Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Sawbones: A Couple of Boob Questions
Episode Date: July 2, 2024Sawbones listeners just have so many strange medical questions! Questions like: Why do I sneeze at dark chocolate? Does Diet Coke actually relieve nausea? Why does saliva get thicker while exercising?... And you know that TikTok with the cinnamon rolls and the yeast infection. . . is that . . .real? Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/
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Sawbones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken
as medical advice or opinion.
It's for fun.
Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil?
We think you've earned it.
Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction from that weird growth.
You're worth it.
Alright, this one is about some books.
One, two, one, of Misguided Medicine. for the mouth.
Hello everybody and welcome to Sawbones, a marital tour of misguided medicine. I'm your co-host Justin McElroy.
And I'm Sydney McElroy. Our kids have been fighting literally all day.
Well, not just all day. All life?
All life? It's intensified since summer vacation started. I mean, they're around each other more,
so that makes sense.
They're also on weird sleep schedules now.
Yeah, because of the theater and what all.
I'm not a morning person.
I don't like- Not what?
I don't like having to get up at 6 a.m.
to get the kids ready for school.
I mean, I don't mean like I don't like,
I hope that makes sense.
I wish school started later.
I wish I could wake up later with my children.
11 to seven instead of nine to five. I don't like, I hope that makes sense. I wish school started later. I wish I could wake up later with my children.
11 to seven instead of nine to five.
I like getting the kids ready for school.
I like that process.
I like having kids.
I don't like everything having to happen
so early in the morning.
I wish we could shift it.
You like having kids?
Yeah, I do.
But we did shift it.
Everything is a little later now that it's summer
and everyone's lost their minds.
Everyone's lost their dang minds.
Like that, the circadian rhythms.
I mean, I'm out of it.
I'm foggy.
One of our kids started crying
because it couldn't find a remote,
and dag nab it by the end of it.
I was right there with him.
I mean, where was it?
You know?
We don't wanna revisit when one of the fish died.
Oh man, or when five of the fish died.
And we all, man, we were really sobbing.
It's been busy.
It's been a time, but I'm so thrilled that we're here, Sid,
because we're doing one of my favorite kinds of EBS.
Weird Medical Questions.
You know.
This is where we help.
This is where we fix it.
This is where we help.
Charlie wanted to come up with weird medical questions
for me for this episode.
She said, what if I just come up with them all?
And I said, well, that's not as exciting for the listeners,
but did you have any specifically?
And she said, I'm going to tell you
a bunch of skincare brands,
and I want you to tell me if they're real or not.
I said, what do you mean if they're real?
Like if they exist?
She said, no, like are they, do they work?
And I was like, I don't think that would be.
She did ask me a question,
which I guess is sort of our first question,
Charlie, age nine, about skincare smoothies,
which I thought was very interesting.
Did you know that people on TikTok are making up,
basically taking a bunch of their own skincare products
and mixing them together to try to make a more superior,
no, not to drink it.
It's a bad name then.
Yes.
Skincare smoothies sounds like something
that you would drink and get better collagen
and elasticity.
If you Google this, there are those two.
There are smoothies that are, I mean,
a lot of them look like green drinks
and they're like, this is great for your skin
because it's got whatever in it.
It's so many vegetables in here,
you wouldn't believe it.
There are also people who are mixing moisturizers,
and I don't know, all the various skincare products
that people use.
Obviously, I don't have a lot of them.
And putting that on their face as a superior product.
And I was trying to figure out,
well, is that better for you?
And the answer, I was looking at all these
Dermatologists commenting on it and they were all saying the same thing like I don't know what's in it Like how do you want me to come like what did you put in it?
It's all just the stuff in your house like just makeup though. It's like makeup and stuff or like no
It's skincare products like that. They put on their face like instead of I have okay. I have a moisturizer
I put it on at night
Instead of me just reaching in that jar of goop
and slathering it on my face,
I would take some of that jar
and then I would have a collection of other bottles and jars
and I would put that all together.
Like toners and creams and different.
And all the different serums, I guess.
Serums, I guess, or serums.
Mix it all together, putting that on.
I'm just glad to see hacking over there
I'm glad you all are I don't know that it is hacking and I think that's the answer to the question
Finally for Charlie's benefit and anyone else who's curious
it is almost impossible to comment on is this better for my skin without knowing your skin type and
What the various products you're putting together are,
it's not possible to say.
I would say that we probably, like most industries,
that exist in capitalist societies
where the point is to sell you things,
not to improve your life,
but to sell you things that you think
will improve your life,
which is an important distinction.
There's probably a lot of snake oil out there.
That's what I would say.
Okay, you ready to answer some questions?
Yep, let's start on the first one.
This actually weirdly ties in perfectly
with the re-released episode we did last week,
so it seems very intentional, I love it.
High City and Justin, when I eat chocolate,
the cocoa permeates through my mouth,
tickles my nose, and makes me sneeze.
It's almost every time, especially if it's dark chocolate.
My mom has the same reaction.
Is this genetic?
Am I lightly allergic to chocolate?
Thanks, sneezing in the South.
Well, certainly, if you have any sort of allergic symptoms
after eating something, yes, I guess
an allergy is possible.
