How I Discovered My Life Was In Danger

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  • Опубликовано: 24 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @BryanJohnson
    @BryanJohnson  18 дней назад +106

    This is the world’s most advanced longevity scan: ezra.com/blueprint
    Blueprint MRI blows every other scanning protocol out of the water.
    Here’s what’s included:
    1. Full-body MRI: Covering head, neck, spine, abdomen, pelvis. Screening for potential cancer and over 500+ conditions.
    2. MR Angiogram: Comprehensive arterial analysis of the brain and neck
    3. Advanced Brain Analysis: volume analysis, advanced lesion assessment and brain age
    4. Body Composition: Advanced body fat distribution and muscle composition analysis
    5. Musculoskeletal Scan: Assesses the condition of your musculoskeletal system, focusing on the knees and hips
    6. Low-dose Chest CT (optional): Screens for potential lung cancer, emphysema, lung bullaes, cysts and more
    7. Coronary Calcium Scan: scans the heart to give an assessment of coronary artery disease).

    • @BY-vatic-s
      @BY-vatic-s 18 дней назад +2

      Thank you for listening to the most important thing you have to offer… testing

    • @kary1313
      @kary1313 18 дней назад +1

    • @coachdimabjj
      @coachdimabjj 18 дней назад

      That's amazing

    • @nikopaulanne
      @nikopaulanne 18 дней назад +4

      really looking forward to have services in EU-region. Especially looking cor calcium score as over 50 heart becomes numer 1 concern.

    • @Rsquared-n2u
      @Rsquared-n2u 18 дней назад +3

      I am a huge fan of early MRI detection. However, a lot of people say that using MRI can lead to a lot of false negative results, leading to invasive biopsies for non-life threatening conditions. How do you balance the impact/toll on your body due to invasive biopsies compared to the benefit of MRI?

  • @TwistedSkyfall
    @TwistedSkyfall 18 дней назад +404

    For people living in Europe, an MRI scan costs around €1000 in Germany, whereas in Poland it is available for just a few hundred euros.

    • @contagiousintelligence5007
      @contagiousintelligence5007 18 дней назад +16

      But do they evaluate it too?

    • @localguide8395
      @localguide8395 18 дней назад +3

      Nice info, and also good question.

    • @TwistedSkyfall
      @TwistedSkyfall 18 дней назад +30

      Yes they do and i found a company which evaluate your scans for 120€ for a second opinion, also with Ai.

    • @localguide8395
      @localguide8395 18 дней назад +12

      @@TwistedSkyfall can u name some companys?

    • @thomasbroker69
      @thomasbroker69 18 дней назад

      Love to know where too

  • @vitusdjbl3nd
    @vitusdjbl3nd 18 дней назад +745

    0:15
    Hello Bryan, that is not correct, both veins transport blood out of the brain. It is the arteries that transport blood into the brain.
    Source: I'm a doctor

    • @tarik.moufid
      @tarik.moufid 18 дней назад +119

      It’s crazy nobody’s checking his script for errors.

    • @Treityn.
      @Treityn. 18 дней назад +55

      its ok, very small mistake that technically doesnt matter since if it were that way it wouldnt hurt. but yeah technicallities are ok to point out either way as well

    • @Terra12345X
      @Terra12345X 18 дней назад +25

      Think of Bryan as a laboratory rat / guinea pig. He is an entrepreneur with lots of money, he doesn't know where to spend them, and he also has this all-consuming and utterly bizarre obsession with health. We'll see where will this whole journey take him at the end, but I have to admit, it's actually fun to watch his obsession with mortality. Obviously we all know where will this end up. But what bothers me is that he also sells fake promises and offers fake solutions to people watching him, that's the entrepreneur part I don't like about him. Some people will fail to that. Bryan is just "Dr. Oz number 2".

    • @cp37373
      @cp37373 18 дней назад +15

      Oh, you don’t know? Everybody on the Internet is a doctor.

    • @TheCalumHay
      @TheCalumHay 18 дней назад +1

      Yeah I realised that aswell lol

  • @jonesmree
    @jonesmree 18 дней назад +596

    Its 6k to save you guys some time.

    • @georgiavegan1264
      @georgiavegan1264 18 дней назад +14

      Thank you

    • @explosev6513
      @explosev6513 18 дней назад +50

      that is the max version, starts off at 1.3k with the code

    • @ch1apet761
      @ch1apet761 18 дней назад +2

      Thanks

    • @ChallusMercer
      @ChallusMercer 18 дней назад +16

      Sounds expensive as a routine test...

    • @TheMoneyGPS
      @TheMoneyGPS 18 дней назад +17

      Not a bad price. Once a year.

  • @CaptivaLP
    @CaptivaLP 18 дней назад +32

    Small correction at 0:18 : both jugular veins carry blood away from the brain. Most blood reaches the brain via the carotic artery

  • @thehealthionaire
    @thehealthionaire 10 дней назад +8

    You’re the reason I started posting on my channel documenting myself giving up all of my bad habits. Thank you!!

  • @metouw
    @metouw 18 дней назад +122

    $1295 - Full Body Flash
    $2195 - Full Body
    $5695 - Ezra Blueprint
    (all prices are with the included discounts)

    • @vegasallen1212
      @vegasallen1212 18 дней назад +10

      I know someone who just got a full body CT scan here in Las Vegas.
      Cost--$499

    • @tonysuper3074
      @tonysuper3074 18 дней назад +32

      @@vegasallen1212 CT is a lot of radiation

    • @vegasallen1212
      @vegasallen1212 18 дней назад

      It's also a better detailed scan and at a much lower price. If I had that scan, I'd take some NAC and alpha lipoic acid beforehand to help deal with the radiation. Btw, the person I know who got that scan got a call telling him that his calcium score was extremely high. He had no idea. @tonysuper3074

    • @audreyl704
      @audreyl704 18 дней назад

    • @viktorgoa
      @viktorgoa 18 дней назад +15

      @@metouw I can't believe people fall for his marketing , it's a business, not a longevity plan or trying to help humanity. No, he's trying to get richer, and uses ppl's trust and naiveness, like he's offering something new

  • @AngStation
    @AngStation 18 дней назад +111

    I consider myself a general fan of your work, but I have to admit this is one that I am a little hesitant about the messaging for. More testing is not always better. Generally, MRI is pretty safe, but other interventions/testing come with risks such as contrast nephropathy and radiation, or infection anytime you have an IV placed.
    What I'm concerned about is incidental detection, particularly with MRIs. The MRI is so sensitive it can detect "abnormalities" that may not affect survival outcomes at all, but get treated with consequences.
    Medlife Crisis has a good video called, "The Epidemic of Fake Disease" that provides good insight into this concept. It basically boils down to the fact that you can detect things if you just spam testing which does not affect the outcome but may lead to interventions that are not risk-free. A commonly discussed example is regarding prostate cancer. There are people who die from prostate cancer, however there are many who will die of something else and it is detected postmortem that they had prostate cancer. In other words, there are situations where you can die WITH cancer but not FROM cancer. But, say you detected the prostate cancer early, cut your prostate out, and now have urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction post-operatively. You may have compromised your life for something that was never going to give you any trouble.
    I agree with the broad ideas of the mission, but sometimes ideas like testing everyone for everything are not so black and white.

