. But we're still, you can't be that close to something like this.
Starting point is 00:35:42 And it's not like, oh, me too. But you can't be that close to something like this of people that you care about and not be affected by it. So, all right. All right. Let's talk about something more fun. How about a testicle nightmare? Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 00:35:59 Hey, Dr. Steve. This is Rob again. Hey, Rob. wrote to you about having my testicles replaced and then having one replaced after infection with the wrong size. Yeah. Yeah. So when you have a testicle removed for whatever reason, they can put prosthetics in there so you don't just have an empty sack between your leg because it feels weird and it looks weird.
Starting point is 00:36:24 And if you're having intercourse with somebody, it's like, well, where are you nuts, right? So they can put these prosthetics in. Do you think girls care about that? Do you not? No. Really? So if you were blowing some guy and then you just felt down there and there was just an empty scrotum that you wouldn't wonder about that? I really don't think I would care.
Starting point is 00:36:44 Okay. All right. Good. Well, guys think that you care. So I guess that's why. But anyway. The update. I had to go eventually to the emergency room because I developed such a big infection.
Starting point is 00:36:56 It's really about four inches above my left nut. and they had to cut it open and clean it and pack it. And I had to, like, you know, change the dressing every day. It was a pain in the ass. Anywho, the doctor, the neurologist, who I saw in an emergency room, said not to put any more foreign objects in my body. I'm assuming he wasn't talking about my ass, but that's neither here nor there. Right. So, anyhow, what's your thought?
Starting point is 00:37:26 He might have had a better way to say that. I don't like really walking around with one nut. Yeah. You know, you put your hands down your pants. You kind of like the field two down there. Yeah. Should I give it a year or two and, you know, see how it goes? Or do you think I should just never have another implant put it?
Starting point is 00:37:44 The reason that they said that is if they put another foreign body in there, while there's still bacteria anywhere within a thousand miles of your scrotum, it's just going to colonize it again. And you'll be in the same place that you were. So that's why they're recommending that. It's very difficult to eradicate an infection around a foreign body because it's not living. And so the white blood cells and all the antibodies and all that stuff, just can't make it to it. So if you have an infected foreign body, it's got to be removed. And then so I would wait until everything is healed up. All of this has completely resolved and there's no sign.
Starting point is 00:38:27 of infection. I would even probably do a C-reactive protein on you, which is an indicator of inflammation, just to make sure I would repeat cultures and all that stuff, make sure it's all gone. And you've lived with it for a year or two. And then you can talk to the urologist about maybe put one back in because the ER doctor really didn't have any business. And they don't have any standing when it comes to urologic implants like that. So, I mean, they just literally have no standing.
Starting point is 00:39:01 They, you know, they're doctors and they know some stuff, but that's not their call. It would be the urologist's call. So talk to them, whoever put the implant in. And, you know, if that person was part of the problem, maybe get somebody else to do it. But these things happen. It's probably, it has nothing to do with the actual urologist that did your procedure. It was just one of those things. I used to tell people when I did Botox, even if you have doctorate,
Starting point is 00:39:27 90210 doing your Botox, one in 200 people get a droopy eyelid. And I think, and that worked out. I did, how many of those did we do? We had one droopy eyelid. One droopy eyelid. Yeah, it happened sometimes. So post-operative infections happen at a certain rate. It's a very low percentage, but they do happen.
Starting point is 00:39:52 And so it's probably no flies whatsoever on the person. Their technique could have been perfect. and there were just some bacteria hanging around from whatever, maybe from your prostate, always blame the patient, by the way, or something like that, and it just happened. So give it some time, let it completely resolve, then give it some even more time and then go see the urologist and talk to them. You can also get Spock-Eye from Botox. You can get Spock-Eye. Yeah, where your eyebrow goes up like Spock. That is correct, and some people like that.
Starting point is 00:40:26 And that's not, well, I had it once, and I thought that was my normal thing, and my doctor said, no, that shouldn't be like that. We'll do a brow left on some people. They fixed it, and I've always gotten a brow lift, but the Spock eye was, it looked just like Spock. Yeah, yeah. And now your mother, I'm sure she wouldn't mind, she had an enlarged. or a, what's the word I'm looking for, an overabundance of eyelid on the top. And I would give her a brow lift and it would lift it up enough so that she could see without having to have surgery on her eyelid. Which she eventually had.