Probably not.
That's probably not what's happening because this is a known phenomenon and it is called
dark chocolate sneezing.
No kidding.
It's a clever title.
You've got the dark chocolate sneezes.
You have observed scientifically exactly what this phenomenon is.
We don't know exactly why, but we know,
this is similar and we've talked about this,
I think in another Weird Medical Questions episode,
photic sneezing, you walk into a brightly lit room
and you erupt into like a fit of sneezing.
Yeah.
You've heard of this, not everyone does it.
This is from the, I mean, the Nightcrawlers episode.
Yes.
Of Pete and Pete when she uses the,
they use the flashlight to stay awake
because she's trying to do it in her face
and makes sure she'll sneeze.
So some people have that reaction and it is genetic.
Similarly, some people have a sneezing reaction.
She looks at the sun.
Yes, some people have a sneezing reaction to dark chocolate.
Some people have a sneezing reaction
to like specifically spicy foods.
Some people do to bitter foods. Is that like with pepper or is that a, some people have a sneezing reaction to like specifically spicy foods, some people do to bitter foods.
Is that like with pepper or is that just a physical reaction?
That's a different, yeah, that's a physical irritation
from, yeah, but no, this is a known thing,
it is thought to be genetic, so it makes sense
that your mom has the same reaction,
and it is specifically tied to dark chocolate,
although other chocolates can trigger it as well,
which makes me think it is the cocoa, right?
Dark chocolate seems to be the biggest culprit.
So I can't tell you exactly why,
but we know that while most sneezing is the result
of irritation of the inside of the nasal passageways,
right, because the function of sneezing is to clear them.
So it's irritated, you sneeze,
everything blows out of them quickly, you've cleared them.
There are other things in our brain
that can trigger sneezing like our light reflex
when we see bright light,
and somehow the probably related to the smell
of certain substances that are spicier,
or chocolate and all that.
Good to know.
My question is in regards to my husband's
unconfirmed medical intuition.
Five years ago, he was diagnosed with testicular cancer.
Luckily, it was caught in time,
and they were able to remove the organ
with no signs it had spread.
Two years later, he had a benign brain tumor,
and by all the good fortune in the universe,
it was removed without any problems.
God, these guys should talk to the Glockenspilans.
It seems like they have similar medical history here.
Sheesh, this is a tough road.
Here is where my question comes into play.
Since turning 40, I keep asking him to go to our doctor
and begin to have regular, or is it annual, prostate exams
as he is now at the age where this should be happening.
However, he insists that since he has quarterly scans
for both of the prior conditions,
that any prostate issues would show up on the scan.
Is he actually correct about this?
If they're scanning his pelvis,
would they notice a problem in his prostate
if one was presented?
Is he some sort of armchair nurse?
Thanks for everything, Mark.
Now, Mark, I wanna just say something real quick
before Sydney says.
I just wanna take a moment to remind everyone
that this show is not medical advice.
You should probably talk to your primary care physician
about this and not a podcast,
which is the same way that people listen to Joe Rogan.
I just want you to remind that's about the level we're at.
Okay?
I'm just kidding.
Please do not put me on the level of Joe Rogan.
I just want to see your reaction.
Okay, no, I was gonna say the same thing.
I never comment specifically on your issue,
you should do this on this show,
because I can't do that, right?
I'm not your doctor, I am a doctor, but not your doctor.
And I would always encourage people
to go to their own medical professional
who knows their history and their specific situation
for the best advice possible, not me.
That being said, I thought that this was a good way
to talk about different kinds of scans and screenings
and what we can learn from different ones.
Because there are, I think, common misconceptions
about like, if I routinely do this, you're looking for this.
This happens a lot in medicine.
Like, well, I got labs, so surely you would have seen
if that was wrong.
And it's like, oh, well, we didn't check for that.
Like not all, you know.
When it comes to scans, knowing what you mean
by the word scan is part of why I couldn't give you advice
because there are ultrasounds that people call scans,
there are CT scans that are often called scans,
there's MRIs which are also sometimes referred to as scans.
These all show different things
and while some of them might show like incidentally is the prostate looking enlarged,
other ones wouldn't pick that up.
Right, it's important to remember,
I think that these are all different types of technologies
that are, they're not taking,
it's not like we're taking pictures, right?
The, they're reacting to different things.
So there's different sensitivities,
different wavelengths, different like depths.
Are we looking at looking for bone? Are we looking for bone? Are we looking for fluid?
Are we looking for soft tissue?
What are we looking for?
Because each scan is good at picking up something different.
And then how did we do it?
Did we put dye or some sort of contrast medium in there?
Because that would change what we're looking for too.
You know what it's just exactly like?
It would be like if you were pregnant
and then someone did an ultrasound
and they see a weird little baby in there
and then they did an x-ray and they're like,
oh crap, my baby's only bones, right?
Sure, yeah.
It would be like you would think
that you had an only bone baby if you did that scan.
And it wouldn't tell you that there's a whole rest
of the baby in there, you know what I mean?
I thought that this was useful to,
so first of all, I would say, if you're ever concerned,
ask the questions.
I thought there would be a lot more thorough nodding
from you during that mid-sit.
I thought I really had something good there.
