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--Geeta,

How long has your son been taking the enzymes? My son was extremely

obsessive before enzymes and it took about 4 weeks for the obsessive

behavior to go away. Also what about yeast? My son is currently having a

yeast flare-up and we had to put him on nystatin and now we are having

a problem with obsessing during the " die-off " . Just a thought.

Patti

- In @y..., " gorugallu " <gorugallu@y...> wrote:

> I would like to know about any supplements which will help with my

> son's obsessive behavior? He is on Houstonni's enzymes. We just

> started chelation with DMSA this weekend. Our neurologist suggested

> PROZAC, but my son did not tolerate it. And, Prozac is my last resort.

>

> Thanks

> Geeta

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Geeta,

If it is related to die-off, activated charcoal works pretty well to

relieve the symptoms. Otherwise, magnesium in a soluble form (not

oxide or carbonate) is good. I use homemade epsom salt oil and

cream, and Natural Calm magnesium citrate from the health food

store. The epsom salts also supply sulfur which helps with hyperness.

.

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Geeta,

After a few months on the Houston enzymes, my son's obsessive

behaviors stopped. I only see them very occasionally now. If your

child has been on the enzymes with all foods less than three months,

I would hold off on trying anything else a little while longer to see

if the enzymes help with the obsessions.

> I would like to know about any supplements which will help with my

> son's obsessive behavior? He is on Houstonni's enzymes. We just

> started chelation with DMSA this weekend. Our neurologist suggested

> PROZAC, but my son did not tolerate it. And, Prozac is my last

resort.

>

> Thanks

> Geeta

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Patti,

My son has been on enzymes for more than 5 weeks now with all the

food at home. He is at school from 9am to 3pm. He is taking

probiotics ( culturelle and lacto-tri-blend ). He is on gfcfsf diet.

He is also taking olive oil and biocidin. How do you test for yeast.

I have given him oil of oregano with no reaction at all.

Thanks

Geeta

> > I would like to know about any supplements which will help with

my

> > son's obsessive behavior? He is on Houstonni's enzymes. We just

> > started chelation with DMSA this weekend. Our neurologist

suggested

> > PROZAC, but my son did not tolerate it. And, Prozac is my last

resort.

> >

> > Thanks

> > Geeta

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Once my daughter was able to tolerate the Peptizyde full strength in combo with

the Zyme, her obsessive behaviors started disappearing and we were able to

successfully wean her off Luvox. This took about a month.

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  • 2 years later...

> Listmates,

>

> Has anyone ever seen an increase of obsessive behavior when using

> glutathione? If you have, can you tell us about it?

>

> What about DMG or TMG?

>

> Has the introduction of any other supplement brought on obsessive

behavior?

>

> Thanks!

>

>

Hi, I have not used glutathione, and my son did have a true PANDAS

reaction 18 months ago with 2 subsquent exacerbations, however we

have seen a true increase in OCD with supplements, yeast flares and

fatique. I suspect my son is a overmethylator and we literally have

seen make increase in OCD with any supplement that promotes

methylation..so yes to DMG/TMG, we also saw it with enyzmes and

anything but very low dose 5-HTP, hope this helps Gordon

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,

I recently made some changes- my son started the Brainchild SII vitamins

and minerals. BCII has TMG, plus I started TMG/folinic/b-12 again and

his obsessions are considerably worse than they have ever been. Earlier

this week I eliniated the TMG trio, and today, I reduced the dose of the

BC II. His day at school went much better today. Trade off, because his

vocab seems worse. The recent OCD is WAY TO MUCH to bear. The obsessions

essentially control his entire day.

[ ] obsessive behavior

Listmates,

Has anyone ever seen an increase of obsessive behavior when using

glutathione? If you have, can you tell us about it?

What about DMG or TMG?

Has the introduction of any other supplement brought on obsessive

behavior?

Thanks!

