Articles from NaturalNews In-House Writers:

Person-to-person transmission of mad cow disease / BSE now documented; alarming discovery suggests widespread human susceptibility

By Mike Adams, July 23 2004
It's a frightening realization: not only is BSE -- the human equivalent of mad cow disease -- easily transmitted through blood transfusions, it can also strike patients previously thought to be immune to the disease. These findings reveal that a much wider portion of the world population is potentially susceptible to both BSE and mad cow disease, and with incubation times of ten years, it's virtually impossible to say who has BSE right now. Another disturbing shocker: persons can carry BSE for years...

Coming wave of Alzheimer's patients threatens to bankrupt U.S. health care system, says leading Alzheimer's doctor

By Mike Adams, July 23 2004
There's a cost crisis looming on the U.S. health care system, and I'm not talking about obesity: it's Alzheimer's disease. Health experts expect a massive increase in Alzheimer's patients in the next few years, and treating the disease is astonishingly expensive. But there's hope on the horizon: researchers are making breakthroughs in the treatment and prevention of Alzheimer's. Thankfully, some of the most exciting research about the disease is now showing a strong correlation with dietary habits...

Official nutritional information for cancer patients offers wimpy advice; here's how to really prevent and even reverse cancer

By Mike Adams, July 12 2004
It's laudable when people with cancer decide to get serious about nutrition and avoid cancer-causing foods. When people avoid red meat, stop eating all hydrogenated oils, and give up soft drinks for life, they're obviously going to have a lower risk of cancer. But the "official" advice on how to avoid cancer is purposely wimpy: it's just enough advice to keep people in limbo so that they stand a good chance of getting cancer again down the road. If you truly want to prevent or reverse cancer, you...

Pharmaceutical advertising turns national newspapers into drug industry puppets

By Mike Adams, July 12 2004
A New York Times headline blares, "Health Officials Urge Sharply Lower Cholesterol Levels," and the article discusses all the reasons why more and more people should be on statin drugs. Changes in diet, nutrition and levels of physical exercise are utterly absent from the story, leaving the reader with only one conclusion: statin drugs are the only way to lower cholesterol. To the right of the story, a giant tower banner ad demands, "Talk to your doctor today!" Right above that giant quote, a...

The big Bush handout to pharmaceutical companies: mandatory mental health screening for entire U.S. population

By Mike Adams, July 23 2004
The Bush administration's handouts to pharmaceutical companies just keep on coming. First, it was the Medicare discount drug card scam which turned out to be a system that guaranteed pharmaceutical industry profits thanks to sky-high prices of prescription drugs (the discounts were nonexistent). Next, it was the initiation of an anti-terror drug research program where the government would spend billions of dollars buying and stockpiling expensive drugs and vaccines to counter biological weapons....

High protein diet good for your health, good for weight loss, says startling new research

By Mike Adams, July 23 2004
Ever since the popularity of the Atkins diet exploded, low-carb / high protein diets have been under fire from critics who say that eating very high levels of protein (three to four times the normal daily amount) would compromise the function of important organs such as the kidneys. Others claim high protein diets don't really help people lose weight. It turns out both are wrong. New research on rats conducted in France and appearing in the American Journal of Physiology shows that a high protein...

Aspirin therapy proves useless in half of stroke patients

By Mike Adams, July 22 2004
Stroke patients have long been told to take a daily aspirin to "thin their blood" and help prevent strokes. But new research conducted by Northwestern Memorial Hospital has found that aspirin doesn't work for half the intended patients. No surprise there: if people want to prevent strokes, what they need is healthier blood without over-the-counter drugs. To do that, they need to avoid all hydrogenated oils in their foods (which causes blood cells to clump together), stop eating fried foods, and...

Medicare to fund obesity treatments, but which ones really work?

By Mike Adams, July 22 2004
With the new decision by Medicare to consider obesity a disease, providers of solutions to obesity will no doubt be lining up to offer treatments. But which treatments will Medicare fund? Which treatments really work for weight loss? There's no doubt that the increasingly popular surgical procedure known as gastric bypass surgery will be on the list, but that's a shame: it's a barbaric procedure that kills 1% of its recipients right on the operating table and leaves the rest maimed for life, unable...

