[00:00:00] Carl Lanore: [00:00:00] You're watching the video, you see me smiling? It's because I can see Adam Lamb in our green room and what he's wearing. We're going to bring him on in just a minute. Today is a Thursday. Every other Thursday we do the renew life, our rec show with Adam Lamb. He's actually here today in person. We've, uh, he's honoring us, uh, by being here today.
[00:00:19] Uh, but before we get started with a good discussion, today we're going to cover three different topics. Go to talk about the antibody test. We're going to talk about D H E a. For menopause. This is a big game changer for a lot of women out there who are stuck and can't find the doctor. We're going to talk about that.
[00:00:35] And then also, uh, with almost predicted 700 million type two diabetics, uh, globally, uh, by the year 20, 45, I think it's like 350 million. Now, uh, we may have something that pennies a day to protect them from some of the harmful effects of type two diabetes. Before I get started with that, [00:01:00] of course, I have to acknowledge my title sponsor.
[00:01:03] That is legendary foods. Of course, and right now you can get 10% off anything you buy at legendary foods. They're seasoned nuts, they're delicious nut butters, and yes, the insanely popular. Toaster pastry, uh, the tasty pastry, which is a low carb toaster pastry, uh, less than one gram of sugar. They taste like pop tarts, but they taste better.
[00:01:30] They have nine grams of protein. So if you're somebody who's on a, you're focused on protein as one of your important macros in your diet, uh, that is where you want to be. So now let me, uh, play his theme music. Here we go. The first step to changing your life starts with the renew life show with Adam Lamb.
[00:01:59] Know Adam lives in [00:02:00] Texas and he's afraid that he could get put in jail by doing this interview without his mask on. Very nice. How are you.
[00:02:09] Adam Lamb: [00:02:09] So yesterday's the first time, you know, we, we first started seeing patients back here in the office yesterday. I'm, it's so funny cause our practitioners and myself, I'm in my office, but, you know, I say greet them and things like that.
[00:02:22] So, um, but I'm not like treating them up close and doing the injections, things like that. And it was so funny because at the end of the day we were like, you know, we took her mess off. For breathing your own CO2, like it's not
[00:02:38] Carl Lanore: [00:02:38] healthy to wear a mask. So I haven't wanted to jump on this comment because actually, um, I think it was Judy who came up.
[00:02:47] Mike Ovitz came on my show recently. You know, she's like a, she's like going viral right now with her videos planned. Debbie,
[00:02:54] Adam Lamb: [00:02:54] she was,
[00:02:55] Carl Lanore: [00:02:55] yeah, she was on last week and she was talking about that. And actually I attended [00:03:00] a quest think tank. Uh, breathing your own CO2 is actually a good thing. If you ratio two levels in blood, it liberates more oxygen.
[00:03:10] CO2 is a very misunderstood gas. It's not a waste. It's not a waste of gas.
[00:03:16] Adam Lamb: [00:03:16] That's like when you put your face over back from hyperventilating, call me.
[00:03:20] Carl Lanore: [00:03:20] Well, but it's not. It's not just that. It's not just that. If you study Buteyko breathing, if you've ever heard of Buteyko breathing or even a whim, Hoff.
[00:03:29] He's another guy. Then these, these guys, they understand the value of carbon dioxide. It's not a waste gas. It's a, it's a very important gas. In fact. Now, when firemen, um, are checking to see if someone is alive and or can be revived, let's say they're trying to. Brett, you know, pump the heart and revive somebody.
[00:03:52] They look at SHEEO two levels, and that's a better indicator of whether or not you're going to get somebody, because when CO2 levels rise in the blood, [00:04:00] it actually allows the hemoglobin to release more oxygen into tissue, so it has the opposite
[00:04:08] Adam Lamb: [00:04:08] situation. Fasting. Well get your body to use that stored sugar better than if you give it sugar.
[00:04:16] Right? Still gives you a headache.
[00:04:19] Carl Lanore: [00:04:19] And I think what gives you a headache? I think what gives you a headache? Is it so much the CO2 as the restricted breathing. Yeah. And that's you're blowing out and you're literally putting a lot more effort. You know, you breathe, you breathe, you, yeah. 17,000 to 30,000 breaths a day.
[00:04:38] We take now imagine just restricting it a little bit. Like now all of a sudden your lungs are working, right. We have to push harder. We have to suck harder. So yeah,
[00:04:48] Adam Lamb: [00:04:48] makes a lot of sense, because anything can cause a headache. Right. And so. But even, you know, the hip hop stuff, I don't know. I do a lot of that with I, I've read about it and watches videos.
[00:04:59] I'll do that in [00:05:00] the, in the water. I get my pool the wintertime and when it's in the fifties and even it's times lower and do that breathing and it's, it's crazy how it works.
[00:05:10] Carl Lanore: [00:05:10] Phrasing it is amazing. So I have to announce something real quick. Did you may not be aware of this, but we are now available on over 100 million.
[00:05:19] Alexa, smart speakers around the world. All you have to do is walk up to your Alexa and say, Alexa, play superhuman radio podcast and the latest show we'll play. And if you know how to command your Alexa, you can go back. You can go forward. So convenience of listening to the show now, I mean, you could just start it on a Saturday morning and work all day and it'll play one podcast after the other.
[00:05:41] You get all caught up. So check that out on your Alexa. Let me know how it works.
[00:05:44] Adam Lamb: [00:05:44] Well, that's cool.
[00:05:46] Carl Lanore: [00:05:46] Alright, so. We're going to start off with, we've got three topics today, da TA for menopause, melatonin for type two diabetes. And then we're going to talk about, um, the antibody [00:06:00] tests because you guys are offering that now and you want to enlighten people, so to speak about what they do and how to estimate
[00:06:08] Adam Lamb: [00:06:08] at a high level too with this da.
[00:06:11] If you ask for women, you know. Medication number one, I'll let you guess to Stastrom medication. Number two, DHA, and 95% of the time, that's where we stop it. Just have the most success. Melatonin. I'm super interested in that conversation because I don't know much about. That's studying workplace.
[00:06:32] Interesting. And then, yeah, we can hit on the Cobra 19 stuff because you only have so many patients nationwide that we can leverage their telemedicine platform to just get them set up to go right in, get to the lab report, which is reputable, you have to pull back a hundred antibody tests or something like that.
[00:06:50] Companies out there because. You know what, it's like anything. I had a guy who was, and just get it done for 15 bucks at this little plastic thing that's made China that was bought and [00:07:00] ball for, you know, like. Why is phage if it doesn't work? You know?
[00:07:05] Carl Lanore: [00:07:05] So this particular study was called an overview of DHA, but it's parenthetically seven 60.
[00:07:11] And there's a reason for that. I'll explain as a treatment for genital Nuria syndrome of menopause, which is, uh, when women's thought to have, uh, problems with their vaginas drying out, basically, the Walston vagina drives out and, and then makes intercourse. A real big problem. Uh, intercourse, uh, and being intimate becomes a problem.
[00:07:35] But also there are other, uh, other effects when you usually get this, uh, this condition. Uh, you'll also notice that you, you may start to have incontinence. The bladder starts to malfunction. These are all from estrogen and androgens disappearing post-menopause. So what they did was. And I want to distinguish that we're talking about a study [00:08:00] that's talking about a pharmaceutical DHA cream that placed into vaginally and as a pharmaceutical, they don't call it, um,
[00:08:13] They, they call it because it's a, it's, it's, it's da TA, just like the DHA. You could buy it your grocery store. But it's made into a topical or transdermal cream that women then put inside their vaginas to a suede. This, this an embarrassing problem of, of menopause. But what I'm submitting today is that you can take this research to also imply that women can supplement with DHA.