=======================================================

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The more toxic I get the more o/c I get. I find I start wanting all

the bottles to be lined up, labels out, dish towels folded as

perfectly as possible. Normally I don't care but I get serious

comfort from doing that when I'm toxic.

Ahhh...just one more fun mercury symptom...I wouldn't worry, with me

it always passes.

Jen

> > Listmates,

> >

> > Has anyone ever seen an increase of obsessive behavior when using

> > glutathione? If you have, can you tell us about it?

> >

> > What about DMG or TMG?

> >

> > Has the introduction of any other supplement brought on obsessive

> behavior?

> >

> > Thanks!

> >

> >

>

> Hi, I have not used glutathione, and my son did have a true PANDAS

> reaction 18 months ago with 2 subsquent exacerbations, however we

> have seen a true increase in OCD with supplements, yeast flares and

> fatique. I suspect my son is a overmethylator and we literally have

> seen make increase in OCD with any supplement that promotes

> methylation..so yes to DMG/TMG, we also saw it with enyzmes and

> anything but very low dose 5-HTP, hope this helps Gordon

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Dear ,

Yes, I think that I have seen an increase in obsessive behavior in the triplets

since we started TMG. I also feel that we have seen an improvement in

speech/communication so I have cut back their dose to 500mg BID (6 yrs old/50

pounds). We are giving folinic too, but I am going to try Folapro shortly. Do

you have any idea why this might happen?

Owens <lwo@...> wrote:

Listmates,

Has anyone ever seen an increase of obsessive behavior when using

glutathione? If you have, can you tell us about it?

What about DMG or TMG?

Has the introduction of any other supplement brought on obsessive behavior?

Thanks!

=======================================================

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  • 7 months later...

Looks like a low # of antioxidants to me! ;}

----- Original Message -----

From: jwwright <jwwright@...>

Date: Sat, 25 Sep 2004 14:14:46 -0500

Subject: [ ] obsessive behavior

Anyone who thinks CRers are O/C (obsessive/compulisive) should view

the on now NGC 276, explorations: age wars.

These folks are taking 70 nti oxidant pills per day. PArt on CR also.

regards.

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Hi ,

How many A/O pills do you take?

Also shown is Young doing CR at 42 yo, <1500 Kcals per day, so called "radical" vegetarian diet, has a nice carotid artery, also has a problem with osteo - hip and spine. He looks thin, 6' tall, 58 kg, ~128#, bmi <18.

I calculate his BMR at 1504. Adding 200 for routine mechanical, he's eating too little to sustain that weight. That intake should get him to ~100#.

Regards.

----- Original Message -----

From: Dowling

Sent: Saturday, September 25, 2004 2:27 PM

Subject: Re: [ ] obsessive behavior

Looks like a low # of antioxidants to me! ;}----- Original Message -----From: jwwright <jwwright@...>Date: Sat, 25 Sep 2004 14:14:46 -0500Subject: [ ] obsessive behavior Anyone who thinks CRers are O/C (obsessive/compulisive) should viewthe on now NGC 276, explorations: age wars.These folks are taking 70 nti oxidant pills per day. PArt on CR also.regards.

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Depends.

Lately, I've been thinking about consolidating a bit with something

like LEF's LE mix, so a single pill or coupla pills with many

ingredients would take the place of the many individual powders and

tablets I currently take. For a shorthand approximation, I take pretty

much what Wakfer takes, with some minor differences. He has

listed his regimen on his website:

http://morelife.org/personal/health/his-regimen.html

Lots of great information at this website, BTW, relating to nutrition,

CR, supplementation, exercise, etc.

----- Original Message -----

From: jwwright <jwwright@...>

Date: Sat, 25 Sep 2004 15:02:22 -0500

Subject: Re: [ ] obsessive behavior

Hi ,

How many A/O pills do you take?

Also shown is Young doing CR at 42 yo, <1500 Kcals per day, so

called " radical " vegetarian diet, has a nice carotid artery, also has

a problem with osteo - hip and spine. He looks thin, 6' tall, 58 kg,

~128#, bmi <18.