I don't think anybody out there's like,
I'm having a bone, but I don't wanna, nevermind.
I just think the metaphor is the point,
you wouldn't do that, which is why you shouldn't assume
that these scans would work the same way.
This is what I'm saying.
But that's why I would ask because-
Illustrate the difference between scans with a bone baby, it's very normal.
Well, because humans practice medicine
and we are fallible, of course.
And so it's always important to ask if you have questions.
Sometimes the answer is,
oh, it's fine because of this, this and this.
And we know what you're asking and we had that in mind
and don't worry.
Other times the answer is, well, actually,
what we're doing has nothing to do with that.
And if you have concerns about that, let's talk about that.
And maybe we do need to do something else.
So, you know, it's always important to ask those questions.
I thought prostate exam is a good point to mention
because this is an area of medicine.
When do we do prostate exams and how do we do them
and all that has been an evolving area of medicine
just in my career.
So when I was trained, we did regular, usually annual digital rectal exams, meaning we would
exactly what that sounds like, put a finger into the rectum to feel the prostate.
It's not exactly what it sounds like, because what it sounds like is that you would use
a calculator.
So it's not exactly what it sounds like.
Your fingers are your digits. I know, but it sounds like,
you said it's exactly what it sounds like.
It's not like a finger.
Well, to me, I hear digit and I think finger.
If it was called finger up the butt exam,
that would be exactly what it sounds like.
Well, it is that.
We used to do those, especially between the ages
of like 55 and 70 was pretty standard.
Sometimes depending on history or symptoms,
we would pair it with something called
a prostate specific antigen blood test, PSA blood test.
To add a layman's note here,
this was established enough that you could almost like
genetically age standup comics during this period
because they would inevitably have a take
on the doctor putting their finger in the fire.
Got my first prostate.
Got my prostate exam folks, it finally happened.
But the thing is, that's changed.
We don't, so what we found, or a couple things,
when we do these screening tests, it's important to know,
are we actually picking up what we're looking for?
Are we picking up stuff that isn't what we're looking for?
Are we doing too many unnecessary tests as a result?
Like how effective is this as a screening tool?
What are the risks versus benefits?
And what we found over time is that one,
just feeling a prostate can only tell you so much
and experience has a lot to do with it.
And even experience, you can feel a prostate
and think a lot of different things.
So the digital rectal exam is not great.
And even the PSA, the prostate specific antigen blood test
isn't always great.
And what we were doing is a lot of exams
that led to a lot of biopsies and tests
that were unnecessary and those have risks to them.
So the current recommendations
from the United States Preventive Service Task Force
from which we derive a lot of our like,
what do we do and when do we do it recommendations,
now says that between ages 55 and 70,
it's grade C level evidence to do any prostate screening,
meaning we don't recommend for or against this.
So that's very unhelpful.
Most major medical organizations echo that.
We don't really recommend for or against
prostate cancer screening,
because we don't know that it helps,
we don't know that it hurts.
After 70, it's actually a grade D level,
which means don't do this.
We recommend, well, we recommend you don't do this.
Now, of course, every patient's different.
There are historical and symptomatic factors
that might push us in a direction,
absolutely,
to do these exams.
But generally speaking, regular prostate exams
are not necessarily gonna be part of your life.
Oh, there you have it, Sandok comedians.
Not only were they uncomfortable,
but also unnecessary.
Your fears, your fears that there was really no point
to this as you were a gay probe
were 100 percent grounded in
Reality, I'll never forget. I'll never forget in medical school so many years ago as we were being trained on a
Plastic butt they had a plastic butt model for us to practice prostate exams on PR dummy, right? They just put a button
No, it's just a butt.
There's no body.
There's no anything.
Why are we making so many different body parts for this?
Why don't one fake person?
Well, then you have a whole,
what we had was a line of butts across the room
so that a lot of students could do it all at the same time.
And they're small, so you just put the butts on the tables
and poke your finger in them.
God, did anybody take a picture?
I would give you anything to see this.
But I still remember the moment when we were all trying,
and the thing is, if you have shorter fingers,
a prostate exam is harder to do.
And specifically, one student was having a lot of problems
reaching the fake prostate in the fake butt,
and so I remember them saying, it's the glove,
the glove is getting in my way, and removing the glove,
and sticking their bare finger in the fake butt.
And I still remember our professor
keeping an absolute straight face while saying,
well, you understand that's not going to be an option
in the real world, right?
Why does drinking, now diet coke
sounds like I was ragging on this person on Reddit.
I am not suggesting that.
I'm saying, I don't think you're on copium.
I don't think you're drinking diet coke. When you were in an internet argument, sometimes don't think you're on copium. I don't think you're drinking Diet Coke.
When you were in an internet argument,
sometimes people say that you're coping.
So you're saying you're on copium.
It was a big thing during the stock days,
when the heady stock days,
when everyone was trying to compartmentalize
their large losses.
Why does drinking Diet Coke help with my nausea?
I sometimes get nausea due to, am I saying that right?
Is it nausea?
Nausea, okay.
Nausea due to my cycle and found myself craving a diet coke
and it helps my nausea.
