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Thread: The Nutrition Science thread

  1. #926
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    The Nutrition Science thread

    I’ll let everyone here know that they should do the 12 hour round trip and pay $2500 out of pocket to have a neuropsych ask the same questions any MD can ask in order to be trialed on medications for a condition with purely subjective symptoms and subjective responses to treatment.

  2. #927
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    This is off topic for this thread, but diagnosing and managing ADHD in adults is often times more nuanced than a 5 minute ADHD questionnaire. Neuropsych evals are WAY more detailed and thorough than any primary care doc would ever have time for.

  3. #928
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    Wow I will have to reflect on the multiple 30 minute apts I use to diagnose adult or pediatric ADHD. So great that you guys can project out from your anecdotal experiences to teach us about the reality everywhere.

    I guess I should send all my patients to Resp if considering a COPD diagnosis since that is going to always be a “more detailed and thorough” assessment. Or to cardio for hypertension etc.

    My question is: what makes ADHD so special versus say depression or anxiety? There’s no diagnostic tests - yet no one reasonable is advocating ALL potentially depressed patients get psychiatric evaluation before starting any treatment.

    And if your response is “well there is overlap with ADHD and Anxiety symptoms” - the same questions can be asked of the patient by anyone to tease that out - and if an anxiety sufferer gets put on ADHD meds they will feel worse - for the 1-2 days until they stop the medication as instructed since their symptoms worsened. This isn’t rocket surgery.

  4. #929
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    Yeah, I would guess it's valuable to do the evaluation because sometimes people discover it's not just ADHD but also X, Y or Z and have an 'aha' moment. ADHD seems like the go-to culprit for uneducated people. Saying that as a non-therapist/psychologist/doctor and also uneducated person on the subject....

  5. #930
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    So, I just got diagnosed with ADHD in the last year, and I had a 3 hour evaluation with a specialist to confirm what I had been getting in the shorter evals. I think one of the issues is the screening had been built for kids so applying it to adults is not always 1:1, and they adjusted some of my self-reported scores after discussing my answers with me.

    My regular doc also said it’s easier to get insurance sign off on meds and other treatments with the full evaluation.

  6. #931
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    You win Bennymac. Good points.

  7. #932
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    Thanks, DTM and Viva.

    While I can understand the reason for prescription pills in ultras, it seems to go against a lot of the common reasons for doing ultra-endurance events, so I'm inclined to think they're not that prevalent. Even most of the "pros" aren't making that much money from the activities, so you have to have a good reason to do something for 24+ hours straight. Maybe it's my ignorance, optimism, or something else, it just doesn't make sense to me given what I have experienced/felt/seen in the ultra world.

  8. #933
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    Quote Originally Posted by fool View Post
    Thanks, DTM and Viva.

    While I can understand the reason for prescription pills in ultras, it seems to go against a lot of the common reasons for doing ultra-endurance events, so I'm inclined to think they're not that prevalent. Even most of the "pros" aren't making that much money from the activities, so you have to have a good reason to do something for 24+ hours straight. Maybe it's my ignorance, optimism, or something else, it just doesn't make sense to me given what I have experienced/felt/seen in the ultra world.
    I would imagine most are clean, but even amateur sporting events bust dopers. So who knows?

  9. #934
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    I have heard of some long distance athletes that will take lsd to push through nights and tediousness. But none of these are mainstream events
    skid luxury

  10. #935
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    I read a magazine article about an ultra athlete that takes low dose THC to numb the pain and be lightly stoned through the events. Performance enhancing? Probably depends on the person. Me I’d quit at the first aid station so I could go home and eat a burrito while watching Interstellar.

  11. #936
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    Exactly- I would get too involved in looking at a flower and cease all progress.
    skid luxury

  12. #937
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    Quote Originally Posted by fool View Post
    Maybe it's my ignorance, optimism, or something else, it just doesn't make sense to me given what I have experienced/felt/seen in the ultra world.
    Not drugs, per se, but I have seen quite a bit of athletes chasing the latest fad or, in some way, trying to leverage, even if just infinitesimally, their innate abilities. This was usually in the form of nutritional / hydration developments, and sometimes it was just fucking stupid. Mostly just wishful thinking. And some of these folks were pretty damn good runners or cyclists!

    But they wanted (needed, really) to run some course or distance just a little faster.

    And that's fine.

    So fucking train harder!

    People were so vetted in the "I only train at race pace" doctrine that improvement could only occur via supplements or gym work, or so they reasoned. This one gal was so pleased about doing stairmaster twice a week for thirty minutes because it would really help her on uphill sections of races. And maybe you could just fucking run the uphills during your training runs ya dumb bitch!

    Yeah, I lost a few friends.

    I also knew a number of folks who would schedule a race known to be easy so they might earn a PR at that distance. St. George Marathon was very popular (downhill course) due to that. A lot of friends ran Vermont or Rocky Raccoon 100 miles for the same reason, as they were two of the easiest 100s back in the nineties.

    Ego's thing, I guess.