[00:08:46] And get the same results and more. Because remember, when, when, when women have this problem of painful intercourse, uh, some doctors prescribe estrogen cream to be put in the vagina. [00:09:00] Uh, and, and all it does is it gets the vaginal wall. It gets all of that tissue in there, reset, moderated, like it was when you were young.
[00:09:10] That's all it really does. But the reality is that. The estrogen that goes away in your body goes away in your entire body, and that's how it affects the vagina. But it's affecting your brain. It's affecting your heart, it's affecting your kidneys. It's, it's affecting everything. So instead of taking this approach, many people who are watching the show today and listening can also accept the implication that if you take oral DHA, you will lose this.
[00:09:38] Negative effect of going through menopause, but you'll also gain a lot of other benefits besides just not having painful intercourse.
[00:09:45] Adam Lamb: [00:09:45] Janet, for us, you know, from our perspective, what we see just about everybody should be taking 25 milligrams of DHA every year, and we've had folks come up like. Actually one of the most [00:10:00] popular marketing people as soon as fifties has was having trouble getting out of bed and he thought he needed all this stuff.
[00:10:06] We said, just try it. 25 milligrams of THCA in a week is, you know, his clock was reset. Cortisol is popping when it's supposed to in the morning and things like that. Found himself more likely to relax at night. Things like that. And DJ's, and it's cheap. You can go get, you know, we get like pharmaceutical DHA through the pharmacy, but you can still go get a good quality DHA supplement online for 15 bucks for, you know, 25 milligrams, something like that.
[00:10:36] And I don't know about your opinion, but I don't think you need all that stuff that they, you know, there's so many different things added with the AGA and we just haven't. Well, not necessary.
[00:10:49] Carl Lanore: [00:10:49] It's not necessary. DHA is two clicks downstream from, uh, from, uh, pregnant alone. Three clicks downstream from, from some, from cholesterol.
[00:11:00] [00:10:59] It's a, it's a, it's a, one of the progenitor type hormones. It can make testosterone, it could make estrogen. And from that. DHT. Uh, I mean, you know, it's, it's a, it's a great way to kind of, uh, you know, and, uh, we've lost dr Crisler many years ago, but crystal used to say DHA is a great hormone because the back loads and F and then if your body wants more testosterone, or if your body wants more estrogen, it will produce that on demand.
[00:11:27] If you have that building block.
[00:11:28] Adam Lamb: [00:11:28] And that's one of the things that we've always said is to explain it simply as DJs, like that harmonizing hormone that when levels are healthy. It's, it helps your body to do what needs to be done, whether it's increased testosterone, increased estrogen, and we kind of use the analogy for folks like your listeners and us.
[00:11:48] We're a bit more educated in this space, but for. Susie down the street that knows nothing. The analogy we use is, it's kind of like that police officer at the four way stop when the traffic lights out that comes in and it's like, [00:12:00] okay, you come, all right, estrogen, hold on, testosterone or you in it, and we really see that balancing of hormones happening.
[00:12:08] DHA levels are optimal. We also see DHA get crushed. A high stress, high adrenal, high cortisol. You know, people, everybody,
[00:12:18] Carl Lanore: [00:12:18] well, think about it. Think about it in both men and women. DHA is made in the adrenal glands. Yeah. And there's some residual amounts made in other tissue, but if your adrenals are getting hammered and they're making cortisol, they're going, Hey, we really can't.
[00:12:32] We don't have the building blocks to make DHA and cortisol. We gotta make a choice here. I want to answer Lee wall. I want, I want you to answer Lee wall's question cause I'm sure you get this from time to time. So Lee says DHA is not recommended if taking blood thinners, which it sounds like, um, is there any way around this?
[00:12:50] So
[00:12:50] Adam Lamb: [00:12:50] my first question will be. I don't know. You know, that's something like the doctor makes that decision and that question. I just think that back to our team. [00:13:00] Um, but most, we don't see a lot of people on blood thinners, you know, that come through our client base. But I think that's something we could look into and get back to.
[00:13:10] Lee about to find out. I don't, I don't know,
[00:13:13] Carl Lanore: [00:13:13] to reach out, Lee and why that's my why is on blood thinners, right?
[00:13:20] Adam Lamb: [00:13:20] Because a lot of times in these, I'm not recommending this, but a lot of times it's said, and then when you ask why, they don't know why. They just, you know, that's what it was said. And so I would be curious, unless, you know, I don't think DHA has anything to do with blood pressure or.
[00:13:38] Yeah. Maybe
[00:13:41] Carl Lanore: [00:13:41] most people, most people, most people today are on a blood thinner because of either idiopathic mitral valve prolapse or some sort of rhythm issue like a AFib, and that 90% of the people on blood thinners are on it for that reason.
[00:13:58] Adam Lamb: [00:13:58] Come through with any cardiovascular. [00:14:00] Always have to get cleared, but that's their wheel house.
[00:14:05] Carl Lanore: [00:14:05] And keep in mind, a lot of doctors put people on blood thinners telling them like somebody will have a clot, they'll have a thrombotic incident. The doctor will say, we're going to put you on blood thinners. We're going to monitor you. And then they watch you. And like a year later, your blood lipids have changed and inflammatory markers are down, but they don't take you off the blood thinner.
[00:14:24] So you may want to revisit your doctor if your doctor says, no, you'll never be on blood thinners. Then you may want to look at, uh, talking to your doctor and saying, I want to take DHA. And here's what I'd like to do. I'd like to come in and take my protime test, which is the clotting test you have to take if you're on one of the more aggressive, uh, blood thinners, there are some that say you don't have to go for the test, but you can say, look, I want to get a test.
[00:14:50] I want to supplement with DTA for a month. That's not going to kill me. It's not going to thicken my blood so much in just a month where I'm going to fucking, Oh, excuse me, I'm so sorry. [00:15:00] The stroke out. I'll bleep that. Where at what time was that one 15. But at the same time I'd like to monitor it cause I'm going to start taking DHA.
[00:15:08] Then I want to come back and have my protime test done again and see if we have to adjust my blood thinner. Because if you tell your doctor you want to take it, they say, well, I don't recommend it. I say, I understand you're not recommending it, but I want to take it. I'm going to take it and I'd like to do it with your, with your supervision.
[00:15:24] That's all. Do that
[00:15:25] Adam Lamb: [00:15:25] and that's usually just conversation stuff to have a lot of. Situations. But I think that's great advice and I think that's great advice with anything you've researched and wanting to do.
[00:15:41] Carl Lanore: [00:15:41] So Tom, Tommy D has a question and I can't put it up, Tommy, cause the button isn't there to put it up.
[00:15:46] But Tommy D says, how about seven Quito, DHA, similar mechanisms, absolutely not. Right.
[00:15:53] Adam Lamb: [00:15:53] And this is why I said don't go get it. Plus products just to
[00:15:58] Carl Lanore: [00:15:58] the right, just plain old [00:16:00] DHA, right? Yeah. No, it does. In fact, the HTA, uh, seven Quito, DHA has very few of the hormonal effects that DHA has. And supposedly it's just the, uh, the thermogenic, uh, fat burning effects.
[00:16:12] So I don't even, and that's really iffy. A lot of people have used it.
[00:16:20] Uh, da GA, uh. Obviously, we just covered this, I'm sorry. It's a steroidal hormone. It produces estrogens and androgens, comprehensive drug evaluation describing chemical compositions and, and all of the effects of press, their own press own as the interventional da. Uh, but when they, when they put the women on it, uh, they lost a lot of the side effects of going through menopause.
