Aging _Brain Health _Microbiome & More Role Of Sulphate Glyphosate & Deuterium Dr Stephanie Seneff

Ғылым және технология

✨Welcome to the channel "busysuperhuman - Dr Sara Pugh"✨
Senior MIT Research Scientist Dr Stephanie Seneff has published over 200 peer-reviewed papers in scientific journals and conference proceedings on a range of subjects. In this podcast we talk about methylation, MTHFR and more about deuterium.
Dr Seneff has two books one which covers different causes of autism and the other on the weedkiller glyphosate which also includes a lot of practical lifestyle biochemistry for lay people
Slow down aging, increase ATP production & reduce inflammation
High-Quality Lipofullerene (C60) For You Or Your Cat Or Dog
Use Code DRSARA For 15% Discount
wizardsciences.com/
Dr Seneff’s Books
Cindy & Erica's Obsession to Solve Today’s Health Care Crisis: Autism, Alzheimer’s Disease, Cardiovascular Disease, ALS and More
amzn.eu/d/bKu1opS
Slow down aging, increase ATP production & reduce inflammation
High Quality Lipofullerene (C60) For You Or Your Cat Or Dog
Use Code DRSARA For 15% Discount
wizardsciences.com/
Toxic Legacy -
How the Weedkiller Glyphosate Is Destroying Our Health and the Environment
amzn.eu/d/19CAWnQ
In this podcast we begin talking about glyphosate and the mineral sulphate as sulphate is vital for health but get overlooked and a lot people don’t understand how glyphosate affects your serotonin and melatonin levels, sex hormones and vitamin D and how it relates to autism
We discuss melatonin in more detail and if its ok to use a supplement or not and why
The conversation then goes into deuterium or heavy hydrogen and its role in our health / ageing. I made a video on deuterium before this video in case you get lost
We then move into methylation and the gut microbiome making methane and why its not bad and how that relates to deuterium and glyphosate and also which foods are low in deuterium
There is more to tryptophan, cholesterol and vitamin D than we think and Dr Seneff discusses their roles as sensors -
Can vitamin D supplements do this too or not ?
We have a little lesson on proton tunnelling and structured water as we then switch into proton wires and quantum biology as we continue with the deuterium story
To finish off we look at less talked about minerals minerals such as iodine, manganese, iron and fluorine and how excess or deficiencies affect health .
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#aging #brainhealth #microbiome #sulphate #glyphosate #deuterium #drstephanieseneff #methylation #mthfr #autism #healthcare #biochemistry #atpproduction #inflammation #lipofullerene #discountcode #wizardsciences #toxiclegacy #weedkiller #mineralsulphate #serotoninlevels #melatoninlevels #sexhormones #vitamind #melatoninsupplement #deuteriumrole #methylationprocess #gutmicrobiome #methaneproduction #tryptophan #cholesterol #structuredwater #protontunnelling #quantumbiology #minerals #iodine #manganese #irondeficiency #fluorine #healthadvice #biochemistrytips

Пікірлер: 83

  • @apocalypse9347
    @apocalypse934710 ай бұрын

    Awesome interview 🤩 Dr Stephanie Seneff is a blessing to the universe! Glyphosate is genocide. Thanks for sharing this exceptional dialogue. Peace love and blessings 🙏

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    Ай бұрын

    Yes I think she is tremendous

  • @richardkirby5560
    @richardkirby556010 ай бұрын

    The best Stephanie Seneff interview I've heard yet..She has definitely been the biggest inspiration for setting up our 'Healthy Gardens Healthy Children Healthy Planet campaign' ..which helps to detox children's education gardens, supply free organic onion growing kits(sulphur, B1,quercetin, Inulin) and building healthy living growing soils through recycling resources.

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes she went all in and was superb. She said she had talked about things she has not mentioned in podcasts before

  • @emoveroijkeldam3772

    @emoveroijkeldam3772

    10 ай бұрын

    Also due to your great input.. that makes quite a difference...