I had already had coffee,
so it wasn't a caffeine dependency thing
and I've been out of the diet coke habit for a bit,
so I don't think it was that either.
These are-
Was it the carbonation?
This question, I didn't have a name on it,
so I didn't wanna list list their email handle that seems inappropriate
So that is why I'm sorry if you were the one who sent in this question
That's why you're unnamed is you didn't I didn't know if you want to be named
Okay, this is interesting
Studies have not shown that soda actually does help with nausea really this is now this is commonly
with nausea. Really?
Now this is commonly practiced though, right?
I have done that.
And like the thought was,
is it the carbonation altering the pH of your stomach
that relieves your nausea?
This has been like, I saw that actually quoted
by some medical professionals on the internet,
but studies did not support
that drinking a carbonated beverage actually eased nausea.
So even if it does anecdotally for you,
I don't have a reason that it does for the masses
because studies tell me it doesn't for the masses.
I know, I know.
I have done the same thing
and I've experienced this relief of nausea.
Ginger ale, yes, there is some scientific evidence
to suggest that ginger in ginger ale does.
And of course, ginger ale is also carbonated.
Generally speaking, caffeine is thought to be bad for nausea.
It's thought to be more irritating
and not a good thing to drink when you're nauseous,
anything with creating, anything containing caffeine.
But I thought this was really it.
I don't know why a carbonated drink would help with your,
maybe if somebody suggested it makes you burp
and that relieves pressure. Like if you have pressure in your suggested it makes you burp and that relieves pressure,
like if you have pressure in your stomach
and then you burp, it relieves pressure,
but it made you, it put the pressure in there
with its gas, so there you go.
I have no idea, but I would concur.
For me, it's diet Dr. Pepper,
that when I'm a little nauseous, diet Dr. Pepper.
So maybe it's the sweet sugar or something like sugar,
fake sugar, fake sugar.
Sweetness we know is a mild analgesic.
It mildly relieves pain, creates a little bit of like, it's not euphoria, but a good
feeling, right?
Maybe this is all just, it tastes good, it feels good, we like it, we associate it with
the alleviating nausea in the past, maybe when we were kids.
It's a little placebo is what I'm saying.
Sweet also though, couldn't it be starting
like digestive processes?
Like the sweetness from the brain starts your body like,
oh, we gotta break down some sugar.
Let's get it going.
This is a thought too.
It gives your stomach and small intestine
something to do the sugar. So yes, this This is a thought too. It gives your stomach and small intestine something to do the sugar.
So yes, this is also a thought process,
but I don't have a study to support this.
I wish just once I could say something like that
and you're like, actually, that's a medical hypothesis
that a lot of scientists are talking about.
And you could just seem like the slightest bit impressed.
Just like a little, I don't need you to keep stickers
back there, but like, I don't need you to keep stickers back there,
but like, it wouldn't kill you.
Okay, Justin, while you go to your pity party, I'm gonna take us to the billing department.
Let's go.
The medicines, the medicines that escalate my carb for the mouth.
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So did you see the lady on TikTok
that made cinnamon rolls with her yeast?
Do you see the last line of this question that made cinnamon rolls with
their yeast infection and then her husband got thrushed? I'm genuinely going to throw up.
Okay. Why would the baking of the cinnamon rolls not kill the yeast? To be honest,
mostly asking to hear Justin's reaction. Well, you got it. That sucks.
We're seeing anything we've ever.
The perversion of cinnamon rolls in it
makes me wanna cry.
To bring cinnamon rolls into this.
Cinnamon rolls?
Into this?
Okay.
I have destroyed my algorithms
for you all, our beloved listening audience, so many times,
and happily done so. Like done it with aplomb because I am so devoted to the show.
I will not look up this TikTok. I won't do it. I won't search it. I won't do it. I won't do that
to my TikTok. I love my TikTok. I've curated it
I destroy it routinely for the show and then I bring it back. I pull the algorithm back to gardening and
I don't know chapel ron songs and gardening and
Anyway, it doesn't matter. The point is I will not look this up. But here's what i'm gonna say
There's no way this is real.
There's no way, there's no way, whatever this person says they did or tried to show
that they did, I do not buy it.
I do not buy it.
It would not yet.
Of course, like, yes, when you, when you bake with yeast, you kill the yeast.
Initially you don't, right?
Right.
Cause it makes the dough rise.
Yes.
Right.
So initially-
Yeast eats the sugar.
It poops out gas. Gas make fluffy bread. Yeah. And so you get the dough rise. Yes. So initially... Yeast eats the sugar, it poops out, gas, gas make fluffy bread.
Yeah, and so you get the fluffy bread,
but then you put it in an oven.
It's dead as disco, baby.
Yeah, and the temperature gets real high and it dies.
Every piece of bread is a yeast graveyard.
Yes, so you did not, nobody got thrush from eating it,
and also you didn't do this, you didn't do, you didn't,
you didn't do, I don't believe it.
Good for you, Sid.
I don't believe it.
Myth busting.
There is live yeast in the vaginal secretions
that may happen with a yeast infection, right?
Like that, there is yeast in there.
Yeah, okay.
It's a different kind of yeast,
but I mean, it does eat sugar and poop out gas. I will also say this.