    • @MrObsvenchilde
      @MrObsvenchilde 17 дней назад +10

      I think that you should be able to tell whether an intervention is worth it with a good consultant. So, you don't have to be fearful of testing. I don't think any sane doctor will have you cut your prostate out unless it was deemed absolutely necessary and you were at the edge of your lifespan

    • @bardo3830
      @bardo3830 16 дней назад +3

      @@MrObsvenchilde I can assure you that this happens really often. This is a bit of a sad side of the great medical achievements we made so far as humans. Over treatment as AngStation mentioned is a serious problem: contrast fluid that raise the chance of getting Cancer, young doctors that work after a scheme resulting in mistreatment (they wanted the best for you). After high school I wanted to become a doctor myself. I educated to a paramedic with an internship in a hospital. I noticed that a lot of mistakes happened there.

    • @bluewave7120
      @bluewave7120 16 дней назад +1

      The MRI I's often used without contrast True certain conditions diagnosed will not corelate to increased life span yet others will

    • @j.c.7555
      @j.c.7555 16 дней назад

      @@bardo3830mistakes can start with paramedics

    • @j.c.7555
      @j.c.7555 15 дней назад +1

      @angStation An example of infection anytime you have an IV as a risk is a pretty poor example imo. How many infections have there been vs number of IV s given? IV infection would be the least of my worries..as far as MRI s there is always a risk with slight possibility of later risk depending on individual. Medicine is a science and here we are talking about one MRI that would be voluntary and up to each person if they want it to possibly prevent further health deterioration. .The key is getting someone you trust and has knowledge to read the results. All procedures could potentially be a risk to certain individuals but IV infection as an example? Pretty far fetched to bring up IV infection concern imo. I respect your fear of getting a mri for yourself regardless and definitely not black or white.

  • @nickromanek9444
    @nickromanek9444 7 дней назад +2

    I talked to my doctor about this a few months ago, he gave me the example of someone he knew that had incurable brain cancer so we're better off not knowing about these things which is why he doesnt recommend such prevantative scans
    I honestly couldn't believe what i was hearing out of my doctor's mouth. Even with that example, maybe the guy with incurable cancer would've retired early had he known....I will be looking for a new doctor

  • @OMUNDODETUTU
    @OMUNDODETUTU 18 дней назад +131

    Can you elaborate on your thoughts about early MRIs potentially being counterproductive for health outcomes? I’m close friends with a surgeon, and in the past, we’ve debated the value of MRIs for preventative care. He was adamant that this has been statistically proven to cause more harm due to excessive early interventions. One example he mentioned was that MRIs can prompt more aggressive forms of examinations, which may be harmful to the body. I'm sure this is a counter-argument you have heard before in your effort to make this into a product.

    • @SewingBoxDesigns
      @SewingBoxDesigns 18 дней назад

      Same thing with mammograms. They keep pushing them on women until they find something, and I can't help thinking it causes 'lumps' that become cancerous. I don't know how many times friends and I have been told "a shadow" "dense tissue" " we need to do a biopsy" and it turns out to be nothing more than a large bill!

    • @AndreaMastroberti
      @AndreaMastroberti 18 дней назад +11

      I've heard this very issue mentioned in the podcast he did with Dr Mike

    • @tayloranderson456
      @tayloranderson456 18 дней назад +10

      Prob with advanced screening is the for profit healthcare business model, healthcare always looking for something to "treat" even if they kinda suck at it and do harm. It's wild how many standards of care actually kind suck or do more harm than good. For example doing the coronary calcium score is kind pointless for most people because if you eat the SAD, we already know there is heart disease. Aside from the messed up incentives though it's always good to have more info about your body, especially if getting that info and MRI def do no harm.
      Also there's another conflict of interest with healthcare where less info is actually a good thing for it because it means they catch things later. For example in dentistry they rarely ever do MRIs even though they could catch infections way earlier, which would be bad for business. A lot of thinks make sense to do from a purely health standpoint, just not from a cost standpoint unfortunately.

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 18 дней назад +14

      Your surgeon friend is absolutely correct. (I am also a doctor). The problem is that once something "atypical" is identified we are obligated to investigate further. I do not recommend that anyone who feels well and is asymptomatic to do anything but maybe occasional blood work.

    • @lleallooo
      @lleallooo 18 дней назад +7

      One should also watch out for use of gadolinium contrast media which is used for "MRI with contrast". Emerging research is showing that gadolinium can be highly toxic

  • @ironheavenz
    @ironheavenz 14 дней назад +2

    Dude, I'm so glad you're doing this, even if I can't currently afford to go to the lengths you go the fact this exists also marks the beginning of a trend that will eventually snowball and this is one philosophy that I wish for it to snowball really fast!

  • @BertyBogTrot
    @BertyBogTrot 18 дней назад +104

    I have reached out a few times but i will shoot my shot again from here. I am a UK diagnostic radiography student with a particular interest in MRI and longevity. I would give anything to work with you guys when i qualify in the summer! Thank you for all of the wonderful content! This year i had a shot of EVOO instead of alcohol at new year because of you guys. All the best, Bert.

    • @leslieshatkin707
      @leslieshatkin707 18 дней назад +7

      Sounds like you’re the person for them. Keep trying.

    • @JackLem653
      @JackLem653 18 дней назад +5

      Yeah man keep pushing for it

    • @AshimGarg
      @AshimGarg 18 дней назад +3

      Try contacting them through their email

    • @huuttaanngg
      @huuttaanngg 18 дней назад +5

      LET HIM COOK!!!!

    • @ShareCraftIdeas
      @ShareCraftIdeas 18 дней назад +3

      @@BertyBogTrot Get'em, Bert!

  • @fawzibriedj4441
    @fawzibriedj4441 18 дней назад +160

    Hi Bryan,
    It's the first time that you sell knowledge since the beginning of Blueprint. Can you explain why you don't share the "MRI Scan protocol" and let the doctors use it with their patients everywhere in the world?
    Can you share at least some principles for people to ask their doctor to do a similar (or even a lesser) version of your scan?
    Best regards!

