Weird Medicine: The Podcast - 625 - Vodka Tampon Sequelae
Episode Date: March 7, 2025Dr Steve, Dr Scott, and Tacie discuss: UTI vaccine overuse or brachial plexus? why don't we taste salt when we swim in the ocean? vodka vaginitis aspara-piss wth methylene blue? SXM news sea s...alt v. iodized salt hyperphagia Please visit: simplyherbals.net/cbd-sinus-rinse (the best he's ever made. Seriously.) instagram.com/weirdmedicine x.com/weirdmedicine stuff.doctorsteve.com (it's back!) youtube.com/@weirdmedicine (click JOIN and ACCEPT GIFTED MEMBERSHIPS. Join the "Fluid Family" for live recordings!) youtube.com/@normalworld (Check out Dave and crew, and occasionally see your old pal!) Watch for our new channel "Stitts on Gaming" coming soon! You can play along with us at Megabonanza.com! An actual legit site, never had an issue redeeming "sweepstakes coins" (i.e., real money) We also play at STAKE.US! Get free stuff (crypto site, let me know if you need help getting set up!) Try mining any major crypto on ANY device! Join the largest mining ecosystem: you only need the right tools to get a stable income! Check out the full product line 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!") 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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If you just read the bio for Dr. Steve, host of Weird Medicine on Sirius XM103, and made popular by two really comedy shows, Opian Anthony and Ron and Fez, you would have thought that this guy was a bit of, you know, a clown.
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Hey, Dr. Steve.
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Yes.
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Yeah, we've got some more. We've got some coming to them.
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okay very good all right Tacey you got something for us
yes I do all right well let's hear it
hang on it's Tacey's time of topics
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.
Hello.
Today's subject is a UTI vaccine.
This is crazy.
Euromune, also known by its developmental code named MV-140, is a polyvvalent.
bactorial vaccine, which is used and is being developed for prevention of recurrent urinary tract
infection.
This is crazy.
There are particularly women that have recurrent urinary tract infections, and some of them
have to take antibiotics chronically, which is not good.
And sometimes, as they get older and they have these recurrent urinary tract infections,
it can cause delirium, it can cause sepsis.
In other words, you know, where the bacteria invade the bloodstream.
So it's bad.
So anyway, go ahead and taste.
It has been found to reduce total number of UTIs by about 70%.
It's huge.
To increase UTI free rates from around 25% to 57%
and to increase time to next UTI from about 1.6 months to 9 months.
And that's average.
So some people get better than that.
It has also been found to reduce subjective UTI symptoms, reduce antibiotic use, and improve quality of life.
I wonder if this would work for people who, oh, okay, it contains inactivated bacteria from the most common types of bacteria.
So I bet people who have ureaplasm, unless it's in there, it's not going to help them because there are some people that have chronic UTI symptoms from inflammation in the bladder.
And there's one called trigonitis, which is inflammation of the bladder, the trigon of the bladder,
which is between the two inlets from the kidney, the ureters, right, and the outlet.
So there's this thing called the trigon.
It's a sort of triangular shape place.
And they can get inflammation there, and you have to take triumcinloan or, no, that's not right,
triamterine antibiotic, on and on and on, to.
keep it suppressed.
There are other people that have inflammation due to a weird organism called urea plasma.
And it's really hard to get rid of, too.
So if this works, maybe in the future, they'll have something that will clear that as well.
That'll be right.
Go ahead and taste.
Says the effectiveness of the vaccine appears to decrease with time, which might warrant
readministration.
Yeah, sure.
Your immune is used as a sublingual spray once daily for three months.
Wow.
It's sublingual.
side effects of your immune are considered in frequent, minor, and usually not treatment-related.
It is an inactivated combination of four major bacteria known to cause recurrent UTIs.
And those four are E. coli, or did you want to?
No, because I can't.
Okay, E. coli, Klebsiella, pneumonia, proteus vulgaris, and enderococcus fecalis.
So those are the big four.
So that's good, yeah.
It is thought to work by increasing adaptive immunity against UTI causing bacteria.
That's crazy.
It might also work by increasing trained immunity against these pathogens.
And that is my story for the day.
I don't know if I want to put E. coli under my tongue, though.
Well, it's not actually shit.
It's just bacteria.
It's like a stool transfer kind of the same kind of thing.
A little different space.
Yeah, that's really different than I thought it would be.
I was thinking maybe it was a monoclonal antibody or something, but then it wouldn't really be a vaccine.
So it's just really giving you, it's a traditional vaccine where you're being exposed to bacterial parts before you get exposed to the actual bacteria, you know.
Wow.
Pretty cool.
That's wonderful.
Yay.
Well, that's a good one taste.
Good one taste.
That I got.
Well, thank you, Steve.
That's all you need.
Thank you for sending it to me.
Well, that one came from Stacey Deloche, I believe.
Oh, cool.
Yep, good.
Good old Steis.
All right, you got anything, Scott?
No.
Okay.
Number one thing, don't take advice from some asshole on the radio.
All right.
Let's do a couple of these things.
I've got, well, here's one that might be.
Hey, Dr. Steve.
This is Matt.
You're from Connecticut.
Hey, Matt.
I recently just lost a bunch of weight, like some 320s for about $2.95.
Excellent.
Started doing keto with pre-diabetic, so I'm waiting to get a,
repeat blood test after about three months and see how everything look.
