Power Grid stability: At first, it will... - Fight Prostate Ca...

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Power Grid stability

Justfor_ profile image
26 Replies

At first, it will sound as irrelevant to PCa, but my belief is that the medical community should learn from other industries when prescribing dosages. In a nut shell, more can be disastrous. Today, Sunday morning at 10 AM, as you can see from the attached graph, the grid voltage went crazy. Grid voltage (nominal value: 230V +10%/-15%) went as down as to 136V on the graphed phase, causing a led lamp to dim-off completely, and up to ~270V on the other 2 phases of the 3 phase low tension distribution system. You may want to how/why this happened. The answer is easy: Sunday morning the grid power consumption was at its lows, the sky was clear and there was also a light breeze of air. The photovoltaic and wind production plants were pumping energy on the grid at their fullest, while the overall consumption was low. The perfect scenario for a black out! If you look at the graph closer, you will spot out that stability returned twice after deep notches. Grid protection was probably auto-activated to shed off photovoltaic and/or wind power plants, or compensate for the unused real/imaginary power in any other way.

Now you may understand my Bicalutamide maneuvers. More, than needed, Bicalutamide may promote castrate resistance . Well, this is relevant to PCa. No?

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Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_
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26 Replies
julianc profile image
julianc

As I understand it, you are monitoring to take the min amount of Bicalutamide to keep psa below a certain level. Makes a lot of sense, especially if you think that the total amount of Bicalutamide consumed to date is related to the development of castrate resistance, is that the theory? If I decide to avoid SRT I may consider a similar approach with the E2 gel. It also has always seemed odd to me that medical dosage is not usually related to body mass. I weigh 105kg+ but am not really that overweight for build and height, but i find myself taking the same dosage of things that an adult nearly half my weight would take ... which seems odd!

I wish you continued success :)

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to julianc

Thanks for your kind wishes. The level is not the primary target. The stability is. I have been using a lab that reports PSA to the second decimal place. The analyzer they use is a Cobas 8000 e801-1, e801-2, by Roche, advertised to have a Limit of Detection (LoD) of 0.010 and a Limit of Quantification (LoQ) of 0.014. I got 3 consecutive monthly tests of <0.01. Most people here would go around and brag about it. I was very concerned because "undetectable" is synonymous to "I have no idea were I am at". I switched to a different lab that reports to the third decimal place and uses an ALINITY ΜΤ-24-01 by ABBOTT with a LoD of 0.003. Now, I know were I am at and can adjust dosing for equilibrium. That is, for every hormone sensitive newborn cell, one existing should be killed or put to sleep, otherwise the hormone indifferent will fill the void like gases fill any vacuum. I don't believe that this mild pressure on the hormone sensitive cells will 100% block the advent of their dreaded cousins, but at least I find it very silly to throw welcome parties in their honour.

ragnar2020 profile image
ragnar2020 in reply to Justfor_

Justfor_. Now that is a lovely metaphor, “I find it very silly to throw welcome parties in their honour.” Explained and spoken not like any SOC MO whom I’ve ever encountered.

ElRanchoDePoisonIvy profile image
ElRanchoDePoisonIvy in reply to Justfor_

Care to name the lab that reports to the third decimal? I’m looking around.

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to ElRanchoDePoisonIvy

If you plan to come over here* on vacations anytime, I will be happy to provide full info. Prices are also good, 14 Euros, or about 16 USD(*) Greece

cujoe profile image
cujoe

Justfor_, You and ragnar just made my day! As the trademarked saying at one of the CLL patient support sites, CLL Society, reads, "Smart Patients Get Smart Care™".

Some big brains thinking large and finding those connecting patterns using lots of "Range" to do so. Thanks for the insights.

davidepstein.com/the-range/

Keep being S&W, Paz - K9

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to cujoe

There is a lot kitchen hardware revolving around PCa. I already knew about the kitchen sink. New entry to me the "range" cooker. I will try to come up with something new pertinent to a toaster, a blender, or some other utensil . (just pulling your leg cujoe, filling in for my compatriot J-O-H-N).

cujoe profile image
cujoe in reply to Justfor_

You could have signed it as j-o-h-n and I might not have noticed the actual source - and, no doubt, j-o-h-n would have approved of the context of and for the humor. Have a good weekend!

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to cujoe

Plagiarism? No way. Have a good Sunday too!

Miccoman profile image
Miccoman

You know that graph is something that might just be relevant to PCa because we get radiation. And even the best clinics are probably not paying much attention to voltages since their physical plant guys do that. I and a friend in Florida both had "simple" radiation and came away with severe radiation burns. My RO (radiation oncologist) is completely baffled and fears having to irradiate me again. However voltage spikes would explain a lot.