    • @ab185
      @ab185 18 дней назад +36

      Generally speaking, no doctor is going to do this if there's not a medical need for it. Insurance will also not cover it the vast majority of the time.

    • @jamesfranko5098
      @jamesfranko5098 18 дней назад +13

      Why should he? He's put a bunch of time and money into this when others wouldn't because they don't give a shit. Why should they profit off all his effort?

    • @fawzibriedj4441
      @fawzibriedj4441 18 дней назад

      @@ab185 if a doctor knows Blueprint and think it could help detect cancer or other health problems early in his patients, he might implement it.
      For insurance, it depends on the countries.

    • @philipp5142
      @philipp5142 18 дней назад +27

      @@jamesfranko5098 because he said so before lmao

    • @TheRealTommyR
      @TheRealTommyR 18 дней назад +6

      i am pretty sure Brian would share if normal doctors would do it in good faith.

  • @thehealthionaire
    @thehealthionaire 2 дня назад +1

    I'm giving up all of my bad habits overnight, similar to you Bryan. I'll be documenting it on my channel and I'm hoping it can heal my shattered brain. Thanks for your inspo, cheers!

  • @tomsmithtomsmith
    @tomsmithtomsmith 17 дней назад +4

    This is amazing and you are scaling Blueprint up much quicker than I would've ever imagined even just a few months ago. Immensely exciting, promising, heartening, motivating...... Thank you for all of your work, it feels like you are really beginning to move the needle in a measurable way that people in the 25th century will register and feel the effects of.. Maybe we are those people.

  • @ThePankyHam
    @ThePankyHam 18 дней назад +6

    Prices are surprisingly reasonable (At least for the Flash scan). I recently went to South Korea and went through their full body healthcare checkup (That nationals get for free every 2y). It cost me $200 addon to get an MRI of my brain as i was concerned with the amount of headaches I was getting.

    • @Dowper
      @Dowper 18 дней назад

      What was the results?

    • @ThePankyHam
      @ThePankyHam 18 дней назад +2

      @@Dowper They didn't spot anything abnormal that would attribute to the headaches I usually get

    • @muneeb-khan
      @muneeb-khan 18 дней назад

      The flash scan is not done by a radiologist (doctor trained to read the scan). According to the website it is AI.
      Full Body Flash
      30m AI-powered MRI
      Ezra Flash is our FDA-cleared AI image enhancement technology. Our scans are powered by AI-assisted medical reports.

    • @ShareCraftIdeas
      @ShareCraftIdeas 18 дней назад +1

      ​@muneeb-khan the AI part is just used to clean up the images and make them easier to read. It's still read by a radiologist like any other MRI.

  • @michaelpelech3574
    @michaelpelech3574 18 дней назад +37

    It has been 6 months since your father received systematic mesenchymal stem cell treatment. I am his age and an interested in this. Any updates on Dad? Physical or mental improvement. Is the procedure worth it in your opinion?

    • @1ron0xide
      @1ron0xide 18 дней назад +12

      Obviously it had no meaningful effects otherwise Bryan would post about them 32 times per hour.

    • @HiNinqi
      @HiNinqi 17 дней назад

      Maybe there will be an update soon. My relatives have gotten stem cell treatments for lung issues before. At the 6 month mark is supposedly when you'll know if it helped at all or not.

    • @nindoninshu
      @nindoninshu 15 дней назад

      @@1ron0xide he posts about things that aren't effective too, it's about publishing results whether proving effectiveness or ineffectiveness

  • @starkjunior1811
    @starkjunior1811 18 дней назад +18

    Can you bring it to eindhoven? Netherlands

  • @staceywebb7740
    @staceywebb7740 18 дней назад +28

    I had a full body scan it was 2500 dollars canadian.
    It was the best thing for me I had been struggling with RA and it turned out that my knee,thigh and hip pain was from my RA attacking this area.
    However, my rheumatologist had tried many different drugs none were working very well.
    I had chronic pneumonia but my GP could not figure out why.
    I was so frustrated and sick but no one knew what was really happening, so I had the scan done and when the results came back we had a pathway forward.I needed biologics,and methotrexate plus prednisone for my Ra.
    Ozempic to lose weight,because I had fatty organs.
    A month long course of antibiotics for my pneumonia.
    2 yrs later I am in remission ,85lbs lighter,but the most important part was knowing what wasn't wrong with me so we could target what was.
    This is alot of money but I believe it saved my life.

    • @KingRockets
      @KingRockets 18 дней назад +3

      Glad you are feeling better, but you did not need a full body scan to tell you that information or to get started on the medications you outlined. Sounds like poor medical care instead.

    • @AH-mj1rd
      @AH-mj1rd 18 дней назад +1

      What happened to the great free Canadian healthcare I hear about??

    • @nickygill6688
      @nickygill6688 18 дней назад +1

      Where in Canada did you get it done from?

    • @mrgringo7289
      @mrgringo7289 15 дней назад

      what its RA? dont expect everyone to know random shit like that...

  • @Knifehands__
    @Knifehands__ 18 дней назад +9

    I'd love to get routine MRIs, but here in the United States health insurance will not cover it if there isn't a "qualified" reason, which the insurance company gets to decide. They will even deny the coverage if your doctor insists it is needed. This is one reason why so many people die from cancer, because it's so often found late -- all thanks to our health insurance companies.

    • @ChristianKleineidam
      @ChristianKleineidam 18 дней назад +2

      The existing scientific literature suggests that doing routine screening without qualified reasons doesn't lead to fewer people dying. A lot of cancers found that way would disappear on their own without treatment. On the other hand standard cancer treatment has a lot of side effects and the studies we have suggests that it's frequently causing more harm than benefit. Health insurance companies only paying for evidence-based interventions makes a lot of sense to keep healthcare costs down. You need to believe that you would react in a more effective way to a cancer diagnosis than the average patient who just does whatever doctors recommend for it to make sense. There are likely biohackers who can handle a cancer diagnosis well and Bryan with his huge team might effectively deal with a diagnosis, but many people would be harmed.

    • @1ron0xide
      @1ron0xide 18 дней назад +2

      Bryan is terrified of the A-H word (Affordable healthcare) which is hilarious because he brags all day long about buying meaningless devices and professional evaluation/elective treatments.

    • @ShareCraftIdeas
      @ShareCraftIdeas 18 дней назад +2

      I think that's actually the cool thing about this. Normally, you'd have to go thru the motions and get things approved, or get things denied, and then wait for months for a test, then a followup, etc. Even if insurance approves the work, you still have to meet a deductible and pay for all those copays. This costs money, too, but they have payment plans and you don't have to go thru the trouble of all those appointments and follow-ups. There's also a TON of other criteria covered in that scan; hip joints, knee joints, entire spine, body fat composition, pelvis, abdomen... People keep saying it could possibly lead to more appointments, but the MRI alone skips so many appointments because you don't have to go thru weeks of physical therapy and xrays first.