Starting point is 00:41:11 Which she eventually had to do because I stopped doing Botox. It turned out very well. Yeah, she did good. Yep. All right. It's called blephoroplasty, by the way, when you have it. And insurance will cover it. Correct. Yeah, it's one of the few insurances or one of the few cosmet procedures that insurance will cover because it actually affects your function. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:31 Do you want to talk about your nose at all? Oh, I mean, I can talk about that. Yeah. I mean, I had a, what do you call it? Concha Belosa. A conchia belosa, which is like a tumor, kind of like a benign tumor. Severe, deviated septum, and then it grows around and causes all kinds of growth. And then I walked into the doctor's office, and I looked.
Starting point is 00:41:56 at this the doctor was looking at his computer and it looked like a patient had a note in their nose was like a train wreck right with a big bulb next to it and I thought gosh that person's a mass yeah well turns out that was me yeah and so he said you've got a deviated septum well I know everybody says they get nose jobs oh I got a deviated septum in quotation marks but um right right I really did have one with this contumelosa, and it was causing my eyes to close. My face always looked really swollen, and I just looked a mess. And he took it all out, and I asked him just casually, how much would it be if you fix the knot on my nose? And he was like, oh, I'll do that for free.
Starting point is 00:42:48 So I did get a free nose job out of my actual deviated septum. and contubilosa. Right. Yeah, because while he was there, he had to open it all up anyway. Yeah, so he just fixed it. And he got very excited about it. When I asked him that, he was like, ooh, we can do this and we can do that. And I thought, well, hell, if you want to do it, buddy, go ahead.
Starting point is 00:43:16 And he did it. And I can actually, listen, if you've got a deviated septum and you're afraid to get that surgery, I can't tell you how wonderful it is. is to be able to breathe. To actually be able to breathe because I did not know I wasn't breathing before. And I was breathing through my mouth all the time, like a dang, I don't know what you, mouth breather. Mouth breather, yeah. And, you know, I diagnosed Carl from WATP with a deviated septum.
Starting point is 00:43:46 The first time I ever met him, I said, you know, I'm pretty sure you have a deviated septum. He said, no, I do. How did you know? And I said, I could tell by just listening to you talk, because he's. would say, you know, he'd say, cabad instead of come on. Yeah. You know, there's an obstruction in his nose. And, you know, every once in a while you can diagnose these things.
Starting point is 00:44:06 We diagnosed a TV guy with acromegaly once. What was that? Acromegaly is a tumor that produces growth hormone. And when it does it in adult males particularly, they get huge joints. They'll get a big lantern jaw. and they used to say Richard Keele, the jaws, the guy who played jaws, might have acromegaly. I don't know if he really did or not, but that's the kind of thing that you look for, you know, that's sort of facial thing. They sweat more and the growth hormone.
Starting point is 00:44:41 Well, I sweat more. Maybe I have that. You know, but, you know, what it's trying to do is make your bones grow when you're a kid, when there's cartilage between them. There's nothing, no growth plates anymore. It just piles bone on bone on bone, so it's not good for you. Oh, okay. So, and then the other, not too long ago, and she talked about this on the show, a normal world, Dave's producer and co-host, her name's Angela, had taught was, we were working on one of my bits, and she asked me a question, and I diagnosed her with Ailer Danlo's syndrome, you know, type one. She's got the minimum thing, but you've got hyper-mobile joints and elastic skin and stuff.
Starting point is 00:45:28 So some things you can diagnose remotely. Yeah. You know what you can't diagnose easily remotely for me is rashes. People send me pictures of rashes. Yeah. It's like, well, it could be this, it could be that. It's really hard for me to do it. The dermatologist, in their training, they look at slide after slide after slide of pictures of rashes and they can just whip them off just like that.
Starting point is 00:45:50 but it was very difficult for me to do that. Yeah, I bet. But anyway, all right. Very good. Thank you. Let's do this one. Hey, Dr. Steve. It's your old pal, Diesel Child.
Starting point is 00:46:03 Hey, Diesel Child. Thank you, my friend. Hey, everybody in the studio. How are y'all doing? Hey, we're doing good, man. How are you? Well, that's lovely. Glad to hear that.