I calculate his BMR at 1504. Adding 200 for routine mechanical, he's

eating too little to sustain that weight. That intake should get him

to ~100#.

Regards.

----- Original Message -----

From: Dowling

Sent: Saturday, September 25, 2004 2:27 PM

Subject: Re: [ ] obsessive behavior

Looks like a low # of antioxidants to me! ;}

----- Original Message -----

From: jwwright <jwwright@...>

Date: Sat, 25 Sep 2004 14:14:46 -0500

Subject: [ ] obsessive behavior

Anyone who thinks CRers are O/C (obsessive/compulisive) should view

the on now NGC 276, explorations: age wars.

These folks are taking 70 nti oxidant pills per day. PArt on CR also.

regards.

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From what I see of his protocol, most of the nutrients he takes are

synthetic or inorganic which is a waste of money (at the least) when

there are natural forms available in food or supplements. What looks

money-worthy is the standardized herbal extracts and the amino acids

due to LEF's high quality control.

Despite all these supplements, why does this guy need a protocol for

when " Under the Weather " or still take prescription medicine? That

should indicate volumes about the efficacy of the supplements.

Logan

> Depends.

>

> Lately, I've been thinking about consolidating a bit with something

> like LEF's LE mix, so a single pill or coupla pills with many

> ingredients would take the place of the many individual powders and

> tablets I currently take. For a shorthand approximation, I take

pretty

> much what Wakfer takes, with some minor differences. He has

> listed his regimen on his website:

>

> http://morelife.org/personal/health/his-regimen.html

>

> Lots of great information at this website, BTW, relating to

nutrition,

> CR, supplementation, exercise, etc.

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is has a scientific approach to life extension. His protocol is

based upon peer reviewed studies of the supplements and chemicals he

takes. His website has extensive references to such studies along

with synopses of many. Obviously, WRT life extension, all of us a

making (hopefully educated) guesses about what will result in the best

outcome.

On Sun, 26 Sep 2004 18:54:51 -0000, loganruns73 <loganruns73@...> wrote:

> From what I see of his protocol, most of the nutrients he takes are

> synthetic or inorganic which is a waste of money (at the least) when

> there are natural forms available in food or supplements. What looks

> money-worthy is the standardized herbal extracts and the amino acids

> due to LEF's high quality control.

>

> Despite all these supplements, why does this guy need a protocol for

> when " Under the Weather " or still take prescription medicine? That

> should indicate volumes about the efficacy of the supplements.

>

> Logan

>

>

> > Depends.

> >

> > Lately, I've been thinking about consolidating a bit with something

> > like LEF's LE mix, so a single pill or coupla pills with many

> > ingredients would take the place of the many individual powders and

> > tablets I currently take. For a shorthand approximation, I take

> pretty

> > much what Wakfer takes, with some minor differences. He has

> > listed his regimen on his website:

> >

> > http://morelife.org/personal/health/his-regimen.html

> >

> > Lots of great information at this website, BTW, relating to

> nutrition,

> > CR, supplementation, exercise, etc.

>

>

>

>

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In a message dated 9/26/04 8:58:28 PM Eastern Daylight Time, jwwright@... writes:

until I quit eating the essentials, methionine and cysteine, right?

but, IIRC, cysteine (in the form of dipeptide cystine) is the limiting factor in synthesis of glutathione, the "master antioxidant".

World's Healthiest Foods likes cysteine:

http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=nutrient & dbid=54

but strangely, they do not recommend cold-processed whey as a source

and btw, methionine is used to synthesize cysteine

side note: cysteine is supposedly a cure or preventive for hangover. Many folk cures from way back include raw egg yolk. Raw egg yolk contains, you guessed it, cysteine.

--

Ken

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I took a look at the guy's blood work results posted on the site

to " quantify " the effect of the CR and supplements. I perceive these

problems:

1. Most of the liver enzymes are elevated (SGPT is outside normal

range) and have generally gone up over time.