    • @1ron0xide
      @1ron0xide 18 дней назад

      @@ShareCraftIdeas You're so close to figuring it out, aren't you?

    • @ShareCraftIdeas
      @ShareCraftIdeas 18 дней назад

      @@1ron0xide Speak up

  • @roadspike193
    @roadspike193 18 дней назад +457

    Accidentally read Scan as Scam at first.

    • @Wunderkinddd
      @Wunderkinddd 18 дней назад +22

      Get your eyes tested or your brain.

    • @Dansker2009
      @Dansker2009 18 дней назад +69

      @@Wunderkindddchill brutha

    • @tab8294
      @tab8294 18 дней назад +7

      😂😂

    • @Steve-iy5eq
      @Steve-iy5eq 18 дней назад +1

      😅

    • @litare4328
      @litare4328 18 дней назад +23

      ​@@Dansker2009 dude some people in the comment section are crazy, it really looks like a cult
      Especially the community post

  • @jhutt3486
    @jhutt3486 18 дней назад +8

    I truly appreciate your content. thank you

  • @maximustitan8171
    @maximustitan8171 4 дня назад

    Thanks to Bryan hard work and hard spend. He will discovered new things and we will learned from it. Keep going chef!

  • @alexshi9320
    @alexshi9320 18 дней назад +38

    During a MRI scan for a tumor in my neck (dw it was benigin) they also found I had a C4-C5 disk herniation. The doctors were surprised I had like zero symptoms, no headaches no numbness in my appendages, no weakness. So they just ignored it since I'm only 24. MRIs are super useful because they find all sorts of conditions for you to be aware of even though you have no symptoms

    • @lars6317
      @lars6317 18 дней назад +11

      They find completely asymptomatic herniated disks all the time. The incidence of disk degeneration is already around 37% in individuals aged 20-29 years old. It's no reason for concern and in fact having an MRI for non specific pain and finding these features puts you at risk of having unnecessary procedures with their accompanying risks.

    • @carlosdominguez3108
      @carlosdominguez3108 18 дней назад

      This is called an incidental finding. We find all sorts of stuff all over the human body, in just about every single patient. Read your radiology reports. We notate all these things. Don't let them freak you out. Our job is to look at these image, and point out what we see. Unless it's something truly pathological, ignoring these incidental findings is the correct course of action. Otherwise, subjecting a patient to surgery to treat something causing no problems at all results in nothing but more cost to the patient at the very least, and possibly death if something were to happen under anesthesia, etc.

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 18 дней назад +5

      @@alexshi9320 The pain from herniated discs and osteoarthritis varies greatly from person to person. Some are asymptomatic and some can't function for the pain. If you have no symptoms, leave it alone.

    • @icawn
      @icawn 17 дней назад

      Sounds like you're one hop away from daily discomfort and pain by age 40. I hope you make changes to your behaviors today to minimize that wear.

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 16 дней назад

      @@icawn That's not necessarily true. I've had some herniated discs in the lumbar area for at least 20 years and they don't cause any pain or athletic limitations. And I'm almost 55 and do sports (basketball, skiing, hiking, biking) all the time.

  • @jack8831
    @jack8831 16 дней назад +1

    As also Dr. Mike said in at least one video, some conditions won't ever kill us, overcuring can be more dangerous than leaving the condition alone in some cases. Always check with a doctor! 😃

  • @5p674
    @5p674 18 дней назад +24

    Bryan is brilliant at money-making ventures.

    • @mariee.5912
      @mariee.5912 18 дней назад +2

      He needs a lot of money. He's spending 2 million a year on his protocol.

    • @starry_3689
      @starry_3689 18 дней назад +6

      @@mariee.5912 He sold Venmo for 800 million lol. No disrespect, but he definitely doesn't need the money.

    • @mariee.5912
      @mariee.5912 18 дней назад +1

      @@starry_3689 he has a lot of expenses and he will live a long life.

    • @viktorgoa
      @viktorgoa 18 дней назад +3

      @@mariee.5912 lol you fell for the oldest trick in the book, he got your trust, so he can use your money. Go and buy his NFTs and body scans 😂

    • @ryzikx
      @ryzikx 18 дней назад +2

      he is a businessman. he provides value, you pay for it. its a win win. capitalism at work

  • @eduardom3209
    @eduardom3209 16 дней назад

    it was through an mri machine that i learned that i had a life threatening tumor in my spinal nerve, the surgery was very complicated but i am alive and walking now

  • @posie.
    @posie. 18 дней назад +35

    That's a MRIcle!

  • @Momoluckyspace
    @Momoluckyspace 9 дней назад

    Qing shi huang emperor entire life looks for one immortality pill for eternal life. You work so damn hard to stay young and eternal. I truly admire your persistence and discipline!

  • @thisistotallyfine
    @thisistotallyfine 18 дней назад +11

    That carhartt tee makes Bryan age even younger

  • @creaturecomfort5545
    @creaturecomfort5545 14 дней назад

    Wow, this is huge! Last year, I tried to get a lower abdominal MRI to address pelvic pain and my insurance wouldn't cover it without a pre-existing condition.

  • @OzgurMehmet-y6m
    @OzgurMehmet-y6m 17 дней назад +264

    Everyone watching this go find the book the hidden herbs by anette ray

  • @kenbobcorn
    @kenbobcorn 18 дней назад +3

    One of the reasons why people dont get routine MRI scans is because of 1) the cost, and 2) catching an incidental finding actually leads to more hardship and lower standard of living than not finding an incidental in the first place. Would have been interested for you to actually see the longterm effects of such a protocol, rather than just say everyone is better off by getting an MRI test done like so.

    • @MrObsvenchilde
      @MrObsvenchilde 17 дней назад +1

      Nothing says you have to treat an incidental finding. The scan is not the culprit. Your treatment risk analysis is the culprit

    • @kenbobcorn
      @kenbobcorn 17 дней назад +1

      @@MrObsvenchilde Absolutely, you are correct. Studies have shown incidental findings lead to long term stressors, and its very often not recommended to get scans willy nilly.

    • @nindoninshu
      @nindoninshu 15 дней назад +1

      @@kenbobcorn that probably just means too many people have anxiety

  • @Ritze007
    @Ritze007 18 дней назад +25

    You‘ve gotta launch in Europe!
    Best wishes from Germany!

    • @rancortv6186
      @rancortv6186 18 дней назад +3

      No need, you can already pay out of pocket for a scan.