  • @richardkirby5560

    @richardkirby5560

    10 ай бұрын

    Hoping for round 2..

  • @wadeneumann4959

    @wadeneumann4959

    5 ай бұрын

    And she doesn't usually pull a punch!@@Thebusysuperhuman The glycine carrying methyl-phosphate was super interesting given Dr Gerald Aardmsa claiming something so similar as a life extension Vitamin!

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    Ай бұрын

    The Part 2 is EVEN better

  • @gregengeler9368
    @gregengeler936810 ай бұрын

    What a terrific discussion, I’m going to have to watch this multiple times. Everything you do Sarah is just gold.

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    10 ай бұрын

    Glad you liked it and I hope Dr Seneff is back for part 2

  • @josephinebarbarino8165
    @josephinebarbarino816510 ай бұрын

    Brilliant - Thank you, Sara, for getting one of my heroes Dr Stephanie Seneff to your great show! I enjoyed listening to the two of you big time. Looking forward to more ❣

  • @Mo-yj3wf
    @Mo-yj3wf10 ай бұрын

    Great, thanks! 48:00 S. Pellegrino sulfur 52:00 water

  • @BiggieCheese45
    @BiggieCheese4510 ай бұрын

    I think eating foods rich in Sulfur is missing the main point. Besides the dysfunction of the terrible pesticides like Glyphosate, the grand majority of people have a lack of Molybdenum which is important for detoxing and processing sulfur compounds. Molybdenum Glycinate is a game changer. Great interview with Dr. Seneff, I've enjoyed it very much and learned a lot.

  • @raykinney9907

    @raykinney9907

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes, I'm very curious about potential beneficial dose with it, I understand that it has a narrow range of ideal levels in the body, and possible toxic effects when outside the narrow range. Does anybody know more about this?

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    Ай бұрын

    Sunlight too for sulphation.

  • @jJtom30
    @jJtom309 ай бұрын

    Fantastic joining up of dots for me ❤ Thank you both 🙂

  • @bonemill4013
    @bonemill401310 ай бұрын

    More outstanding work from Dr Sara - Dr Seneff is the perfect guest for this channel, thank you both !

  • @a.macdonald4877
    @a.macdonald487710 ай бұрын

    I just love Dr. Stephanie, she is so brilliant, she is very kind as well...I emailed her several times in the past with questions in regards to my autistic daughter and she kindly responded each time.

  • @madeinengland1212
    @madeinengland121210 ай бұрын

    Stephanie is the wise grandmother we never had.

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    10 ай бұрын

    Absolutely that is a superb description of her! She is tremendous

  • @bobmciver6437
    @bobmciver643710 ай бұрын

    Watched many interviews with Dr Seneff, good clarity here in distinguishing between when she is speculating and citing literature which has been a problem in some other interviews...always a danger with polymaths who are constantly busy connecting dots.Thank you for a great interview!

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes unlike Dr Pollack - Dr Seneff does speculate - but it could also be called creating a hypothesis

  • @raumraumraum
    @raumraumraum10 ай бұрын

    Wow, what a wealth of new info in a single episode!! Methyl, sulphate, Deuterium: I had a lot of questions about these and this answers many! Need to relisten though, it's dense! --Thanks for making this!

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes it went very deep and she really over delivered the value today

  • @kimberlymusser6200
    @kimberlymusser62007 ай бұрын

    Dr. Pugh, I enjoy your channel very much. Very educational yet understandable ❤

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you !