Yeast can bloom,
is ideally gonna bloom at a temperature around 105, 110.
That's like the neighborhood, right?
But if you're doing cinnamon rolls,
those are extremely dense.
And I could see if you underbaked them,
this is why baking them to a certain temperature
is so important,
because if you underbaked them, this is why baking them to a certain temperature is so important, because if you underbaked them,
it is not implausible that there would be a part of the dough
that has not exceeded 110 degrees.
Like that has not exceeded the temperature needed to kill,
110 wouldn't even kill them.
I have a lot of trouble believing any part of the story.
I don't, I mean like that you would- I am just representing a baking perspective.
Because there's also like, so for those of us
who have vaginas-
Oh, you're gonna talk about it more.
There's also natural flora that exists there,
like bacterial flora that is not bad or gross or dangerous,
but you don't necessarily want to put in baked goods.
So that's there too.
In addition to if you did indeed
have a yeast infection and you put that in there.
I'm not gonna deny that like, is it possible
if you isolated yeast from the secretions
and then you put that in sugar and warm water
and did the blooming and all that stuff,
could you actually create some gas?
There's just no way to curate it.
I mean, I guess it's possible,
but I have so many problems with all that.
And then again, just in your sort of theory here, Justin,
if you do under bake it,
and so it is still cool enough that the yeast would be alive
and then you ate it,
in order to get thrush typically, typically,
and this isn't always the case,
you need to have had some sort of like
immunosuppression in your mouth usually.
So like the most common reason,
especially as adults that we see thrush,
either immunocompromised due to meds
or some sort of, you know, process.
Also if you use like steroid inhalers
and you don't rinse your mouth out
because then the steroids allow the yeast to flourish.
I'm gonna cut you off here
because we're gonna answer more questions. I'm saying I do not buy it.
Okay, is MRSA as scary as everyone makes it out to be?
I get that it can be very bad and there are different
strains, but I honestly expected MRSA to be a bigger deal
than it is.
My elderly immunocompromised dog had a spot of MRSA
and the doggy dermatologist was like,
it's basically not a risk to you because you're a healthy
adult with a functioning immune system.
So I thought this was good to talk about MRSA
because I think a lot of people,
there's always this mythology around MRSA.
So MRSA, some doctors really don't like
when you call it MRSA, I don't really care.
It's a helpful abbreviation.
I don't really mind.
Methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus
is what that stands for.
What did you not say?
Well, no, I'm just telling you.
I'm just showing you what it would be like
to have a supportive partner.
Oh.
That was proud of you.
They're really making this show hostile.
No, it's just kidding.
It's just for jokes.
Okay.
Oh, see, you're making kissy faces at me, Ness.
I know that you're gonna laugh.
I know that you're not mad.
I need to talk about
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
Do you mean MRSA?
MRSA, it is just a strain of Staph aureus,
which we know can cause infections.
It's all on us, it's all over us anyway.
Like Staph is on us naturally,
but if it gets in a cut or a wound of some sort,
a scratch, it can cause an infection.
That infection usually with Staph will look like
what is colloquially, colloquially,
I hate that word colloquially.
It's a tough one.
Commonly called.
It always sounds like you're eating the word.
Like you got stuck in your,
colloquially.
Colloquially.
What is called a boil.
If you've heard that,
I mean like what you might call a boil,
what I might call a furrunkle,
I never use that term though.
Abscess, abscess is more frequently known.
Furrunkle is the worst.
Furrunkle's rough.
It's the, Carbuncle. Bezoar may be a worse word in your field. Bezocle is the worst. Feruncle's rough. It's the us.
Carbuncle.
Bezoar may be a worse word in your field.
Bezoar is really bad.
Feruncle is up there.
Feruncle is bad.
Either way, it's a little pocket of infection.
That's usually what a staph infection looks like.
It can look like cellulitis, like red hot skin.
That's sometimes strep though.
But anyway, the point is you can get staph infections
that aren't MRSA, they're just staph.
If that staph cannot be killed by methicillin,
so methicillin resistant staph, then it's MRSA.
That doesn't make the staph inherently scarier
or more dangerous.
It's just treatability.
It just means that the list of antibiotics
I can use to treat your staph just got a lot shorter.
That is the, like if there's a scary part of MRSA,
that is the scary part of MRSA,
is if you're trying to treat it with the wrong antibiotic
and it's MRSA, it's not gonna get better, it'll get worse.
And any infection, if left untreated, has the possibility.
They don't always, right?
Like people didn't die of every infection
before antibiotics, some people got better.
But the chances that it could then go to your bloodstream
or then go to other major organs or cause major,
you know, cause sepsis, cause severe illness, even death,
go up if you're treating it with the wrong antibiotic.
Obviously.
So that is why MRSA gets scary is that you've got to allow for the possibility of MRSA
when you choose your antibiotics.
I will tell you that in the medicine I practice,
in my patient population,
and especially working in a hospital,
and in the sort of patients I see
with the kind of underlying illnesses I deal with,
I allow for the possibility
that there is going to be MRSA, almost always.
I am constantly aware of that when I choose antibiotics.
Your local docs probably know,
I mean MRSA used to be something we only saw in hospitals,
it's out in the community now,
we see it commonly out in the world.
