Risk factors of ALS (a motor neurone disease with a 100% mortality rate) that healthcare professionals don't want to tell you about

Xangsane

Xangsane

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(TLDR at the bottom)

About ALS:
Motor neurone disease (MND) is a rare and fatal condition that progressively damages parts of the nervous system. This leads to muscle weakness, often with visible wasting.

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is the most common form of MND.

MND happens when specialist nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord, called motor neurones, stop working properly and die prematurely. This is known as neurodegeneration.

Motor neurones control muscle activity like:
  • gripping
  • walking
  • speaking
  • swallowing
  • breathing
As MND progresses, it can become more difficult to do some or all of these activities.
Most people are diagnosed with ALS between the ages of 40 and 70 with the average age being 55.

About half of people with ALS live at least three years. About 20 percent live more than five years. And only about 10 percent live more than 10 years.
About 60 percent of people with ALS are men and 93 percent are white European.

What healthcare professionals say:
MND/ALS occurs when specialist nerve cells (motor neurones) in the brain and spinal cord progressively fail. It's not clear why this happens.
90% of the time, people who develop ALS don't have any identifiable risk factors. 10% of the time, ALS is inherited.
The only known risk factors are:
  • Older age
  • Being identified as male at birth
  • A family history of ALS
Although we have learned a great deal about the genetic factors that might influence whether someone is at risk of developing MND later in life, environmental and age-related factors have been more difficult to identify. This means that people seem to develop MND because of a mix of factors amounting to 'bad luck', rather than because of a single major lifestyle factor, such as their occupation or diet.

There are an increasing amount of younger people being diagnosed with ALS and nobody knows why.


The reality, that scientific researchers have found out, of why an increasing amount of young people below the age of 60 are getting ALS, apparently for "no known reason" according to healthcare professionals, is as follows:

Lifestyle risk factors for ALS:
  • Exposure to diesel exhaust, lead, silica, organic dust, extremely low-frequency magnetic fields, and electric shocks
  • Intense physical activity in your occupation
  • Certain occupations, including construction, farming, fishing, logging, and hunting
  • Long-term exposure to air pollution
  • Red and processed meat, animal protein, sodium, zinc, and glutamic acid

A slightly reduced risk for ALS has been associated with consuming coffee, tea, whole-grain bread, raw vegetables, and citrus fruits.

Smoking​

According to an evidence-based medicine analysis, smoking is the only probable risk factor for ALS.49,83 Intriguingly, smoking may be a risk factor among women, especially post-menopausal women,84,85 although not among men.86 The controversy regarding the role of smoking in ALS appears to remain unsolved87,88 and is an interesting area for epidemiological studies of ALS.89

Dietary factors​

The most investigated relationship between dietary factors and ALS is the inverse association between higher intake of antioxidants and a lower risk of ALS. For example, regular use of vitamin E supplements was associated with a lower risk of ALS,90 and a longer duration of vitamin E use was associated with a lower risk of ALS in a large study pooling individual data from five cohorts.91 Dietary intake of vitamin E was also associated with a lower risk of ALS in case-control studies from the Netherlands92 and Japan.93 These results were further corroborated by another cohort study that measured vitamin E serum levels directly.94 In other smaller studies, however, levels of vitamin E did not differ between ALS patients and controls, neither in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)95 nor in the serum95,96 samples. Further, high-dose vitamin E as an add-on therapy to riluzole in ALS did not extend survival, although improvement in the rate of deterioration of function was suggested for vitamin E.97 Another group of antioxidants associated with a lower risk of ALS is polyunsaturated fatty acids,92,98,99 which may modulate lipid metabolism, oxidative stress, and inflammatory processes. Evidence for the role of other dietary factors in ALS, including consumption of coffee100,101 and alcohol,102,103 is scant.

