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G-Protein Response Modifiers key to Rosacea Treatment: Dr. Geoffrey Nase Editorial on G-Proteins and their Role in Rosacea [45]
I submitted several articles including two small trials and dozens of cutting edge articles in Dermatology Times, Practical Dermatology, Journal of Investigative Dermatology, and Dermatology Online Publications in 2004, 2005 2006. 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 My training is geared towards determining key pathways towards inflammatory disorders and presenting them to Biotech Companies and Pharmaceutical Companies (much like Rosadyn and Vascular Health Specialists). But, we have to be right in the physiology, pharmacology, and cellular pathways otherwise we lead these companies down wrong roads and millions of dollars of wasted money. Sort of like Wall Street, but we have to be 100% correct or are careers die a quick death. If you block G-Proteins from opening up the inflammatory cascade, flushing, the overzealous immune response and many other well known rosacea pathways, symptoms and triggers, rosacea will go into remisssion. This is a fact that I predicted and has come true and verified via the new class of rosacea treatments solely targetting G Proteins. It's analagous to a G Protein acting like a key and all inflammatory responses/reactions are the lock that needs to be opened (with the G Protein Key), but you block the lock with a short acting lock blocker (reversible G Protein Inhibitors) or permanently block the locks with (irreversible G protein Inhibitors) and rosacea is no longer a disorder, people heal and recover, and we move onto another disorder. With all the humility that I can muster, isn't life sort of funny when 6 year predictions come true and now the products are wildfire, even presented by a couple of my famous cyberstalkers like David Pascoe as if they were based on his own work or research (and with no retractions, no credit, no apologies). You know what..... that has always been fine because this has been going on since 1998 and my biomedical training has taught me to simply present the material, make hypothesis and predictions years/decades before they come true (or else you don't get grants and funding), so please, David Pascoe, Duke and everyone else out there going crazy over these "NEW Discoveries", take all the credit you like. I will gladly continue to publish in medical journals and push the boundries as this is reward enough for me and this is what my NeuroVascular training taught me over 19 years.... there are no superstars in biomedical research and drug discoveries. One person rarely makes the discovery of a lifetime. We all lay one brick down of information for the next biomedical lab and pharmaceutical company to learn and add their knowledge base because they have different training that works synergistically with mine. It has always been AND always will be a team sport. Most of you see this and most of you know who the bicycle racers are in rosacea who have never been trained or understand what and how a team sport works. Keep on truckin Team Pascoe. One bike must be enough. Geoffrey
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_ Best, Geoffrey Dr. Geoffrey Nase Ph.D: Neuro-Vascular Physiologist Email: drnase1000@hotmail.com Bibliography: http://drnase.com All posts are for informational purposes only. Please visit our Home Page to view our Medical Disclaimer. |
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| dr. geoffrey nase, dr. nase, g proteins, geoffrey nase, rosacea |
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