[00:16:48] Uh, and sexual dysfunction went away. Uh, they were able to be intimate again. So this is, this is this, you should look at this in the same way that you look at just supplementing with DHA. I would say [00:17:00] to women, don't worry about getting on a special DHA product. Just take plain old DHA. Have your physician supervise it.
[00:17:10] You know, watch the, because don't forget, DHA is technically an androgen. It's technically an androgen that can make estrogen. It is susceptible to a romanticization, just like testosterone. And that's how it makes estrogen. So women who have more body fat, they'll get higher rises of estrogen from taking a DHA and the women who Alina may see high rises and testosterone.
[00:17:34] But what I do know is I know a lot of women at the time that they were faced with getting on HRT and they started taking. Just a simple DHA tablet, which is over the counter here in the United States. Unfortunately, not in Canada, but you can't get doctors to prescribe it, and they didn't need any other therapy, but take the DTA.
[00:17:55] Adam Lamb: [00:17:55] Yeah. And we, you know, and that's, like I said, those are the two main [00:18:00] paths. And depending on the doc might say, Hey, we're going to start the HTA. Let's go 30 days. Let's see how you feel. And if the AGA solves the problem, they're like, wow, I feel this is, this is what I wanted to feel. We're done. And if we get that 30 day Mark and they're like, eh, there's something else I'm looking for, then we'll add that to stop, start or vice versa.
[00:18:23] We'll put in the testosterone and then at 30 days we'll find out. How you know, how are you feeling? How you sleep in DHA really helps a lot of people sleep better. We'll take it into, uh, and so then we'll add it in that way. But those are the two, like, you know, powerhouse, you know, therapy processes for women.
[00:18:43] And usually.
[00:18:44] Carl Lanore: [00:18:44] We do bull penny and it's pennies a day. You told him about pennies a day and you're talking about something that, and the other thing is that, you know, when you start talking about estrogen and testosterone, it's almost like, Oh, wait a minute. Now we're waiting into like dangerous stuff. The women's health initiative, [00:19:00] breast cancer, you don't care.
[00:19:01] Like you just have to say those words and everything after that is taken with the . But, but no doctor's ever been called on the carpet for prescribing DHA because it's an over the counter supplement.
[00:19:14] Adam Lamb: [00:19:14] And the other thing with the AGA too is add on it. From the, you know, fitness, you know, the drug abuse app, you know, area.
[00:19:25] DHA is not strong enough to do anything, so they don't take it right. And then from the normal Joe, doctor, family physician know anything about the HEA, so no one's taken it. So it's this big space of people that everyone should be, you know, theoretically it should be taking 25 milligrams of DHA supplement.
[00:19:47] Every evening
[00:19:48] Carl Lanore: [00:19:48] in art. So you think if you say, take it in the evening, huh?
[00:19:52] Adam Lamb: [00:19:52] Yeah. So what we found, there's two different things. Some people can take it right before bed, but if, depending on how you metabolize medication, if you take it, you [00:20:00] might be a little groggier. So we kind of said that after dinner time, usually.
[00:20:05] It gets kind of, you know, you're getting that large amount of DHA, which is bringing down adrenal, which is, you know, keeping cortisol down so that cortisol spikes at the DGA kind of wears off in the morning when you're supposed to. Right. And that's where we see people get way better sleep. Less stress, easier time unwinding.
[00:20:25] We even at the end, some folks have them do like an afternoon, so like a one or two o'clock DHA, the high function, high stress individuals, and then that evening dose again too.
[00:20:36] Carl Lanore: [00:20:36] I'm going to have to try this. So I've always taken DHA in the morning because of a study I read probably 12 years ago that showed that Dak agonizes melatonin.
[00:20:45] That they're, they are, they are the exact opposite. So, you know, melatonin kicks in at night when the sun goes down. DHA kicks in in the morning when the sun comes up. And so I've never experimented with it at night, but I may give it a try and see. So you find, [00:21:00] so if I wanted it to, I have my last meal at 6:00 PM I want to take it with a fatty meal.
[00:21:04] Can I take it then?
[00:21:05] Adam Lamb: [00:21:05] Take it. That is just because you want your cortisol in the morning. To, to get you out of bed. And DHA actually can help come backwards on it. And then it, it doesn't make as much sense, but if you take it too late and you're a slow metabolizer, you could find yourself like still having that.
[00:21:26] Like, I don't really want to get out of bed. You know, if you're usually
[00:21:29] Carl Lanore: [00:21:29] do during this, during this covert 19 thing, I don't want to get out of bed in the morning. I gotta be honest with you. I am. I am suffering from clinical depression. I mean, I'm not sad about my life. I'm happy about my life, but it's like I don't want to train Adam.
[00:21:44] I haven't trained all week. I
[00:21:46] Adam Lamb: [00:21:46] like 46 pushups on the counter and that was it.
[00:21:51] Carl Lanore: [00:21:51] You had done
[00:21:54] Adam Lamb: [00:21:54] some ups, but I'm too lazy to lay it out.
[00:21:57] Carl Lanore: [00:21:57] Like, like for me getting in the car. [00:22:00] Turning that key on and realizing I'm going to the gym, my, my, everything changes about me. I'm like excited.
[00:22:07] Adam Lamb: [00:22:07] The other day, like I think the last time I was out and we talked about that having to go to the gym process.
[00:22:12] You know, I think it's like, I think of an athlete like leaving the locker room. Like I know a lot of pro athletes have conversations with them in that locker room or that coming through that tunnel and there's, all of them will tell you there's no feeling. From that moment of getting up off the bench in the locker room to getting out there on the court.
[00:22:32] It's like I get chills talking about it cause I know that feeling of that game on feeling, you know what I mean? If that's what you're used to say. I'm the same way. I can't wait to go to the gym,
[00:22:43] Carl Lanore: [00:22:43] but, you know, it might feel good. Yeah. I, I feel good. I was just talking to a friend yesterday and I said, I, I, I'm chomping at the bit like I am, I'm already creating my program.
[00:22:56] Like I am going to crush it when I get back to the gym and I'm not going to miss a [00:23:00] day. And, um, I mean I'm, this was actually very therapeutic for me, not training cause I, I, I have muscle aches. Yeah. Cause at my age you don't train, you start getting muscle pain. It just,
[00:23:11] Adam Lamb: [00:23:11] I get tired or two of my ankylosing spondylitis if I don't, and I'm just too lazy to even do my stress.
[00:23:15] It's like, you know, I do my workout, which gets a heavier way. It gets the blood flowing and then I'm more likely to want to get down, stretch, but like to get up in the morning and go do it. I'm like, for what? You know, I don't, I don't want to, but it's a, yeah, it's almost
[00:23:30] Carl Lanore: [00:23:30] so, you know what I had to do, Adam, to quench my.
[00:23:35] My thirst, my I, I, I've been sad. I've been depressed. I, I, I thought, you know what I need to do? What would Adam do? I know what Adam would do. Adam would go out and buy himself a beautiful. Harley Davidson motorcycle. Right. Look at that. That will be here. It's moving today from Tulsa, Oklahoma. Uh, and I'm hoping it's here by the weekend.
[00:23:59] It probably won't be [00:24:00] here till maybe Monday. I'm hoping it's going to be by the weekend, but I am so excited. I can't wait. I have not had a motorcycle since I was 21 or 22 years old.
[00:24:10] Adam Lamb: [00:24:10] I almost bought one in November. I was going to get a triumphs. Thruxton I think they're called really sweet in the day I went and wrote it.
