I’m no doctor, but I think the cause of morning sickness is pregnancy.
I’m no doctor, but I think they know the leading cause of pregnancy as well.
OK, I’ll bite: how DID you stumble upon such a font of truth and knowledge?
Let’s just say “Facebook” and “blood relation”.
Werewolves
What the hell do you think they are, pickled?
Pickling is actually a form of anaerobic fermentation. Fermentation is not just converting sugars to alcohol, it also covers conversion to acid.
Beer?
Huh. Ignorance fought.
Jack Daniels and jello shots?
OT, but this is one of the big reason that I unfriended everyone on FB, and refuse all requests.
I keep the account for some data sharing on useful apps, but I don’t want any of the BS.
I have a few pretty darn interesting relatives on FB, too. Some are blood relatives, some are by marriage. I don’t know which set is worse.
That’s a Hiding Their Feed if nothing else.
And sitting at the opposite end of the table at family dinners.
Just look at it as tagging so you can tell which kids aren’t vaccinated.
And that’s why doctors want you to stay away from fermented products. If you KEEP drinking it, you end up with twins.
Actually “Papa Smurf” there is the result of a rare genetic trait being concentrated over several generations within a limited gene pool in a geographically diverse area. Google “the blue Fugates of Troublesome Creek, KY” or “methemoglobinemia” to learn more. It’s actually quite fascinating, IMHO.
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While methemoglobinemia does exist in Kentucky, often in association with the surname Fugate, the “papa smurf” in the link is NOT suffering from that disorder. He really did achieve that skin color via colloidal silver. His name is Paul Karason and his story made the rounds of the media a few years ago.
That is 100% incorrect. The picture was of Paul Karason who famously promoted the use of colloidal silver. He recently died.
Oh wow, ignorance fought. I’ve only ever seen his picture lumped in with blue Fugate pictures and never had a back story.
Actually the quote was
It references HG, which I assume means hyperemesis gravidarum (sp?), which means really really bad morning sickness.
A biopsy is not routine in handling morning sickness of ANY level. If a woman’s symptoms were such that h pylori was suspected, then yeah, a significant percentage might well come up positive.
But the rest. Egad, the stoopid, it BURNSSSSSSSS.
Also, whenever someone references a percentage, your first thought should ALWAYS be, “what was the sample size?” 100% of 2 people and 100% of 40,000 people tell you different things.