I often will choose antibiotics that will also cover MRSA,
basic staff and MRSA.
So that's what's scary about MRSA.
Yeah, even if you, I, even if you are a healthy adult
with a functioning immune system,
you should still be worried about infection.
Infections can become serious in people
with functional immune systems as well.
Certainly more serious in people
who have some sort of immune problem.
But no, you should go get treated
and your local medical professionals
should know the rates of MRSA in the community
and their sensitivities.
Why does saliva get thicker while exercising?
Spitting is gross, but even I do it when I go jogging
because it's uncomfortable not to.
That's from Lauren.
Thanks, Lauren.
So I thought this was really interesting.
I looked it up and absolutely,
not only do we know that you salivate more
when you're exercising, we've measured it.
The stuff, the level, and I mean,
I think it's because of the concern for supporting
and promoting high-performance athletes,
the kinds of stuff we know about exercise,
physiology, changes in the human body,
and I mean, it always amazes me.
If you wanna look where like the most precise answer
to your questions are gonna be in medicine,
if it has to do with working out,
you're gonna find some really precise answers.
It's fascinating to me always.
Like if it gets into sports medicine.
Yeah, oh yeah, we were on that.
Yeah, you get so technical with those answers.
Makeup medicine, you gotta do that
in your garage or whatever.
Yeah, sports medicine, we got machines for that. A in your in your garage or whatever. Yeah sports medicine
There are some machines for that. There are some fields of medicine like for instance if it has to do with the uterus or ovaries
We don't know
We don't know we're figuring it out. But if it has to do with sports man, we got an answer
We painted the waiting room pink
What more do you want in healthy individuals unstimulated saliva secreted at rest at the rate of 0.3 to 0.65 milliliters per minute.
When you exercise, it goes up to 0.78 to 0.94.
Makes perfect biological sense to me.
There you go.
You can lubricate your airways and you're getting more saliva going.
Their thought is that you're warming air as it comes in,
which needs humidity, which means you increase
saliva production.
It also has to do, yeah, there are a lot of,
hey, very smart, very smart.
There are a lot of reasons, but yes,
we do increase our saliva production naturally.
And then the other thing is,
I thought this was really weird.
Not only do you, if you've noticed after you exercise,
you might have like a thick feeling in your mouth.
It's almost like dry mouth, right?
Like you've been salivating more,
but then afterwards you feel really dried out.
That is because we also release mucin, MUC5B,
which increases the viscosity of your saliva
while you're exercising,
and especially like in that rest and recovery period.
So you'll have all this extra saliva,
and then it gets super thick in your mouth.
So your mouth will feel dry.
It's not really dry, it's just viscous.
And that's your body telling you
that it's time to slam some prime.
That's your body's way of telling you it needs prime.
Justin, we got a couple boob questions.
Okay.
These are kind of tied, these two boob questions.
Okay, well, let me answer them.
Can working out actually increase your breast size?
When I was younger, I had very small breasts
and people, mostly boys, would tell me to do pushups
to make them bigger.
That never made sense to me though.
If her breasts are mostly fat,
wouldn't working them out make them get smaller?
And then, well I'll tie this to our next question.
Is wearing bras actually important for people with breasts?
My mom told me that her mom would sleep with a bra on
to prevent sagging, but other women say
constantly wearing a bra prevents you
from developing the muscles to hold them up on your own.
I stopped wearing a bra four years ago
and I honestly haven't noticed any difference,
but I'm also pretty young, under 30.
I feel like this is an area with a lot of misinformation
and contradicting information.
Thanks for the awesome podcast
and everything y'all do to correct the pseudoscience.
I really admire you, Morgan.
I think I wanted to tie these together.
Well, first of all, Morgan asked both questions,
but also because there's so much misinformation about boobs
and especially when you're young,
if you are a boob-haver when you're young
and you're trying to read about,
if you have concerns about
the size of your boobs, which many of us may have, there's so much out there to tell you
stuff that is all predicated on the belief that there is a perfect way that boobs are
supposed to look, right?
And that we should all be desiring to have boobs that look a certain way.
I think that's underneath all of that advice
is that supposition.
If you let go of the idea that boobs are supposed to,
quote unquote, look any certain way,
none of it really matters.
None of it is helpful, right?
Because like, why are we trying to keep our boobs
this size or that size or saggy or not saggy?
Why does any of it matter?
It's all aesthetics.
It just depends on what you like and what you prefer.
I will say that working out
does not increase your breast size.
It doesn't necessarily make your breasts smaller or larger,
either direction, toning muscle.
A lot of it has to do with like fat tissue,
especially as when you're younger,
breasts are mainly made of like a dense glandular tissue
and then as you get older,
it's replaced by a lot of fat tissue.
And so if you are losing fat,
you can, your breast size can go down.
And if you are gaining fat, your breast size could go up.
But that isn't necessarily tied to working out.
Does that make sense?
I'm making the distinction of like,
there's fat loss and fat gain,
and then there's working out,
and these are the three different things, right?
So like, no.
And so any exercises that anybody is ever telling,
like, do this exercise to make your boobs bigger,
that doesn't make any sense.