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 18 дней назад

      That would be an IGeL Leistung that nobody can afford.

    • @viktorgoa
      @viktorgoa 18 дней назад +3

      yea, make the guy richer than he is, and pay thousands of dollars if you have any spare money lol. His offer starts ONLY $1300 all the way up to $6000.
      Or, just do MRI elsewhere for less. The guy provides NFTs he said in the livestream, which enough for me to say this is all marketing, borderline scam, nothing to do with longevity.
      Not to mention, that he looks sick - still, and someone's look says a lot more about health than the those measurements.

    • @iwsntlistening
      @iwsntlistening 18 дней назад

      @@viktorgoa You seems like you are his biggest fan lol

    • @viktorgoa
      @viktorgoa 18 дней назад

      @@iwsntlistening I was a fan the beginning, not going to lie. But what makes you still a fan?

  • @AleksandarT10
    @AleksandarT10 18 дней назад +61

    Whenever the prices come down to few hundred dollars - that would make sense for normal people.

    • @joezupko
      @joezupko 17 дней назад

      There's no real money in helping normal people though.
      Majority of high level health stuff is meant for people making $100k+ per year.
      Unfortunately, if you don't make a lot of money you're more likely to not live as long.
      Lower income people are less likely to workout, have access to healthy groceries, get annual checkups, etc.
      Great motivation for me (and hopefully others) to up my income 💪

    • @JakeSlaughterr
      @JakeSlaughterr 15 дней назад +2

      What do you mean “normal people” not sure where you are from but most people can afford this.

    • @HM-vf8vh
      @HM-vf8vh 15 дней назад +1

      @@JakeSlaughterr lol no. 80% of the world population make less then 2000$ per month before taxes. so not even close

    • @HM-vf8vh
      @HM-vf8vh 15 дней назад

      @@JakeSlaughterr Just in case you say "Oh but In US wE dO" 80% of the US make less then 70k before taxes. I am pretty sure they can't afford 5k blueprint + MRI that insurance won't cover. There is nothing wrong with selling to rich though. some can afford, while others don't. Let's just not be ignorant about this.

    • @Reelix
      @Reelix 8 дней назад

      @@JakeSlaughterr Most people can't afford his $1500 / month regular Blueprint Protocol.
      Minimum wage in the US is top 1% earning globally, and he doesn't do regional pricing.

  • @juhomalmi
    @juhomalmi 17 дней назад

    I'm praying that you're able to expand this to Europe soon! Your work in providing data and services for longevity is so crucial since nobody else is doing it but it's so badly needed.

  • @nickpiovesan4361
    @nickpiovesan4361 18 дней назад +10

    MRI is great, making the protocol cheaper is great.
    Revolutionizing health = automating and reducing the cost of MRI technology, making it more accessible to more people. Brian you mentioned in your most recent video you have a 1bil don't die movement size for 2027, there's no way to get there unless people not only see you providing information, but also taking steps to address the root causes of health inequality: cost.

    • @Knifehands__
      @Knifehands__ 18 дней назад +4

      That is an unfortunate irony in his message; everything he has offered is, well... expensive. And "expensive" is arguably one of the leading causes of death. My concern is that his "movement" will really only be available to rich elites. On the bright side, the 3 major factors of your overall health are easily obtainable: stop eating junk, get your sleep, and exercise.

    • @bossgd100
      @bossgd100 18 дней назад

      There is startups already working on smaller and cheaper MRI

  • @logical_lb3059
    @logical_lb3059 3 дня назад

    Brian is the kindest vampire in history

  • @contagiousintelligence5007
    @contagiousintelligence5007 18 дней назад +11

    Hello Bryan, I have just seen your Netflix documentary. I expected longevity advice, but instead I got family drama lol. But it’s okay, you’re a nice human being. Best of luck with your work!

    • @mamenamamena
      @mamenamamena 18 дней назад +1

      That’s netflix for ya. At least they didn’t drag it out for 3 seasons of suspense music as they do.

  • @Nathanrios95
    @Nathanrios95 12 дней назад +1

    Yea once I get a good job with benefits and making more money sure I will get an MRI scan but other than that I am staying healthy, active , an being more conscious what I put in my body ..❤😊

  • @jeb6183
    @jeb6183 18 дней назад +65

    Feels like Bryan is going pretty hard on selling us anything and everything at this point.

    • @matthewdawson9364
      @matthewdawson9364 18 дней назад +18

      Living forever is pricy apparently

    • @hellonomasonto
      @hellonomasonto 18 дней назад +3

      And I haven't decided yet if that's a good thing or a bad thing.

    • @viktorgoa
      @viktorgoa 18 дней назад

      @@jeb6183 his 200M net worth is not enough. He also has NFTs if anyone is interested in burning money

    • @mattdannald
      @mattdannald 17 дней назад

      @@matthewdawson9364
      Guys, I need $10 billion more dollars to reach my goal of living forever. If you come together and help me reach my goal, I’ll be there when your great grandkids are adults. By that time, I will have developed a system that’s affordable, so most people will have a chance at immortality.

    • @HiNinqi
      @HiNinqi 17 дней назад +5

      It's awesome having access to an MRI this cheap and easily. When I was sick as a kid it took like 2 yrs and 70k to get a MRI approved.

  • @mohammedwassouf2695
    @mohammedwassouf2695 18 дней назад +1

    Speaking of cancer
    I really hope that you'd give more information /advice focused on this subject
    We know there's a whole lot of articles abt this topic.. But I think nobody really cares as you do
    You are my favorite health information source ❤

  • @Obliviono
    @Obliviono 18 дней назад +6

    Arteries carry blood away from the heart, and veins carry blood towards the heart. With the exception of pulmonary blood vessels, arteries carry oxygenated blood and veins carry deoxygenated blood. Arteries have thick walls with muscle tissue. Veins have thinner walls and use valves to keep your blood flowing.
    Source: I searched it on the web.

    • @KingRockets
      @KingRockets 18 дней назад

      What is this the point of this comment?

    • @gendalfbeast213
      @gendalfbeast213 13 дней назад

      @@KingRocketsbecause in the video mistake on this matter

  • @Halljand
    @Halljand 11 дней назад

    Full body MRIs are not really routine… but I’m glad they caught this of course.

  • @MattieLove
    @MattieLove 18 дней назад +47

    Great content, as always! Your hard work really shows.

  • @AFpaleoCon
    @AFpaleoCon 18 дней назад +9

    Do a video on lifespan effects of x-rays.

