Exciting Update — New Audio & Infographics Now Available 🎉

We’re thrilled to announce that five of our most important health-investigative articles have been upgraded with Latin American Spanish and Mandarin audio tracks, plus fresh infographics, and still retain the original English version. We hope this will make the content more accessible for a broader global audience. Here’s a quick snapshot of each updated article:

1. 10 Toxic Food Additives In America: The Hidden Dangers

An eye-opening investigation into common additives used in processed foods — from artificial sweeteners to preservatives — that may pose serious health risks over time. The updated version now includes multilingual narration and infographics to help you better understand which additives to watch out for and why.

2. How Low Dose Lithium Affects Kidneys: What Research Shows

A careful review of emerging evidence on low-dose lithium supplementation, exploring potential benefits — and crucially, its possible effects on kidney function over time. The new audio tracks and visuals walk you through how lithium is processed in the body and what kidney markers to monitor for safety.

3. Expired versus New Glucose Test Strips: How Much Can You Trust Old Strips?

An essential guide for anyone who monitors blood glucose. This article compares performance, reliability, and risks of using expired test strips versus fresh ones. The updated infographics and multilingual audio make clear how expiration affects accuracy — critical information if you’re tracking blood sugar carefully.

4. Case Reports of Liver Injury with Fenbendazole Intake

A report on documented cases where use of fenbendazole — often touted online for off-label purposes — was followed by signs of liver damage. The refreshed article adds narrated summaries (in Spanish, Mandarin, and English) and visual breakdowns of key changes in lab values and liver-related warning signs.

5. What Makes Ivermectin a Potent Antiviral?

A deep dive into the scientific arguments backing antiviral properties attributed to ivermectin — examining how and why it might work, and under what conditions. The new version comes with multilingual narration and clear infographic diagrams to help lay readers and researchers alike follow the mechanisms under discussion.

Whether you prefer reading, listening, or learning via visuals — these articles now offer more flexibility than ever. I encourage you to have a look (or a listen) and share with friends, family, or viewers who might benefit from a non-English presentation.

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