[00:24:19] It was going to get it. I had some notice somewhat. Somehow someone like hacked. A wire. It's anyway stole like nine grand from us and from do a wire we're supposed to send anyway, watch your email if you're sending wires. And uh, and I was like, God, that's a sign from God because of the motorcycle I was going to get was like, it was like 7,500.
[00:24:42] I was like, maybe I don't get it yet, but I used to, I used to race a Swart likes.
[00:24:46] Carl Lanore: [00:24:46] Oh really?
[00:24:48] Adam Lamb: [00:24:48] Uh, mania. My wife won't let me get anything that's not like cruiser.
[00:24:52] Carl Lanore: [00:24:52] Yeah, right. No cafes for you
[00:24:54] Adam Lamb: [00:24:54] over the front wheel. It crazy stuff. We used to be stumped. Yeah.
[00:24:58] Carl Lanore: [00:24:58] I almost [00:25:00] bought the, um, what's the, um, the V um, well, yeah, I always bought a V rod instead.
[00:25:09] That thing's
[00:25:10] Adam Lamb: [00:25:10] bad.
[00:25:10] Carl Lanore: [00:25:10] 200. It's 200 horsepower. No, I think
[00:25:13] Adam Lamb: [00:25:13] sweet and it's, it's still a cruiser, but it's a, that was like my first, I wanted something small, little triumph, you know, wife and I, little helmets, putting around the Woodlands, going to grab dinner, you know, something simple like that. I still will get,
[00:25:27] Carl Lanore: [00:25:27] yeah, I know.
[00:25:28] I just, I felt like add is the time to do it. I mean, I'm really, I, I'm looking forward to it. The one thing I'm looking forward to is not about, I'm looking forward to everything opening back up where, you know, w we're 50 days in, as you can see here. To the covert thing, but I can't wait for that bike to get here.
[00:25:43] I look, we're going to take a quick commercial break. When we come back, we're going to talk about another inexpensive supplement that could possibly save a lot of lives of people with type two diabetes. You're listening to the renew life AREC show with Adam Lamb. Go to renew life rx.com today. If you want to feel [00:26:00] younger, look better and be prepared.
[00:26:03] Next time another pandemic comes around, we'll be right. Yeah.
[00:26:07] Adam Lamb: [00:26:07] We're brawn and brains. Finally meet.
[00:26:19] Carl Lanore: [00:26:19] Adam is on the move,
[00:26:21] Adam Lamb: [00:26:21] making moves.
[00:26:23] Carl Lanore: [00:26:23] I like that shirt.
[00:26:24] Adam Lamb: [00:26:24] Every minute. Golf clothes are like, women get to where they're like yoga pants and there can be. Cause those are like pants on too. I mean, they're like comfy.
[00:26:39] Carl Lanore: [00:26:39] You know, when you, I gotta be honest with you. I know I've said this to you before and I'm not trying to be, uh, I'm not trying to be an idiot or something, but you look like you could be like a movie star on a hallmark channel movie.
[00:26:51] No, you do. You have that, you have that wholesome. Look, you know what I mean? You got a nice physique, a, you got nice mannerisms, a nice way about you. [00:27:00] I gotta believe that's contributed a lot to your success as well. It has to have,
[00:27:04] Adam Lamb: [00:27:04] you know, my father-in-law's always said to my wife, who's very good looking, you know, your looks are a gift that can get you in the door, but your, you know, your content.
[00:27:16] Carl Lanore: [00:27:16] I get it.
[00:27:17] Adam Lamb: [00:27:17] I get it. That's what I think. My wife's always been successful as she's really good looking, super polite, and. Really smarter. Right? So mean, you have some
[00:27:25] Carl Lanore: [00:27:25] the whole time. Yeah.
[00:27:26] Adam Lamb: [00:27:26] Yeah. Well, thank you for all the
[00:27:28] Carl Lanore: [00:27:28] Hollywood folks now. Maybe. Yeah, there you go, man. So call sets. So what does he know globally?
[00:27:35] Uh, and 2019, there was approximately 463 million adults between the ages of 20 and 79. That's shocking. 20, uh, that will living with type two diabetes, and it's estimated by 2045 that this will be 700 million people. This is, this is a ridiculous situation because this is completely avoidable. Uh, let's be honest.
[00:27:56] Type two diabetes is something you give yourself. [00:28:00] That's because of your lifestyle, your eating habits.
[00:28:03] Adam Lamb: [00:28:03] The tiny gap is you to have a predisposition. You can, that's a DNA. Uh, but. You could still eat,
[00:28:14] Carl Lanore: [00:28:14] but, but here's the thing. Here's the thing. That DNA stuff, when we first learned about it, they called it the thrifty gene.
[00:28:21] That was actually a, an evolutionary metabolic gift that ensured that you would survive in times of famine. But now that gene is mismatched for the fact that you have a fridge six feet away from you, and the desire to eat every 15 minutes. Right? I
[00:28:39] Adam Lamb: [00:28:39] w I had a client yesterday, he's in his fifties well, the guy takes your guess.
[00:28:42] Reminds me of like you outspoken and shape still in it, but his blood sugar is always higher and I'm like, man, we got up. He's like, listen, I need half a bag. Licorice when I get home and I don't hear his blood work, actually just did it. He's been a client for about seven [00:29:00] years and his water is healthiest.
[00:29:02] He's like, that's the healthiest blood work I've ever had. Is that Adam, I'm not changing shit. Liberation, you know, with the guy's face. I sent him pictures, but the point being is that that repeat habit creates that insulin sensitivity. Then you might look good, right? You might be fit and you can still be fit and still have.
[00:29:22] Get type two diabetes
[00:29:24] Carl Lanore: [00:29:24] course. Of course, there's a lot of people who don't look like they would have insulin resistance that do.
[00:29:31] Adam Lamb: [00:29:31] A lot of folks are saying, is that sugar right? When you wake up, it's the worst thing you can do
[00:29:37] Carl Lanore: [00:29:37] because it sets up, it sets up the rest of the day to be this. This boomerang
[00:29:42] Adam Lamb: [00:29:42] is what happens when you spike insulin.
[00:29:43] Your growth hormone goes down and there's so many people. I know that growth hormone is super expensive and folks that take growth hormone. And then 15 minutes later they're eating a bowl of cereal. You know, it just, it just shutting the whole process down and growth hormone is very important to our recovery.
[00:29:59] And, [00:30:00] you know, everything, you know, like all things were about it. So, anyway, that's diabetes.
[00:30:05] Carl Lanore: [00:30:05] So 78, 79% of people with diabetes, they live in a, they live in a middle, a middle income, low and middle income countries, which is baffling to me. Right? But no, it's not. But there was a movie once called, um. From Prada to nada.
[00:30:22] It was a B movie with these two sisters. They were Latino, they were very wealthy. The father lost all the money and they had to now get used to being regular people. And they were like high maintenance girls in LA, you know, Beverly Hills. And uh, and, and there was one line in it. Like they, they went to a restaurant and like all they could afford were these things.
[00:30:43] And she's like, those are all carbs. Carbs are for poor people. And while that's a joke, it's not.
[00:30:51] Adam Lamb: [00:30:51] No. And that's if, you know, if the government were step in right now, and we can get constitutional and other conversation, but [00:31:00] go into the dollar menu and look at the things that are on the dollar menu, and it's all things that are going to kill you,
[00:31:07] Carl Lanore: [00:31:07] right?
[00:31:07] It's very, very, very, very, very high in carbohydrate load. Very, very high in sugar. A very, very high and added sodium
[00:31:14] Adam Lamb: [00:31:14] that and fried food and things like that, you know? And then the reality is people not being active and not using the sugar and things like that as well.
[00:31:26] Carl Lanore: [00:31:26] So there's this isn't it? So this is a 30,000 foot view comment.
