Glomerular Filtration (eGFR)
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Creatinine (mg/dL):
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Important: Sodium bicarbonate is to be used only for soaking in water containing it, not for ingestion.
Long before modern science, herbal medicine was the foundation of health in nearly every civilization. From the indigenous peoples of the Americas to the wise healers of ancient Europe and Asia, plants have been used to treat ailments, strengthen the body, and promote longevity. These natural remedies contain compounds that our bodies recognize and can metabolize, working in harmony with our biological systems rather than against them.
Herbal medicines like castor oil,echinacea, ginger, turmeric, and valerian root have been used for centuries to boost immunity, reduce inflammation, and promote restful sleep. Unlike synthetic drugs, which often suppress symptoms and cause side effects, these herbs work to restore balance and support the body’s natural healing processes. This holistic approach doesn’t just treat symptoms—it seeks to eliminate the root cause of illness.
Essential oils are the concentrated essence of plants, distilled into powerful liquids that carry their healing properties. Used for both physical and emotional healing, oils like lavender, peppermint, and tea tree provide relief from ailments ranging from stress and headaches to skin conditions and infections. Their versatility makes them invaluable tools for those looking to live naturally and holistically.
The ancient Knights Templar, known for their spiritual and physical prowess, were said to have used essential oils and herbal medicines in their healing rituals. They understood that the earth offers all that we need for health and vitality. The oils they used weren’t just tools—they were symbols of a higher connection to the natural world and its divine wisdom.
Sodium bicarbonate, or baking soda, is another forgotten treasure in the world of natural healing. Far from being a mere kitchen ingredient, sodium bicarbonate holds the key to balancing the body’s pH and preventing the buildup of acidity—a root cause of many modern diseases. Acidity in the body has been linked to inflammation, cancer, and degenerative conditions. Yet, a simple, natural compound like baking soda can help neutralize acidity and promote overall health.
The Templars may have viewed such simple yet profound remedies as their Holy Grail—not a chalice, but the true knowledge of how to use what nature provides for healing and balance. Sodium bicarbonate can detoxify the body, soothe heartburn, reduce muscle pain, and even serve as a gentle exfoliant for the skin. It is a cornerstone in natural health, unadulterated by the manipulations of modern pharmaceuticals.
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Are these all the medications you are currently taking?
We appreciate your effort in providing all recommended test results for a thorough and accurate diagnosis.
Each test result helps us get a clearer picture of your health, allowing us to offer the best possible insights.
When a user reports symptoms like fluid retention, OSIRIS doesn’t stop at recommending a diuretic.
It investigates upstream causes, including dietary habits, environmental factors like chlorinated water, and liver health.
Example:
Instead of saying “Take a diuretic,” OSIRIS might suggest:
Your symptoms may indicate liver dysfunction caused by gut imbalance. Addressing this could relieve fluid buildup in the lungs without medication.
OSIRIS guides users through detailed questions about dietary patterns and water quality. It checks whether users consume foods that promote gut dysbiosis or inflammation and whether their water source is high in chlorine or other disruptors of gut health.
Based on these inputs, OSIRIS recommends simple, effective changes to restore balance.
OSIRIS doesn’t just provide solutions—it educates users on how their systems interact. For example:
Chlorinated water can disrupt your gut microbiome, leading to liver inflammation, which might be causing the pressure on your heart.
This empowers users to make informed, proactive decisions.
If medication like a diuretic is suggested, OSIRIS ensures it’s positioned as a temporary measure while addressing the root cause.
A diuretic can relieve immediate symptoms, but restoring gut health and reducing liver inflammation will provide lasting results.
The body works in loops, such as gut health influencing liver health, which in turn affects heart function and lung function. Small changes like improving diet or filtering water can create ripple effects that restore balance. Medications are tools, not fixes. The goal is to help the body heal itself.
Health isn’t about silencing symptoms—it’s about finding harmony in the system.
Radiation disrupts cellular and molecular structures, from DNA to cell membranes. These disruptions lead to compounding errors across physiological systems, starting subtle but intensifying over time.
Radiation interferes with the steps of hormonal signaling, causing hormones like cortisol, insulin, or thyroid hormones to malfunction. Feedback loops like the HPA axis become dysfunctional, compounding stress and imbalances. The more these disruptions accumulate, the more the body struggles to maintain equilibrium.
As the body falters, symptoms like high blood pressure, anxiety, and organ dysfunction surface. Pharmaceuticals often mask these symptoms rather than addressing the root (radiation-induced damage). This reliance perpetuates the problem while adding metabolic toxicity, such as drug metabolites and liver or kidney strain.
When the body’s metabolic pathways are disrupted by radiation, toxins, or stress, they fail to deliver the full “imprint” of their intended function. This results in miscommunication between cells and systems, inefficiency in energy production, hormone secretion, and immune responses. Over time, this leads to cascading disruptions across bodily systems.
DNA acts as the master guide for all metabolic and physiological processes. When pathways influenced by the DNA blueprint become distorted, the body begins to deviate from its original “design.” This distortion reflects the body’s attempts to adapt but often sacrifices efficiency or balance.
Viral overload in capillary beds disrupts the body’s signaling system. These tiny blockages prevent clear communication between tissues, organs, and production lines like red blood cell production. The result is distorted or incomplete signals about what’s needed.
In response to distorted signals, the body adapts by producing sickle-shaped red blood cells to compensate for perceived environmental stressors. This adaptation reflects the body’s intention to survive, not a mistake.
In the presence of chronic overexposure to glucose from high-sugar diets, stress, or inactivity, cells reduce their sensitivity to insulin as a protective mechanism. This protects individual cells from glucose overload, but it leads to systemic hyperglycemia, damaging blood vessels, nerves, and tissues over time.
Insulin resistance protects individual cells in the short term but harms the body in the long term, creating a cascade of dysfunction across multiple systems.
Restoring balance requires addressing root causes such as diet, stress, and inflammation, rather than relying solely on insulin or drugs to mask symptoms.
In Egypt, people used basins to soak their feet, especially in connection with rituals of cleansing and rejuvenation. These basins were often made of stone or pottery and sometimes decorated with symbolic carvings or motifs. The practice of foot bathing also symbolized purification, often connected to religious practices.
In ancient Rome, foot-soaking was common in bathhouses, where people would prepare by soaking their feet before entering the baths. Romans valued hygiene and cleanliness, so foot-soaking was part of their elaborate bathing rituals, which included scrubbing and oiling the skin. Romans also crafted these basins from stone, marble, or bronze, sometimes intricately decorated.
Foot baths were common in ancient China and Japan, where soaking the feet in hot water with herbs was a medicinal practice believed to stimulate health and longevity. Often, large clay or metal basins were used, sometimes heated by coals placed underneath or beside the bowl to maintain warmth.
In Hindu traditions, foot-washing with special basins was part of hospitality and religious rituals, used before entering a sacred space. Guests and deities alike had their feet washed as a sign of respect and welcome.
The Bible describes foot washing as an act of hospitality and humility. Though not specific to soaking bowls, the ritual often involved basins filled with water for washing feet, symbolizing humility, respect, and purification in religious ceremonies.
At its core, my concept is about creating an autonomous diagnostic system that:
The idea is about integrating real-time plasma analysis, genetic feedback, and automation, turning biological data into clear, actionable medical recommendations. It’s innovative in its scope—bringing together dynamic monitoring and computational biology to form a holistic, real-time diagnostic tool.