  • @eawil-sunart
    @eawil-sunart9 ай бұрын

    This info has got to help w addiction…. All of these hormones , molecules etc are affected. This explains why certain substances are so profound … makes you wonder how they came about

  • @johneubank8543
    @johneubank854310 ай бұрын

    Whenever someone makes autism claims, it gets my attention - I have a great deal of experience with it in my family. If glyphosate is involved, it's not "causing" it. We know this because autism existed before glyphosate. I suspect autism arises from a complex epigenetic event and probably needs a certain kind of genes in the background to happen. This, for me, is the best explanation of why billions of people consume glyphosate-dosed food but only a tiny number - though growing alarmingly - get autism. Some time ago I suspected a societal cause in increased autism. Several generations ago, few people went to college and parents were far more influential in picking or influencing mates for their children. Anyone "on spectrum" - i.e. likely having autism genes - would not be seen as a good mate, more often than not. But with greater independence in young adults - with then being away from parents at college and being exposed to potential mates - and people "on spectrum" possibly being attracted to each other - this could explain a concentration of these possible needed-background-genes for autism to occur. Autism often occurs in more intelligent people - maybe. We really should not ignore macronutrient issues, when approaching autism's cause or causes. I've lost over sixty pounds, put my diabetes t2 into remission, and so many other wonderful things simply by going keto. Hardly eating any carbs, eating a little more protein and more saturated fat - no more PUFA oil or seed oil. I don't think getting more sunlight has done it - doubt I am getting more. Structured water - highly doubt this has done it or been a factor at all. I don't ground. And, highly likely on a macro adjustment alone (and no pufa), my mental health is far better. I sleep better and more regularly - I wake up refreshed and ready to go - I don't need to nap - I have a better mental attitude and far more energy throughout the day. Now, one could argue that I'm also not getting much glyphosate - a bit will still come through from the monogastric animal sources I eat - a little pork, eggs, a little chicken dark meat - maybe farmed salmon. /shrug I'm just going to put out there that the lowering of carb to lower insulin production and end insulin resistance - and all the good things that happen from that - is almost certainly what's been at play in my body the last year and fourth or so months, that I've been doing keto. Chris Palmer has a great hypothesis that mental illness is a brain metabolism problem. He should not be ignored. There is also research that parents with obesity problems and metabolic problems are more likely to produce autistic children. Now, one can argue aha, they're eating a lot of glyphosate-dosed carbs, aren't they? Well, yes, so that makes this harder to resolve. I would guess, if I had to, that if we ended glyphosate right now but people kept eating carbs and seed oil at current rates, autism rates would still go up. The spike in autism coincides with the 1980 or so new US food pyramid, to eat far more carb and drastically limit red meat and sat. fat. But it also coincides with large scale glyphosate use. Another factor in autism we mustn't ignore is that it really is diagnosed differently now compared to even 25 years ago. I've experienced this. One of my children - they would not diagnose as autistic when this was clearly the case - but they were still using DSM 3 guidelines, even though DSM 4 had been adopted. Med. practitioners are allowed to continue to use the older DSM, somehow - or were not long ago. Older psychiatrists, phycologists, and therapists and so on were using the wrong criteria to judge whether or not a child had autism - really they were only looking for classical autism. This is very real and may account for most or even all of the "increase" we're seeing in autism diagnoses. We also need to be careful about diet and autism re families dealing with an autistic child. Once autism occurs, the damage is already done, or so it seems. No amount of dietary change will alleviate autism symptoms - or if so it is very rare. I've volunteered to help other families struggling with an autistic child - and have worked w the school district in this capacity - and I've been horrified by the large number of parents who say "well, I eliminated all gluten in my child's diet, and he's much better." He's not! I knew the kid. Not better at all. Or, if better, they instituted other changes at the same time - other changes that had positive effect - but the parents assumed diet was the cause in positive outcomes. It highly liikely wasn't. And I saw families where the focus on diet resulted in a lack of work on the stuff that might have really made a difference. Each case of autism is different, but there are some commonalities. If the autistic child can understand language, they rarely understand the full meaning of words they hear. They must be taught to understand language, because they (1) use what I call "autism logic" and (2) tend to by hyper literal. They can hear a sentence like "You're good at basketball. You should join a team" from an aide at school and assume this means they are being forced to join a team, that they must. And they might freak out because they don't want to be on a team. Up all night groaning, grunting, kicking the wall, hitting themselves. Diet change will not teach them how to understand what neurotypicals really mean by their words. It takes six to ten years of daily work. You can't confront them. If they're high functioning, they usually "know" they're right and will block you out if you keep telling them they're wrong. You must engineer situations where they realize they're wrong, at least in my experience, and it's insanely hard. But worth doing, because even a fairly severely autistic (though still high functioning - this is not a high threshold) autistic child can be taught to survive and even thrive in the N.T. world around them. Diet change, in a vast majority of cases, will not do this. The neural pathways they're missing, I'm convinced, must be "built" by daily effort over many years, before they grow up and the brain gets less "plastic". Please, don't think that eliminating glyphosate from an already autistic person's diet will "fix" them. It almost certainly won't. If you work with such a person, you must learn to not trigger them - you must completely rethink how you interface with such a person. You must become incredibly empathetic and inspire them to want to grow and learn. They have to do it, ultimately. An autistic child on a path to success in learning how to parse the strange, scary, and Illogical (to them) NT world that surrounds them - this child will be doing the equivalent of a full time job from the age of 2 or so on. If you're dealing with such a situation, I wish you the best of luck - and be strong. An autistic person's life - at any age - can always be improved. But it takes great and deep understanding of them to do so - and not a reliance on "quick fixes", which can help here and there but won't fix the situation.