[00:31:30] This has nothing to do with the study itself, but it's something to make people go, Hmm, that's interesting. So. In this study, they started out with 36 rats. They cut them into groups of 18 and we're going to talk about that in a second, but they had to make one group of rats diabetic, and they used a drug called strep, strep, strep, strep, Zosyn, I'm trying to pronounce it.
[00:31:57] That was good. And so [00:32:00] streptozotocin is a cancer drug. But I thought that, you know, I saw that CIN at the, at the end, you know, wrap myosin, uh, zip the myosin. And I thought, gee, this is interesting. So I looked it up. It is in fact, an antibiotic that's so powerful that it destroys the, uh, the Insulet cells of the pancreas and makes you forever diabetic.
[00:32:24] Now the reason I point this out. Is, there's obviously an issue between the gut microbiome, the development development of type two diabetes, and this kind of connects it because this particular antibiotic destroys a lot of microbes in the gut. Some good, some bad. I just wanted to point that out to people that, yeah, this, this antibiotic will make you diabetic.
[00:32:52] Adam Lamb: [00:32:52] What is that antibiotic. Typically prescribed for,
[00:32:55] Carl Lanore: [00:32:55] so it's prescribed for cancer because it's a, it's a, it's, it [00:33:00] stops. Um, it's an antiangiogenic, uh, stops blood flow to tumors and stuff like that. So think about this, right? You go to the doctor, they go, you got this tumor, we're going to give you this drug.
[00:33:10] We're going to get rid of that tumor, but you're going to be forever diabetic and insulin dependent. That, that actually is something it's done with.
[00:33:18] Adam Lamb: [00:33:18] Well, I, I can think of recently a female client of ours had cancer and she just can't lose weight. I mean, like her thyroid was smoked or just the officer was like, literally less.
[00:33:32] That didn't even register. It was like under, under three, which has nothing. Um, and same thing, you know, she had some insulin resistance, but,
[00:33:40] and
[00:33:41] Carl Lanore: [00:33:41] also her body,
[00:33:42] Adam Lamb: [00:33:42] just her from an, you know, just. Not being well, and so, but now she's having tremendous results on hormone therapy, but it's true that so many of those drugs, it just beat cancer, but just beat everything else to be a long time without, you know, how to come back from [00:34:00] that properly to build those natural.
[00:34:02] Behaviors back up if some things were taken away. Totally.
[00:34:07] Carl Lanore: [00:34:07] But the other, the other thing is like just from the 30,000 foot view though, I was trying to imply here, is that we, there were so many pharmaceutical drugs that that fix this. But they destroy these other six things and you end up dying from those things, and medicine thinks that's a win.
[00:34:22] That's just, that's what I'm pointing out here. This is an antibiotic that makes you forever diabetic and they're probably going to give it to somebody who's dealing with cancer right now. So it's, it's horrible. So this money, I'm sorry. Good
[00:34:35] Adam Lamb: [00:34:35] diabetic drug people are like. Looks good to me.
[00:34:38] Carl Lanore: [00:34:38] Yeah, sure. We'll just give them, yeah, we'll just give them the, they're going to need insulin.
[00:34:43] I mean, if the pancreas is destroyed, you got to go on insulin. So there were a total of 36 rats selected. They were cut into two major groups, right. The one, uh, 18 will put into, um, either the group that got, um, [00:35:00] that was a control group, the group that got the strip to strip the Zosyn. Um. No, I'm sorry. The group that got melatonin as a treatment group, the group that got it at any diabetic drug, Colt, glib, betide, the other group was then spontaneously made diabetic by giving them 250 milligrams per deciliter of streptozotocin and they were made diabetic and that was going to be another one of the test groups.
[00:35:27] And then what they did was they, they gave them, they gave the rats. Either melatonin, they any diabetic drug, uh, or nothing at all. And what they found out and the rats that got the melatonin exclusively, that the changes in their blood and which were the most profound, that people with type two diabetes have low red blood cell counts, low hemoglobin, low white.
[00:35:57] Blood cell counts, low neutrophils, or their [00:36:00] immune system is all jacked up. It's all very, very low. The group that ended up getting the melatonin, uh, ended up actually having a complete correction of all of these changes in the blood, which means that if you're type two diabetic, even if you were on a, an antidiabetic drug, you should be taking melatonin at night to sleep to protect you.
[00:36:22] It will, it's protective. It's not going to cure your diabetes. Now. If you start sleeping better, you may start to see your insulin sensitivity change. So it may have an extrinsic effect on you changing your diabetic status, but that's not what talking about. What we're talking about here is that taking melatonin will keep you from progressing in the things that change in your blood that actually cause other diseases and other issues.
[00:36:51] Adam Lamb: [00:36:51] You're on this. You know, it's interesting too. If melatonin helps you sleep better, so you're less likely to have a, [00:37:00] uh, a to disruption of sleep, right? So like, if I came into your bedroom at night, it was like, wow. Like you're gonna. But when you wake up, you can't control sugars released in your body. Right, right.
[00:37:12] And so whether it's nightmares or sleep apnea or something like that, and then that's what can also happen to where that sugar's being distributed where it's not supposed to, and causing additional problems. I wonder too, if, you know, just trying to think outside of the box, if melatonin helps you sleep well also helps.
[00:37:30] Not disruption of sleep of, I mean, I did. I wake up all the time with. Know, I watched too much like Homeland before I go to
[00:37:38] Carl Lanore: [00:37:38] bed. It's funny, you get all jacked up, you sleep with, you
[00:37:43] Adam Lamb: [00:37:43] wait for the bottom of my sleep.
[00:37:45] Carl Lanore: [00:37:45] But you know, and melatonin does so much more. We talked about melatonin on the show for the past 14 years.
[00:37:50] I used to be able to get Dr. Russell rider on the show from the university of Texas at Dallas, and he's written more papers about the peel Glen than any other [00:38:00] scientists in the world. And. Melatonin protects against colon cancer at a variety of cancers. Melatonin seems to slow the progression of both Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease.
[00:38:12] I mean, and now on top of that, the blood changes, uh, hematological changes in a di diabetic model are reduced and you don't have to live with those risks. I mean, thrombotic index goes up, you know, somebody was asking you about, um. Blood thinners. So you know, anything that, anything that acts as an antiinflammatory thins the blood and anything that causes inflammation, thickens the blood.
[00:38:39] Just think about that. That's why aspirin is a blood thinner, right? But when you get the cytokine storm because you're sick, your blood gets thick. So melatonin also has a slight blood thinning effect. And also it has an antioxidant effect effect in the brain. It crosses the blood brain barrier. So I mean, it's just, it's worth taking it.
[00:39:00] [00:38:59] If you are diabetic, this is something you should not be passing up on
[00:39:03] Adam Lamb: [00:39:03] at all. Sounds good. Take one more.
[00:39:08] Carl Lanore: [00:39:08] Yeah, it's, it's good stuff. So, um, we're going to take one quick commercial break, and when we come back, we're going to talk about the, uh, antibody tests. And this is an area that your group is actually involved and we'll learn more about them and what we can expect from them.
[00:39:23] Uh, you're listening to super human radio. This is the, uh, renew life AREC show with Adam Lamb. And if you want to reach out to them and learn more, go to the website, renew life rx.com you'll, you'll hear from Ronnie Milo most likely. And uh, stay tuned. We'll be right back.
[00:39:46] Adam Lamb: [00:39:46] You are listening
[00:39:46] Carl Lanore: [00:39:46] to the superhuman channel. We're ripped and we're ready.
