whygetfat on Nostr: Max Gulhane MD: "Do you see any use of deuterium-depleted water outside of very ...
Max Gulhane MD: "Do you see any use of deuterium-depleted water outside of very specific medical indications, say cancer? Or would you perhaps just recommend that people get a lower naturally occurring spring water that has lower amount of deuterium?"
Carrie Bennett: "Yeah, the cool part about deuterium is that we've got ways to sequester it and deplete it naturally in our bodies, if we utilize it. So well before recommending deuterium-depleted water, I always say, 'Are you maximizing infrared exposures?' Because we sequester our deuterium in the exclusion zone, because deuterium has a higher binding affinity to oxygen. Right? Almost 10 times stronger.
"So that's why a protium is going to get kicked out. And that protium is mobile, that proton zone, that's where that protium actually can go to places like the inner membrane space.
"But we're trying to ensure it is a protium because we want to maintain the exclusion zone and that will hold the deuterium.
"So I want people to max out that, max out sunlight on the skin, sweat, make sure you're pooping regularly. These are ways that we just naturally can deplete deuterium.
"Then if someone's concerned with something like cancer, for example, it never hurts to have deuterium levels tested, because it's a very easy test to do. A company like Litewater will offer that, and you can just see what in general what your deuterium number is. And if it is 150, 152, 154, it would probably behoove you to go on a key deuterium-depletion strategy, which will involve deuterium-depleted water.
"But deuterium-depleted water by itself, while still eating foods really high in deuterium, and not doing the things to sequester and have the body eliminate the deuterium naturally, really in my opinion doesn't do a whole heck of a lot." —Carrie Bennett with maxgulhanemd (npub19yj…unad) @ 54:32–56:25 https://youtu.be/YC9-p5KAQDY&t=3272
Carrie Bennett: "Yeah, the cool part about deuterium is that we've got ways to sequester it and deplete it naturally in our bodies, if we utilize it. So well before recommending deuterium-depleted water, I always say, 'Are you maximizing infrared exposures?' Because we sequester our deuterium in the exclusion zone, because deuterium has a higher binding affinity to oxygen. Right? Almost 10 times stronger.
"So that's why a protium is going to get kicked out. And that protium is mobile, that proton zone, that's where that protium actually can go to places like the inner membrane space.
"But we're trying to ensure it is a protium because we want to maintain the exclusion zone and that will hold the deuterium.
"So I want people to max out that, max out sunlight on the skin, sweat, make sure you're pooping regularly. These are ways that we just naturally can deplete deuterium.
"Then if someone's concerned with something like cancer, for example, it never hurts to have deuterium levels tested, because it's a very easy test to do. A company like Litewater will offer that, and you can just see what in general what your deuterium number is. And if it is 150, 152, 154, it would probably behoove you to go on a key deuterium-depletion strategy, which will involve deuterium-depleted water.
"But deuterium-depleted water by itself, while still eating foods really high in deuterium, and not doing the things to sequester and have the body eliminate the deuterium naturally, really in my opinion doesn't do a whole heck of a lot." —Carrie Bennett with maxgulhanemd (npub19yj…unad) @ 54:32–56:25 https://youtu.be/YC9-p5KAQDY&t=3272