Is it true that even with mild psoriatic arthirtis medication is required to prevent further damage? Or is it OK to monitor inflammation levels (which markers) and take care of nutrition and exercise, and only medicate if it gets worse? Or is it typically adviseable to do immunotherapy even for mild cases? (I am 40yrs, psoriasis on feet plus 1 swollen toe, hardly any pain. Fairly healthy otherwise)
I am a 75 year-old woman who has kept fit (running and cross training) all my adult life, cook healthy meals (plant-based), am at a good weight and generally look after my health, re sleeping etc. I had an Afib episode a month ago and have undergone MRIs and Cardiac scans and absolutely nothing was found. I am trying to figure out what could have caused this and the only thing I can think of is a potassium problem. Could drinking one sachet of LMNT about every day or every other day have caused an imbalance? By the time my blood was taken the levels seemed okay. Would very much appreciate a response. Thanks much.
Can you have a discussion around what all the annual tests you suggest people should be doing (blood panels, cancer screenings, bone density, Vo2 Max, etc.) to maximize the data they are collecting on themselves for the long term. Assume unlimited resources and also assume limited resources as 2 example ways to answer. Please include suggestions on where people can actually get these things. Love what you do - keep it up!