[00:40:00] [00:40:00] Adam Lamb: [00:40:00] What's funny is some sort of like affiliate, you know, with the left, same last name and kind of funny and I believe in what their product does. I just been too lazy to order my stuff yet.
[00:40:13] Carl Lanore: [00:40:13] I believe in what the product does too. And I think that people are taking it a little too casual. They don't realize the a, I've done a couple of posts about RF.
[00:40:25] And what does that do to the body?
[00:40:29] Adam Lamb: [00:40:29] My nightstand
[00:40:30] Carl Lanore: [00:40:30] and I may, it's on airplane mode. I use one of the apps on it, but I said it's on airplane mode and even all my Bluetooth things are turned off at night. I even unplug. The base station to our cordless phone and turn our router off at night because it's wireless.
[00:40:43] I mean, I turn everything off. Now, granted, I live close enough to my next door neighbors where their router is emanating into my house. And the truth is there's literally an invisible cloud around us at every second of the day. I just want to cut my proximity to it. So let's talk about the antibody test.
[00:40:59] So [00:41:00] I have a questions about a good song.
[00:41:02] Adam Lamb: [00:41:02] Yeah. And so
[00:41:03] Carl Lanore: [00:41:03] what
[00:41:04] Adam Lamb: [00:41:04] we've, we've been exploring is, you know, with everything we do, like to kind of see it in the forefront of how can we serve people in that, that was something that everybody was like, I think I had it, I might've had it. I actually tested negative for it.
[00:41:17] Um,
[00:41:17] Carl Lanore: [00:41:17] did you think you had it at one time?
[00:41:19] Adam Lamb: [00:41:19] Yeah, because my kids who I'm still going to get tested, both had week-long fever. Dry, like annoying cough, like I want to strangle them. If I hear one other person cough again, it was so annoying, but I mean, they're my kids. I'm taking care of them. They're sleeping on our bed.
[00:41:33] Like, you know, my, my wife had never skipped a beat. At the same time though, there's like the pollen and I actually did a poll on Facebook. I said, I'm poor. I'm more concerned about the pollen here in Texas than I have the Kobe 19 because I usually get sick every year and I didn't. But I had about three days of feeling like crap plus being short with my kids.
[00:41:52] And so. That it would be? Well, if I test negative, the assumption would be my kids probably didn't have it, but [00:42:00] we had a husband and wife, husband tested positive wife tested negative, and he's like, eh, we were not social distance. You know what I mean? And so then it brings the conversation of, cause w what I haven't seen talked about that really interests me is if you have a high immune system that you can't catch things as easily.
[00:42:22] Right? And so the analogy I was going to have a conversation with is like if I got in a fight with my son, say my son's the virus,
[00:42:31] Carl Lanore: [00:42:31] he's out,
[00:42:32] Adam Lamb: [00:42:32] might even be killed. Right, right. Look, look, I got a fight, but if you and I, if you have Carl's the virus and he comes and you and I get in the scrap, I think you can probably hang.
[00:42:42] Carl Lanore: [00:42:42] So I'm going to look, the longer I'm able to work with you, I'm going to give it to you
[00:42:48] Adam Lamb: [00:42:48] that I had, like someone would be like, dude, what happened to you? You're all. Got it. Your nose is bleeding. Black guy, here's all men. Like I just got in a fight. Right? So in that situation, [00:43:00] cause this couple I'm thinking of where the husband and wife or the wife was negative, husband was positive.
[00:43:06] The wife is stellar health. And I think of like my wife, never, never, she's sick. It's like four minutes. Like she's crazy. Great immune system. All that stuff takes care of herself. And so. You know, that's part of it too. So you could still end up being negative for the antibodies. And it doesn't mean that the virus didn't come in, poke around and just couldn't live there because it couldn't do what the virus does.
[00:43:30] It couldn't attach it to feed because your body was strong enough to fight it off. And so we just got into it cause we're interested in seeing the results. And we've seen about 10% of the people come back positive.
[00:43:44] Carl Lanore: [00:43:44] Did they ever have, did these people have symptoms.
[00:43:47] Adam Lamb: [00:43:47] One had no symptoms. One did that one.
[00:43:51] And then the two that I can think of off the top of my head, I'd have to go through,
[00:43:54] Carl Lanore: [00:43:54] I don't read through the channel, but wait a minute. So I have questions. So there's, there's some speculation that some of these, uh, [00:44:00] antibody tests, uh, may be false positive. Uh, you know, how reliable are they?
[00:44:06] Adam Lamb: [00:44:06] Yeah. So we do everything through lab LabCorp.
[00:44:08] We stayed on the sideline a little longer. I mean, we've been researching this for a month as far as. You know, cause people have it and there's, there's just, there's a lot of junk out there. And I'm glad the FDA just just pull back like a hundred different companies tests cause they weren't good. And so, you know, we have a tremendous relationship with lab Corp and, uh, we just felt confident going there.
[00:44:32] First work, there's another company we're going to do some stuff with if the FDA will ever approve the at home kit. Cause some people. They want it at home. It's more expensive obviously, logistically. But, uh, then they prick their finger and put the droplet in there. And the test has got the tests that, you know, the IgG, IgM, IGA, it's got four different antigen test points and you know, in spite ones by two.
[00:44:57] All these things, which is great cause it rates [00:45:00] it so it's not positive or negative. It's like zero to five, five to 10, 10 to 15 at rating work, moderate or low or high. And so that's some real, real science with the bottom line of this thing is that we don't know everything about it yet. And so the more that we can all participate in learning about it, I think the better educated.
[00:45:24] Carl Lanore: [00:45:24] So let me ask you a question. If I, if I have a test done, um, who knows that I had that test too, because there's a lot of speculation now. Like, Oh, you don't want to be. You don't want to be on the list of people who had it. You don't want to be on the list of people who haven't had it because of the whole vaccine thing.
[00:45:41] So if I had this test done, who does that? There's a lab protect my identity.
[00:45:48] Adam Lamb: [00:45:48] So
[00:45:49] Carl Lanore: [00:45:49] I mean the lab
[00:45:50] Adam Lamb: [00:45:50] core, you know, the, the, any lab company, any information could be subpoenaed at some point. Right? And so we don't share your, so all lab as is your [00:46:00] data, right? We do ask like a car. Did you have any symptoms? Does that stuff cause want to know to serve you better?
[00:46:08] Right? We want to be able to have that, that interaction, that conversation. We don't send that stuff to lab four, you know what I mean? Like that. So we, um, but yeah, the lab Corp checking your blood, you know, it, they're going to have that data. Um. Is it getting sent or the government or is there a law, the list or whatever.
[00:46:28] I don't know. If they come after me or the vaccine, I'm moving to Chile, I'll tell you that. But, um, I wouldn't worry about as much as trying to figure out that, that piece. And that's the part, because the part for me that's most important isn't of, well, if I have, if I'm positive for the antibodies, then I'm immune.
[00:46:48] You know, maybe we should, it's still too early to know that too. But the likelihood I think they're finding out is that you've kind of beat it. But it doesn't mean there couldn't be a stars. Three stars coping. [00:47:00] Right. We could have coven 20 next year and covert, you know, we can have just like the flu. I did think it could morph.
[00:47:06] We've seen it happen. So, um, the part for me that's very interesting is I
[00:47:10] Carl Lanore: [00:47:10] want to
[00:47:11] Adam Lamb: [00:47:11] know if I can be exposed and not get it. That's what's. The important thing, and that's the thing that usually doesn't get talked about. And even based on DNA, you can have certain DNA that there's certain viruses I could catch that you might not judge.