But since I've been going back to the gym, I feel much better,
but I'm getting this 80 rob in my shoulder,
and it goes from almost like where your biopically hollow bone is,
and it kind of goes behind my shoulder,
and then it radiates up my neck into the front and side of my,
almost like my skull.
Just broad, and I just have to like, like,
kind of let my arm hang a little bit, and I'm just curious if it's something that I should
just keep taking anti-inflammatory for.
All right, the noise in his car.
You know what it is?
I'm going to air on the side of something not so great.
It's like a brachial plexus syndrome.
You know, maybe.
It's kind of what I'm, because, I mean, he could have a little rotator cuff.
It could be levator strain.
That's what I'm thinking.
But when he's talking about it wrapping around front underneath, the whole thing.
and going up into his neck, I almost leaned into like a brachial plexus.
Yeah, Brachial plexus, so what Scott's talking about is a group of nerves that are kind of under the armpit.
Yeah, the lower cervical spine area.
Yeah, yeah, right, right, right.
But they go through there, and you, the brachial plexus fires, you know, nerve signals to the hand and also,
receives stuff from there as well.
Yep.
From the arm and the hand.
And yeah, so that's possible.
I'm just thinking
after he lost weight, he just
hit the gym.
And now he's got inflammation in his shoulder.
He's got an overuse syndrome, yeah.
And what I would do is
see your primary, and then
they can always send you
to physical therapy.
If they may,
if you have loss of range of motion,
they'll do an MRI on your shoulder
just to see if you've got a tear.
in one of the muscles or tendons.
You know, I'll poke around on those, and every once in a while, you just find a, you know, a super spinaitis tendonitis.
That's a tendon over the, that sort of spine of the shoulder blade.
Yeah, scapillar.
Right, right.
But, you know, our listeners know it is the shoulder blade.
Sure, sure.
The wing bone.
If you feel back, right, if you feel back there, there's sort of a spine over there.
and right above that there's a fleshy part
and that's the supra-spanatus muscle
and it's one that it's kind of thin
and it's really easy to get inflamed
and I do a lot of super spinaitis injections
in my office.
Well, there and then what he's talking about too
a little bit of the deltoids
a little bit of the long head of the biceps
and deltoe being the big
fleshy thing over the shoulder itself.
You know what I would tell him first though?
Yeah, I would ask him first
when you go to gym
find out which one of the exercises
is making it if it makes a little bit worse
because nine out of ten times what happens
is when people start lifting weights
their elbows, when their elbows flare away
from their ribs, they get out into free
space and that puts in a lot of extra strain on the shoulders.
So a lot of times if you're doing
bicep curls and your arms
flare out or you're doing bench presses
or push-ups or even anything over your head
if your elbows get away from your ribs,
your shoulders get much more engaged
and they can get sore. Interesting. So maybe try to
keep your elbows down when you're doing
bench presses or push-ups,
bicep curls, things like that,
to try to really not get that shoulder muscles
so worked up. So you can continue to work out without
heart and your shoulder. Yeah. Yeah. That's good
advice. Yeah. I think that.
All right. So let us know what you find
out. Yes. All right. I was
going to put up a picture of the brachial plexus
up on our
YouTube, but I couldn't
get it to work. I'm sorry.
All right. Let's try
in this one. Oh, this is an interesting question.
Hey, Dr. Steve, a huge fan. This is Ron
from Oregon. Hey, thanks, Ron. I've been listening
to you since O&A. Yeah, I love you.
So listen, I got a weird question,
because weird medicine.
Hence the name. Or why is it
that when you put a laticane patch on your lower
back or pain symptoms, you know,
it soaks into your bloodstream, nicotine
patch does the same thing.
Yep. Or when you rub test, you know,
cream on your body, you know, it sometimes somehow helps your testosterone levels.
Yep.
But yet when you go in, let's say, a really salty ocean and stay in there for an hour,
you don't, your sodium levels don't go up or when you're in a pool for a long time,
you don't all of a sudden get poisoned from chlorine or something like that.
Yeah.
What is, I guess what I'm asking is, what is the mechanism that, you know,
It makes certain things go into your bloodstream and certain things not.
I think I'm an idiot, but I think it's called transdermal.
What makes it transdermal?
And also, I got a quick question after that.
Why is it when you eat asparagus?
Okay, hang on.
Let's do this one first, and then we'll...
That's a great question.
Yeah.
So if you take...
Let's just use pain medication.
You take morphine.
It's a large, water-soluble molecule.
If you put it under your tongue, it's not absorbed.
Five to ten percent.
There's a big myth that if you put it under your tongue, it gets absorbed, but it doesn't.
It has to hit the GI track.
If you put it on your skin, nothing.
If you remember when we had Susie and the, I don't know if you were here for the vodka tampon.
No, I wasn't ever that.
Okay, so what we did is...
What a shame.
We soaked a tampon and vodka, and she inserted it, and then we had a breathalizer.
Because we were trying to bust the myth that you can do that to somehow evade, you know, getting a DWI or getting, you know, if you're underage, you could somehow, quote, unquote, drink using your vagina, which none of that worked.
And the reason is, is that the skin is impervious to water-soluble things.
Fentanyl is a small lipid-soluble.
In other words, you can dissolve it in fat, and that will readily go through the skin.
So if you have something that is dissolvable in fat, that is going to be the most bio-available when you put it on the skin.
and by bioavailable, I mean available to the body to use.
In other words, it will pass through the skin and into the bloodstream.
And then the least bioavailable thing is going to be something that's purely water soluble.
And there's a reason for it.