Body mass index and physical fitness​

There is a strong clinical impression that ALS patients have a higher level of physical fitness and lower body mass index (BMI) than average.104 Whether there is an overrepresentation of higher physical fitness among presymptomatic ALS patients is not firmly established. However, based on a large sample of Swedish conscripts, one longitudinal study showed that higher physical fitness, but not muscle strength, measured at age 18 years was associated with a higher risk of ALS decades later.105 Low BMI and higher BMI reduction rate have been shown to be independent prognostic indicators for ALS after diagnosis.106108 Longitudinal cohort studies further suggest that low premorbid BMI is associated with a higher risk of and greater mortality from ALS.109,110

Athleticism, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and physical exercise​

Historically, the most famous ALS patient was Lou Gehrig, the renowned US baseball player. Several studies have demonstrated increased risk of ALS among football or soccer players,111114 other athletes,115 and individuals who engage in vigorous physical activity,116 but inconsistent results have also been reported.117120 Strenuous physical activity, repeated head injuries, use of illicit performance-enhancing drugs, or chemicals used to treat football fields have all been discussed as potential explanations for such risk elevations.111,121 Chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a newly defined neurodegenerative disease, often resulting from repeated head injuries, has been proposed as the underlying reason or the “correct” diagnosis for ALS cases observed among professional athletes and perhaps also among military veterans.122 Different levels of physical exercise (professional versus recreational) may have very different biological effects on neurodegeneration. This is in line with previous findings of an increased risk of ALS among professional football players,111114 although not among high school players.119 Similarly, a large European case-control study showed a 51% lower risk of ALS for organized sport, but a 59% higher risk of ALS for professional sport.123 Further efforts to disentangle the different exposure patterns involved in professional sports as compared with recreational sports will be needed to better understand these findings. Although the hypothesis that athleticism contributes to ALS is intriguing, caution should be exercised in interpreting these findings, given the fact that the vast majority are based on small numbers of ALS cases.

Occupations​

Workers in various occupations with seemingly disparate exposures have been reported to be potentially at altered risk of ALS, including athletes, carpenters, cockpit workers, construction workers, electrical workers, farm workers, hairdressers, house painters, laboratory technicians, leather workers, machine assemblers, medical service workers, military workers, nurses, power production plant workers, precision metal workers, programmers, rubber workers, shepherds, tobacco workers, veterinarians, and welders.124,125 These occupations potentially involve work exposures to chemicals, pesticides, metals, and electromagnetic fields (EMF).125127 However, common denominators among these different occupations are not easily identified.

Military personnel are exposed to a battery of unique and potentially harmful factors, including physical and psychological exertion and trauma, transmissible agents (eg, viruses) and vaccines, toxic substances (eg, heavy metals and chemicals), and other environmental toxicants specific to particular deployment areas. A review article focusing on the potential links between military-related factors and ALS has been published recently, and concluded that although there is evidence suggesting a role of military service in ALS, it is too premature to draw a firm conclusion regarding a causal relationship.128

Electric occupation, electric shock, and electromagnetic field​

ALS has been associated with “electrical” occupations,129,130 especially welding.131 Magnetic fields, electrical fields, contact currents, microshocks, and both perceptible and imperceptible electric shocks all contribute to occupational exposure to extremely low frequency EMF. The reported association of ALS with EMF is generally weaker than that with electrical occupations.129,130 Evidence is not yet available to distinguish whether electric shocks or exposure to EMF underlies the association between electrical occupation and ALS.132134 A meta-analysis suggested that there might be a slight but statistically significant increase in ALS risk among people with job descriptions related to relatively high levels of EMF exposure.135 However, studies using residential proximity to power lines as a proxy for EMF exposure have failed to support such a relationship.136,137 Different exposure levels investigated in studies of occupational, compared with residential, exposure to EMF may partly explain the different findings to date.

Metals​

That lead may be a culprit in ALS etiology is a long-standing hypothesis. Previous studies have mostly supported this relationship, relying in general on indirect measures of lead exposure.115,138148 Lead levels in both blood and bone were found to be associated with ALS,147,148 although others found only an association for blood and not bone.149 Blood lead levels may reflect current environmental lead exposure and may also reflect mobilization of lead from bone.150 Lead toxicokinetics and bone metabolism may therefore modify the lead-ALS association. A recent case-control study observed that blood lead levels were high among ALS cases compared with controls, even after careful adjustment for bone turnover status and a polymorphism affecting lead toxicokinetics.151

Pesticides​

Pesticides are in widespread use worldwide and can be measured in various concentrations in air, food, and water. An association between pesticide use and ALS has been explicitly evaluated and suggested in previous studies,139141,146,163166 including two recent studies from India167 and the USA (organochlorine compounds, pyrethroids, herbicides, and fumigants specifically).168 In meta-analyses, pesticide use was found to be significantly associated with a higher risk of ALS,168,169 although the latter study169 suggested a male-specific association.