  • @marynguyen6417
    @marynguyen641710 ай бұрын

    Thank you, such a great interview from the two extremely intelligent women!

  • @redasimanskaite4586
    @redasimanskaite458610 ай бұрын

    Absolutely loved this interview ❤

  • @williambelmont9601
    @williambelmont96019 ай бұрын

    Amazing insights, I will have to look into Dr Seneff's research.

  • @kaceeboxers3580
    @kaceeboxers358010 ай бұрын

    Being homozygous with both COMTs and BHMT my body is sensitive to ingesting too many methyl donors at the same time. But, what I have found over the years is that the better my methylation cycle is performing, the more methylated supplements I can handle. If I over do it, niacin to the rescue. But, when I first started supplementing with B vitamins, I could not tolerate methylated B 12 or folate. Instead I took Hydroxy and Adenesol B-12 and Folinic acid. After six or so months, I was able to tolerate methylcabalamin and folate better.

  • @JuliePeterson-12345

    @JuliePeterson-12345

    15 күн бұрын

    Great info! Do you have a recommend book or podcast relating to this as I feel it’s an issue for me as well. Thanks

  • @kaceeboxers3580

    @kaceeboxers3580

    15 күн бұрын

    @@JuliePeterson-12345 from what I’ve noticed, many doctors talk about the methylation cycle and the need for methylcabalamin and folate, but few talk about those who have difficulty clearing methyl donors. For me, when I first started dosing b vitamins, it consisted of folate and methylcabalamin and I felt like I had a motor running inside my body, was anxious ( not typical for me) and brain fog was horrible. Did 23andMe, started researching my snps, listened to dr Ben lynch (geneticist), got his book ‘Dirty Genes’, started taking several products he manufactures and sells (Seeking Health) and after several months, was able to reintroduce ‘some’ methylated b vitamins. Dr Lynch has recently started doing more videos on KZread and I believe, Facebook. All the best to you.

  • @bernadettebecher4689
    @bernadettebecher468910 ай бұрын

    Thank you for all this valuable information. Have listened to Dr Seneff interviews for a few years.

  • @madeinengland1212
    @madeinengland121210 ай бұрын

    Great! two people who speak and think as fast as I do.

  • @raykinney9907
    @raykinney99077 ай бұрын

    I suddenly lost a little sleep last nite, when I realized that someone on my OG farm bought straw for mulch on a newly constructed herb garden bed w/o being sure that it was OG straw. Given current wheat harvest management risk factor of commonly spraying glyphosate just before harvest to increase effective ripening timing, I suspect that my day now needs to prioritize removing that mulch quickly before any rain hits it, just in case it is contaminated.

  • @ogeoge6000
    @ogeoge600010 ай бұрын

    Fantastic interview thank you both.