The mechanism is there is this thing called the stratum corneum, which is an outermost layer of the skin.
And it's composed of tightly packed dead skin cells filled with keratin.
which is a protein, and it creates a waterproof barrier that repels water from penetrating deeper into the body.
And it also has fats in it, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
Most people know that if you take, like, oil and put it in a jar and then pour water over it, the two things will separate.
The oil is less dense, so it floats to the top, usually, anyway.
And they won't mix.
You can make an emulsion if you try really hard, but for the most part, they won't mix.
So you have keratin and you have basically oil that forms what we call a hydrophobic layer.
And so water and solutes and stuff can't go through so you can go into the ocean and you're not getting a big load of salt being injected into your body.
But if you have chronic cancer pain and you put transdermal fentanyl on, then you can because it will pass through.
because it's lipid soluble.
So anything that's water or charged, particularly,
you know, you have ions and water.
You have sodium and you have chloride.
Salt doesn't exist in water as sodium chloride.
It's sodium ions and chloride ions,
and they're all just sort of floating around, you know,
interacting with each other and stuff.
So because they're charged also, again,
they can't pass through that neutral lipid layer.
Gotcha.
And that's why.
So that's a great question because you wonder, well, shit, you know, if I get in the ocean, how come I'm not getting a salt overload?
I think it's also important to tell everyone about the side effects she experienced from the tampon incident.
Yeah, okay.
So, yeah, if we're going to go back to that, she had an itchy vagina for about a month.
Oh, no.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So we concluded that, number one, it doesn't work.
Let's drink it.
Stop trying to be clever.
No alcohol animas, that will, has the potential to kill you.
No vaginal alcohol suppositories because it doesn't work and it's just going to cause vaginitis.
I've seen fraternity brothers putting alcohol under their eyelids.
Oh, geez.
That's just going to cause a conjunctivitis and it may be absorbed.
But the only amount that's going to be absorbed is the amount that you can put under your eyes.
lid, which isn't enough to do anything anyway.
No, and you're going to go spend a whole lot more going to quick care to get an eye cream.
Right, right.
And when you drink alcohol, most people can control how much they drink.
And if you get too much, you pass out.
We had a friend that used to come to our parties, and she'd pass out by 7.30, and I'd have to drive her home.
It was ridiculous.
And, you know, but she never got alcohol poised.
Because she would pass out before she could drink anymore.
Whereas if you take a whole bottle of something and you put it in an enema bag and shove it up your ass and put it in your colon, you have no control over the intake of that.
It's just going to get all absorbed all at once and you're going to pass out and you may die.
It's happened.
When I was medical examiner, you remember I used to get that magazine called the National Association of Medical Examiners or NAME or name.
And they loved just letting everybody know about these horrific deaths.
You know, the guy that gave himself a concrete enema and didn't realize it was exothermic and it cooked him from the inside.
You know, another guy that gave himself a champagne anima and then did autoerotic asphyxiation and passed out and died with the Hanson video still, you know, on infinite loop.
Yeah, it was bad.
So don't do that stuff.
Just drink responsibly, but drink it, don't try to be clever.
And enjoy.
No other orifices.
Yes, enjoy.
God.
And be responsible.
Yes.
Yes.
Well, I believe I said drink responsibly, but yes, it doesn't hurt to say it to reiterate.
All right.
Very good.
All right.
Now, he had another question.
I know it stinks, but for me, and I think for everybody else, I mean, it happens within five to ten minutes.
Oh, wait.
What's he talking about?
I know it stinks, but for me.
Okay, so he's asking about asparagus piss.
I did a thing for Dave Landau's normal world on that.
You might be able to find it, normal world, asparagus, Dr. Steve,
but I can just tell you the answer.
Some people produce the smell, and some people can smell the smell.
So there are people that don't produce, and there are people that can't smell it.
And then there are people that produce it and smell it,
et cetera, et cetera.
So that's where the confusion comes from because not everybody reacts to this the same way.
And, you know, they identified this precursor or this molecule that causes the smell and it's a sulfur-containing molecule.
The problem is once it's in the urine and it outgasses and so that you can smell it, it's so small that it should not, it shouldn't be in the urine.
It should have been broken up and filtered out.
So what that tells us is there is a precursor molecule that is cleaved either in the kidney or somewhere in the urinary tract that then breaks down to the smelly molecule that not everybody can smell and not everybody produces.
And they've never identified what that precursor molecule is.
And the reason they've never identified it is because you can't get grant money.
There's no money.
To find out what's the actual molecule that causes asparagus piss smell.
Right on.
So, but that's what it is.
And it's just there is a precursor molecule in, in asparagus, particularly, that when it's broken down somewhere in the, before it hits your bladder, then becomes a small sulfur-containing molecule that out-gasses when you piss.
and some people can smell it
and some people can't.
So there are people that will produce it
but can't smell it.
So they're like, you're crazy, my piss doesn't smell.
But the person next to them is like,
oh, I can tell you had asparagus.
What is happening in that room?
Well, it's, you know, I mean, it's, you know,
it's like men's bathroom.
There's urinals.
It's different than females.
You know, men, sometimes they just have troughs
and then men piss into.
You know, particularly at the ball field,
In France, they used to have the Pissois, which was just a place men could go in and piss.
And it just had a covering from about your knees to, you know, your nose.
And you could still see their feet and, you know, people in there pissing.
Yeah.
But, yeah, so that's how.