Viruses​

Previous viral infection has also been considered as a potential risk factor for ALS. For example, a role of enteroviral infections in ALS has been hypothesized since neurons in the anterior horn of the spinal cord are the target cells both in ALS and enteroviral infections, including poliomyelitis.174 Using reverse transcriptase (RT) in situ polymerase chain reaction, enterovirus RNA was detected in motor neurons of the anterior horn of patients with ALS.175 Exposure to other viruses may also be important. Human herpesvirus (HHV)-6 seropositivity was associated with a more than threefold risk of ALS, and HHV-8 seropositivity with a more than eightfold risk.176 Retroviruses, such as human immunodeficiency virus and human T-cell lymphotrophic virus-1, caused motor neuron syndromes.177 Some as yet unidentified retrovirus might also be a risk factor for ALS, because a mouse retrovirus (murine leukemia virus) causes both a lower motor neuron syndrome and leukemia/lymphoma.178 A more broad measure of retroviral infection, ie, serum activity of reverse transcriptase (an enzyme characterizing retroviral infections), was similar among ALS patients and their blood relatives, but lower among their spouses, who had levels similar to that of other non-blood-related controls.179 More recent studies of the expression of human endogenous retroviral sequences have revealed significantly increased expression of human endogenous retro virus type K (HERV-K), one of the two most studied human endogenous retroviruses given its complete open reading frame and ability to form virus-like particles, in the serum, muscle, and post mortem brain tissue of ALS patients.180183

Medical conditions

The general belief that ALS is a complex multifactorial disease has suggested the importance of studying the relationship between ALS and other medical conditions, which may share environmental risk factors or a genetic predisposition with ALS. In this review, we focus our discussion on the potential roles of head trauma, metabolic diseases, cancer, and neuroinflammation in ALS.

Head trauma

Early case-control studies reported a significant association between history of head trauma and ALS.184 Aiming to rule out the possibilities of recall bias and reverse causality (ie, trauma as a result, rather than a cause, of ALS), later studies generally used more objective assessment of head trauma history and excluded traumas experienced during the years immediately before the diagnosis of ALS.185,186 Severe head traumas that were hospitalized were not associated with a higher risk of ALS in Sweden.186 A possible association of ALS with milder head traumas, perhaps specifically with repeatedly experienced mild traumas, has not been thoroughly addressed.

Metabolic diseases

An interest in the relationship between metabolic disorders and ALS arose after the observation that ALS patients are hypermetabolic.187 Previous studies suggested that type 2 diabetes is associated with a lower risk of ALS,188 while type 1 diabetes, as well as some other autoimmune diseases, might instead be risk factors for ALS.189 In a recent study, we confirmed an inverse association between type 2 diabetes and risk of ALS, and found that type 1 diabetes was indeed associated with a threefold risk of ALS.190 Medications used for treatments of metabolic disorders, independently of the underlying disorders, may also be associated with the development of ALS. However, the evidence gathered to date is inconclusive regarding the relationship between use of statins191 and the risk or progression of ALS, and between the antidiabetic drug, pioglitazone, and progression of ALS.192 However, these findings are not surprising given the complexity of their properties. Pioglitazone, for example, is both antioxidant and anti-inflammatory and may protect against neurodegeneration, but it is also antidiabetic and antidyslipidemic and may therefore be detrimental for ALS, if the emerging evidence of a potentially protective effect of obesity and type 2 diabetes with regard to ALS proves true.

Cancer

Although the incidence of neurodegenerative diseases and of cancer increases in older adults, these two groups of diseases are characterized by largely opposing cellular behavior, ie, premature cell death in neurodegeneration and resistance to cell death in carcinogenesis.193 A potential inverse relationship between neurodegenerative diseases (eg, Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease) and cancer has been observed, and is plausible for the reasons discussed.194 Based on clinical case series or case reports, earlier studies suggested a positive association between ALS and cancer.195197 Most epidemiological studies have refuted such a link in general,198201 except for melanoma.199,201203 The most recent, large-scale, prospective cohort studies have similarly refuted a positive association between cancer, including melanoma, and ALS.204,205