Starting point is 00:46:12 I'm doing well myself, thanks. Good, man. So, discovered something. I'm now on a drug called Penta, Prozol, which I'm now on because of... You can call it that. It's also pantoprozole. It's a proton pump inhibitor for acid reflux.
Starting point is 00:46:29 I had my complete fund duplication. Yes. Okay, so fund duplication for people who don't know is where they seal off the lower esophageal sphincter of the esophagus so that acid can't get up into the esophagus anymore. There's various ways that you can do it. A lot of times they just take... stomach tissue and wrap it around and then stitch it in just to create a more narrow sphincter down there. So it's harder for stomach acid to get up into these. I'm a stomach on my hyal hernia, which almost killed me twice from the front of bleeding.
Starting point is 00:47:06 And what we found out was taking that medicine in the morning, along with my levocyroxin for my hypothyroidism. Oh, yeah. That's fun. This is why I wanted to play this, because this may be. apropos to you, Tase. That ended up blocking sort of the effectiveness and absorption rate of the nebo-thyroxin. Correct.
Starting point is 00:47:30 That threw off my thyroid. Give myself a bail. And so the doctor that I was dealing with was just increasing my thyroid medication to the point where it was so high that other doctors were like, hey, buddy, pumped the brakes. This is a little high. Does that sound familiar, taste? And I had a second opinion. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:48 And that guy said, hey, you should probably take the thyroid medication in the morning. Yes. She can take the tantaprosol, or probably pronounced it, at night. Exactly. And then you would have this interaction. Correct. Yes. That's what I do.
Starting point is 00:48:02 That's what I do. Okay. So you do. So, yeah, taking the libothoroxin, which is synthroid, thyroid, thyroid replacement hormone. And then you have to wait. You have to wait 20 to 30 minutes after you take it. So you knew that. Or it will not work.
Starting point is 00:48:17 Right. Okay. Yeah. It interferes with absorption of levitiroxin when you take pantoporazole with it and reduces its effectiveness. And so he's exactly right. What happens, they keep increasing your dose and increasing and increasing. And then you stop the pantoporazole. Now you're overdosed on synthroid.
Starting point is 00:48:35 And now you get hyperthyroid. Yeah, which is just as bad as low hypothyroid. We see this sometimes in people, not this particularly, but people who go to the pain doctor and they say, oh, my pain. out of control, it's out of control, and they keep increasing their pain medication. Turns out they're actually giving it to their son or they're selling it or whatever. They're not taking it. And then they end up in the hospital and you give them what they're supposed to be taking. Quote unquote, supposed to be taking and you overdose them.
Starting point is 00:49:05 That's how you diagnose that. Because you know immediately what happened was you gave them the dose that they've supposedly been taken for years. Now they're overdosed. Nothing else is going on. They haven't been taking their medicine. So you have to have what we call a come-to-Jesus talk with them. I would say.
Starting point is 00:49:21 I'm curious what you think of that. Yeah, that's what I think about it. So anyway, now, are there other PPIs that do this, too? Is it just Pantopresol? I do not know. That was never once in 25 years was it discussed with me. Really? Never.
Starting point is 00:49:36 Well, let's look up Lansopresol. And we'll just take a second. Like I said, Carl loves it when I look up stuff on the air. But Lanzopazol and Synthroids. I would say it's a pH issue. I would think, okay, could be a pH issue or just a class-specific thing. Yep, same. Same.
Starting point is 00:49:57 Taking Leibethyroxin with Lansopazole interferes with the absorption of leviothyroxin. Yeah, I wonder what the mechanism is. It might be that, that it's just a pH thing rather than that drug-drug interaction. Yeah. But anyway, all right. We've got time for maybe one more here. Let's see. here. Let's try, let's do a poop one. How about that? Oh, no, I got a better one. Hang on. This is the one we
Starting point is 00:50:23 need to do. Hey, Dr. Steve. Yeah. Uh, my name's Fred. Hey, Fred. How goes it, man? I might have sex with somebody who has, well, a female that has herpes. You don't have to specify that. I know I'm not going to have intercourse penetration between our bodies. But will I catch anything if I just use my fingers on her? Okay, do you know the answer to this, TACE? No, I do not. It was a thing that GVAC could never remember the name of. And yes, you can get, and you'll see this in health care workers sometimes,
Starting point is 00:51:03 they will get herpes of the nail bed, and it's called herpetic Whitlow. So, yeah, you absolutely can. So, and just because they're not actively having symptoms doesn't mean they're not. shedding. So there are some things that you can do. Number one, if you're not going to have penetrative intercourse, then you can just, you know, you could wear rubber gloves if you wanted to. If you're just going to manipulate them or you could have them, you know, use a toy or something like that. That person, if they have frequent episodes, could be on suppressive therapy. They could take an antiviral every day. Doesn't 100 percent prevent transmission, but it reduces
Starting point is 00:51:45 the risk significantly. And there are couples out there where one of the people has herpes and the other one doesn't, and they've never gotten it. Now, that could be either from their lucky or the person who has herpes has been really good at taking their medication and suppressing their outbreaks and recognizing them when they happen and not having intercourse, or it could be that their partner has natural immunity. There are people who have herpes cold sores that we feel.