See, in a woman's bathroom that would be unlikely to happen because women sit in different stalls
and they're not just sitting there open, you know, looking at each other's junk.
And it's disgusting.
But anyway, so, so, yeah.
So, and then some people don't produce it, but can smell it, can smell it other people.
And it's like, well, I never, I can eat asparagus all day long and, you know, my piss doesn't smell.
So that's where the controversy is.
It's not that different from the controversy about female ejaculation, where some women ejaculate, some have coital.
incontinence, which is, you know, the release of clear fluid from the bladdered during
intercourse, and then some people do both, and some do none.
So there is just this ongoing controversy, oh, it's just piss, or no, it's not, it's,
you know, it's ejaculate.
And both of them are right, sort of, and, you know, and on and on it goes.
If you want to convince somebody of the reality of female ejaculation and
Coital Incontinence, go to Dr. Steve.com.
I've got an article that I wrote that is the final answer, and it is backed by scientific, you know, papers in the medical literature.
All right.
And even Brian Redband from Joe Rogan show, somebody would bring it up and he'd say, Dr. Steve, you know, explained this years ago.
Oh, thank you.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I don't know where Brian.
And I reached out to him recently, and I haven't heard from him.
But anyway, that was kind of...
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Cool.
Cool.
Anyway, ok-do.
All right, that's why.
Goodness.
Let's see here.
We did that one.
Let's do this one.
This is kind of interesting.
Hey, Dr. Steve.
It's Todd from Pennsylvania.
Hey, man.
I have two questions.
I recently found a new product.
I guess we'll call it.
It's called methylene blue.
It's not new.
And I was wondering what you knew about it.
I have started taking it over the last about a week or so,
and I haven't noticed any, you know, changes.
Well, okay.
So this is that typical thing.
What are you trying to accomplish?
Because people say, well, is vitamin D any good?
Well, for what?
You want to prevent rickets?
It's fucking great.
You want to prevent heart attacks?
Probably not so much.
Do you want to decrease all-cause mortality?
Maybe.
There's some data on that.
So that's the thing.
So what are you trying to accomplish with this?
Other than my urine is...
Blue.
A lot on the blue side.
You know, kind of teal, we'll call it.
Yeah.
And but other than that, I haven't noticed any adverse effects.
Yeah.
But I did a little bit of the Internet research, and there could be some problems.
But I was wondering what your opinion of it was.
Okay.
Well, okay, so let's talk about methylene blue.
The indication from the FDA is to treat a condition called methhemogloenemia.
And that's where hemoglobin changes its confirmation and becomes less able to carry oxygen.
And when you take methylene blue for that, it can help to reverse it.
Now, there are some other things that methylene blue is used for, and there's one is called vasoplegic syndrome.
and it's kind of interesting that the methylene blue will help to prevent this sort of
distributive shock that occurs during coronary procedures and every once in a while, like if you
have a coronary artery bypass graft and you have this shock that happens right after, shock just
meaning precipitous dropping of your blood pressure, they can give methylene blue IV and that may help
particularly when epinephrine is not effective.
Now, during lumpectomy or mastectomy, they'll apply it as a dye to map out which lymph nodes, if any, have signs of malignancy because it will stain them.
It also reduces post-injection pain when used 45 seconds before the administration of a beta blocker called Propofol.
And you can also use it for plasmodium.
In other words, malaria in areas that have shown resistance to chloroquine and pyromethamine.
So, you know, there's all kinds of crazy stuff, but I don't know.
Oh, and then you can use it to identify the parathyroid glands if you're doing a parathyroid ectomy.
So when you open up somebody's neck and you get a bloodless field, parathyroid glands are embedded in the thyroid, and it's hard to find the damn things.
but if you throw some methylene glue,
a methylene blue in there,
they'll light up.
You can see them.
Gotcha.
So, you know, it's kind of interesting,
and I don't know what in the hell
you would just go buy it and take it for it, to be honest with you.
I think in the alternative world,
they use it a lot as an antisidipressant.
Well, no, is for brain fog,
for anti-inflammation,
and it's an anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial kind of thing,
just in small doses.
Well, okay, so I'm looking at NIH, and they're saying one of the most common adverse effects of methylene blue is bluish green discoloration of urine, so that would be teal.
So he may be taking a tad too much of his methylene blue.
He may have to check the dosage before he carries on.
Yeah, other common adverse effects is, you know, if you give it IV, which he's not as limb pain.
And it can also contribute to serotonin syndrome if it's combined with other drugs like serotonin.
selective reuptake inhibitors
SSRIs
like Prozac Paxil
that kind of stuff
SNRIs
serotonin
norepineepine
reuptake inhibitors which would
be what
deloxetine which is
Symbolta
Prisique
Venlofaxine
and other antidepressants
so you got to be really careful
not to take this stuff
if you are on a drug
that modulate serotonin levels
got you
all right
I don't know.
So tell me again why the alternative people are using it.
Using it to treat specifically some brain fog.
So like post-COVID brain fogs.
Where would they get the idea that that would do anything?
I don't know.
But they use it in really small doses because I guess it has some anti-inflammatory properties.
And certainly I've seen people use it like as little washes and stuff just
or an antiseptic.
So now I'm looking here, I searched instead of looking at the science, I looked at the alternative, quote-unquote, science.
It says, methylene blue is used to improve memory and cognitive function.
Okay, so there's a link here.
So let me see.
This is benefits of methylene blue in alternative medicine, but this is from a functional medicine website.
So it's not got any data.
whatsoever.