Neuroinflammation

Since the earliest pathological changes in ALS appear to occur in axons, dendrites, and synapses,206 studies of the relationship between inflammatory conditions around the motor unit and ALS may shed light on the pathological development of ALS. Clinically, early symptoms of ALS can be difficult to differentiate from symptoms of other inflammatory neuromuscular diseases such as myositis, myasthenia gravis, Guillain–Barré syndrome, and multiple sclerosis. Due to the difficulties in determining the correct diagnosis, misdiagnosis may be an explanation for any higher-than-expected co-occurrence of ALS and inflammatory diseases.207 Interestingly, ALS and multiple sclerosis were reported to co-occur in individuals with the C9ORF72 repeat expansion, suggesting some biological overlaps between ALS and autoimmune/inflammatory diseases.208 However, apart from several reports of cases diagnosed with both ALS and with some of the conditions above, few studies have addressed this issue.
Being white

Some studies have found that certain genetic mutations are more common in people of European descent and may be associated with an increased risk of developing ALS.
  • Certain environmental factors, such as exposure to toxins or chemicals, have been suggested as possible contributors to the development of ALS. It is possible that white people are more likely to be exposed to these factors than other racial or ethnic groups.
  • Certain variations in the gene encoding for the enzyme SOD1 (superoxide dismutase 1) have been associated with an increased risk of developing ALS, and these variations are more common in people of European descent. (T Awano, 2009)

TLDR:
  • Smoking is the only probable risk factor for ALS, particularly among women, but controversy remains.
  • A higher intake of antioxidants, particularly vitamin E and polyunsaturated fatty acids, is associated with a lower risk of ALS.
  • Low body mass index (BMI) and higher BMI reduction rate are independent prognostic indicators for ALS after diagnosis, and low premorbid BMI is associated with a higher risk of and greater mortality from ALS.
  • Increased risk of ALS has been reported among athletes, particularly those engaged in football or soccer, and individuals who engage in vigorous physical activity. The underlying reasons are still unclear, but potential explanations include repeated head injuries, use of performance-enhancing drugs, or exposure to chemicals.
  • Various occupations with seemingly disparate exposures have been reported to be potentially at altered risk of ALS, including athletes, carpenters, cockpit workers, construction workers, electrical workers, farm workers, hairdressers, house painters, laboratory technicians, and more. Common denominators among these different occupations are not easily identified.
  • Military service has been suggested as a potential risk factor for ALS due to exposure to various harmful factors, but it is too premature to draw a firm conclusion regarding a causal relationship.
  • ALS has been associated with "electrical" occupations, especially welding, and exposure to extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (EMF). The association of ALS with EMF is generally weaker than that with electrical occupations, and evidence is not yet available to distinguish whether electric shocks or exposure to EMF underlies the association between electrical occupation and ALS.
  • White Europeans may have a higher risk of developing ALS due to genetic mutations and environmental factors, as well as variations in the SOD1 gene that are more common in this population.

PS: just because you feel a little sporadic muscle twitch here and there doesn't mean you have ALS, especially if your muscles aren't being wasted away.

A previous health thread I wrote:
 
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@MagnusTheRed @thecel @Gaia262 @GalacticHero @Jungcuck @rand anon @Baldingman1998 @SubhumanCurrycel @Sens @tents @Pretty @capybara @Chinacurry @justadude @JohnDoe @ThousandCuts @User28823 @2d v2 @kumquat @Enfant terrible @Chinlet Ascension @HerpDerpson @TsarTsar444
 
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learned nothing I didnt already know...
 
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The healthcare professionals don't tell you this
they don't tell you that being exposed to diesel exhaust chemicals is bad for you? i think that's common sense. this is all generic "bad shit" that they blame all unknown diseases on. muh pesticides muh metals.
 
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they don't tell you that being exposed to diesel exhaust chemicals is bad for you? i think that's common sense. this is all generic "bad shit" that they blame all unknown diseases on. muh pesticides muh metals.
They only tell you:
MND/ALS occurs when specialist nerve cells (motor neurones) in the brain and spinal cord progressively fail. It's not clear why this happens.
90% of the time, people who develop ALS don't have any identifiable risk factors. 10% of the time, ALS is inherited.
The only known risk factors are:
  • Older age
  • Being identified as male at birth
  • A family history of ALS
Although we have learned a great deal about the genetic factors that might influence whether someone is at risk of developing MND later in life, environmental and age-related factors have been more difficult to identify. This means that people seem to develop MND because of a mix of factors amounting to 'bad luck', rather than because of a single major lifestyle factor, such as their occupation or diet.
 
sounds like a bunch of bullshit, my grandfather did bare knuckle boxing through his like entire 20s. Didn't make it past his 50s but not because of that.