Syndicated news services lie about antidepressant drugs with blatantly misleading headlines

By Mike Adams, July 22 2004
When a major study reveals that antidepressant drugs quadruple a person's risk of committing suicide, and when that study is backed by an analysis of three million patient records covering four SSRIs like Paxil and Prozac, a reasonable person can only draw one conclusion: these drugs tend to cause people to commit suicide. The research shows it: a 400% increase across the board. But some journalists don't see it that way. This news story from the AFP syndicated news service headlines with, "No increased...

Pharmaceutical companies want $1.2 billion to treat colon cancer

By Mike Adams, July 22 2004
Cost of prescription drugs to treat colon cancer are skyrocketing beyond belief. Adding just a few months to patients' lives can cost as much as $31,000 per patient in drug costs alone. And that means big profits for pharmaceutical companies. As always, the American consumer is getting shafted by Big Pharma, which continues to claim that such sky-high prices are necessary to fund R&D. It's a lie, of course: far more money goes into advertising and promotion than R&D, and the exact same drugs are...

Antidepressant drugs quadruple risk of suicides, research shows

By Mike Adams, July 22 2004
The very first week you start taking antidepressant drugs, your risk of committing suicide quadruples. Antidepressants have long been accused of actually causing suicides and violent behavior, and now research is proving it. It may be news to you and me, but it's not news to antidepressant drug manufacturers: they've known about the increased suicide risk for years, but they chose to suppress that information and hide it from public view. It's no secret why: if the truth got out about how dangerous...

Medical community concedes that multivitamins are important for health, but only after decades of denying benefit from vitamins

By Mike Adams, July 21 2004
It only took 38 years for the American Medical Association, old-school doctors and conservative medical authorities to admit that vitamin supplements are, in fact, necessary for optimum health. That's not bad: four decades is moving pretty fast for these slow-thinkers. Year after year, they were shutting out the hard science proving that vitamin supplements were important for optimum human health. They attacked manufacturers of nutritional supplements, ostracized forward-looking doctors who backed...

Today's pharmaceutical industry mirrors the hyping and marketing of radioactive products in the early 1900's

By Mike Adams, July 21 2004
At the turn of the 20th century, radioactive products were thought to be good for you. Manufacturers made, marketed and sold products like radioactive tablets (designed to give you more energy!), radioactive water storage containers, and even radioactive bottled water. Many of the people behind the marketing and hyping of these products, by the way, were physicians. (A few decades later, physicians were also spokespeople for cigarette companies and touted the "health benefits" of smoking cigarettes...

Medical myth remains: most people still believe that high-priced prescription drugs are necessary for innovation

By Mike Adams, July 21 2004
It's one of the most widely-held beliefs in health care: that sky-high prescription drug prices are the key to innovation, and without 100,000% markups (or more) on prescription drugs, pharmaceutical companies would halt research and never find cures for chronic disease. There are so many individual myths in this belief that we have to unravel them one by one. First, there's the belief that pharmaceutical profits go to fund R&D in the first place. In reality, only around 14% of revenues go to fund...

Gastric bypass sugery leaves patient at critical 87 pounds, dying from malnutrition

By Mike Adams, July 21 2004
Be careful what you ask for. Loren Root was obese, weighing in at 330 pounds, and wanted to lose weight. But after undergoing expensive gastric bypass surgery, Loren found herself unable to eat enough to maintain any weight at all, and she quickly slipped to a dangerous 87 pounds in total body weight. It's yet another horror story about the dangers of gastric bypass surgery -- dangers that surgeons who perform such procedures hardly ever reveal to their patients. Gastric bypass surgery is rapidly...

EPA nails DuPont for violating federal Toxic Substances Control Act over Teflon

By Mike Adams, July 21 2004
Few people know it, but DuPont has a long history of exposing workers and customers to toxic substances, then denying that such substances harm their health. In the mid 20th century, for example, DuPont was one of the many industrial chemical producers involved in the production of lead products such as leaded gasoline. Lead was thought to be a "miracle" element with great potential for industrial use. But as DuPont workers started losing their minds to lead poisoning, the company denied everything...