So let's go to PubMed.
So anybody can go to PubMed.gov and put in Methylene, Meth-E-Lene Blue, and Cognitive.
Right.
Right.
And let's see if there's anything in the actual medical literature about this.
Quite a few things.
Oh, wow.
But it looks all preclinical, meaning that's not human studies, says from mitochondrial function to
neuroprotection and emerging role for methylene blue.
Now, this is another one of these things where it's on the market and it's known to be relatively
safe, and so people are getting it and using it and based on studies that really are not
clinical studies, but it says this is from what journal is this, molecular neurobiology.
And it says a methylene blue can reroute electrons in the mitochondrial.
electron transfer chain.
Damn.
I don't know if I like that.
Directly from NADH to Cytochrome C,
increasing the activity of Complex 4 and effectively promoting mitochondrial activity.
Well, okay, while mitigating oxidative stress.
Well, that might be good.
Anything that mitigates stress is good.
And, okay, so it says here,
Methylene Blue has shown impressive efficacy in mitigating neurodegeneration
and the accompanying behavioral phenotypes
in animal models for conditions such as stroke, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's disease, and traumatic brain injury.
Now we're getting somewhere.
So, Dr. Scott, would you look up methylene blue and peripheral neuropathy, see if you can find any studies on that?
Because, shit, I might need to take this stuff.
Yeah, we could use a gallon of it.
You guys do teach me things on this show.
So, you know, people ask me questions.
I've never heard of that.
And then I look it up and find that actually there is some, some, some, some, some,
truth to it. Now, here's one, exploring
Methylene Blue and its derivatives
in Alzheimer treatment, a comprehensive
review of randomized
controlled trials. So this has been looked
at quite a bit. And this is
in the journal Sirius,
C-E-U-E-U-S.
Yeah, hang on, just a sec-taste.
It says the findings of the studies indicate
the administration of Methylene Blue has demonstrated
enhancements in cognitive functions,
reductions in the accumulation of plaques
containing beta amyloid, improvements in
memory and cognitive function in animal subjects.
Okay, what were you going to say, Taze?
Well, it says it may help with peripheral neuropathy, however, it also could damage nerves.
Oh, well, okay, I don't want that.
And it says it helps with peripheral neuropathy by pain relief, nerve block, discogenic, low back pain.
How it can damage nerves is reversible nerve damage, reducing nerve sensitivity.
Really?
Can induce dose-dependent toxicity in peripheral neurons.
can potentially be fatal when used with medications that increase serotonin.
Interesting.
Other considerations, if you have a G6PD deficiency, you should avoid it.
Okay, so G6PD is also a drug, I mean, is an enzyme that if you take 5 fluorocell,
If you've got colon cancer and you have G6PD deficiency, then you're going to have a really wild and sometimes life-threatening adverse reaction to that.
And they don't test for it because it's so rare.
But then when you have somebody and it happens to them, you kind of go, well, would you have paid for the test?
And they're like, hell yeah, I would have to have avoided this.
So it's a little bit of a quandary in oncology still to this day.
Hey, so, it's saying here, too, I'm reading words, the pain relief from methylame blue helps by reducing nitric oxide production.
Reducing it?
Yeah, reducing the production.
Oh, I don't like that.
Well, reducing nitric oxide production.
For pain, it's good.
For erections, it's bad.
That sucks.
Okay, look up, okay, look up methylene blue and impotence, then, see if it contributes to impotence.
See, this is how we do our research.
We might as well just do it on the fly, so you kind of see.
Here we go.
Well, they're looking that up,
therapeutic benefits of methylene blue on cognitive impairment during chronic cerebral hypopersusion.
In other words, people who have low blood flow to the brain,
and this is a risk factor for cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease.
What'd you find?
So here's the funny thing.
Methylene blue is not used to treat ED, but is used to treat if you have priapism.
There you go.
Ding, ding, ding, ding.
Give myself a bell.
There you go.
No, funny.
You can have your cake or you can have your ice cream, but you can't have both.
You can have your cake or you can have your erection.
You can't have your cake and cock too or whatever.
You know what, at certain ages, I think the cake is a little bit better.
Yeah.
I'll take the cake.
I'll take the cake too, man.
And reduce the nitrogocide.
We would have predicted that.
Yeah, that's correct.
So that, that hits or agrees with our hypothesis.
Yeah.
So that's, this dude that's calling, let us know if it's affecting your ability to get an erection because that's kind of interesting.
Yeah, it is kind of bizarre.
Okay.
Did he have another question or was that at?
And also, my second question is, why are you only on Sunday night and they don't replay your show at any point during the week?
Yeah.
They used to play us Saturday at 7, Sunday at 5, and then Monday at 5 a.m.
And that's where Rob Bartlett used to listen to us, because he would be driving into WFAN to do the IMA show.
And on his way in, our show would be playing on Sirius XM.
And that's how he became – I hesitate to say fan.
He says fan.
I say listener.
He became a listener.
of our show. I'm the fan. I'm a fan of his. He can't be a fan of ours.
So funny. Remember meeting him? There's a picture of, yeah, that's a picture with me, and then
there's a picture with the four of us with him when we were up in the studio that day. That was
cool. We just walked in. He was there, and he was like, oh, my God. How fun. So I didn't think
anybody less and much less Rob Bartlett from the IMA show, who was the best part of that show,
in my opinion.
Anyway, all right.
Do you guys hear Anthony is going to W.A.B.C. Radio?
Yes, I did.