BTW repeated head traumas mean something that rattles the fuck out of the brain and spine, like getting clocked in the head hundreds of times

idk man. The only thing you can really do to combat neuro degeneration is ice plunges, but its mainly due to family/genetic problems
 
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Being white

Some studies have found that certain genetic mutations are more common in people of European descent and may be associated with an increased risk of developing ALS.
  • Certain environmental factors, such as exposure to toxins or chemicals, have been suggested as possible contributors to the development of ALS. It is possible that white people are more likely to be exposed to these factors than other racial or ethnic groups.
  • Certain variations in the gene encoding for the enzyme SOD1 (superoxide dismutase 1) have been associated with an increased risk of developing ALS, and these variations are more common in people of European descent. (T Awano, 2009)
Sfcels on suicide watch
 
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"polyunsaturated fatty acids, is associated with a lower risk of ALS" zionist propaganda
 
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"polyunsaturated fatty acids, is associated with a lower risk of ALS" zionist propaganda
just take ice baths it protects against alzeimers and dementia
 
"Increased risk of ALS has been reported among athletes, particularly those engaged in football or soccer, and individuals who engage in vigorous physical activity. The underlying reasons are still unclear, but potential explanations include repeated head injuries, use of performance-enhancing drugs, or exposure to chemicals."
Goatis vegan
 
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Fear mongering crap
 
I WILL KILL MYSELF WITH A TOOTHPICK BEFORE I EVER EAT A PUFA

RAY PEAT FORECER
 
Autism, Schizophrenia, ADHD and Aspergers.Very pale nordic skin with very dark hair and eyes med ancestry :feelskek:
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Chads slay, Normies get cucked, and incels fantasize about Love; writing Blackpill book page 1120
Stop the Disney fantasy that women love you - they love themselves and their children ONLY (evolutionary biology)
 
Interesting, another good thread xangsane. To me it seems like if you're not white european and your lifestyle isn't so bad, you're safe. Really though they still don't know even half of the diseases and their causes or cures. The only thing i know for sure is that western diets are beyond terrible. Even the "healthy" food is riddled with hormones, pesticides etc. Plastic is the enemy and so on.
 
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Smoking is so destructive, low-class habit.
 
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Smoking is so destructive, low-class habit.
Unfortunately kids in school think it's cool and end up becoming life long smokers. Imagine that, taking a decision to ruin your health before you have even finished puberty.
 
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Screenshot 2023 04 21 at 02 08 15 Risk factors of ALS a motor neurone disease with a 100 mor


brutal
So I guess xangsane has a 50% of getting ALS and dying @Biggdink
 
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(TLDR at the bottom)

About ALS:




What healthcare professionals say:





There are an increasing amount of younger people being diagnosed with ALS and nobody knows why.



The reality, that scientific researchers have found out, of why an increasing amount of young people below the age of 60 are getting ALS, apparently for "no known reason" according to healthcare professionals, is as follows:



















TLDR:

  • Smoking is the only probable risk factor for ALS, particularly among women, but controversy remains.
  • A higher intake of antioxidants, particularly vitamin E and polyunsaturated fatty acids, is associated with a lower risk of ALS.
  • Low body mass index (BMI) and higher BMI reduction rate are independent prognostic indicators for ALS after diagnosis, and low premorbid BMI is associated with a higher risk of and greater mortality from ALS.
  • Increased risk of ALS has been reported among athletes, particularly those engaged in football or soccer, and individuals who engage in vigorous physical activity. The underlying reasons are still unclear, but potential explanations include repeated head injuries, use of performance-enhancing drugs, or exposure to chemicals.
  • Various occupations with seemingly disparate exposures have been reported to be potentially at altered risk of ALS, including athletes, carpenters, cockpit workers, construction workers, electrical workers, farm workers, hairdressers, house painters, laboratory technicians, and more. Common denominators among these different occupations are not easily identified.
  • Military service has been suggested as a potential risk factor for ALS due to exposure to various harmful factors, but it is too premature to draw a firm conclusion regarding a causal relationship.
  • ALS has been associated with "electrical" occupations, especially welding, and exposure to extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (EMF). The association of ALS with EMF is generally weaker than that with electrical occupations, and evidence is not yet available to distinguish whether electric shocks or exposure to EMF underlies the association between electrical occupation and ALS.
  • White Europeans may have a higher risk of developing ALS due to genetic mutations and environmental factors, as well as variations in the SOD1 gene that are more common in this population.

