About this episode
Today
How Your Vagus Nerve Shapes Heart Aging and Resilience
Heart aging begins with weakened communication between your brain and heart, not just clogged arteries or genetics, and preserving that signaling slows structural decline inside heart tissue Research shows that losing vagus nerve input accelerates cellular aging in the heart, whi ... Show More
7m 16s
Today
The Hidden Risks of Unnecessary Gluten-Free Diets in Children
Gluten-free diets were initially intended for children with medical conditions such as celiac disease, wheat allergy, and non-celiac gluten sensitivity A review published in Frontiers in Nutrition found that gluten-free diets, when not medically required, can cause nutrient gaps ... Show More
7m 3s
Yesterday
A Single Binge-Drinking Episode Can Damage Your Gut
A single binge-drinking episode triggers rapid immune and barrier damage in your gut, and those changes continue to affect digestion, inflammation, and nutrient absorption for days or weeks afterward Alcohol causes your immune system to attack your own gut lining, increasing inte ... Show More
6m 56s
Apr 2024
Lung Allocation System: Improving Patient Access with Kenneth McCurry, MD & Maryam Valapour, MD, MPP
0:16 Intro2:28 Recent modifications to the lung allocation score5:11 Monitoring chronic graft rejection9:23 The rising use of ex vivo lung perfusion 16:17 The presence of post-COVID patients on the lung transplant waitlist21:01 Impact of long Covid on transplant rehabilitation22: ... Show More
35m 53s
Jul 2025
Methylprednisolone vs. Hydrocortisone: Which Can Save More Lives in Severe Pneumonia?
In this episode of the Saving Lives Podcast, we review a July 2025 study from the Journal of Intensive Care comparing methylprednisolone and hydrocortisone for severe pneumonia treatment. The discussion focuses on how these findings may influence clinical decisions, particularly ... Show More
5m 8s
Nov 2024
Reduce Respiratory Mucus
<p>Today, I’m going to show you how to eliminate mucus in the lungs using NAC. NAC works similarly to salt by thinning mucus, but it also stops its production. It’s a potent anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antibacterial, and antiviral agent that can even break up biofilms. NAC al ... Show More
5m 30s
Jul 2023
Asthme: quelle partie du système respiratoire la maladie affecte-t-elle?
Maladie chronique, l’asthme touche environ 340 millions de personnes. Elle se caractérise par des crises récurrentes, où l’on observe des difficultés respiratoires et une respiration sifflante. Chez une personne asthmatique, quelle partie de l’appareil respiratoire est affecté pa ... Show More
1m 55s
Oct 2020
Updates in acute medicine: Pulmonary embolism and vaping associated lung injury
Kieran Walsh, clinical director at BMJ, asks Matt Castleden, GP and editor for BMJ Best Practice and BMJ Learning, to summarise the latest clinical guidance in acute medicine. Dr Castleden updates us on recent recommendations on pulmonary embolism, and also acute respiratory dist ... Show More
14m 31s
Aug 2021
Episode 029 Respiratory Physiotherapy & Covid-19 with Pat Camp
<p>In this episode of the podcast I get to speak with Pat Camp - a respiratory rehabilitation specialist and researcher with around 3 decades experience as a physiotherapist & over a decades experience in research for respiratory physiotherapy. Pat is also the host of the LungFit ... Show More
1h 21m
Apr 2025
Lung Cancer
Send us a textNinja Nerds,Welcome to the Ninja Nerd Podcast with Zach and Rob! In this episode, we discuss Lung Cancer, a leading cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide. We explore the pathophysiology, risk factors, and key differences between non-small cell lung cancer (NSC ... Show More
46m 31s
Nov 13
New Research: Mitochondrial DNA in TRALI and Venetoclax-Obinituzumab in CLL Trials
In this week's episode, associate editor Dr. James Griffin interviews researchers Dr. John Semple and Dr. Othman Al-Sawaf on their groundbreaking studies on transfusion-related acute lung injury and chronic lymphocytic leukemia treatment. Dr. Semple explored how mitochondrial DNA ... Show More
18m 36s
Jan 2023
Asthme: quelle partie du système respiratoire la maladie affecte-t-elle?
À l'occasion du congrès de pneumologie de langue française, qui se tient à Marseille jusqu'au 29 janvier, nous parlons de l’asthme. Maladie chronique, l’asthme touche environ 340 millions de personnes. Elle se caractérise par des crises récurrentes, où l’on observe des difficulté ... Show More
1m 59s
Aug 2021
Pulmonx trial into emphysema treatment
<p>In the UK, about 1.3 million people are living with COPD - chronic obstructive pulmonary disease - , and there's no cure - but there's a lot of research into its treatment.</p>
<p>In one type of COPD, emphysema, disease destroys alveoli in the lung so they can't transfer oxyge ... Show More
12m 41s
- Scott Adams, who recently passed from an aggressive, rapidly progressing prostate cancer, openly shared his final journey with a wide audience, offering valuable insights for others facing the dying experience
- Over centuries, the medical industry has increasingly monopolized death and dying, fostering a cultural view that treats death as something to fear, deny, and exclude from life — rather than a natural companion to accept
- This distortion makes dying far more arduous in our society, fueling an escalating medicalization of death in which expensive, often futile interventions are imposed on patients — frequently against their deepest values and wishes
- In contrast to the materialist scientific view that consciousness emerges solely from brain activity, compelling evidence indicates consciousness can persist independently of the brain and, in some cases, even transfer between individuals or contexts (e.g., via organ transplants or near-death accounts)
- Recognizing the spiritual dimensions of dying and how they intersect with modern medical discoveries. Many ancient and enduring traditions regard this moment as one of the most significant in human life