Alex Clark
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
balance the adrenals with adaptogens and stuff like that and microcurrent and laser, whereas someone with a lot of emotional trauma, Lyme flooding their system is a much harder hill to climb to get them to remission and maybe not have POTS anymore.
So it's tough to say.
I love blood work.
But every time I've tried to really dive deep in blood work and like really understand like beyond just a CBC and a CMP, I always fall back on that's a snapshot.
I need to muscle test and find out what is the roadblocks because blood work will take 40% dysfunction and muscle testing will take 3% to 5% dysfunction.
Way faster.
Okay.
And don't get me wrong.
There's people who are going to watch this and be like, hey, I'm proficient reading blood work, and I can see some patterns that would tell me maybe this is going towards that.
There's some really good blood work people.
I'm not going to take it away that I think blood work is very valuable.
I think it's a snapshot and a picture of a piece of the puzzle that
But I, in my experience, in my opinion, too, is that when people are using frequency medicine, however they're using it, whether it's scans, whether it's muscle testing, they're able to put together a protocol much more efficiently and take the guesswork out of like blood work shows you a ton of information.
Frequency medicine shows you, all right, what's the priority of a ton of information?
PANDAS is when strep basically, you know, hits the nervous system and the basal ganglia of the brain, which then turns into like massive OCD.
It's essentially like an autoimmune reaction between strep bacteria and brain tissue.
Yep.
Caused by strep.
The biggest mistake I would say is they don't diagnose it fast enough and antibiotics are not the end-all be-all.
And sometimes they can help because strep is a bacteria.