And then the bra thing,
man, that's another area where like,
there have actually been, there's been some research to look gosh this feels so
Typical sorry, there's been some research to see does wearing bras may make your boobs saggy or not
Can I protect your boobs from getting saggy or not? Which like who cares if your boobs are saggy?
I know who cares. I know? I know and you know,
and it's the people funding the research,
it's the people, it's the weirdos in lab coats
who are like, this is important work I'm doing.
It makes me so mad,
because you know what, I have had two children
and I breastfed them both.
Me too.
So you figure out if my boobs are saggy or not,
you can guess, and I don't care, and I'm not going to share it with you because none of your business.
And I'm remaining completely stationary, absolutely frozen in absolute terror.
There is some thought that because, so there are ligaments called Cooper's ligaments that
hold up the breast tissue, that support the breast tissue.
Don't tell her that, please.
Don't tell her that.
It'll be all she wants to talk about. It'll be all she talks about. If you tell her that, please. Don't tell her that.
It'll be all she wants to talk about.
It'll be all she talks about.
If you tell her that,
it'll be all she talks about to anybody who listens.
I won't tell her that.
Famously, in med school,
I remember being told that they were called
Cooper's droopers,
because as they lengthen,
as you get older and your boobs sag,
and they're drooping.
That's great.
I was told that in med school.
That's great, isn't it?
That's good for me.
There is, we don't know if wearing a bra
really affects whether or not.
There was some studies that suggested
that wearing a bra might help support those ligaments
as you get older and so it would help prevent sagging.
Then there was a study that suggested
actually wearing a bra made you more likely you get older and so it would help prevent sagging, then there was a study that suggested actually
wearing a bra made you more likely to have sagging breasts
and that you shouldn't wear a bra
and that it would reduce sagging,
but that's been called into question too.
So I think the point is it doesn't really matter.
Wear a bra if you wanna wear a bra,
don't wear a bra if you don't wanna wear a bra.
I do think there is a point where, not in concern for sagging,
but like for back pain or shoulder pain,
if you have very large breasts and you don't wear a bra,
you might, it depends on the physics of that.
Like mechanically, you might start to develop some pain
in your upper back.
That has nothing to do with breast sagging though.
These are two different issues.
So when I say you don't ever have to wear a bra,
there are some people who need to wear bras
to reduce like strain on their upper back.
But this has nothing to do with the aesthetic appearance
of breasts.
Does that make sense?
That makes sense.
Can we do two more quick ones, Syd?
I think these will be easy for you.
Okay.
I'm a fight choreographer and I have choreographed fights
on stage that end with a throat cut,
but a friend recently brought up that tracheotomies are a thing
So in theory someone could have the front of their throat slit without that necessarily being fatal
They're basically wanted to know if that's possible
Could you survive a slit throat?
It depends on what you hit there's I hate I hate as a matter as someone who had to study medicine and learn and be
Tested on medicine. I hate the neck, there's so much stuff in the neck.
There's just like a ton of stuff in there.
It's important, important stuff in the neck.
Necessary.
When we do a tracheotomy, which I don't personally do,
that's not, I do a lot of stuff, I don't do that.
That's your windpipe, right?
Yes, we're cutting into, yes, the tube that connects
your upper air, your mouth, your upper airway
with your lungs, right?
This is how, you know what I'm saying?
This is how crazy the neck is,
that sometimes stuff in your own body
goes down the wrong different tube
that you have in the same place.
Yeah, there's an esophagus.
That's why the body messes it up sometimes.
They're like, oh, not there, crap.
This is so confusing in here.
The trachea is the air tube, the esophagus is the food tube.
When we do a tracheotomy, what we're saying is-
And the TV's the boob tube.
There's some sort of blockage, like, above the neck,
where air can't get through,
so putting a tube down your throat,
and like swelling or trauma or something can cause this,
putting a tube down your throat, like we usually do,
to intubate somebody and help them breathe,
isn't gonna work, so we have to bypass the mouth area
and stick a tube directly into the windpipe in your neck
to get air down into your lungs to help you breathe.
Famously, George Clooney did that with a pen on ER, right?
Like that's what everybody always thinks of.
When we're doing that procedure,
not like George Clooney did,
but like actually in a controlled environment
with proper equipment, you are making a very precise,
small incision directly into your trachea at one,
like there's a location.
We know, we are taught where exactly to make that incision.
It's small, it's localized.
We're not hitting anything else, right?
That's why you can survive that.
If you are randomly slashed in the throat,
who knows what you hit?
So first of all, if you sever someone's trachea completely
and you're not putting a tube down into their lungs
to help them breathe, they'll stop breathing.
So you couldn't survive that.
If you hit the major vessels in the neck,
you can bleed to death very quickly.
So your answer is it depends.
It depends on what you hit.
If it's very, very superficial
and you can get immediate medical attention,
yeah, you could.
But if you hit, especially like your carotids,
that's not a good situation.
And I mean, of course, if you sever the trachea, that's not.
I mean, again, unless you got EMS standing right there,
that's gonna be a rough one.
So no, no, you could not, generally speaking,
I would say that's a fatal injury, generally.
Generally.
Might I also recommend though,
sometimes characters working things out
can be also very powerful.