Starting point is 00:52:15 have some natural immunity from getting herpes genitalia, you know, in their genitals, because they already have antibodies to herpes that are protective. So it's always very interesting. So if you're going to be in a monogamous relationship with this person for the rest of your life, call us back. We can talk about things that you can do as a couple to prevent transmission. Anyway, so let's check out what's going on in the fluid family. Myrtle Manus, gifted data.
Starting point is 00:52:45 20 weird, I almost said bedabler memberships, 20 Weird Medicine with Dr. Steve memberships. A lot of people got their membership. So don't forget to go to our channel at YouTube.com slash at weird medicine and click join and then click accept gifted memberships and people will give out memberships from time to time. Let's see here. And then, oh, Nick Illig, thanks for the $5 super chance. said, you mentioned low glycemic diets help reverse type 2 diabetes, but not low carb. Any known reason for that? No, I didn't mean that.
Starting point is 00:53:24 Low carb diet, absolutely, it's better. I think I've cured people of their type 2 diabetes by getting them to adhere to a low carb diet. I think what I was saying was it's hard for a lot of people to adhere to. and the low glycemic index diet can be beneficial for people with type 2 diabetes. But I'm not 100% sure what the record is on curing people of their diabetes by using that. Now, this is not type 1 diabetes. These are for people who have insulin resistance. And when I'm talking about low carbohydrate diet, I'm not talking about that meat diet
Starting point is 00:54:06 where you just ate meat and bacon and mayonnaise and cheese all the time. what I'm talking about is the, because that's the telephone game, right? Someone read the book by Dr. Adkins and told somebody who told somebody who told somebody the next thing you know, people are just eating steak and mayonnaise and cheese and bacon every day. So the kind of, I think the healthier low-carb diet is still a carnivore-type diet, but it's lean animal protein. I mean, animal fat is not the enemy, but still lean animal protein. So you're controlling which fats you're taking in. And then having good fats,
Starting point is 00:54:51 mono-unsaturated fats like olive oil, those kinds of things. And then green leafy vegetables that are low carbohydrate vegetables, unlike potatoes and corn and yams and stuff like that. Now, a low-glycemic index diet just is not metabolized to sugar as quickly so you don't get those spikes in your insulin. And that is a diet that is all of the above I just mentioned, but also includes brown bread instead of white bread, brown pasta instead of white pasta, brown rice instead of white rice, and sweet potatoes instead of potatoes. And listen, if you learn how to properly make sweet potato fries so if they're crispy on the outside and normal on the inside, they're really good. They're tasty. I just don't like soggy sweet potato fries. So there is a way to do it.
Starting point is 00:55:50 We can talk about that someday. But that's what that was about, Nick. And please say hello to your brother, Captain Mike. If you want to be in the Charleston area and go fishing with the best captain out there, look. for Captain Mike Illig. This is Nick's brother. And he's in the Awandaw to, I guess, Pauley's Island sort of area, that area. And just go to avidangling.com. Or you can find him on Facebook avid angling. Really good guy. He's known my kids since they were little. I mean, Liam is a senior in college now. I think the first time we went out fishing with Camp Mike, Liam was four, and Beck was three. so you know he's just he's a naturalist he knows where all the fish are and even the we've been out with him twice where we didn't catch anything and the second time we still caught stuff because we went in to the marina where there's a bunch of reds that not communist but redfish and that hang out there and so we caught a few of those so we could take some pictures and just throw them back but anyway cap mike's awesome let's see If we got anything else here, I need to announce. A lot of questions in the fluid family, but I can't read them because they're too far away.