  • @olebrumm1995
    @olebrumm1995 16 дней назад

    you should make a program where a person can do a mri scan at their local hospital and then request to get the file on a thump drive so that the person can send the file to one of your facilities. this way everyone that can get a mri can from a local hospital could get a top level opinion and it likely would be cheaper to :)

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 14 дней назад

      He's not less expensive, though. Plus, you still have to pay a radiologist for Interpretation.

  • @spacetimeranus
    @spacetimeranus 18 дней назад +22

    Rooting for you Bryan. I wish I could get as bricked up as you.

    • @cp37373
      @cp37373 18 дней назад

      Just eat a lot of cheese. That’ll brick you up real nice.

    • @MrTiktok33
      @MrTiktok33 18 дней назад +1

      Bryan's reply gon be devious

  • @lukekemsley2138
    @lukekemsley2138 9 дней назад

    Finished watching your show.
    Fairly similar life and upbringing to mine along with religion and relationships.
    I really hope everything works for you and longevity of life for you and your children. Fuck the haters!

  • @emmyorzi9488
    @emmyorzi9488 18 дней назад +5

    Thank you Bryan. This is absolutely fantastic news! I am only 44 and I found out that I had a brain tumor a couple of years ago. I had no symptoms until I had three grand mal seizures (out of nowhere) and wound up going through hell with chemo and radiation. I kept asking myself why aren’t MRI’s part of our routine care? I am so glad you are working on this. I’m truly grateful. 🙏

  • @ManuelMartínez-i9z
    @ManuelMartínez-i9z 4 дня назад

    Radiologist here, the professional actually qualified to talk about this. The vascular structures shown in red at the beginning are the common and internal carotid arteries not the yugular veins. Whole body MRI is not done because its not cost effective from a healthcare perspective but also because its can lead to many rabbit holes and unnecessary and invasive procedures for incidental findings which can be iatrogenic, no radiology or medical organization promotes this. As the hipoccratic oath states, primum non nocere, first of all do not harm. I wouldn’t entrust a body MRI protocol to an influencer who doesn’t know the difference between a vein and an artery but to each their own.

  • @0505-u2z
    @0505-u2z 18 дней назад +11

    we need this in France

  • @Yellow_Afryca
    @Yellow_Afryca 18 дней назад +2

    The scan cost is worth more than my life

  • @nutsbutdum
    @nutsbutdum 18 дней назад +4

    Can't wait for the international version. Thank you Bryan!

  • @EL-mg9st
    @EL-mg9st 18 дней назад +2

    Just frickin' WOW. This is AMAZING. Thank you BluePrint Team!!!! :)

  • @sebas_par_03
    @sebas_par_03 18 дней назад +13

    Bro, what do you mean with cheap? The full body costs more than 5.000$ 💀

    • @sebas_par_03
      @sebas_par_03 18 дней назад +2

      And the "cheapest" is 1.300, I don't know men, I think you are starting to do a very nice business with this.

    • @RIP212
      @RIP212 18 дней назад

      ​@@sebas_par_03for US it's incredibly reasonable. In US calling an ambulance without health insured would cost you like 5-8k USD. These prices are OK for rich countries. A bit on an expensive side, but it's a proprietary Ai driven (which is proven to be extremely good at spotting things consistently and even better than humans) software as well with the top notch equipment.
      Basic scan in Poland now is 300 of only one section of your body. Whole spine is around 600 USD, add head and other parts, that would be nearing 1000 USD.
      And that's in Poland. I'm sure that in richer countries that would be near 1300-1400 EUR private.
      Abd that's probably with 5-10 years old equipment.
      This one is top notch.
      So, yeah, a bit on expensive side (especially full full scan), but for US is reasonable. If it will be like 30-40% cheaper in EU, then it would be perfect for our market.

    • @Yvessaintleben
      @Yvessaintleben 18 дней назад +3

      @@sebas_par_03you want it for $30 bruh ?😭

    • @TRXST.ISSUES
      @TRXST.ISSUES 18 дней назад

      @@YvessaintlebenI do

    • @bobbybrown1258
      @bobbybrown1258 18 дней назад +2

      MRI scans are stupid expensive. For a full body. I dread to think what private clinic normally charges for that

  • @tealautomaton5931
    @tealautomaton5931 18 дней назад +1

    This is absolutely brilliant. Thank you Bryan! Please bring it to New Zealand.

  • @lucbassompierre
    @lucbassompierre 18 дней назад +5

    Thank you for your dedication and sacrifice. I hope Ezra makes it’s way to Cape Town soon. Asking for an contrasted MRI just because I would like a deeper assessment of where I’m at and being told the bloods don’t require one is like telling me the paint on my car isn’t chipped therefore my engine is fine. My Dad was a doctor and is no longer with us, so I like to think I have a better understanding of the human body than a choo-choo train.
    I’m 48 and I’ve pretty much treated my body and mind like it won’t die since I was 18. All of a sudden alarm bells go off, when one has a good read on their body it’s scary… so you have my attention and gratitude. In the process of living, don’t die got brushed aside. It’s time or we’ll be out of time.

    • @viktorgoa
      @viktorgoa 18 дней назад

      lol just look at the hefty price he is asking before you praise this guy. This is nothing but a sales pitch

    • @lleallooo
      @lleallooo 18 дней назад +1

      PSA: There is emerging research showing that gadolinium contrast media injected for "contrasted MRI" can be highly toxic. I encourage you to do more research about gadolinium poisoning / toxicity.
      I predict it will be banned in decades to come... for me right now, I would not let them put that stuff in my bloodstream unless my life depended upon it (just my own personal opinion so take it with a grain of salt)

    • @JoanneLang-e3h
      @JoanneLang-e3h 18 дней назад

      Don't be so eager for contrast... gadolinium is a heavy metal that lodges in the brain and can't be detoxed. Standard medicine is happy to inject you with it without ensuring that you are well hydrated prior.

  • @jobe4721
    @jobe4721 18 дней назад +1

    Thanks Bryan. This is a big step forward. Keep up the great work and I appreciate that most of your content is free.

  • @nadiaaraujo209
    @nadiaaraujo209 18 дней назад +4

    hope this becomes as viral as k-beauty skincare consultations. Good Job!

  • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
    @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep 14 дней назад

    Despite all you've done, something as simple? as this could very well be by far the most significant and impactful thing you've done to save lives at least in the immediate. It's crazy this never existed before you did it with all the mri scans being done and all that data not being utilized and gone over fully for other issues. This could easily save a lot of lives. Now we just need cheap annual mri's anyone can get.

  • @leslieshatkin707
    @leslieshatkin707 18 дней назад +3

    This is honestly worth the money. At 64 years old I’ve never had an MRI. Looking at locations in New York City right now, but also I live in Buffalo so I put my location for future scans.