  • @ayumi_springdawn
    @ayumi_springdawn10 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much 🙏

  • @kateprentice1575
    @kateprentice15757 ай бұрын

    Brilliant! So fast and packed with info …

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    7 ай бұрын

    Dr Seneff was on form Part 2 is coming very soon as it’s been recorded

  • @littleedenflowerschannel440
    @littleedenflowerschannel4409 ай бұрын

    Great talk thank you 🌻🌻🌻

  • @rachelb3263
    @rachelb32638 ай бұрын

    What a nice ending and very fitting!

  • @pircello
    @pircello10 ай бұрын

    I love your videos Sara! 🌞

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much!!

  • @christophalcmeonides8537
    @christophalcmeonides853710 ай бұрын

    GREAT INFO & The best Stephanie Seneff interview I've heard thanks to the level of the interviewer Thank you both!

  • @TheSocialSmilingMonkey
    @TheSocialSmilingMonkey7 ай бұрын

    This woman is amazingly focused on lifes biological processes. Her knowledge is very important . More in acedemia should follow her lead & listen to her insights. Our Synthesis processes within our biochemistry are susceptible to minute alterations in that they'll have a detrimental effect . Dr Stephanie Seneff Thank you for guiding my comprehension of what I've learnt over many year's into even more clarification. ❤

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes she is a poly math for sure

  • @gotmama2
    @gotmama29 ай бұрын

    A brilliant discussion between two brilliant women. You must do this again, because I'm sure you've barely scratched the surface!

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you Dr Seneff is back on this month or early October

  • @gotmama2

    @gotmama2

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Thebusysuperhuman I ordered her book on glyphosate after seeing your interview... it arrived yesterday :-) I usually get Kindle/Audible books, but I wanted this in print so I can highlight and write notes...

  • @beepsilver
    @beepsilver9 ай бұрын

    Very informative podcast! FYI San Pellegrino water may contain beneficial sulfur but it does contain fluoride, nearly as much as much as tap water in the US. No bueno.

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    8 ай бұрын

    Very useful to know - thank you

  • @tinfoilhatscholar
    @tinfoilhatscholar4 ай бұрын

    Must read book list? (Please and thank you:) I'm glad I've read Seneff's and Nick Lane's recent books before listening to this one! But also I'd love more book recommendations that are in line with the research. Thank you! (Also super glad to have found your awesome work!)

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    4 ай бұрын

    Try the invisible rainbow and Life on the edge by Dr Jim al kalili

  • @tinfoilhatscholar

    @tinfoilhatscholar

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Thebusysuperhuman isn't interesting that Firstenberg and Seneff both posited disruption of cytochrome oxidase as the primary mechanism of effect from two very different sources?! And thank you, I'll check out Life on the edge next

  • @FasterThanTheSpeedOfScience
    @FasterThanTheSpeedOfScience10 ай бұрын

    Very interesting discussion. I'd love to know Dr Stephanie's view on vitamin D from food - cod liver oil for example. Many of us live in fairly cloudy climates where little or no vitamin D from sun exposure is available for 6 months of the year.

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    9 ай бұрын

    Dr Seneff is coming back for part 2 as we are just planning the date

  • @lorikunkel283
    @lorikunkel2839 ай бұрын

    Please check out all natural mitcide/insecticide called Eco-Mite !!!!

  • @raykinney9907
    @raykinney99078 ай бұрын

    Given I have two drinking water sources (A spring with very soft water, and a well with water with increased S and iron from oxidation of iron pyrite in the rock), I can smell a bit of hydrogen sulphide in the well water, would the well S be helpful, more than the more acidic spring water (all other parameters ignored)?

  • @robertviggiano
    @robertviggiano10 ай бұрын

    Does her book cover MTHFR in relation to methyl groups?

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    10 ай бұрын

    She mentions it but it’s not specifically about the MTHFR gene. However her work on sulphate is very relevant to MTHFR due to the detox link

  • @robertviggiano

    @robertviggiano

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Thebusysuperhuman Thank you!