I've been having to- Talking through it
and deciding like no one needs to die tonight,
let's work through it. That like no one needs to die tonight,
let's work through it.
That's true, you said that to me,
but you were teaching me how to do a stage punch
just last night.
Punching is not stabbing in the throat.
I don't think that you should,
when your boyfriend escaped to Margaritaville upsets you,
I don't think that you should stab him in the throat
and murder him. I don't stab him in the throat.
I toss you my cheeseburger and I punch him in the face.
I do get to pretend to punch someone in the face.
My doctor and I decided I should stop taking
one of my migraine preventative medications
because it doesn't seem to be preventing migraines.
He wants me to gradually decrease my dose
rather than stopping it once.
So basically the question is,
why do we step down a dose of medicine that isn't working?
I'd never really thought about this,
that it would make sense if the medicine
isn't doing the thing that you thought it would do.
Just stop it.
Well, then a person would think like,
well, it's not doing anything, so why would I need to?
So I think that even if something is chemically
doing something in your body, especially when it comes to, I mean,
medicines where there's a little more trial and error.
Amitriptyline, the one that you mentioned, is actually,
so we do use it to prevent migraines.
We also have used it as an antidepressant, historically,
because it stops the reuptake of serotonin and epinephrine,
or norepinephrine, excuse me.
Norepinephrine, actually. Nowadays,phrine, excuse me. Norephrine, actually, baby.
Nowadays, a lot of the antidepressants we use
just stop the reuptake of serotonin,
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, SSRIs,
you may have heard that before.
This is an SNRI, serotonin and norepinephrine.
So it increases the amount of these neurotransmitters
at the receptors in your brain, okay?
It's doing that even if it's not having
the symptomatic relief of your migraines,
it is still having that chemical effect in your body,
or at least we would assume it would be.
How that translates into pain, mood, energy,
all of the other things that we want these medicines to do
is very different from patient to patient.
So that's why we do need to wean you off of them,
even if it's not helping you in the way
that we thought the medicine would help you,
it's still chemically doing something in your body.
It's just that it's not a straight one-to-one.
This chemical change always equals this symptom relief
for every patient everywhere, period.
We know that humans are more complex than that.
So it is not considered,
and this is true for all these medicines like this,
in this class, this is not considered withdrawal technically,
like we would with benzodiazepines,
like Xanax and medicines like that,
or opiates, medicines that are narcotics.
Those have withdrawal syndromes that can be quite severe
and with some medications even fatal.
With these medications, we usually don't think of it
as a withdrawal syndrome and the main reason
we distinguish it is because it is not dangerous
as much as it is very, the symptoms can be quite severe
and they can make you feel very bad.
So we usually call them like a discontinuation syndrome.
It's kind of semantics just to clarify,
like this isn't as dangerous
as going cold turkey off of a Benzo would be
or stopping drinking cold turkey would be.
But it is important that you wean off them
because you can feel really lousy
while you're going off them if you just go cold turkey
and it might disrupt your life and your work or your play or your relaxation
or your family or whatever else, or just yourself.
You might feel really bad.
So even if you're not getting the effect
from the medicine you would expect to,
it's still doing something chemically.
And so you do need to wean off it
if your doctor recommends that.
Good to know.
Hey folks, thank you so much for listening.
We hope you've enjoyed yourself.
Hey, if you don't have any plans this weekend or next and you want to have a good time with your pals
Justin Sidney come on out to the Ritter Park amphitheater
at 8 30 p.m. The show starts and
We're gonna be doing escape to Margaritaville if you go to
h a r t of w v org slash tickets
You can get tickets to it and come see us in Margaritaville.
We are in the show, we are in love.
It is a Jimmy Buffett musical.
So if you're a Jimmy Buffett fan,
it's a bunch of Jimmy Buffett songs.
It's gonna be, y'all, it's gonna be wild.
There's a plane, it's a wild show.
I dance with cheeseburgers.
It is an outdoor amphitheater,
so if you do come, bring chairs or blankets,
feel free to bring picnic baskets or drinks or whatever,
you know?
Yep.
And there's also a VIP thing where you can get in early,
I think, and do some karaoke.
It's heartofwv.org slash VIP.
There's like margaritas and karaoke early,
and it said for a while on the website
that those were sold out and that was
Like an error, but they are not they are not sold out
Yeah, it's a lot of fun. And if you can come out and then we would love to see you
I should clarify too. We're just in it and we would like people to come see it because we're in it
We don't we're not we don't make money off of this production. Yes
Yeah, no, we're not like yes, I just think it'd be fun
Yeah, it's community theater folks came out during Charlie think it'd be fun. You can come say hi. It's community theater.
Some folks came out during Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Some folks came out and said hi.
We had some folks in from Columbus and North Carolina
and we're gonna be in this show and it's gonna be fun.
So if you want a fun thing to do, just come to Huntington.
Why not, take a flyer.
And the money goes to our parks.
So there you go.
Go support our parks.
Yeah.
Thank you to the taxpayers for using their song,
Medicines, as the intro and outro of our program.
And thanks to you for listening.
We really appreciate you.
That's gonna do it for us.
Until next time, my name is Justin McElroy.
I'm Sydney McElroy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. All right!
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