Lawmakers want better food labeling of allergens, but far more deaths are caused by other ingredients

By Mike Adams, July 21 2004
Lawmakers are rightly concerned about the 200 deaths caused each year by food allergens that are insufficiently noted on food product labels. Some 30,000 people are hospitalized each year thanks to allergic reactions to ingredients like peanuts, cow's milk and wheat, and many food manufacturers neglect to warn consumers about such ingredients in a clear, concise manner. But if lawmakers are so concerned over the 200 deaths caused each year by allergens, why aren't they similarly concerned about...

High-dose chemotherapy offers no benefit against breast cancer

By Mike Adams, July 21 2004
The results are in: high-dose chemotherapy has been proven no better than low-dose chemotherapy in treating breast cancer tumors. Published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, this study shows that poisoning the patient's immune system with extremely toxic chemicals is not an effective way to save their lives. Go figure... Of course, this revelation doesn't mean high-dose chemotherapy won't continue to be pushed onto cancer patients by their oncologists. High-dose chemotherapy sells...

Florida Attorney General sues six pharmaceutical companies for price fixing and possibly defrauding Medicaid

By Mike Adams, July 21 2004
Demonstrating yet again that pharmaceutical companies will do anything to make a buck, six such companies are under fire by the Florida Attorney General who has issued civil subpoenas concerning potential overcharges to Medicaid in the amount of $100 million. Apparently, the pharmaceutical companies involved in this scam inflated the "wholesale" prices charged to Medicaid, thereby pocketing additional profits at the expense of taxpayers. That pharmaceutical companies would overcharge the government...

Green tea from China found to be contaminated with alarming levels of pesticides

By Mike Adams, July 20 2004
China is angry over a test of its green tea exports that turned up alarming levels of pesticides. But rather than turning to its agricultural practices and limiting the use of pesticides, China is attacking the testing methods used to detect the pesticides in the first place. Let me say this bluntly: China practices atrocious environmental responsibility, and the Communist government in charge there cares nothing about mass use of pesticides, industrial pollution, or the safety of the food supply...

Obesity causes Alzheimers; massive wave of Alzheimer's to strike America in the years ahead

By Mike Adams, July 20 2004
Future generations will no doubt look back on modern America and wonder how we could eat ourselves and drug ourselves into such a sad state of mental and physical health. But today, the links between lifestyle choices and chronic disease are only beginning to be documented, so much of it is new to most Americans. What's happening right now is that our obesity epidemic is not only causing diabetes, heart disease and clinical depression today, it's also setting up the nation for an epidemic of Alzheimer's...

Obesity, lack of green vegetables and avoidance of mental exercise cause Azheimer's, dementia

By Mike Adams, July 20 2004
New studies are showing how important lifestyle choices are for preventing Alzheimer's. As demonstrated by several studies, people who were severely overweight, who avoided eating healthy green vegetables and who avoided exercising their brains were more prone to being diagnosed with Alzheimer's. It's not surprising, actually: staying healthy means being both mentally and physically fit, and the two go hand in hand. A person who is truly healthy must exercise both their body and their mind on a...

Functional foods gain in popularity, but health claims on most brand-name groceries mislead consumers

By Mike Adams, July 19 2004
Functional foods are gaining in popularity: big-name grocery product manufacturers like Kraft are making huge R&D investments in bringing these nutritionally enhanced foods to market. Likewise, customer demand for healthier, enhanced foods is surging. But here's the real story on functional foods: most health claims on brand-name grocery store products are hogwash. Here's what I mean: take the most popular brand of strawberry milk powder. It's made primarily with refined white sugar, an ingredient...

Zinc deficiency during pregnancy causes bone problems in fetus

By Mike Adams, July 19 2004
A lack of dietary zinc causes significant bone development problems in fetuses, new research shows. Sadly, most women -- pregnant or otherwise -- suffer from widespread nutritional deficiencies that frequently include zinc, meaning that most children are born with a lower level of health than possible. Simple supplementation of zinc and other nutrients, costing just pennies a day, would result in the birth of healthier, stronger babies. Good health starts in the womb, and yet very few expectant...

Is obesity a choice or a disease?

By Mike Adams, July 19 2004
Here's an editorial by an individual who used to weigh 410 pounds. He's now under 300, and he's angered by the new designation by Medicare that obesity should be considered an illness. In his own words, If someone eats a bunch of Big Macs and fries and gorges himself on every food known to man, why should a skinny person who eats fine and is in good health have to bear the burden of paying for obese people's medical bills? It's not right! There are a lot of people who agree with this assessment...