2. Although still barely within the optimal range, LDL has been

steadily increasing over time.

3. TC may be sub-optimal depending on what you believe is a higher

risk factor for an older guy: ischemic or hemorrhage stroke.

4. Fasting glucose is not ideal, although within optimal range.

5. TSH is sub-optimal.

6. FSH is sub-optimal.

7. Homocysteine is borderline sub-optimal.

8. Testosterone (free) is sub-optimal.

9. Testosterone (total) is sub-optimal.

10. Cortisol is borderline high.

To me, assuming no other pathology, #1 is suggestive of additional

demands on the liver to detoxify all the synthetic substances the guy

is taking. SGPT being outside range can be suggestive of liver

disease.

#2 suggest the guy's diet is/becoming inadequate in Omega-6. (Is the

guy CR or CRON?)

#7 suggests supplemention being non-effective. I believe

homocysteine may be a difficult factor to control via diet alone.

Anyone know about that?

Otherwise for the rest, the guy needs aggressive hormone replacement

therapy. But I suspect this is an issue we all face, exacerbated by

CR.

Logan

> is has a scientific approach to life extension. His protocol is

> based upon peer reviewed studies of the supplements and chemicals he

> takes. His website has extensive references to such studies along

> with synopses of many. Obviously, WRT life extension, all of us a

> making (hopefully educated) guesses about what will result in the

best

> outcome.

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In a message dated 9/26/04 8:26:19 PM Eastern Daylight Time, perspect1111@... writes:

Isn't the current 'standard' method for lowering homocysteine

increasing B-6, B-12 and folic acid?

Yer certainly do not want higher than average homocysteine, at least

according to the people at Tufts ........ Bloomberg et al.

Let's not forget the doctor at Harvard (some 25-30 years ago) named McCully, who noticed severe atherosclerosis in some very young patients, amybe 2 or 3 years old. They also had very high homocysteine. Because he advocated folate (and the other associated B vitamins) as a preventive to CVD, he was driven out of Harvard. It took a long time for him to be vindicated.

I think of that every time that I see Harvard being touted as an authoritative source of opinion on anything.

--

Ken

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Yeah, being perfectly healthy by lab values is not typical of

practitioners of CR, either. Most have low WBC #s, high cortisol, low

testosterone, etc. (Some of the same findings you've mentioned for

). Some have noted poor responses to acute glucose loads, and

other " abnormalities. "

On Sun, 26 Sep 2004 21:28:23 -0000, loganruns73 <loganruns73@...> wrote:

> I took a look at the guy's blood work results posted on the site

> to " quantify " the effect of the CR and supplements. I perceive these

> problems:

>

> 1. Most of the liver enzymes are elevated (SGPT is outside normal

> range) and have generally gone up over time.

> 2. Although still barely within the optimal range, LDL has been

> steadily increasing over time.

> 3. TC may be sub-optimal depending on what you believe is a higher

> risk factor for an older guy: ischemic or hemorrhage stroke.

> 4. Fasting glucose is not ideal, although within optimal range.

> 5. TSH is sub-optimal.

> 6. FSH is sub-optimal.

> 7. Homocysteine is borderline sub-optimal.

> 8. Testosterone (free) is sub-optimal.

> 9. Testosterone (total) is sub-optimal.

> 10. Cortisol is borderline high.

>

> To me, assuming no other pathology, #1 is suggestive of additional

> demands on the liver to detoxify all the synthetic substances the guy

> is taking. SGPT being outside range can be suggestive of liver

> disease.

>

> #2 suggest the guy's diet is/becoming inadequate in Omega-6. (Is the

> guy CR or CRON?)

>

> #7 suggests supplemention being non-effective. I believe

> homocysteine may be a difficult factor to control via diet alone.

> Anyone know about that?

>

> Otherwise for the rest, the guy needs aggressive hormone replacement

> therapy. But I suspect this is an issue we all face, exacerbated by

> CR.

