The MeidasTouch Podcast
The MeidasTouch Podcast

Trump’s Health Collapses as Top Doctor Sounds Alarm!!!

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MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on the tests Donald Trump is actually taking to expose is true health condition once and for all.  Go to https://TryMiracle.com/Meidas and use the code MEIDAS to...

Transcript

EN

I am the housemaster.

In my life, my husband has to repair his wife.

Then there are also the denies of the Great Vertical Couture,

the king of the state of the roof and the roof of the roof. And the king of the roof of the roof is connected to the house. They are also talking about the location of the house. This is a lot of light and good night.

I am always talking about the house.

There are only my job as the housemaster. If you are talking about the housemaster and coming to our team, how do you know the housemaster? I am the housemaster. In my life, my husband has to repair his wife.

Then there are the denies of the Great Vertical Couture, the king of the roof of the roof of the roof and the roof of the roof of the roof. And the king of the roof of the roof is connected to the roof. They are talking about the location of the housemaster. This is a lot of light and good night.

I am always talking about the housemaster. There are only my job as the housemaster. We are talking about the housemaster and coming to our team. The housemaster is the housemaster. It is not looking good for Donald Trump.

His health is crashing fast. His physical and cognitive deterioration is obvious for us all to see. But I want to share with you what the creator of the Montreal cognitive assessment, the mocha exam that Donald Trump keeps on bragging about taking. What the creator of the mocha exam is saying about the purpose of this test,

what it is testing. And I want to show you how it's actually administered because this raises major red flags. I know we all hear about Donald Trump every speech now. He brags about cognitive exams. I took this exam.

I took that exam. We all know what that exam is. The exam is called the mocha. That's the Montreal cognitive assessment. It was created by a doctor by the name of Dr. Zayed Nasreddin,

very well known neurologist from Canada. And he's been asked a lot lately. Can you tell us about this exam? Can you tell us what this is all about? And he gave interviews in the past where he talked about how he created this exam,

which is an early detection tool for Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, for dementia, for other very serious neurological disorders. And it's an early detection tool. You know, it was interesting because I read an article recently about Dr. Zayed Nasreddin. I mean, he spoke with an Australian news company.

And I wanted a dig deeper. And I wanted to learn about Dr. Nasreddin's research. How he's talked about the mocha exam before. Because this is the exam that Donald Trump says he takes. So I found interviews with Dr. Nasreddin,

where he talks about the exam, what its purpose is. I want you to hear from him yourself about what this exam is. And then I want to show you how the exam is actually administered. Because this is what Donald Trump is doing frequently. You don't take it on your own.

You need a, you know how Donald Trump says they gave it to me. They administered it to me. It's a group of people who administer it to at least one clinician who will administer it to you. Sometimes many. And they all assess it in the room, depending on what your responses are.

And I think it's also interesting when you also factor in that Donald Trump says he's

been getting, you know, these MRIs, which they've entered. Oh, no, it's not an MRI. It's actually a CT scan. When you watch this, you're going to see the urgent red flags that are being raised. You're going to want to watch the video of Dr. Nostradene's interview.

It's very important. And I want to show you how this exam is administered.

So let me to show you first this article from nine news in Australia.

Not a test of IQ. Dr. Who designed the cognitive test addresses Donald Trump's boast. Here's what Trump said. I don't want to play Donald Trump's words right now. You've seen me play him over and over again.

So I'll just read to you what Donald Trump says. He goes whenever they get a little sassy saying does he still have it? Does it still have what it takes? I say I'll take another one. Trump pointed out the test were hard.

The first question was very easy.

You have a line of baron alligator and what's another good one?

A squirrel, which is the squirrel. By the way, there's no squirrel in this exam. By the time you get to the middle, they're very tough. He bragged about the results.

One doctor said it's the first time I've ever seen anyone get all questions right.

Trump said that's a doctor who does this stuff for a living. The test, the president's referring to is called the Montreal cognitive test or the mocha, the Montreal cognitive assessment. It's a 10-minute test developed by Canadian neurologist, Zia Nasseradine, and it's intended to determine if a person has a condition like Alzheimer's or dementia.

You've seen this test before, right? It goes on to talk about how Zia E Nasseradine developed this cognitive test to determine if patients

Have dementia.