Is obesity during pregnancy child abuse?

By Mike Adams, July 19 2004
The research is pouring in: obesity during pregnancy poses a tremendous risk to the health of the unborn child. Children of obese mothers are born as pre-diabetics or with serious birth defects that can lead to kidney disease or heart disease, among other problems. The fact that obesity in expectant mothers leads to health problems in their unborn children is not in dispute. What is in question, though, is how this should be handled. Given that obesity is a condition caused by lifestyle choices...

USDA looks to revamp flawed Food Guide Pyramid, but new guide will no doubt favor interests of powerful food group lobbies

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
The current USDA Food Guide Pyramid is little more than government-approved propaganda for America's grain growers. The document has almost nothing to do with sound nutritional advice and everything to do with appeasing influential food producers. Now the USDA is looking to revamp the Food Guide Pyramid into something that's easier to understand. This process is highly politicized. Read Food Politics by Marion Nestle to get an insider's view of what goes on. For example, in the existing Food Guide...

The fight over low-carb dieting isn't about health, it's about healthy profits

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
There's a whole lot of bickering going on over the effectiveness and potential dangers of low-carb diets, but the participants in this fight aren't concerned about your health: they're concerned about their profits. Ever since the popularity of the Atkins Diet and South Beach Diet, Americans are avoiding orange juice, soft drinks, breads and other refined carbohydrates in record numbers. And while that's a smart choice in terms of protecting public health, the manufacturers of soft drinks, orange...

Burning of fossil fuels is polluting oceans with carbon dioxide, says research

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
Half the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere by the burning of fossil fuels is actually winding up the oceans, says new research published in the journal Science. And that's threatening the health of the oceans and the diverse organisms living there, say researchers. This research presents a new twist in the argument over global warming and the burning of fossil fuels. Traditionally, governments and industry have only argued over air quality, but now we're learning that oceans, too, are...

Medicare declares obesity to be a disease, stripping away patient responsibility and power

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
Medicare has now officially declared obesity to be a disease, opening the floodgates for obesity treatments to be covered by federal and private health insurers. To many overweight patients, it's a welcome change, since they were unable to obtain medical treatment for their obesity unless they also suffered medical complications such as diabetes or heart disease. But wait a minute. Is obesity really a disease? Malaria is a disease. Diabetes is a disease. Cancer is a disease. But obesity? I argue...

USDA mad cow testing program is a sham, says inspector general

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
The USDA's mad cow disease testing program is a sham: it doesn't test many cows showing neurological symptoms, it falsified records of one cow to make sure it received "downer" status, and it doesn't test healthy-looking cattle at all! These are the accusations from the USDA's own inspector general and various Senators who are hammering the USDA for its lackluster practices. Clearly, there's a rift inside the USDA. The inspector general of the agency is trying to warn the public about what goes...

Following revelation that new cholesterol advice came from board members who profit from statin drug makers, medical leaders see no conflict of interest

By Mike Adams, July 17 2004
This article isn't about the comical fact that six out of nine board members who issued the new cholesterol guidelines have been paid by the very pharmaceutical companies who stand to benefit from those new guidelines. (Lower cholesterol guidelines will equate to billions in profits from the sales of statin drugs.) Rather, this is about the outrageous defense of these financial ties -- and the failure to disclose such ties -- by the board members themselves and leaders of the medical community. Essentially...

Broccoli and tomatoes prevent prostate cancer better than leading prescription drugs, research shows

By Mike Adams, July 17 2004
Want to know how to beat prostate cancer? Your physician will probably tell you to take prescription drugs. That's the no-brainer answer from a professional who has been all but brainwashed by the pharmaceutical industry. But the real answer is far simpler and a lot less expensive: eat large quantities of broccoli and tomatoes in combination. Exciting new research proves that this simple food combination actually beats prostate cancer drugs -- but only when these foods are eaten in combination....