[00:47:31] It's not, it's not a blanket thing. It doesn't
[00:47:32] Carl Lanore: [00:47:32] say, Hey, that's interesting. I mean, I've always, I've always understood the idea that some people can get it, but they're immune to it. But that, and, and obviously they don't develop any kind of symptoms from it, but I've never thought about what a, what characteristic a person would have, that they're exposed to it, but they don't even get it.
[00:47:56] Like how does it not make it into their body?
[00:48:00] [00:48:00] Adam Lamb: [00:48:00] Science should be focused, but so think about it is the virus is a living thing. And it needs to consume to live, right? So if it's put into a host, just like a parasite, like a host in there, the things that it needs are there for it to consume or having a lot of
[00:48:17] Carl Lanore: [00:48:17] trouble getting.
[00:48:19] It dies
[00:48:20] Adam Lamb: [00:48:20] fast. No antibodies, no symptoms. You could test positive for coven 19 right? So if you
[00:48:28] Carl Lanore: [00:48:28] had,
[00:48:29] Adam Lamb: [00:48:29] if it's, let's say I had it, I sneezed in your face. The day later it the virus trying to like, Oh, I'm trying to get in Carla Carlson too damn healthy. You'll still a swab. You'll have it cause it's on you.
[00:48:42] Right. But it isn't affecting you because it's not being able to
[00:48:48] Carl Lanore: [00:48:48] show the differences. It's, it's, it's, we know it's there, it's identifiable, but we don't see any. Immune response to it, which means your immune system never got called to action. So that's kind of what this [00:49:00] limbo place in the middle.
[00:49:01] Interesting.
[00:49:02] Adam Lamb: [00:49:02] Yeah. Like I said, like a 12 year old kid, I wouldn't hit a kid or I'll say my son in this example came up and you know, wanting to fight me and I just,
[00:49:12] Carl Lanore: [00:49:12] my heart rate went down. Right. But
[00:49:15] Adam Lamb: [00:49:15] come at me and I'm like,
[00:49:16] Carl Lanore: [00:49:16] what? What? Yeah. What is it about that person that they were able to not even get it?
[00:49:21] That's interesting. I think that their health,
[00:49:23] Adam Lamb: [00:49:23] because. That's the only thing.
[00:49:25] Carl Lanore: [00:49:25] But when we talk about healthy, you know, so, so I think it's gotta be something more, and I tell you why, what it can
[00:49:31] Adam Lamb: [00:49:31] be, there could be a DNA
[00:49:33] Carl Lanore: [00:49:33] level or there could, there could actually, could be something on the surface of this person's body right there could be like, um, maybe there's microbes.
[00:49:42] We know there's microbes on our bodies. Uh, maybe there's microbes on the body that are actually vanquishing and the virus before it even gets in.
[00:49:49] Adam Lamb: [00:49:49] Exactly protecting it, which is also called your immune system. Right. I mean, it's
[00:49:54] Carl Lanore: [00:49:54] because it wins like right away. It doesn't even tell the immune system it had a fight.
[00:49:58] So the immune system has [00:50:00] no watermark of it ever fighting that virus
[00:50:03] Adam Lamb: [00:50:03] can be, you know, it could be a layer of the immune system that one individual has and another individual doesn't. And then maybe it's genetic and maybe it's a lifestyle.
[00:50:15] Carl Lanore: [00:50:15] Yeah.
[00:50:16] Adam Lamb: [00:50:16] Yeah. Right. You know, and so those are the things that I like that that's, you know, I'm a data nut.
[00:50:21] Like that's why we've had lost success with taking care of people's, just making sure we put, looking at the data and measuring not just it is an a or B. All right? It might be a B and there's 17 different things that led you to a four. Or there might be a scene that you haven't looked at because it doesn't make sense.
[00:50:37] So while we're doing it, we can send people out pretty quick turnaround time. We get the results back in two to three days. And, um. With a lot of our folks, we're just adding it to their lab, the regular blood work they want. They got to get it done, which added to it and like they go get it done. But it's a really interesting topic and I think it's just helping a lot of people understand or at least ask [00:51:00] more questions.
[00:51:01] You know what
[00:51:01] Carl Lanore: [00:51:01] I mean? That I agree. I agree.
[00:51:04] Adam Lamb: [00:51:04] I agree. Social distancing, like that will help. It's also going to help prevent the flu and it can help all these other potential diseases. Seizing coffee in your hand. All the education that we're learning. It's like, I feel like people that don't know, hopefully now they're finally paying attention, but at the same time, because you and I are six feet from each other, doesn't mean covert 19 appears.
[00:51:25] Right? Right. And it doesn't mean that just as Carl has, it doesn't mean that I can get it. Doesn't mean that right. When we met up a little bit, we all lined up a little bit and then we can just kind of just make more educated decisions.
[00:51:40] Carl Lanore: [00:51:40] I agree. I definitely think we've handled this whole thing the wrong way.
[00:51:43] Yeah,
[00:51:44] Adam Lamb: [00:51:44] on a little too much, but you know what? Trump in charge, no matter what he
[00:51:48] Carl Lanore: [00:51:48] does, and he didn't want to shut down the country, but then he had Nancy Pelosi, who was already saying she was going to have him impeached. You know? It's like, yeah,
[00:51:58] Adam Lamb: [00:51:58] didn't do it soon enough. [00:52:00] So be guy. He's just got to do,
[00:52:01] Carl Lanore: [00:52:01] he didn't do it soon enough.
[00:52:03] He didn't act fast enough. Now you know, he acted too fast. Oh, it's just a mess. I would want, I wouldn't want, that's a thankless position. Listen, it's good seeing you. Nice having some time with you. Um, the website is renewed life RX. It really is a great place if you're a Jesus. If you want some questions answered, like you think, you know, what is it about HRT?
[00:52:24] I want to know more about.
[00:52:26] Adam Lamb: [00:52:26] Yeah. You know, I mean, even, you know, we had a couple college athletes that are going into their next season. They just want to get their blood work. Like we don't treat those guys, you know, we're not going to treat them for, but they want to see, Hey man. At 2122
[00:52:40] Carl Lanore: [00:52:40] let's get a snapshot of what you looked like.
[00:52:42] That's a great, I asked Dr. David Sava that question on my show in 2006 when he, he had ZRT was becoming popular and I said, doctor Sava, don't you think it's a good idea for every parent to buy their child when their child's in their mid twenties. Complete lab analysis so that they have this time [00:53:00] capsule that when it comes time for them to look at HRT, instead of them going, well, you know, you're in the zone that, no, this is, Oh, this is what you look like.
[00:53:07] This is what we need to achieve again. And he said, and he said,
[00:53:11] Adam Lamb: [00:53:11] no. Yeah, and we've done it because it opens more questions and people don't have the answers to questions, so they don't want to be put in that position. He
[00:53:18] Carl Lanore: [00:53:18] said, no, and I was like, are you kidding me? Like I wish I had the foresight to have done that for my kids.
[00:53:23] Adam Lamb: [00:53:23] We've done a ton with football players and MMA fighters because guess what happens when you hit six concussions? You did not
[00:53:32] Carl Lanore: [00:53:32] step. Yeah. The pituitary, the hypothalamus go wonky. Yeah, I know. You can know
[00:53:36] Adam Lamb: [00:53:36] that. Then you can take it. It's not like you can petition. For hormone optimization later in your career, and it's not doping or cheating.
[00:53:45] It's even knocked out nine times in your body
[00:53:49] Carl Lanore: [00:53:49] and you know what the targets are. They're not some epidemiological arbitrary ranges that they're shooting
[00:53:55] Adam Lamb: [00:53:55] for, so that's a good, we, our motto is [00:54:00] stop guessing and start testing.