And it's an AM radio, but it's syndicated to, I don't know, a lot of markets.
And both FM and AM and it's, you know, conservative talk radio.
I think he'll do an amazing job over there.
So it's going to be very interesting to see.
But anyway, congratulations to him.
Yeah, congrats.
All right.
Here we go.
Hey, Dr. Steve.
This is Evan from Michigan.
Yeah, hey, Evan.
I was thinking lately, I cook a lot.
Yeah, and I rarely use iodized table salt.
I almost exclusively use sea salt.
Yeah.
And was wondering if, I feel like it's pretty common,
if goiters have...
Hey, will you look up, does sea salt have any iodine in it?
Because if it's really from the sea, it should have minerals and gold and stuff like that in it.
It skyrocketed it because nobody's using iodine salt anymore.
Or if they've put it in enough things and people are getting enough of it that they've remained stable.
Yeah, you don't need much.
Yes, it does have iodine in it.
Okay, so just not as much as the hyper iodized stuff.
So not getting enough iodine in your diet can absolutely increase the risk of thyroid disease, including enlarged thyroid, low thyroid hormone, and iodized salt's the easiest way to get it.
But most salt used in processed foods in the United States is, go ahead, non-ionized, go ahead.
Okay, so there's iodized.
sea salt, and then there's natural sea salt. And if it's natural sea salt, then there's not.
Yeah. Oh, really? Okay. Yeah, it may contain trace amounts of iodine from the ocean water.
Yeah, that's what I was wondering about. But, um, so I guess it depends on the kind of sea salt you buy.
Okay. Give thyself a bell. There you go. Suck it. Suckers. So, um, when you eat in a, um, a restaurant that most of the time
they're going to be using iodized salt
unless it's a really highfalutin
restaurant. But there are also
foods that
you can get iodine from as
well. And
do you know any of those, Dr. Scott?
Say it again.
Foods that have
naturally have iodine. Oh, yes, your kelp.
Yep. Yeah, kelp would be one
seaweed.
Gosh, other things.
Lots of people eat kelp.
Country.
Country.
Norie.
Scott's 100% right.
He should actually get a bell for that because kelp is actually number one.
Fish, cod, tuna, salmon, shellfish, dairy, milk, cheese, yogurt, whole eggs, and then beef liver.
But then fortified breads and cereals will have it too.
But the iodine in those foods can vary.
So what I would do is you don't need a whole lot of iodine.
I mean, for you to get iodine, not poisoning, but to get thyroid disease from lack of iodine,
you really have to have no iodine in your diet whatsoever.
So if you're eating eggs, milk, cheese, tuna shellfish, some fruits, yogurt, you know, restaurant food and stuff like that.
And as Dr. Scott said, seaweed, lima beans, chicken prunes, all these.
things, shrimp, all these things have some iodine in them.
Just, this is what I would do is every few times when you cook, use some iodized salt.
And then you're guaranteed to get it.
You can take iodine tablets, but that's not necessary, I don't think.
I would be very surprised if in the United States, even if you are cooking purely with pink
Himalayan salt, that you don't, are not getting enough iodine unless you're just, you know, literally
eating just vegetables out of your garden.
And even then, there are, you know, a few of them that have some iodine in them anyway.
All right.
So just use some iodine salt every once in a while.
They recommend that you get enough iodine just to avoid thyroid disease.
Now, do you know why they give people iodine tablets when, in case there's a nuclear attack?
Oh, gosh, no.
So what happens is, is you get.
iodine isotopes in the fallout, and they will be taken up by the thyroid, and then over time, this is assuming you survive, you know, the nuclear attack, that those isotopes of iodine will be taken up by the thyroid and eventually will give off beta decay, I believe it's beta decay, and that is ionizing to the point where it can cause cancer.
Wow.
But if you take an iodine tablet, what it does is it fills up all of the iodine receptors in the thyroid,
and then the radioactive iodine will just bounce off the thyroid.
It's got nowhere to go.
Wow.
So that's the key.
So you want to make sure that those receptors are totally filled up so radioactive iodine can't take hold.
Okay?
There you go.
All right.
Very good.
let's see okay hey dr steve how's it going good man how are you um i'm 50 years old
about six foot um about 165 pounds pretty active pretty healthy don't drink don't smoke um but i have to
eat constantly uh and and i have you know my energy sinks if i don't you know and i have to
pack a lot of snacks and water and stuff for my just my daily uh you know work day and um
So is it just a high metabolism or is there something that I should have checked out?
You know, just wondering.
Also, thank you for the many years of service and kind of miss the show on XM, but it can always fall back on the podcast, I suppose.
But thanks for all you do, man.
I appreciate it.
And thanks for the laughs and all the pertinent information.
I really appreciate it, man.
Take care, guys.
Thank you.
That's the role show.
And nothing funny going on in this room.
No funny stuff here.
But I appreciate it.
And yes, we May 11th, maybe the final recording for serious X-M, but we're still going to be doing some stuff.
I don't know what exactly it will be if it's a Friday night live stream or we're just going to do documentary style stuff.
I don't know.
We'll see.
I've really enjoyed Kaylee from Once Over with Kaylee taught me when I was in Largo how, how,
to, or it got me started using DaVinci.
And DaVinci is what they use like, you know,
the movie studios use this stuff.
You can get it for free.
But if you buy the little video editor that's not that expensive,
it's under $400, that you get DaVinci the full implementation for free.
And, I mean, you can do blue screens, green screens.
