Browsing articles in "FPS"

Nutriton Coaching Options with FPS

“For the present, the important thing is to avoid the use of the least appropriate food products, while choosing natural foods that have historical, epidemiological, and biochemical justification.” –Ray Peat, PhD There are several options available for clients looking to get Ray Peat inspired nutrition coaching from FPS. Coaching is available for both local clients [...]

A Reply to Ray Peat on Essential Fatty Acid Deficiency

Hard to believe this unscientifically “scientific” article was written by a PhD who is “of international renown in the field of lipid biochemistry.” Can I at least get one scientific reference to back up your claims, Dr. Enig? -FPS Ray Peat, PhD, is an influential health writer who claims that there is no such thing [...]

Bohr Effect and Cells O2 Levels: Healthy vs. Sick People

Oct 20, 2011   //   by Team FPS   //   Bohr Effect, Buteyko, carbon dioxide, cellular respiration, Christian Bohr, co2, exercise, FPS, functionalps, General, hemoglobin, hyperventilation, hypothyroidism, Miescher, O2, overbreathing, oxygen, pH, Ray Peat, Rob Turner, Simi Valley, thyroid, Vasodilation  //  Comments Off on Bohr Effect and Cells O2 Levels: Healthy vs. Sick People
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the key player in O2 transport due to 1) vasodilation and 2) the the Bohr effect (or the Bohr law). The Bohr effect explains oxygen release in capillaries or why red blood cells unload oxygen in tissues. The Bohr effect was first described in 1904 by the Danish physiologist Christian Bohr [...]

Is 98.6 Really Normal?

Is 98.6 Really Normal? A great article provided by Women’s Health Connections that includes discussion of the work of Ray Peat, PhD and Broda Barnes, MD, PhD.

Is 98.6 Really Normal?

Is 98.6 Really Normal? A great article provided by Women’s Health Connections that includes discussion of the work of Ray Peat, PhD and Broda Barnes, MD, PhD.

Carbon Monoxide: Cancer Hormone?

by Ray Peat, PhD When I started graduate school in biology at the University of Oregon, cell “membrane” research was a thriving business, almost as lucrative as genetics. Years earlier, I had been intrigued by Linus Pauling’s suggestion that anesthetics might act by “structuring” the water in nerve cells, and in trying to understand the [...]

Ray Peat on PubMed

Oct 16, 2011   //   by Team FPS   //   estrogen, FPS, functionalps, General, progesterone, pubmed, Ray Peat, Rob Turner  //  Comments Off on Ray Peat on PubMed
R231C mutation in KCNQ1 causes long QT syndrome type 1 and familial atrial fibrillation. Bartos DC, Duchatelet S, Burgess DE, Klug D, Denjoy I, Peat R, Lupoglazoff JM, Fressart V, Berthet M, Ackerman MJ, January CT, Guicheney P, Delisle BP. Heart Rhythm. 2011 Jan;8(1):48-55. Epub 2010 Sep 17. Zoledronic acid improves femoral head sphericity in [...]

A Physiological Approach to Ovarian Cancer

Oct 16, 2011   //   by Team FPS   //   estrogen, FPS, FSH, functionalps, General, LH, Ovarian Cancer, progesteron, Ray Peat, Rob Turner, Simi Valley, thyroid, Townsend Letters for Doctors & Patients  //  Comments Off on A Physiological Approach to Ovarian Cancer
by Ray Peat, PhD Several years ago, George Crile, of the Cleveland Clinic, observed that his clinic had removed only 11 thyroids that year, and that they had done more than 5000 thyroidectomies annually in the 1920s. The reason for the change was that they found that there was rarely any reason to remove the [...]
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