>

> Logan

>

>

> > is has a scientific approach to life extension. His protocol is

>

>

> > based upon peer reviewed studies of the supplements and chemicals he

> > takes. His website has extensive references to such studies along

> > with synopses of many. Obviously, WRT life extension, all of us a

> > making (hopefully educated) guesses about what will result in the

> best

> > outcome.

>

>

>

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IMO, Tom ( I knew him as Tom before he gave out his real name) is no slouch for analyzing what he takes and why he takes it. If you have a question - ask him - a friendly guy. you'll get more info than you ever wanted. But I agree that too many "toxins" can raise the liver enzymes. I would insist that anything that raises mine, other than medications, I would quit. That goes for non-synthetic stuff also. That's why I like to get my nutrients from foods (mostly).

BTW, the ranges for SGOT and SGPT seem to change with the lab/patient.

I assume you mean sub-optimal to be not out of range, just not centered in the range?

Homocysteine is in the methionine > cysteine > homocysteine biochem loop and I never understood how anyone could think about controlling it. Maybe by cutting methionine intake AND cysteine intake. Oddly, vegans are reported to have high homocys.

regards.

----- Original Message -----

From: loganruns73

Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 4:28 PM

Subject: [ ] Re: obsessive behavior

I took a look at the guy's blood work results posted on the site to "quantify" the effect of the CR and supplements. I perceive these problems:1. Most of the liver enzymes are elevated (SGPT is outside normal range) and have generally gone up over time.2. Although still barely within the optimal range, LDL has been steadily increasing over time.3. TC may be sub-optimal depending on what you believe is a higher risk factor for an older guy: ischemic or hemorrhage stroke.4. Fasting glucose is not ideal, although within optimal range.5. TSH is sub-optimal.6. FSH is sub-optimal.7. Homocysteine is borderline sub-optimal.8. Testosterone (free) is sub-optimal.9. Testosterone (total) is sub-optimal.10. Cortisol is borderline high.To me, assuming no other pathology, #1 is suggestive of additional demands on the liver to detoxify all the synthetic substances the guy is taking. SGPT being outside range can be suggestive of liver disease.#2 suggest the guy's diet is/becoming inadequate in Omega-6. (Is the guy CR or CRON?)#7 suggests supplemention being non-effective. I believe homocysteine may be a difficult factor to control via diet alone. Anyone know about that?Otherwise for the rest, the guy needs aggressive hormone replacement therapy. But I suspect this is an issue we all face, exacerbated by CR.Logan

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Hi JW:

Isn't the current 'standard' method for lowering homocysteine

increasing B-6, B-12 and folic acid?

Yer certainly do not want higher than average homocysteine, at least

according to the people at Tufts ........ Bloomberg et al.

Rodney.

--- In , " jwwright " <jwwright@e...>

wrote:

> IMO, Tom ( I knew him as Tom before he gave out his real name) is

no slouch for analyzing what he takes and why he takes it. If you

have a question - ask him - a friendly guy. you'll get more info than

you ever wanted. But I agree that too many " toxins " can raise the

liver enzymes. I would insist that anything that raises mine, other

than medications, I would quit. That goes for non-synthetic stuff

also. That's why I like to get my nutrients from foods (mostly).

>

> BTW, the ranges for SGOT and SGPT seem to change with the

lab/patient.

>

> I assume you mean sub-optimal to be not out of range, just not

centered in the range?

>

> Homocysteine is in the methionine > cysteine > homocysteine biochem

loop and I never understood how anyone could think about controlling

it. Maybe by cutting methionine intake AND cysteine intake. Oddly,

vegans are reported to have high homocys.

>

> regards.

>

> ----- Original Message -----

> From: loganruns73

>

> Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 4:28 PM

> Subject: [ ] Re: obsessive behavior

>

>

> I took a look at the guy's blood work results posted on the site

> to " quantify " the effect of the CR and supplements. I perceive

these

> problems:

>

> 1. Most of the liver enzymes are elevated (SGPT is outside normal

> range) and have generally gone up over time.

