Andrew Huberman· PhD
So that guy has a drug called ezetimibe that just mechanically blocks it.
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
So that guy has a drug called ezetimibe that just mechanically blocks it.
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it works by blocking we could get as technical as you want on this it's called the Neiman pix C1 like one transporter in the entros site
aetam has virtually no side effects it's a you can think of it as a drug that's acting outside the body right it's sort of acting on a you know a Turn Style door in your gut
how does that abide through a less potent pathway but still expresses LDL receptors then do the statins and so they work though is that amides main mechanism of action is in the gut how are you with you on that cuz where I talked about these fentanyl Peter Peter talked about the niemann-pick see one like protein which enhances the absorption of star walls including cholesterol in the guy and that's is that amides main area of action inhibiting that from
but it prevents the liver from internalizing cholesterol from a biliary source put them both together you're depleting the liver of
there's a drug called ezetimibe or zetia which blocks cholesterol reabsorption