Food combinations offer powerful cancer prevention; better than isolated foods or phytonutrients

By Mike Adams, July 17 2004
New research is revealing exciting discoveries about the power of eating a variety of foods in an effort to stay healthy. Researchers found that a combination of broccoli and tomatoes offered a powerful, synergistic protective effect against cancer that wasn't reproduced by just eating either vegetable alone. Nor was the positive preventive effect achieved by eating broccoli and taking lycopene supplements (an extract from tomatoes). Only the whole foods eaten in combination offered the protective...

Endometriosis caused by eating red meat and avoiding fresh vegetables, says research; infertility may result

By Mike Adams, July 17 2004
According to new research, consuming red meat such as beef or ham increases your risk of endometriosis by 80 to 100 percent. Endometriosis is a painful health condition experienced by women, and it is sadly becoming more common. It typically strikes women in their 20's and 30's, and the more they consume red meat, the greater their chances of being diagnosed with endometriosis. Having this disease can also cause infertility, painful menstruation, severe cramping and may even be linked to various...

Corruption exposed: drug companies gave grants, consulting fees to panelists who issued new cholesterol guidelines that are driving demand for statins

By Mike Adams, July 15 2004
The new cholesterol lowering guidelines are proving to be a windfall for statin drug manufacturers like Pfizer and Merck: most news articles and medical advice concerning the new guidelines recommend drugs -- and drugs only -- to reduce cholesterol level. As a result, the guidelines are perhaps better described as profit generators for pharmaceutical companies. Today, we're finding out why: six out of nine panelists that issued the new decision about cholesterol levels have received grants or consulting...

New cholesterol guidelines a handout to pharmaceutical companies Merck, Pfizer

By Mike Adams, July 14 2004
There's little doubt that the new cholesterol guidelines are a major handout to pharmaceutical companies (like Merck and Pfizer) who manufacture statin drugs. In my view, this is part of the reason the guidelines were put in place: to sell more prescription drugs. What's my evidence on that? It's more of an observation, really: notice that virtually all the information in the mainstream press about lowering cholesterol leaves out the two most powerful ways to accomplish it: changes in diet and physical...

The Atkins Diet Food Guide Pyramid, Part 7: Superior Nutritional Advice

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
Despite the few areas where I think the Atkins Food Guide Pyramid could be improved, the pyramid nonetheless remains an impressive guide to sound nutrition. In fact, I think it should replace the USDA Food Guide Pyramid. The Atkins pyramid simply describes a healthier way for human beings to eat. Its use of the exercise gradient is nothing less than brilliant, and it even has the courage to warn people against two dangerous ingredients: added sugars and hydrogenated oils. Those are features we've...

The Atkins Diet Food Guide Pyramid, Part 6: Health Improvements

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
As good as the Atkins Good Guide Pyramid is, I think it's worth noting how it could be improved. First, the pyramid would benefit from clarifying the difference between refined and unrefined foods and ingredients. As mentioned previously, all the pictures on the pyramid show unrefined, natural ingredients. Yet most people use these as symbols only and end up consuming all sorts of processed foods that somewhat resemble the pictures on the pyramid. A clarification on this point would further improve...

The Atkins Diet Food Guide Pyramid, Part 5: Appetite Suppression Effects

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
A person who truly applies the Atkins Food Guide Pyramid will notice something interesting: any hunger pangs they used to experience will seem to fade away. In fact, the combination of foods and ingredients suggested by the Atkins pyramid have powerful appetite suppressing effects. Here's why: For starters, all proteins tend to satiate hunger. When they are consumed with a small amount of healthy fats (such as egg yolks, the soy fats found in tofu or organic animal fats), they can satiate hunger...

The Atkins Diet Food Guide Pyramid, Part 4: The Importance of Exercise

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
The use of the exercise gradient on the Atkins pyramid is nothing less than brilliant. With the use of one vertical arrow, the pyramid clearly conveys the idea that increasing your level of physical exercise allows you to choose from an expanded list of foods. This one mechanism, if followed by everyone, would result in a tremendous improvement in the state of global health. Why? Because the human body was designed to be put to daily use. Unlike automobile parts that wear out the more you use...

The Atkins Diet Food Guide Pyramid, Part 3: All Foods Shown On the Atkins Pyramid Are Unrefined, Unprocessed Foods

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
If you look closely at the Atkins pyramid, you'll notice that it contains pictures of raw, unprocessed food ingredients. You don't see any packaged meat products in the meat category, and there are no canned vegetable soups in the vegetables category. The fruit category doesn't have commercially-prepared guacamole, canned fruits, or fruit drinks, and the whole grains category doesn't have flavored instant oatmeal. This is a critical distinction because the health benefits of these minimally-processed...