  • @AndreyMakarov-i7h
    @AndreyMakarov-i7h 5 дней назад

    You need to look into heme iron and it's role in aging. It could be that one thing that causes 80% of problems.

  • @travo6805
    @travo6805 18 дней назад +5

    I think Bryan should be more public with Blueprint’s finances if he truly wants the Don’t Die movement to go anywhere. As more and more of these products and services come out, skepticism will increase beyond where it already is.

  • @XtineJohnes
    @XtineJohnes 16 дней назад +1

    Thanks for helping us and saving us, Bryan!!

  • @KajSeVai
    @KajSeVai 18 дней назад +13

    Once it is in Germany and I am on private insurance as a teacher I'm so gonna get your routine full body MRIs haha but ain't no way I am traveling to the US as 24y/o and pay 6k for the full thing haha
    anyhow amazing work! Please do expand on this it is literally saving and going to save lives.

    • @Dzeuss4
      @Dzeuss4 13 дней назад

      It is already in Germany, and already has been for years, no insurrence pays for it tho, you have to pay everything yourself.

  • @sahilkhurana_
    @sahilkhurana_ 18 дней назад +1

    What about angiographie or CT angiographie, especially considering that cardiac issues are one of the biggest killers in the world and plaque build up can be detected decades in advance

  • @trento6297
    @trento6297 18 дней назад +3

    I’ve tried to use the Ezra service and got stonewalled. They list Dallas as an available location but after calling the MRI office I was informed that theyve never even heard of Ezra. Not a good look.

    • @KingRockets
      @KingRockets 18 дней назад

      These are not Ezra locations. These are already established MRI imaging clinics. Ezra is just the middle man that acts as a broker. You and I can create a company and reach out to MRI clinics and have a similar arrangement, assuming we had enough customers. An MRI clinic can have affiliations with dozens of different companies, so I am not surprised that their reception may not be up to date with Ezra.

  • @yaacovcorcos
    @yaacovcorcos 17 дней назад

    0:16 Both internal jagular veins carry blood from the brain toward the heart.
    The arteries that carry blood to the brain are the internal carotid arteries and the vertebral arteries.

  • @thehealthionaire
    @thehealthionaire 17 дней назад +7

    Can we just agree once and for all that Bryan is doing humanity a huge favor? He even inspired me to document my own journey on my channel where I quit every bad habit overnight.

    • @rayleo8333
      @rayleo8333 13 дней назад +1

      No, he's a health influencer selling supplements and protocols. In the end he might use the money to add a couple of decades to his life.

  • @gamerroger1146
    @gamerroger1146 12 дней назад

    If you have that, you seriously get an MRA of your brain because there's possibly you could have a small brain aneurysm that could have been missed in MRI scanning of the brain.

  • @mcheddadi
    @mcheddadi 18 дней назад +5

    As a medical doctor, i'm watching with great interest. we are taught that routine mri is a a big no no and a massive waste of resources but you can't argue with "if i have the means then why shouldn't i do it routinely". i guess you guys in the usa have as much mri machines and techs as blood work machines and respective techs. lucky !

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 18 дней назад +3

      It is a waste of resources, but a LOT of people have money to burn.

    • @viktorgoa
      @viktorgoa 18 дней назад +1

      he is a scammer, selling NFTs as well, go and get those as well. And go and make him richer than he is lol.

    • @Xamerax
      @Xamerax 17 дней назад

      @@viktorgoaI believe that even if he starts with good intentions, he will end up as a scammer if not already. he builds his brand so much on ” i will/have found the way” that I don’t think he will really back out if he finds out it all doesn’t work like that (like his blueprint stuff)

    • @childofaether8733
      @childofaether8733 14 дней назад

      If you're a doctor you should know the problem is not just the cost but also that it has negative benefit/risk balance due to the MRI very frequently finding irrelevant anomalies that were of no consequence. Often times, these irrelevant findings cannot help your health outcomes and make things worse because of anxiety or side effects of treating anomalies that were and would have remained benign.

  • @upgradeyourtennis
    @upgradeyourtennis 18 дней назад +1

    You are inspiring. Thank you for discovering things. Please keep going.

  • @erik4177
    @erik4177 18 дней назад +4

    For people like me, who are more on the neurotic side of things, this is a recipe for going crazy. I would like to do this since I care a lot about my health, but I know for sure I would hyper-obsess over every little thing that's not 100% perfect. There's something to be said for accepting uncertainty and maintaining your peace of mind. Just my two cents.

  • @wildswan221
    @wildswan221 18 дней назад

    Fascinating work he's doing here. People want to fuss and nitpick, but everyone understood the core of what he was saying. he's done a great job with all this stuff.
    Bryan, are you looking at alternative contrast agents for the MRI? I saw some trials...

  • @wbae1340
    @wbae1340 17 дней назад +8

    Bryan, there are a lot of problems and misinformation with this video:
    -regular imagining for no specific reason is more harmful than it is good in the vast majority of cases.
    -finding the “age” of your organs is pointless. All this will do is give you more anxiety and depression if the age isn’t what you want it to be. If you are already doing everything you should be doing (sleep, diet, exercise) there is NOTHING you can do about it except allow that number to consume you negatively. And on the other side, you shouldn’t allow a number on a MRI to dictate how hard you work in life. You shouldn’t allow be striving to live that lifestyle no matter why. No matter the results of the MRI unless they are life threatening (ex a cancer is found) nothing in your life changes…….. you would still be doing the exact same thing as you were before the results. Except now you wasted a bunch of money, time of healthcare, etc

  • @staceywebb7740
    @staceywebb7740 18 дней назад

    I had it done at Prenuvo in Vancouver.
    I paid for this because I was frustrated because I had many x-rays,blood test,etc.
    My doctors had no idea this was available but it eliminated cancer,etc and clarified exactly what was wrong.
    When you have multiple chronic illnesses it is very difficult to pin point which illness is causing the issues.
    No Canadians have gone bankrupt because of illness or injury,unless it happens in the USA.

  • @nathan-498
    @nathan-498 18 дней назад +4

    This coupled with AI recognition will be immensely powerful.

    • @Reelix
      @Reelix 8 дней назад

      AI is well known for false positives and false negatives...

  • @chrisbell8418
    @chrisbell8418 18 дней назад +1

    I am definitely doing this. I’ve been wanting to do a full body MRI for a long time as I have a ton of joint pain and 2 fake hips. The carnivore diet can’t fix the pain issues and I’m looking for new ways forward.

    • @Andreabay90
      @Andreabay90 18 дней назад +2

      Why would you do carnivore diet? what about anti oxidants etc to heal inflammation? or can't you eat vegetables fruit legumes herbs fruit?