> 2. Although still barely within the optimal range, LDL has been

> steadily increasing over time.

> 3. TC may be sub-optimal depending on what you believe is a higher

> risk factor for an older guy: ischemic or hemorrhage stroke.

> 4. Fasting glucose is not ideal, although within optimal range.

> 5. TSH is sub-optimal.

> 6. FSH is sub-optimal.

> 7. Homocysteine is borderline sub-optimal.

> 8. Testosterone (free) is sub-optimal.

> 9. Testosterone (total) is sub-optimal.

> 10. Cortisol is borderline high.

>

> To me, assuming no other pathology, #1 is suggestive of

additional

> demands on the liver to detoxify all the synthetic substances the

guy

> is taking. SGPT being outside range can be suggestive of liver

> disease.

>

> #2 suggest the guy's diet is/becoming inadequate in Omega-6. (Is

the

> guy CR or CRON?)

>

> #7 suggests supplemention being non-effective. I believe

> homocysteine may be a difficult factor to control via diet

alone.

> Anyone know about that?

>

> Otherwise for the rest, the guy needs aggressive hormone

replacement

> therapy. But I suspect this is an issue we all face, exacerbated

by

> CR.

>

> Logan

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That's what I hear. (saw palmetto is supposed to work too)

You may not want it, but I'm not sure it's "curable". It may be just a feature of the whole problem.

Seems to me, the body can run that biochem loop to get what homocysteine it wants until I quit eating the essentials, methionine and cysteine, right?

Anyway, my doc won't measure stuff he can't treat. That and CRP and some other stuff.

I gotta figure out how to get medicare to pay for all these things some folks think are important.

Regards.

----- Original Message -----

From: Rodney

Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 7:25 PM

Subject: [ ] Re: obsessive behavior

Hi JW:Isn't the current 'standard' method for lowering homocysteine increasing B-6, B-12 and folic acid?Yer certainly do not want higher than average homocysteine, at least according to the people at Tufts ........ Bloomberg et al.Rodney.> IMO, Tom ( I knew him as Tom before he gave out his real name) is no slouch for analyzing what he takes and why he takes it. If you have a question - ask him - a friendly guy. you'll get more info than you ever wanted. But I agree that too many "toxins" can raise the liver enzymes. I would insist that anything that raises mine, other than medications, I would quit. That goes for non-synthetic stuff also. That's why I like to get my nutrients from foods (mostly). > > BTW, the ranges for SGOT and SGPT seem to change with the lab/patient. > > I assume you mean sub-optimal to be not out of range, just not centered in the range?> > Homocysteine is in the methionine > cysteine > homocysteine biochem loop and I never understood how anyone could think about controlling it. Maybe by cutting methionine intake AND cysteine intake. Oddly, vegans are reported to have high homocys. > > regards.

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Optimal is the range scientifically shown to minimize/prevent

disease. It's usually in the lower or upper quadrants of the lab

reference range, sometimes both outside and inside. So sub-optimal

means outside the optimal range.

A complex example is fasting glucose which ranges from 70-100 for

optimal, 70-120+ which is the lab reference range and under 86 which

is ideal.

Logan

--- In , " jwwright " <jwwright@e...>

wrote:

> I assume you mean sub-optimal to be not out of range, just not

centered in the range?

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Where are the optimal ranges/numbers published?

Regards.

----- Original Message -----

From: loganruns73

Sent: Monday, September 27, 2004 10:51 AM

Subject: [ ] Re: obsessive behavior

Optimal is the range scientifically shown to minimize/prevent disease. It's usually in the lower or upper quadrants of the lab reference range, sometimes both outside and inside. So sub-optimal means outside the optimal range. A complex example is fasting glucose which ranges from 70-100 for optimal, 70-120+ which is the lab reference range and under 86 which is ideal.Logan

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