Starting point is 00:57:13 So, but check us out. Let me see. I see Amy is there. Talk like a hick to you. Says, I hate hearing my voice. Also, they drag me over there. My accent, hence my name. Well, you ain't got one like me, I'll tell you that.
Starting point is 00:57:28 When I grew up in the mountains of North Carolina, that's how I sounded. and I had to go to broadcast school at the University of North Carolina for them to erase most of my accent, not all. I mean, most people, if I go to Vermont, they know I'm from the South, but I don't have that Appalachian accent, the deep Appalachian accent anymore. And they did that without my consent, by the way. I wonder if I could sue them for that, for, you know, culturally, you know, not a cultural appropriation, but what would it be when they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they. destroyed part of my image, my self-image, by taking away my southern accent without my consent. How did they do that? We talked briefly about that.
Starting point is 00:58:16 I don't know if I've ever told this story on the show, but it was Speech 101. I was radio television motion pictures major. And in Speech 101, with my absolute favorite professor, his name was Earl Wynn. And he was a real character, a brilliant, brilliant actor, and I just loved him. And he and a guy named Paul Nicol. Paul Nicol used to do Playhouse 90. That's how old I am. And he did Playhouse 90.
Starting point is 00:58:45 He did live black and white television back when there wasn't any other kind of drama on TV. And those two guys were just such great mentors. Well, anyway, Dr. Wynne would. have us read the international phonetic alphabet, which has lots of different symbols for every sound that the human voice can make, including there's a, there is a character, which is an apostrophe for the glottal stop. So like if you're going to do some sort of northern UK accent, you say bo'o instead of bottle, bo'o, there's a way that you can write that out. So you could write out any accent that the human voice can make and you learn all these symbols. And you have to learn them so that you read them just like you read English or whatever language that you're proficient in without thinking about it. And that was first semester.
Starting point is 00:59:42 It was just learning the alphabet and learning what the sounds were and transcribing them when he would say the sounds. You'd have to write them down, all this stuff. So that was semester number one. And then semester number two, you read script after script. after script. We thought that we were reading like camera tests. They'd have the camera out there and you would read these scripts. And we thought
Starting point is 01:00:06 we were pretending or, you know, practicing to read the news. But what we were doing was we were reading scripts in neutral English and international phonetic alphabet. And by the end of the semester, your accent was gone for the most part. So Dan Rather did this class at some point, from what I understand.
Starting point is 01:00:24 Charles Corralt was from University of North Carolina. I know he went through that class because you would never have known. He had a real soft sort of accent, you know. Listen to the birds as they go. You know, it wasn't a heavy accent at all. But I didn't realize until later what was going on. And that's what it was because I always said, yeah, I went to broadcast school. So I don't have my accent.
Starting point is 01:00:52 I didn't really think about how it really had. happened until years later. And I remember thinking to myself, they didn't tell me that that's what they were doing when they did that. It just happened. And I'm not irritated in retrospect. I'm glad that I have the voice and the accent that I have now. But because I think more people will take me seriously this way than if I'm, you know, talking
Starting point is 01:01:16 like I normally talk. You know, I think, but always let your adversaries underestimate you, too, you know. So if you have an IQ of 165 and you're talking like this, people are going to think you're a dumbass, and you can actually get over on them because they're not expecting you to be smart. But anyway, like Stacey Deloge. He sounds like an idiot, and he's not.
Starting point is 01:01:39 He's actually a pretty smart guy. He does stupid things, but his intellect is there. He's very smart person. Anyway, all right. Yep, and Stacey says I did not see any medical questions. Thank you, Stacey. So, all right, I'm going to get out. out of here. Thanks everybody. Thank you, Tacey. And thanks to everyone who has made this show
Starting point is 01:02:01 happen over the years. Listen to our Sirius XM show on the Faction Talk channel, Sirius XM, Channel 103, Saturdays at 7 p.m. Sunday at 6 p.m. Eastern on-demand and other times at Jim McClure's pleasure. Many thanks to our listeners whose voicemail and topic ideas make this job very easy. Go to our website at Dr.steve.com for schedules, podcasts, and other crap. Until next time, check your stupid nuts for lumps. Quit smoking. Get off your asses. get some exercise. We'll see you in one week for the next edition of Weird Medicine. Thanks,

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