PS: just because you feel a little sporadic muscle twitch here and there doesn't mean you have ALS, especially if your muscles aren't being wasted away.

A previous health thread I wrote:
When I saw it say 93% are white European I stopped caring. It seems like it’s the cumskin version of sickle cel. Welcome to the clubs cumskin
 
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When I saw it say 93% are white European I stopped caring. It seems like it’s the cumskin version of sickle cel. Welcome to the clubs cumskin
Very very few are biracials and nonwhites:


@khvirgin @Biggdink


ALS is a terminal illness. You will die within 5 years of getting ALS.
 
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Interesting, another good thread xangsane.
Thank oyu!
To me it seems like if you're not white european and your lifestyle isn't so bad, you're safe.
I wonder if being half-white European half-Arab would count as white European. And I never drink or smoke.
I'm not the most athletic.
Really though they still don't know even half of the diseases and their causes or cures. The only thing i know for sure is that western diets are beyond terrible. Even the "healthy" food is riddled with hormones, pesticides etc. Plastic is the enemy and so on.
Even though I try so hard to eat "purely" as possible, I can't help but trust farmers putting GMOs even in organic food (which is overpriced anyway).


I had shitless severe health anxiety about ALS because I was twitching all over my body with some hotspots, but thankfully it's just BFS.
 
Very very few are biracials and nonwhites:


@khvirgin @Biggdink


ALS is a terminal illness. You will die within 5 years of getting ALS.
You’re half white
Vince Carter Basketball GIF by NBA
bruh you’re a doc you know how genetics work ?

Nigga got his medical degree from sims @khvirgin
 
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You’re half white
Vince Carter Basketball GIF by NBA
bruh you’re a doc you know how genetics work ?

Nigga got his medical degree from sims @khvirgin
I looked at the ALS rates in Latin America and Israel for mixed populations; not as low as purely non-white countries but not as high as white countries.

My risk has been cut down by half as I'm half white, but still, I've got some white ancestry at the end of the day, so I'm still at risk which frightens me.
 
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You’re half white
Vince Carter Basketball GIF by NBA
bruh you’re a doc you know how genetics work ?

Nigga got his medical degree from sims @khvirgin
Also whites are FAR more likely to inherit the FUS or SOD1 gene mutations which puts them at higher risk of ALS.
 
You’re half white
Vince Carter Basketball GIF by NBA
bruh you’re a doc you know how genetics work ?

Nigga got his medical degree from sims @khvirgin
He looks white therefore he’s white so it’s over for OP
 
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He looks white therefore he’s white so it’s over for OP
I looked at the ALS rates in Latin America and Israel for mixed populations; not as low as purely non-white countries but not as high as white countries.

My risk has been cut down by half as I'm half white, but still, I've got some white ancestry at the end of the day, so I'm still at risk which frightens me.
 
@PrinceLuenLeoncur @Biggdink @khvirgin
1682037674620

World prevalence of ALS/Lou Gehrig's
 
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Thank oyu!

I wonder if being half-white European half-Arab would count as white European. And I never drink or smoke.
I'm not the most athletic.

Even though I try so hard to eat "purely" as possible, I can't help but trust farmers putting GMOs even in organic food (which is overpriced anyway).


I had shitless severe health anxiety about ALS because I was twitching all over my body with some hotspots, but thankfully it's just BFS.
I think you're fine. And yh even theorganic food is not as it seems. In our country the best we can do is minimize the damage, there's no avoiding it.
 
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I think you're fine. And yh even theorganic food is not as it seems. In our country the best we can do is minimize the damage, there's no avoiding it.
Thank you. I hope me desperately taking vitamins will cease the BFS twitching. I took them for the past few days and noticed they calmed down by about 50%.
 
Thank you. I hope me desperately taking vitamins will cease the BFS twitching. I took them for the past few days and noticed they calmed down by about 50%.
What is bfs? When did you develop this? Last i talked to you, seemed like you were healthy.
 
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What is bfs? When did you develop this? Last i talked to you, seemed like you were healthy.

BFS is harmless.

What is benign fasciculation syndrome?​

Benign fasciculation syndrome (BFS) is a condition in which you experience frequent muscle twitches without having any kind of underlying medical condition.