  • @weksauce
    @weksauce 18 дней назад +4

    These MRIs are not good. They're expensive, and they're fishing expeditions. Most of what they DO find will not have ever been harmful. In all likelihood, Bryan's arteries/veins woulda been fine and never killed him. What they DON'T find might still kill you.

  • @BeaBagsik
    @BeaBagsik 17 дней назад

    Gosh you have no idea how much I admire you and your dedication ! ☺️

  • @LisaCulton
    @LisaCulton 18 дней назад +5

    As a medical doctor, I do not recommend asymptomatic people of any age to go around getting tests "to see if anything is wrong". Believe me, something WILL be found and then you're in store for bloodwork, different types of biopsies, and more imaging. And in the end, you may wind up with parts of perfectly good organs removed from your body, if not the whole organ. If you feel healthy, you most likely ARE healthy.

    • @Roadkiller85
      @Roadkiller85 18 дней назад

      Thanks, exactly my opinion as a physician (surgical pathologist)! People shoud stop worrying about death. Stop that hybris of trying to stop this. Nothing good comes from hybris.

    • @allan53412
      @allan53412 18 дней назад +1

      If you feel healthy, you are most likely healthy, never heard a bunch of BS like that, much less from the mouth of a supposed MD. Have you heard about high blood pressure, the so called asymptomatic "silent killer"? The point of having a routine MRI scan is to find cancer before you feel the symptoms because at the point you feel the symptoms, it's most likely too late to save you. Have you heard of preventative medecine and curative medecine and which one is better in your opinion? Sure, it would clog the public health services if everyone was to do one every year and insurances wouldn't pay one to you just to prevent you from a 20% chance of having a serious condition but if you have enough money to do one, why wouldn't you?
      Also, the fact that you are a MD is worthless. The number of MDs that gave me garbage opinions on things that were completely outdated compared to research foundable on internet. Your knowledge is likely 30 years old so stop acting like you know better than him, it's because of ancient people like you that progress is held back every year.

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 18 дней назад

      ​@@Roadkiller85I'm a Pathologist too!!!🔬🧫🧬

    • @veniaminneofytidis9525
      @veniaminneofytidis9525 18 дней назад +1

      Yeah a routine MRI Every 5 years will not hurt anybody and he said about older people

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 18 дней назад

      @veniaminneofytidis9525 I've seen people live past 100 in good health without getting a single MRI. But go ahead and get it, if that will make you feel better.

  • @dumb_nauka
    @dumb_nauka 18 дней назад

    It's nice to see that the fat grafting eventually yielded positive results. It really does look much better!

  • @JohnSmith-rq8hw
    @JohnSmith-rq8hw 18 дней назад +5

    I read scam instead of scan on the title

  • @Gngrcpl
    @Gngrcpl 18 дней назад +1

    Just watched your documentary. You’re doing good work Bryan. Of course not many can or wool do everything you are doing. But at least maybe people will be inspired to eat clean and exercise

  • @samuelgregson5336
    @samuelgregson5336 18 дней назад +3

    I’m a neuroradiologist based in the UK.
    I’m a little concerned that you have personally ‘built’ an MRI protocol, yet are seemingly confused that veins are ‘taking blood’ to the brain.
    Many people have a smaller internal jugular vein on one side and often unilateral hypoplastic transverse and jugular sinuses.
    You said this is ‘life threatening’ which is clearly wrong. You later say this is ‘congenital’, which means from birth, which clearly demonstrates you’ve been able to live with this for 40+ years, ‘without dying’.
    MRI studies are useful when used in the appropriate setting, ‘screening’ scans can have significant issues associated with them, often causing significant anxiety in patients with ‘incidentalomas’.
    Cheers

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton 18 дней назад +1

      It's all true and we have more than enough to do without every clinic being clogged with patients demanding rapid treatment for their various incidentalomas.
      The case that sticks with me the most was a Whipple procedure being performed for a "pancreatic mass" seen on imaging...and it turned out to be a small accessory spleen. The entire pancreas was 100% normal and healthy.

  • @Yapels
    @Yapels 18 дней назад +1

    Love you Bryan! Thanks for sharing your journey with us!

  • @einstitute7986
    @einstitute7986 18 дней назад +3

    $5680

  • @tomas.kenzgaila
    @tomas.kenzgaila 18 дней назад

    Thanks for pushing this forward. Having done some MRIs in the past I quickly realised how idiotic is to scan just one side of my hip then have a surgery done based on the results of that half hip scan.

  • @anon-p1o
    @anon-p1o 10 дней назад

    1. Jugular stenosis is not a life threatening condition.
    2. A full body MRI scan cannot rule out cancer.

  • @DaedalusKrieger
    @DaedalusKrieger 15 дней назад

    Appreciate the work you did, but $1295 to $5695 is still unaffordable for most of the population. Full body MRI is considered an elective procedure and not covered by most health insurance providers in the US.

  • @kenbobcorn
    @kenbobcorn 18 дней назад +1

    Would be interesting to know what the stake Bryan has in the company or any proceedings. This channel is usually pretty open about when products are being advertised, and when they are not. If there is a financial incentive for this type of work, it speaks to whether or not this is sound medical advice or not. Would like to know if there is a referral bonus being given and if Bryan has a monetary stake in the medical scanning clinics.

  • @Asaeax
    @Asaeax 18 дней назад +1

    Bryan thank you so so so much for all that you do. You are so darn great. Thank you!!!!

  • @kklein180
    @kklein180 9 дней назад

    I have to save up for about 6 months for the Ezra scan, will this still be available?
    Thank you so much! You guys are incredible, I am so grateful for all your trail blazing.

  • @haraldhorvath1089
    @haraldhorvath1089 18 дней назад +2

    6000 $ for a scan. Ah, now he has figured out how to make billions with it.”

  • @kbkesq
    @kbkesq 18 дней назад

    That’s fantastic Bryan. I cobbled together some MRIs but totally agree the facilities aren’t out of he fast most of the time. I’ve done prostate and brain.

  • @NihilIslands
    @NihilIslands 16 дней назад

    US Customs & Patents approves procedures also blueprint is one and it needs testing and approving...Dont expect it to be in your State Health Insurance

  • @Jetty-hs6kx
    @Jetty-hs6kx 18 дней назад

    Early symptom
    Reduced blood flow to the brain is an early and persistent symptom of AD. A study published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease found that reduced blood flow precedes brain tissue loss in the early stages of AD

  • @adelaczyz8315
    @adelaczyz8315 6 дней назад +1

    I see a commercial for sure.

  • @hellonomasonto
    @hellonomasonto 18 дней назад +2

    3:00 Spelling error of 'kidney' right at the bottom of the checklist!