You can do, you know, all kinds of missed effects.
And just anything you can think of in a movie.
that would be done post-production you can do in Da Vinci.
And I've really enjoyed that, you know, making those videos and stuff.
And I just do real simple stuff with me talking in front of a green screen with an AI doctor's office behind me.
And then just bring up different, you know, video and photographic assets while I'm talking.
But it's really fun to do it.
I like doing that, so I want to do more of that.
Because I see people like Anton from the...
physics channel, and he's always talking, oh, he's the guy that goes, hello, a wonderful person.
And I really like him.
And then every day he does a video about a different science topic, and it's just he does it
in front of a green screen.
And I think I could do one of those a week.
You know, I don't think I'm going to do one every day until I retire, which I'll be dead
before I ever retire.
But anyway, so that's the kind of stuff we're going to do.
But thank you for that.
Now, what the hell was his question?
I don't even remember that either.
You started to get a 50-year-old.
Oh, yeah.
No, he has to eat all the time.
A lot, yeah.
And if he doesn't eat, his energy level dropped.
So Tacey, you want to take this one?
Get him taste.
Aroid?
I'm thinking something else that is pertinent to you.
Insulin resistance.
There you go.
Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
Give thyself a bell.
So that's my guess.
You were nodding.
So go ahead.
A little hypoglycemic, too.
I mean, you know, his body could be just, you know, as you age, your body changes a little bit.
And if he's eating foods that convert into sugar pretty quickly, you know, sometimes we think we're eating really healthy foods like fruits and things that convert into sugar too quickly and it'll spike your insulin.
So it's really important.
When the insulin spikes, it's going to overshoot and then the blood sugar is going to drop.
And then you're going down.
So he needs blood work, correct?
This is what I would do.
If he came to me with that complaint, I'd like to get, you know, a food diary from him.
Yes, absolutely.
What are you eating and then when are you eating it and how do you feel and all that stuff?
But I would do a glucose tolerance test on him where you give him a, you know, a certain amount of sugar.
And then you take blood before and then immediately after and then periodically thereafter.
And you watch the blood sugar peak and then drop.
And if it becomes hypoglycemic, then that makes the diagnosis.
Yeah, and Dang Lizard, actually, I was just reading his question.
Dang Lizard from the fluid family had a question regarding those glucose monitors that people are kind of all the rage right now.
Yeah.
And, you know, what our thoughts are on those things?
You mean for someone that doesn't have diabetes?
Correct, yeah.
Well, but, you know, the reason they're, again, alternative world.
That's fine.
The reason they're wearing them is because what they're trying to do is establish.
which foods you can eat.
I'm fine with that.
That affect you differently.
I'm fine with that.
And so it may be something.
Because a lot of people don't think about you.
They think they have a glass of orange juice and they have some mixed berries and some oatmeal for breakfast.
And they feel great for about 15 minutes.
And then boom.
And it's maybe just maybe one of those constant glucose monitors might help people to realize if they eat their yogurt with berries, there's a reason why they feel good for 15 minutes.
And then it's not very good to rest of the day.
One thing that I would like for him to do is get really.
rid of the carbohydrate snacks and use protein snacks instead because they'll last longer,
they don't spike your insulin.
Absolutely.
And this may be a vicious cycle where he's spiking his insulin in the morning and then it drops.
And now he's taking a carbohydrate snack to get it back up.
And then his insulin is peaking again and then driving his blood sugar down.
And it never ends.
Right.
He's chasing it.
Exactly.
So, you know, the other things that can cause polyphagia, which is.
what we call that. We have to have a different name for everything. It just means
eating a lot. That's poly a lot, phagia, eating, eating a lot. You know, a lack of sleep can do it.
Stress can do it. Just your, you know, and again, shitty diet. There are some medications,
antihistamine, some antidepressants that can cause polyphagia. But the combination of
eating to keep yourself from feeling crappy because your energy level is dropping if you don't
eat really makes me think.
Now, Tacey did say some.
The other thing I would check on them is a thyroid.
Sure.
I would do a thyroid hormone, testosterone.
Yeah.
T-SH, thyroid stimulating hormone just as a screen to see if there's a problem.
If you feel like shit.
And testosterone, yeah, because he's 50.
Check, yeah.
Check that stuff.
Yeah.
If you fail like shit, go check hit.
That's right.
Ain't that right?
That sure is right.
And don't drink diet sodas either.
They're stupid.
Yeah, just get rid of them.
Your body senses sugar, and then it's looking for the chirohydrate rush that never comes.
And then that makes you hungry.
And people who drink diet sodas thinking that they're helping themselves, they're actually making it worse.
And I always wondered how that was possible until I read that, you know, mechanism.
And so would I recommend drinking regular sodas?
no, that's just sugar water.
So we don't have to be constantly entertained, and our tongue doesn't need to be constantly titillated.
No, it doesn't.
Drink water, drink unsweet tea.
Black coffee.
There you go.
Yeah, you don't need the sugar in it.
Yeah.
Something.
I mean, let's get off the sugar water in this country.
Exactly.
Good Lord.
You look at pictures of us in the 1950s, and there are a few.
You fatties, but not anything like now.
And I used to weigh 122, and now, you know, I'm south of 200, but only 20 pounds south of 200.
And, you know, I don't follow my own advice.
I need to be eating more protein and less carbohydrates myself.
But anyway, so Dr. Scott, I didn't ever answer that question about Sirius XM.
We are currently on Sunday at 7, I think.