Sample questions include drawing an analog clock with a correct time,

with points given for correct numbering. Another question is to name as many words as they can in a minute, beginning with a letter B. A failing grade would be less than 11 words. The final questions are to know the date, day of the week,

their location and what city they are in. It wasn't designed to be a test of IQ. Dr. Nasseradine told 9.com Australia. It was designed to assess normal cognitive performance. The test is used in about 200 countries including Australia.

The average person scores 26 out of 30 on the test.

Nasseradine said about 10% of people who are Trump's age get all the answers, right?

I think he's proud he's able to demonstrate that his cognition is fine. Obviously, he likes to maybe boast about it of his age and people might think that his age. You might have more difficulty with your cognition. Okay, so let me show you now what Dr. Nasseradine said about his exam. This is an interview he gave with McGill University in Canada.

And here's what this is a tool for.

And this is what Donald Trump can says he takes all the time. Let's play this first one. The clinician will have a challenge to see. Is this the pattern we see in Alzheimer's? Is it a pattern we see in other neurological conditions?

And then we have to look at our neurological exams.

See the our signs of Parkinson's or signs of hydrostat, normal pressure hydrocephaluses are different neurological conditions that can affect memory. But they are often accompanied by other neurological signs on neurological exam.

We can have also strokes that can affect cognition.

So we sometimes look at the neurological exams. See any signs of stroke with the arm that is weaker on one side or a group. Smile on one side, more than the other. We also look if the patient has vascular factors that could increase the risk of having a vessel disease in their brain.

If they have high blood pressure, diabetes. For example cholesterol, obesity or smoking, it can increase the risk of having a vascular

content of impairment. Sometimes we can have other conditions like heart and lung disease or

renal failure that could affect cognition, thyroid problems, habitual deficiencies, increased calcium levels and low hemoglobin levels like anemia can sometimes affect cognition. Rarely we can have brain tumors that can also be coming in the presentation, but usually they don't have only memory issues. Medication is also a big issue of an sedative that we take for sleeping or for anxiety or narcotics that we can take for pain can also affect our cognition.

Some medication will have anti-colonargic effects, meaning that they affect the acidity coline which is one of the neurotransmitters involved in attention and memory. So some medications can affect the anti-colonargic system so we have to review those medications. We can also think of other causes of cognitive impairment could be stress-related, depression burnout or anxiety.

And here he is again also saying what you're testing for when you take the mocha, you're playing a mocha Montreal cognitive assessment, here play this clip. Since then it became the number one recommended test for detection of early cognitive impairment. We call this MCI which is mild cognitive impairment and became not only useful for detecting Alzheimer early stages of Alzheimer's but also other neurological conditions such as Parkinson's that could

have cognition affected in Parkinson's stroke patients also have cognitive impairment. So it became also recommended for those other conditions and also general medical conditions. For example a heart failure with low output to the brain can have memory issues long disease with poor oxygenation to the brain can have long cognitive impairment associated with it. And also recently with COVID we've seen many patients having the brain fog after long COVID syndrome

and the mocha has been used extensively to detect those subtle cognitive deficits and etc. So now it's being used in 200 countries and 100 languages and dialects validated in most of those languages and the test is very well accepted by the scientific community citing the detest in more than 18,000 scientific studies since 2005.

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If you want to know what is it actually like? You don't take it on your own, you have to have a

doctor asking you the questions. Takes about 10 minutes and the doctor sits with you, sits with the patient and hears what happens. This is what Donald Trump says he's doing. Every other week

he says that this is what he's doing. So first let me show you this clip of the doctor

speaking to a patient. Here's just an example of how the mocha is administered play this clip. We're going to start with some questions and these questions require a little bit of concentration. Some of them are easy. Some of them are more difficult. Okay. So I just want you to do your best. And if you can't hear me or you need anything clarified, just ask me any question you want to. Good no. Okay. I'm going to give you a pencil first. Okay. And I want you to look up in this corner.

What I want you to do is draw a line from a number to a letter in a sending order. Start at number one, draw a line from one to a, a to two and so on and end here. So if I want to a to the b. Yes, exactly. Can you do that now? Yep. One day add two to the b, b to three, 3 to c, c to four. Wow. Four to d, 25. How's that? Oh, and the end. Good. I told you some of these were a little bit tougher than others.

