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Highlighting Alpha Lipoic Acid in Diabetes
By Tina Kaczor, ND, FABNO. Alpha lipoic acid (ALA), given orally or intravenously, affects many conditions in which oxidation and inflammation are involved. One of the conditions for which exogenous ALA has been most studied is diabetes. Understanding ALA’s structure and use as an exogenous agent that is more akin to a drug than a nutrient, with particular attention to diabetes and diabetic peripheral neuropathy, is the topic of this review. Read now.
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Measles Infection or Measles Vaccine?
By Jacob Schor, ND, FABNO. Growing evidence suggests that natural infection by measles, but not vaccination, may result in immune-system amnesia, compromising the immune system for many years after infection. Read more.
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B Vitamins and Bone Fracture Risk
By John Neustadt, ND. To supplement with B complex or not to supplement? A new study raises tricky questions. Read more.
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Utilizing Hintonia latiflora in Clinical Practice for High Blood Sugar
Sponsored by Euromedica. In this interview, integrative physician and best-selling author Jacob Teitelbaum, MD, discusses his approach to preventing and treating diabetes. Teitelbaum goes into detail about the botanical intervention, Hintonia latiflora, that he uses in clinical practice for prediabetes and diabetes. Listen now.
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Covid-19 Insights on Pets, Male Mortality, and Antibody Testing
Interview with Heather Zwickey, PhD. On this episode immunologist and integrative health expert Heather Zwickey, PhD, tackles tough questions about antibody testing concerns, why more men die than women, and what the risk is regarding animal transmission. Listen now.
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Covid-19 Shines Light on Existing Healthcare Disparities
A conversation with Udaya Thomas, MSN, MPH, APRN, CYT. African Americans and other people of color are suffering disproportionately from Covid-19. In this interview, we explore how integrative practitioners can better serve the health needs of underserved populations during the pandemic. Listen now.
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Ketogenic Diet for PCOS
By Megan Chmelik. After 3 months on a ketogenic diet, women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) lost more than 20 pounds on average, a new study reports. Read more.
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