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Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
New patient story.

This one will challenge everything you think you know about medicine.

Bill is 62.

6 years ago (left picture), his doctors told him:

“Go home and enjoy whatever time you have left. There is nothing more we can do.”

He just went snowshoeing.

🧵
Thread image
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
At 56, he was:

• Wheelchair bound
• Functionally quadriplegic
• 320 lbs
• On endless medications

Not one condition. Multiple complex and debilitating diagnoses. 👇
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
Diagnoses:

• Myasthenia gravis
• Dilated cardiomyopathy (heart failure with EF 30%)
• Arrhythmias (Atrial fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia)
• Pulmonary embolism
• Antiphospholipid syndrome
• POTS

Seen by multiple specialists at a top academic center.
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
Primary care. Neurology. Rheumatology. Cardiology.

Their conclusion?

“We’ve done everything we can.”

“Enjoy whatever time you have left.”

That’s where most stories end.

We’re talking about a guy who was very athletic and fit as the picture below shows before he got sick.
Thread image
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
His wife refused to accept that.

She started researching. She took over the kitchen.

Elimination diet first.
Then strict carnivore (Lion’s Diet).

Meat. Salt. Bone broth.
Nothing else.

For 12 months.
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
What happened next shouldn’t happen according to conventional thinking.

Within 6 weeks:

He started getting his strength back.

He got out of the wheelchair.

Not because a doctor adjusted his medications.

Because his wife changed what was on his plate.
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
At 12 months:

• Down 100 lbs
• Hiking
• Cycling
• Fully active

From “enjoy whatever time you have left” to fully alive.
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
Today, at 62, he is 195 lbs with:

• Heart failure: Gone
• Myasthenia gravis: Gone
• POTS: Gone
• Systematically coming off medications

This winter he went snowshoeing.

Look at that photo again. That’s not weight loss. That’s a different life.
Thread image
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
Here’s where it gets uncomfortable.

Some of his doctors looked at the labs, the imaging, the chart and said:

“Your lifestyle changes likely saved your life.”

His primary care doctor still tells him he’s killing himself with his diet.

The concern? His cholesterol. LDL ~ 300.
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
Let that sink in.

A man goes from wheelchair-bound and multi-system disease to active, independent, and off medications.

And the focus is his LDL.

We are so obsessed with numbers we’ve forgotten to recognize health.
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
Even his cardiologist told me that his myasthenia gravis could have been caused by lifelong statin therapy that he used to be on.

But his PCP?

Still tells him he’s killing himself.

Ignores the 125 lb weight loss.
Ignores the remission in heart failure and myasthenia gravis.

Ignores the fact that a wheelchair-bound man is now hiking mountains.
Elie Jarrouge, MD
@ElieJarrougeMD
Bill didn’t get better because of the system, but because one person refused to give up on him.

Food did what four specialists couldn’t.

Most will say: “That’s just one case.”

Exactly.

One case that should make every physician stop and ask:

Why aren’t we trying this first?
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