Okay. You see this design here? Yep. I want you to draw that design in the space provided below. Okay. In this space, I want you to draw a clock for me. Make a big circle and put all the numbers where they go. And now Sam, I want you to set the time for ten past eleven. Okay. Okay. I'll take the pencil back for a minute. Now I want you to tell me the name of this animal.

Lion. What's the name of this one? Right, enough, Russ. How about this one?

Cavalry, no. Cavalry. Okay. Good. And here's another example right here of how the exam is administered. So you can just see for yourself what the mocha is like, how it's administered. There it goes on for about ten minutes. I'm not going to show you the full ten minutes. But I'd like for you to see how the exam is administered from a scientific perspective. I think we should educate the public what's happening here. Here play this clip. Are you ready for the next thing?

Okay.

because I want you to remember them now and later on. Okay. That's okay. This is just just to the best you can. Okay. So listen carefully to the words and then you stay in back to me in any order. Okay. Here are the words. Face, velvet, church, Daisy, red. Go ahead. Face, velvet, Daisy, church, red. Perfect. Face, velvet, church, Daisy, red. Yeah. So I'm in a

read a second time and just like the first repeat them back to me in any order including the

ones that you said before. Okay. Here's the same list again. Face, velvet, church, Daisy, red. Go ahead. Face, velvet, Daisy, church, red. Okay. Now I'm going to ask you to

remember those again a little later. Sure you will. Okay. Here's the next one.

I'm going to say some numbers and I want you to say exactly what I say. You repeat the numbers back to me. Okay. Are you ready to hear them? 2, 1, 8, 5, 4. 2, 1, 8, 5, 4. Okay. Now you've seen on mightest health. You've seen us interview Dr. Gupta who runs mightest health.

And here's what he told us about the mocha exam. So here's what he had to say. Let's play this clip.

Dr. Gupta, I know you got to run. I just want to close the loop on one more thing. In the experts that you speak to in your own practice have you ever heard of somebody taking these cognitive exams that Trump keeps saying he's taking like every three months or six months. This level of have you ever heard of that? Like with that level of frequency? No. Nobody takes a Montreal cognitive assessment mocha for sure, which it focuses on recall memory loss, basic things. Myocognitive

dysfunction is what it tends to sort of screen for. It's not a great tool. No one takes it with this type of frequency. I was on when the coal wall is sistered and I thought she said beautifully saying that you're passing it every other week. It's not seem sort of flexier than he thinks of this. This is an unusual thing to keep those things about doing it as frequently as he's doing, makes no sense. I don't know any neurologists that would recommend doing a mocha

with that type of frequency. And again, it's not the flex that I think he thinks of this.

Okay, now that we've seen that, here's just an example of Donald Trump boast. I'm all they're going to play a short clip of it. But here he is boasting about what you just saw. Kind of will tie this all together. Let's play it. I took three of them. Aist all of them, by the way. You know, I'm the only president. I'm the only president to take a cognitive test. Because I don't think Obama could pass it. I don't. Didn't he get into Harvard

with the sea average? I don't know. What's that? I don't think he could pass it. I don't think well Biden isn't going to give me a break. You know, the first question is very easy. It's a lion at giraffe a bear and a shark. They say which one is the bear? And everybody says, oh, 30 questions. Everyone says very standard. It's a very standard test. But very tough around those last 10 questions, not too many people. Even in this very room. Unlike Newsom. I'll say

this room of geniuses. He said, I'm in a room of dumb people. That was not good. That was not good. You know what happened to him after that. It wasn't a pretty, but I'm in a room of greeted people. But a lot of you wouldn't have been able to answer those 10 questions.

And when I got the score in the test, the doctor said, wow, I've never seen, you know, you have

five doctors lined up. They're all over the place. I said, should I take it? You know, I've had different phases. They've said, he's a mad genius. I didn't mind that too much. Then they said, he's a horrible human being. I don't like that, but then they said, he's really not a smart person at all. I really hated that. So I took a cognitive test and I said to the, well, there you have it, folks. I just, I think from an educational perspective, it's just

important that we know what is it that is being tested. What does that test look like? I think

now you know, when he says, I have the cognitive exams, it's that exam, the mocha. That's what the mocha is. I just don't want anybody to be like, what is he referring to? That's the test.

You've seen the test.

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