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oxygen

huge amounts of oxygen tension in a Cell you're never going to be hypoxic well I want you to think about now biochemistry we now know clearly that when NAD positive drops at sine of curl One what
Concept
oxygen
Score
6 · never · evidence
Status
candidate — not yet promoted to canon

Corpus evidence — top 10 passages

Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).

  1. 01 · _intake0.960

    > huge amounts of oxygen tension in a Cell you're never going to be hypoxic well I want you to think about now biochemistry we now know clearly that when NAD positive drops at sine of curl One what

    _intake/claims-allbranch/curated-low/oxygen/003-huge-amounts-of-oxygen-tension-in-a-cell-you-re-never-going-.md

  2. 02 · _intake0.815

    > so when you have melanin you're creating huge amounts of oxygen tension in a Cell you're never going to be hypoxic well I want you to think about now biochemistry we now know clearly that when NAD

    _intake/claims-allbranch/curated-low/melanin/007-so-when-you-have-melanin-you-re-creating-huge-amounts-of-oxy.md

  3. 03 · yt0.752

    That's where the other cytochrome proteins are made. And the other cytochrome proteins further were able to make other uh magneto-chemistry, which is superoxide, hydrogen peroxide. These are all chemicals that become electric resistance molecules that slow light down to do different things distal to it. And when you actually see what nitric oxide does, it also acts at cytochrome c oxidase, which is the fourth cytochrome, right before the ATPase. So, now you have a cap on how hemoglobin can work, and it turns out when nitric oxide binds to hemoglobin at a significant amount when we're hypoxic,

    yt/wwNutyiyQ2I-interview-with-dr-jack-kruse-04-08-2025/transcript.txt

  4. 04 · blog0.748

    The results obtained suggest that CO2 at a tension close to that observed in the blood (37.0 mm Hg) and high tensions (60 or 146 mm Hg) is a potent inhibitor of generation of the active oxygen forms by the cells and mitochondria of the human and tissues. The mechanism of CO2 effect appears to be realized, partially, through inhibition of the NADPH-oxidase activity. The results are important for deciphering of a paradox of evolution, life preservation upon appearance of oxygen in the atmosphere and succession of anaerobiosis by aerobiosis, and elucidation of some other problems of biology and m

    blog/raypeat-com/genes-carbon-dioxide-and-adaptation.md

  5. 05 · yt0.746

    Remember something you learned very early on in your training. The brain gets 20% of the cardiac output whether it's inside mommy or us. So what happens if you get the 20% cardiac output in utero but most of the hemoglobin is in metmoglobin or or can't carry oxygen. Well, do you think neurolation is going to go off the way it would go off in a regular brain? See, you're already starting to smile now. Now you're beginning to realize why this is a big deal. And then when you parse the next level of this, say, "Okay, Jack, let's talk about the optical density of hemoglobin." Well, it turns out it

    yt/2njvFN-W4zc-red-light-blue-light-brain-damage-dr-jack-kruse-explains-wtf/transcript.txt

  6. 06 · yt0.746

    Turns out, when you look back at life, the first two domains, they were obligate anaerobes, they were functioning in a completely different environment. So, between those two things, the story about oxygen becomes really important. And when you point out to people that the TCA cycle basically is a cycle that's based around oxygen levels are really high, you start to ask yourself the question, well, what happens when oxygen for some reason is not very high uh around us? And can it be turned off some way? And this is where the rubber meets the road. Turns out, when you look at oxygen carrying ca

    yt/wwNutyiyQ2I-interview-with-dr-jack-kruse-04-08-2025/transcript.txt

  7. 07 · yt0.745

    Turns out that oxygen at really, really high concentrations is really bad. Now, I'll give you number two that you may not know because you're not a doctor. Any doctor knows about this deed called this disease called ARDS. ARDS was it's called acute respiratory distress syndrome. Uh that's what most people died from in COVID. So when we gave or we give people with ARDS uh endotrachial tube and we deliver an FIO2 which is oxygen at a higher level. Why do doctors do that? Because they use a pulse ox to see what your oxygen level is. They're taught what the biochemist tells them that if your SAT r

    yt/67sLlXeMg2I-regenerative-energy-the-light-inside-you-jack-kruse-221/transcript.txt

  8. 08 · yt0.743

    Oxygen is drawn to magnetic fields. So if you want to know why I told you a little while ago that uh breathing is quantized, you know that the FO head spins when you're using TCA cycle. That's 9,000 protons through the FO head. the FO head from Faraday's laws of electromagnetism that he found in 1851. The electron chain's got a current that goes through it that's got a 30 million volt charge. That's Nick Lane's work. This FO head spins 9,000 times a second. That's how you make ATP. Turns out that's discussed with TCA cycle dynamics. you know as a biochemist that's not true in glycolysis not tr

    yt/67sLlXeMg2I-regenerative-energy-the-light-inside-you-jack-kruse-221/transcript.txt

  9. 09 · yt0.738

    The middle part which we call lammer flow in biology is where all the H+ is and that is the H+ that gets to mitochondria. Why? Because mitochondria need oxygen. Most of the red cells that are in there are carrying that oxygen you know paramagnetically and dropping it off. But the key that people don't realize if blood didn't vortex and dutarium got in it would be a problem. This is one of the fundamental things that biology don't understand is this is the reason why human adult uh red blood cells do not have nuclei. If it had nuclei, it would have mitochondria. If it had mitochondria, that the

    yt/drdn_hDGALk-57-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt

  10. 10 · yt0.735

    They have walls of those tubes that can resist a lot of pressure, and that's important because we need to put a lot of pressure to be able to pump blood far out into the body, out to your fingertips, your toes, and everything in between. Okay, oxygenated blood is going to travel out through those arteries, and then eventually, as those arteries approach the tissues that they need to oxygenate... And by the way, the blood is delivering not just oxygen, but also glucose, blood sugar, hormones, different proteins, amino acids, all the stuff that your tissues need, not just oxygen. But then those

    yt/KBkl3I645c8-improve-your-lymphatic-system-for-overall-health-appearance/transcript.txt

Curation checklist

  • ☐ Verify excerpt against source recording
  • ☐ Tag tier (axiom · law · principle · primary derivation · observation)
  • ☐ Cross-cite to ≥1 primary source (PubMed / arXiv / archive.org)
  • ☐ Promote to bucket-canon/05-biophysics/