Elizabeth Yurth, M.D.
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Mod SC is a mitochondrial peptide.
It increases energy.
It acts as an exoskeleton.
But if you actually have misshapen, disrupted mitochondria, you might actually be doing more harm than good by doing it.
So there's so many little nuances.
Or if you have none of the baseline micronutrients for your mitochondria to work and you try and spin up activity in the mitochondria, you're actually going to create problems.
So you are right.
I mean, I think you should be doing it with, we always say, can you do it yourself?
Yeah.
Can you climb Mount Everest by yourself?
Yeah.
It's going to be really tough.
And the likelihood of you dying is a lot higher than if you do it with a guide.
So that's what we kind of all are, we call ourselves Sherpas, right?
We are helping people do this.
Right, you don't have to stay on these forever.
But if I look at, I'm replacing BPC or I'm replacing my thymic peptides, so what I'll do is cycle people a few times a year of all these different peptides.
Partly because people don't want to be doing six, seven injections a day, right?
So they're on seven peptides, it becomes ridiculous.
But you can use, I can do a cycle of thymus and alpha-1, thymus and beta-4, and then I can do a cycle of BPC and then maybe a mitochondrial recovery peptide, right?