The Atkins Diet Food Guide Pyramid, Part 2: Structure of the Food Guide

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
The pyramid is quite cleverly constructed. Mirroring the USDA's Food Guide Pyramid, the Atkins pyramid puts the "foundation" foods at the bottom, indicating that these foods should make up the majority of your diet. On the Atkins pyramid, these foods are eggs, fish, poultry, beef, pork and soy products. Basically, these are the "meats" of the diet. It's no surprise that these are the foundation of the Atkins Food Guide Pyramid, since the Atkins diet is based on avoiding carbohydrates and consuming...

The Atkins Diet Food Guide Pyramid, Part 1: Introduction

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
The USDA has struggled for years to update its outdated Food Guide Pyramid. Thanks to the meddling of every food and beverage industry group that has a stake in the guide, however (the dairy industry, beef industry, wheat growers, etc.), the USDA seems to be paralyzed, unable to make any changes out of fear of retribution from any industry that might perceive itself as being given anything other than a full-fledged recommendation by the USDA. (This true story of the USDA Food Guide Pyramid is discussed...

Dieting Americans discover they can't pig out on low-carb foods and still lose weight

By Mike Adams, July 18 2004
Popularity of the low-carb diet is edging downwards, say polls. The reason? More than half of all Americans who have tried the Atkins Diet and other low-carb diets have given up. The real issue here, however, isn't whether low-carb diets actually work (avoiding refined carbohydrates is extremely important for losing weight and preventing chronic disease), but why so many Americans leap from one fad diet to another in a desperate search to try anything other than what really works: healthy nutrition...

Physicians warn about dangerous overprescribing of statins

By Mike Adams, July 15 2004
Kudos to the physicians who are shouting the warning that statin drugs are being dangerously overprescribed. There have been no long-term tests of these drugs, and yet pharmaceutical companies and many physicians are now recommending that patients take statins for life! Essentially, very little is known about the side effects of statins on healthy people, especially when used on a long-term basis. The only real clinical trial is going on right now, and the American people are the unwitting test...

Statin drug side effects list

By Mike Adams, July 15 2004
Here's a quick list of known side effects caused by taking statin drugs. People who take statins have suffered ravaging health consequences, including permanent damage to their liver, muscles and nervous system. Statins frequently cause people to lose their memories or feel confused. Here's the full list: Nausea Irritability and short tempers Hostility Homicidal impulses Rapid loss of mental clarity Amnesia Kidney failure Diarrhea Muscle aching and weakness Tingling or cramping in the...

If prescription drugs are so good, where are all the healthy drug takers?

By Mike Adams, July 15 2004
When observing the state of modern medicine and the unprecedented influence of pharmaceuticals, an interesting paradox arises. The drug companies claim that pharmaceuticals can do wonders for people: lower their cholesterol, end clinical depression, reverse osteoporosis, eliminate allergies, calm your children and many other similar promises. But if prescription drugs are so good for people, where are all the healthy medicated customers? There aren't any to speak of. There's nobody taking twelve...

Medical researchers use infrared LEDs to heal cancer

By Mike Adams, July 13 2004
All the prescription drugs in the world can't compete with the healing power of light. Now, medical researchers are using simple infrared LED light to heal cancer patients. It's a powerful example of the healing potential of phototherapy, and it demonstrates one of the reasons why I'm so excited about vibrational medicine. Light has the power to heal us: to heal our diseases, our flesh wounds and our minds. But here's the dirty little secret about phototherapy that all these LED light manufacturers...

Appetite stimulating hormone decreases following gastric bypass surgery

By Mike Adams, July 13 2004
Research is showing that people who under gastric bypass surgery -- a barbaric procedure if there ever was one -- experience a decrease in the appetite stimulating hormone ghrelin. This, according to the researchers, helps patients lose weight and also proves the surgical procedure is a success. But wait a minute. If the decrease in the hormone is responsible for the weight loss, then aren't there other strategies that help control this appetite hormone without the use of scalpels, scar tissue,...



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