Fasciculation (pronounced “fass-ick-you-lay-shun”) is a visible, involuntary twitching of an individual muscle. It doesn’t hurt and can last for several seconds, minutes or even hours. The twitches may be annoying or distracting, but they don’t cause harm.

While most people experience muscle twitches every once in a while, people with benign fasciculation syndrome experience muscle twitches frequently over several months.

What are the symptoms of benign fasciculation syndrome?​

The main symptom of benign fasciculation syndrome (BFS) is frequent muscle twitching. The twitching happens when your muscle is at rest (relaxed). The twitches can last for months or even years.

The twitches can occur anywhere in your body, but they most often occur in or around your:

  • Calves.
  • Thighs.
  • Eyelids.
  • Nose.
  • Arms.
  • Hands.
Some people with BFS also experience muscle cramps. This is known as cramp-fasciculation syndrome (CFS).
 
BFS is harmless.

What is benign fasciculation syndrome?​

Benign fasciculation syndrome (BFS) is a condition in which you experience frequent muscle twitches without having any kind of underlying medical condition.

Fasciculation (pronounced “fass-ick-you-lay-shun”) is a visible, involuntary twitching of an individual muscle. It doesn’t hurt and can last for several seconds, minutes or even hours. The twitches may be annoying or distracting, but they don’t cause harm.

While most people experience muscle twitches every once in a while, people with benign fasciculation syndrome experience muscle twitches frequently over several months.

What are the symptoms of benign fasciculation syndrome?​

The main symptom of benign fasciculation syndrome (BFS) is frequent muscle twitching. The twitching happens when your muscle is at rest (relaxed). The twitches can last for months or even years.

The twitches can occur anywhere in your body, but they most often occur in or around your:

  • Calves.
  • Thighs.
  • Eyelids.
  • Nose.
  • Arms.
  • Hands.
Some people with BFS also experience muscle cramps. This is known as cramp-fasciculation syndrome (CFS).
Oh right... but still seems annoying so if you can get rid of it or reduce it then good.
 
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Oh right... but still seems annoying so if you can get rid of it or reduce it then good.
It gives me big anxiety, ngl.
 
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(TLDR at the bottom)

About ALS:




What healthcare professionals say:





There are an increasing amount of younger people being diagnosed with ALS and nobody knows why.



The reality, that scientific researchers have found out, of why an increasing amount of young people below the age of 60 are getting ALS, apparently for "no known reason" according to healthcare professionals, is as follows:



















TLDR:

  • Smoking is the only probable risk factor for ALS, particularly among women, but controversy remains.
  • A higher intake of antioxidants, particularly vitamin E and polyunsaturated fatty acids, is associated with a lower risk of ALS.
  • Low body mass index (BMI) and higher BMI reduction rate are independent prognostic indicators for ALS after diagnosis, and low premorbid BMI is associated with a higher risk of and greater mortality from ALS.
  • Increased risk of ALS has been reported among athletes, particularly those engaged in football or soccer, and individuals who engage in vigorous physical activity. The underlying reasons are still unclear, but potential explanations include repeated head injuries, use of performance-enhancing drugs, or exposure to chemicals.
  • Various occupations with seemingly disparate exposures have been reported to be potentially at altered risk of ALS, including athletes, carpenters, cockpit workers, construction workers, electrical workers, farm workers, hairdressers, house painters, laboratory technicians, and more. Common denominators among these different occupations are not easily identified.
  • Military service has been suggested as a potential risk factor for ALS due to exposure to various harmful factors, but it is too premature to draw a firm conclusion regarding a causal relationship.
  • ALS has been associated with "electrical" occupations, especially welding, and exposure to extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (EMF). The association of ALS with EMF is generally weaker than that with electrical occupations, and evidence is not yet available to distinguish whether electric shocks or exposure to EMF underlies the association between electrical occupation and ALS.
  • White Europeans may have a higher risk of developing ALS due to genetic mutations and environmental factors, as well as variations in the SOD1 gene that are more common in this population.

PS: just because you feel a little sporadic muscle twitch here and there doesn't mean you have ALS, especially if your muscles aren't being wasted away.

A previous health thread I wrote:
BONE CHILLING
 
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Reactions: Xangsane
"Increased risk of ALS has been reported among athletes, particularly those engaged in football or soccer, and individuals who engage in vigorous physical activity. The underlying reasons are still unclear, but potential explanations include repeated head injuries, use of performance-enhancing drugs, or exposure to chemicals."
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And army vets.
 

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