[00:54:01] Carl Lanore: [00:54:01] I like that the Covance.
[00:54:06] Adam. Thanks for being here today, brother. We're going to take a quick commercial break. When we come back, I'm going to talk to you about what I think is a real big problem right now, and that is that science is trying to leverage covert 19 to do some dirty, dirty, dirty things, and I use that word specifically.
[00:54:21] You know how I feel about androgen deprivation therapy for men who have prostate cancer? Well, stay tuned and wait till you hear. This story will be right back. Amazon spit that out right now. This is the superhuman channel.
[00:54:39] I just got an email from the uh, motorcycle dealership in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He just sent me a picture of the bike. It's loaded on a trailer
[00:54:47] Adam Lamb: [00:54:47] and
[00:54:47] Carl Lanore: [00:54:47] heading to Louisville, Kentucky. They're only 11 hours away. I have a feeling it'll be here tomorrow. That would be so exciting. I can't wait. I haven't had a motorcycle since I was 21 years old.
[00:54:58] And before that, that's all [00:55:00] I had. I didn't have a car. Um, I only had a motorcycle if the roads were plowed. I don't care how cold it was. I used to ride my motorcycle to school to work. Um, I'm looking forward to this bike anyway, so. If you've listened to this show for any length of time, you know how I feel about androgen deprivation therapy?
[00:55:19] Androgen deprivation therapy is a very cruel, barbaric approach to treating prostate cancer. Men get prostate cancer, and because the misinformation still is alive. That testosterone causes prostate cancer, and that has not only been debunked, but I had dr Samuel den meet on this show four or five years ago, who showed that by giving men with aggressive prostate cancer, testosterone, the prostate cancer went away.
[00:55:47] Now keep in mind that this is doctors out there still. They got their fingers in their ears. They don't care. Androgen deprivation therapy is giving men long acting gonadotrope and [00:56:00] releasing. Analogs that caused the pituitary to produce an overabundance of luteinizing hormone that caused the testicles to overwork and try to produce more and more testosterone.
[00:56:12] It lasts about four days. Men actually feel great for the first four days because their testosterone levels go through. The roof. But then after that, they plummet. And by the end of the first month, uh, a full grown man has the testosterone levels of maybe a pre pubertal girl, testosterone is virtually negligible, undetectable in the blood, and they believe.
[00:56:40] That this is working. Even though these men go back while on ADT and still have high psh, which is another misguided marker by the way, that they're still using. But I'm not going to go into that. So this, this, this is a horrible therapy for men who have prostate cancer. It horrible. [00:57:00] And, and just as you would have it.
[00:57:04] I'm going to see the European society of medical oncology published a paper. Andrew did the Andrew tin deprivation treatment for prostate cancer could protect men from covert 19 now, when I read this, as soon as I read it, I saw exactly what was going on here. Exactly, and I'm going to let you see if you figure it out to a study of 4,532 men in Veneto region of Italy.
[00:57:32] Has found that those who were being treated for prostate cancer with androgen deprivation therapy or ADT for short, well, less likely to develop the Corona virus, covert 19 and if they were infected, the disease was less severe. The authors of this study published in the leading cancer journal annals of oncology today, Thursday, say their findings [00:58:00] suggest that ADT appears to protect men from covert 19 infection.
[00:58:05] The researchers led by professor Andre alimony from the university Del Italia. It's is a, actually in Switzerland. It's an Italian. A learning facility there. Found that out of 4,532 men infected with Kobe, 19 430 of them had cancer. That's 9.5% and 180 of them at 18 of them had prostate cancer. 2.6%. Male cancer patients had a 1.8 fold increased risk of Cobra, 19 infection out of the whole male population and developed more severe cases.
[00:58:51] This is just plain old cancer, but the prostate cancer group, now listen to this. However, when they looked at the all the [00:59:00] prostate cancer patient, all of them, all of them, that's a funny word. Uh, they found that only four. Of, uh, out of, uh, 5,000, 273 men on ADT develop covert 19 infections and none of them died.
[00:59:17] This is compared to 37,000, 161 men with prostate cancer who were not receiving ADT. Of who 114 developed covert 19 and 18 died. I could go on and they Pat themselves on the back for this discovery and they're suggesting that androgen deprivation therapy may actually protect men from getting pro from covert 19 and it does.
[00:59:43] And I'm going to tell you how it does. When they Rob you of your testosterone, you don't do anything anymore. First of all, you become insulin resistant. You become fat. All of your muscle goes away and you have no [01:00:00] energy for anything in life. You don't want to leave the house, which these men probably don't.
[01:00:04] That's why they didn't get infected. You definitely don't want to be around people because you feel horrible. I mean, what what they're looking at is correlation here. And this is where epidemiology kind of goes wrong when they abandoned all critical thinking and the brilliant words, uh, of um, Oh, what was his name now, dr Loren Cordain, who came on my show many times years ago.
[01:00:31] If you believe epidemiology, then fire trucks cause house fires because 100% of the time when there's a house fire. Firetrucks are there, and this is how epidemiology works. By correlations. I predicted, if you look at these men, they're miserable. They're not going out, they're not fraternizing. They're happy that there's a shutdown cause they're happy to sit in their chair for the rest of their lives.
[01:00:57] I know a guy who comes to my gym, the poor guy, [01:01:00] I watched him over the past eight years, go from. A real robust, dark haired middle-age man to a gray. He's got a gun on him that looks like he's eight months pregnant. He shuffles through the gym. He has no muscle anymore. I applaud him for even showing up to the gym the way he does.
[01:01:19] He can't move anything like he used to. ADT is a horrible, horrible death sentence to a man. In fact, I think death would probably be welcomed by most of these guys. It doesn't work. It doesn't reverse prostate cancer. Cause these guys continue to have prostate problems. They continue their PSA still still go through the roof, even on the ADT.
[01:01:42] And it's not solving any problems. And the reason that they're contracting Cobra 19 at a lower rate and ergo dying from it in fewer rates as well because so few of them are getting it is because they are not engaged in life at friggin all. [01:02:00] I mean, I'm sure that paraplegics aren't getting covered 19 at a high rate robe because they're stuck in a wheelchair in their house all the time.
[01:02:09] They don't get around people. So th th this is where science really pisses me off trying to Pat yourself on the back because chemical castration is such a horrible, horrible thing to do to man and say, see, we're doing good. They don't get covert 19 yeah, no, I don't think so. I don't think so. I, I'd rather have covert 19 and get better from it then than have to be chemically castrated for a year even.
[01:02:38] And let's not forget these men die of other causes because they become insulin resistant. Their bodies fall apart, dyslipidemia. They are wrecks. They die from other things. I'm sure they die from many, many other things. Most likely I've got heart failure. I bet you I took a couple minutes and I searched for the rate of heart failure.
[01:02:56] Or cardiac problems in men receiving androgen [01:03:00] deprivation therapy. If they don't hide this stuff already, we could find plenty of evidence that that happens as well. So shame, shame on the scientists for trying to Pat themselves on the back for doing something barbaric and horrible to men and then going, yeah, but they're not getting covered.
[01:03:15] 19 BFD. Horrible. All right. That's it for today. Tomorrow. We have a very special pep talk with dr Elizabeth the earth at a special time at 2:00 PM, and we're going to be talking about G, H K CU, and another form of gak peptide. Uh, it's been shown to regrow hair. It's got a lot of benefits with skin. We're going to get into that tomorrow, so don't miss that show.
[01:03:39] And of course, share this show, share all of my shows. Please. Uh, help reach more people so that they learn the things that you learn and can be healthier. We'll see you tomorrow. Thanks for listening. [01:04:00] .