  • @raykinney9907
    @raykinney99078 ай бұрын

    If glyphosate also limits tryptophan eventually getting serotonin into brain to provide melatonin to help glutathione (often depleted by mobilized bone Pb) clean up excess ROS, can getting enough near infra red light from sunlight help induce melatonin in brain mitochondria? And, at the end of the electron transport chain, the rotor mechanism that gets ATP out is 'lubricated' by NIR-altering the water surrounding the rotor to increase releasing the ATP? What state of water is this higher fluidity?

  • @Shadow-bs1iu
    @Shadow-bs1iu9 ай бұрын

    What are those glasses you have on Sara?

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    9 ай бұрын

    They are blue blockers from bon charge to protect my eyes from the blue light

  • @raykinney9907
    @raykinney99078 ай бұрын

    I am concerned by body burden of Pb built up in all of us (say 100 to 1000 times that found in prehistoric bone), getting mobilized back into soft tissue pools when the body comes under stresses of old age, illness, or pregnancy where it needs quick influx of Ca. The lead can readily get into brain tissue where it can harm mitochondrial production of ATP. Does this reduce glutathione levels in those mitochondria? The result could be runaway ROS increases harming mitochondrial function. Now, you mentioned the mechanism of deficit of tryptophan/serotonin/ melatonin supply to brain, Pb must be an added mitochondrial dysfunction pressure commonly. ROS management must have a 'double hit' given glyphosate co-toxicant?!?

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes lead is a problem in wales in the pipes and from leaded petrol. There are ways to get it out with liposomal EDTA just it can take 1-2 yrs

  • @raykinney9907

    @raykinney9907

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes, do you know about how K2 mk7 might possibly be able transport Ca to bone, but ALSO transport the mobilized Pb back into bone once again effectively? Or, does the mobilized Pb circulate until chelated eventually? What might be the risk of time Pb has free to do more damage (e.g. per oxidation of lipids in membranes like the BBB)?@@Thebusysuperhuman

  • @raykinney9907

    @raykinney9907

    7 ай бұрын

    I believe that there is research lit on Pb decreasing glutathione by up to 60%, but i don't know if this gets to the brain mitochondrial pools, or is more in other body pools. Also, I remember research from years ago indicating ALAD decrease increasing ALA. Also, GABA decreases increasing neuroexcitotoxicity. Seems that this mobilization of bone Pb episodically during the most vulnerable times of stresses of old age, illness, or pregnancy is a big deal risk factor that I don not hear many medical people clarifying adequately as a co-morbidity.@@Thebusysuperhuman

  • @dinomiles7999
    @dinomiles79996 ай бұрын

    Dr. Zack Bush, Dr Ronda Patrick, Dr Ted Archaco, Dr Jack kruse, your welcome . Any questions? Love Stef...

  • @floridanaturalfarming3367
    @floridanaturalfarming33679 ай бұрын

    ❤🐸❤️

  • @dinomiles7999
    @dinomiles79996 ай бұрын

    Again , my question to Dr. Steph. Tell us WHAT we can do to live a longer healthier life...

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    5 ай бұрын

    She said to keep your deuterium levels down

  • @harrywright9582
    @harrywright95829 ай бұрын

    🙃 Promo-SM

  • @dinomiles7999
    @dinomiles79996 ай бұрын

    COWS make methane YES . , but check out termites and there release of methane! Your welcome . Any questions?

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    5 ай бұрын

    Hydrogen is a much more important gas anyway

  • @dinomiles7999
    @dinomiles79996 ай бұрын

    No alcohol ever !!!!

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    5 ай бұрын

    I agree

  • @dinomiles7999
    @dinomiles79995 ай бұрын

    Please , she means GRASS FED NON GMO CHICKEN AND TURKEY! Not the SHIT MEAT in the market ! Your welcome. Any questions or comments?

  • @Thebusysuperhuman

    @Thebusysuperhuman

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes I agree proper poultry also contains some DHA

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