Yeah, because I got off on talking about Rob Bartlett.
That's what it was.
The best way to listen to us is on demand.
Just go use the Serious XM app and listen to it that way.
Then you don't have to worry about what time we're on and all that stuff.
And I think some of it is we're getting preempted for sports right now
because they're stealing bandwidth from 103 to broadcast sports.
So the Sunday show is still intact.
Hopefully, when basketball season is over, then we'll be back to Saturday and Sunday.
Cool.
Okay.
But anyway.
All right, Dr. Scott, let's go through the fluid family.
If you want to join the fluid family, go to YouTube.com slash at Weird Medicine and hit join and subscribe that costs nothing.
Subscribe is just like following somebody on Facebook.
And then, but hit join, but you don't have to pay the name.
99 cents.
You can just click
accept gifted
memberships
because Myrtle
Manus gave out
10 gifted
weird medicine
memberships
and somebody else
did the same
Lebron Mystic
also gave
10 weird medicine
with Dr. Steve
memberships.
Thank you very much
LeBron Mystic.
I hope I'm
pronouncing that right.
It's L-A-B-R-N
Mystic.
I always have trouble
when there's missing
vowels in there.
So you had a question,
Dr. Scott?
Yes, King had a question from the fluid family.
He says, or she says, I lost my job in January because they no longer accepted my medical documentation that I had an anaphylactic reaction to the flu vaccine.
They wanted to do a stratification testing.
Okay.
I disagree with that vehemently.
If you have a physician that says you had anaphylaxis, they don't have any business standing between you and your doctor.
No.
And there may be some relief for you on this one.
Yeah. I'll be reaching out to someone who knows more about the, if he's part of a union or labor law stuff.
Yeah, it has an attorney that would be.
Because, you know, all this business with the, you know, the COVID mandates, people that lost their jobs because they refused are now either getting relief or they're getting their jobs back.
but, you know, they can do stratification testing.
But if you have an anaphylactic reaction to that,
they're actually, you know, exposing you to more anaphylaxis
because it doesn't take much.
Mm-hmm.
Right?
Yeah.
And anaplexus, you know, happening once is plenty.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't understand that at all.
I'd be calling it.
Why are they doubting you?
Are you just a big, fat liar?
You know?
Hmm.
Yeah, I'm not okay with that.
Yeah, I'm not either.
That's really terrible.
Let us know how that goes.
You can email me too, and I can send you maybe some information from medical literature
regarding anaphylaxis and influenza vaccine that might help your case.
Especially state specific if we knew where King is.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, King, just email me.
Good luck.
All right, sorry about that.
Let me see.
Yeah, dang lizard saying monitor your glucose levels.
become a common health trend.
Yes, okay.
And it looks like that's it.
Anything else?
Not that I saw.
Tice, you got anything else?
Of course not.
Okay.
Yeah.
King is saying stratification testing scares me.
I don't blame him.
Yeah.
If you ever had, okay, so let's say you had influenza to shellfish and you go to a restaurant.
And they, what did I say?
Influenza.
Oh, sorry about that.
I'm an idiot.
That's okay.
Yeah.
Sorry about that.
Okay.
Okay. So if you have anaphylaxis to shellfish and you go to a restaurant and they go, oh, yeah, we've got shellfish and everything, but let's just, you know, let's just give you a little bit and see how you do. That's stupid. That's a terrible idea. That's a terrible idea.
Yeah, don't do it. Don't do it.
So, I mean, I hate for you to be at risk for influenza because it sucks.
It does suck, yeah.
And the influenza vaccine does reduce the risk of dying from influenza and from, you know, ending up in the hospital.
But an anaphylaxis can kill you right then.
So you've got anaphylaxis on one hand and the potential maybe the influenza will take you out of this world on the other hand.
So, you know, you could see an immunologist.
They are, you know, allergy, allergist, immunologist, and talk to them about it.
And maybe they can write you a letter that says, hell no.
You know, you just get some back on it.
Or they may say, hey, we've got this thing we could do.
be able to desensitize you. I had to, in medical school, desensitize somebody to penicillin
because it was literally the only drug that you could use to kill the thing that was killing
them. And so they said that they had anaphylaxis to penicillin. And so the inflexious
disease guy, here I am, the fourth-year medical students, and here's the protocol. You do it.
And you give somebody, you know, increasing doses and see what happens.
And what you're trying to do is get the antibodies to bind on the first smaller doses.
So when you give the larger doses, they're depleted and are already bound up somewhere.
And, yeah, we were successful in being able to do that.
But that person was going to die if we didn't do it.
You know, there is a risk of death of not taking the influence.
when's a vaccine, but it's vanishingly small.
So that's a different situation.
All right?
Yep.
King, stay in touch with us on that.
All right.
All right.
All right.
Very good.
Thanks to Dr. Scott.
Thanks, Tacey.
Thanks to everyone in the fluid family.
Checking us out at YouTube.com slash at weird medicine.
We're broadcast.
You know, we're not really doing a live stream.
We're doing behind the scenes podcast, you know, episode recording.
Listen to our Cirrus XM show on the Faction Talk channel right now,
Sundays at 7 p.m. Eastern, but on demand and other times at Jim McClure's pleasure.
And many thanks to our listeners whose voicemail and topic ideas make this job very easy.
Good to our website, Dr. Steve.com for schedules, podcasts, and other crap,
and check out Dr. Scott's website at Simplyherbalts.
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, everybody.
Thank you.
Thank you.