And while they're all in CYA mode, no one has done anything for me: no ENT to check out damage to my throat, no neurologist to figure out what's gone wrong in my cervical spine, nope nothing at all. I am struggling along as well as I can and hope my new PCP in July will be able to help as she is outside the university where they are treating my cancer.

ragnar2020 profile image
ragnar2020 in reply to Miccoman

Hi Miccoman,

Standard radiation can burn the crap outta surrounding organs. This is why PBT work better for guys who can get Medicare or their health insurer to pay for the proton beam treatment. The proponents of the old radiation methods will come charging out of the sidelines screaming the usual propaganda against PBT, but o matter the old arguments, it is far less toxic to surrounding tissue. I t stops and does not flow through the body and out your back. They use it over in Jacksonville, FL at the UF PBT facility, but you would find it difficult to get a referral from the Gainesville radiation department across the state.

I’m so sorry that you’ve suffering with the ADT SEs of advanced PCa care. You can explore BAT, and some of the radioligand innovations that are being rolled out ever so slowly. Good luck.

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to ragnar2020

Not to mention a paper comparing the odds of a second cancer incidence quoting 30% the odds of photon for proton.

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply to Justfor_

please restate that???

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to maley2711

Check it out:

"Second Cancer Risk After Primary Cancer Treatment With Three-Dimensional Conformal, Intensity-Modulated, or Proton Beam Radiation Therapy"

acsjournals.onlinelibrary.w...

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply to Justfor_

I tries to , but .... " We're sorry, the page you've requested does not exist at this address. The page you are looking for might have been removed, changed, or is temporarily unavailable. " ???

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to maley2711

Try this one:

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/324...

or this one:

acsjournals.onlinelibrary.w...

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply to Justfor_

" Despite the significant relative decrease in second cancer risk in PBRT-treated patients, the absolute benefit was small because of the rarity of second cancers. In older patients, the clinical impact of this benefit is uncertain because of the low absolute risk of second cancer development and the presence of competing risks for mortality. Conversely, those more likely to benefit from PBRT are patients who face a higher absolute lifetime risk of second cancer. Pediatric and young adult patients are at increased risk because of their potential for long life expectancy and heightened susceptibility to treatment-induced malignancies.16 "

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply to Justfor_

med.stanford.edu/news/all-n...

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to maley2711

"In a span of five years post-radiation, only 1 in 333 patients developed second primary cancer, according to the study. Fifteen to 20 years after treatment, that number rose to 40."

For a medical practitioner 40/333=12% is a "small" percentage. For an engineer, just unthinkable. Imagine 12 out of 100 bridges collapsing after 15-20 years of use. Average of 2.9 hours per day without electricity. War zone conditions in my book.

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply to Justfor_

yes, different worlds. So, does that mean that in 5 years, a similar group of non-radiated developed no cancers? I would doubt that. Same with the 15-20 year results, as we know that cancer is more common than any other " disease" other than cardiovascular . In other words, were the 40 cancers attributed to long-term impact of radiation? I don't think so, but maybe I'm wrong?

Miccoman profile image
Miccoman in reply to ragnar2020

Thanks, Ragnar2020. I will keep this in mind for when I next need radiation as I'm at that phase of the disease: no real promising treatments, just keep me comfortable with irradiating painful areas and high doses of narcotics -- both of which I'm putting off as long as possible (I don't react "normally" to narcotics, either).

Oh, and I'm in Rochester, NY, now. Left Florida for a more friendly state with more robust assistance programs.

groundhogy profile image
groundhogy in reply to Miccoman

the killer Therac-25..

coldfusion-guy.blogspot.com...

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to groundhogy

Getting irradiated is not a stroll in the park as some people think here. During the time that there was a Radio officer aboard every merchant ship, they had to dwell within the radio room (at bridge level) where the short wave communication equipment was located. After a multi-year service there where enough "unexplainable" illnesses appearing to them, that made all the newly build ships to have the transmitter placed in an adjacent, but separate, room to the radioman's dwelling. And mind you that the body penetration of shortwaves is nothing compared to that of microwaves employed in RT. That is the reason I try to push down the road any sRT.

groundhogy profile image
groundhogy

if you read that article, some of those poor people were maimed or killed within seconds

Mrtroxely profile image
Mrtroxely

Wouldn't the ampage draw increase? Gonna cause some fuses to blow???

Justfor_ profile image
Justfor_ in reply to Mrtroxely

Not necessarily for the usual house loads. For industrial loads, overload/over-under voltage protection will get engaged, thus switching them off, thing that will create a vicious cycle that ultimately will lead to a black-out.

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