    Just about to hit "Submit", and I recall when glycerol gels hit the scene about twenty five years ago. This one guy I rode with for Swamis, "Dickhead Ron", was going on during a ride about how he had just started taking glycerol. I asked why, and what his goal was. He went on about increased performance and some other bullshit about finally getting on the podium. I nonchalantly answered "How about training a little harder?". Jonsey (Michellie Jones) laughed so hard, she came very close to falling over. She had tears in her eyes afterwards.

    Fun Times!
    Your dog just ate an avocado!

  13. #938
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    Quote Originally Posted by fool View Post
    Thanks, DTM and Viva.

    While I can understand the reason for prescription pills in ultras, it seems to go against a lot of the common reasons for doing ultra-endurance events, so I'm inclined to think they're not that prevalent. Even most of the "pros" aren't making that much money from the activities, so you have to have a good reason to do something for 24+ hours straight. Maybe it's my ignorance, optimism, or something else, it just doesn't make sense to me given what I have experienced/felt/seen in the ultra world.
    I'm not saying it's a majority or anything, but if you just look at how many students, tech bros, and other high-performer types are taking these drugs "off label" and how much they've been used historically in numerous sports statistically it just has to be happening.

    Also, there's tons of gym bros out there taking steroids. Don't assume people won't take PEDs unless there's a financial incentive.

  14. #939
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    High altitude mountaineering with Diamox, oxygen, dexamethasone
    . Pretty much doping. But two camps, one doing with, the other without oxygen. But nobody deletes or puts an asterisk on those achievements with oxygen. Sort of an interesting paradox.

  15. #940
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    Sorry, bit off topic but have to say my eyes are finally open to the harm seed oils do and also what seems like we've been duped into believing highish cholesterol is a bad thing. Pretty confident this country wants us sick.

  16. #941
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    Quote Originally Posted by cinnepa View Post
    Sorry, bit off topic but have to say my eyes are finally open to the harm seed oils do and also what seems like we've been duped into believing highish cholesterol is a bad thing. Pretty confident this country wants us sick.
    Pharma is a big big industry and they make a whole lot more money off of sick people than they do healthy people.


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  17. #942
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    That’s like saying oil and gas companies make more money off drivers than walkers.

  18. #943
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    Quote Originally Posted by cinnepa View Post
    Sorry, bit off topic but have to say my eyes are finally open to the harm seed oils do and also what seems like we've been duped into believing highish cholesterol is a bad thing. Pretty confident this country wants us sick.
    With how utterly awful the majority of people's diet and lifestyle are physicians have to alter their messaging away from what is ideal, to what is realistic and will effect the largest good. Telling people to not eat high cholesterol/sodium/fat foods is intended for bubba and betty who need to cut back on their 6night/week fast food diet. Getting into the nuanced weeds doesnt work when the majority are too dumb to know that maple syrup isnt fruit juice.

    This shit truly isnt rocket science. If people simply followed the OG food pyramid (which is by no means perfect), our country would almost completely eliminate obesity. Just eat the food that appears on the fucking pyramid, in the quantities it says.

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  19. #944
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    Quote Originally Posted by bennymac View Post
    That’s like saying oil and gas companies make more money off drivers than walkers.

    Exactly. Except big pharma doesn’t have any real competitors. Using your example of driving, where’s the Tesla in the big pharma world?


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  20. #945
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    from some of rabbit holes i went down - that food pyramid above should be the opposite of what's shown - whole foods/meats/veggies/fruits.....then really limit to almost zero grains

  21. #946
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    Quote Originally Posted by PeachesNCream View Post
    Exactly. Except big pharma doesn’t have any real competitors. Using your example of driving, where’s the Tesla in the big pharma world?


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    Supplements, essential oils, crystals, prayer, weightwatchers.

  22. #947
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    Tons of unemployed life coaches out there looking for work.

  23. #948
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    Quote Originally Posted by cinnepa View Post
    from some of rabbit holes i went down - that food pyramid above should be the opposite of what's shown - whole foods/meats/veggies/fruits.....then really limit to almost zero grains
    Oh boy. Beware, a lot of rabbit holes are filled with bullshit.

  24. #949
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    Quote Originally Posted by cinnepa View Post
    from some of rabbit holes i went down - that food pyramid above should be the opposite of what's shown - whole foods/meats/veggies/fruits.....then really limit to almost zero grains
    I think your ratio of meat to carbs to veggies varies a lot on your body and what your goals are, and there’s many healthy diets. For example, most runners do well on a high carb diet, but then Zach bitter broke the record for 100 miles on a low carb diet, just gotta find what works for you. But if we as a country could eat more whole foods than processed foods we’d solve a whole lotta problems


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  25. #950
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    I think the food pyramid isn't necessarily wrong or right. Whole grains aren't inherently bad or inherently good. But the notion that a healthy diet must include them as the base source of energy and nutrition seems wrong.

    Quote Originally Posted by PeachesNCream View Post
    just gotta find what works for you. But if we as a country could eat more whole foods than processed foods we’d solve a whole lotta problems
    This
    "fuck off you asshat gaper shit for brains fucktard wanker." - Jesus Christ
    "She was tossing her bean salad with the vigor of a Drunken Pop princess so I walked out of the corner and said.... "need a hand?"" - Odin
    "everybody's got their hooks into you, fuck em....forge on motherfuckers, drag all those bitches across the goal line with you." - (not so) ill-advised strategy

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