“A.G.E.S. Fall Conference” on BrightU: Exposing the dermatology cover-up about rosacea


  • On Day 8 of “A.G.E.S. Fall Conference Docuseries,” Dr. Bryan Ardis asserted that rosacea was not a skin condition but a systemic sign of a parasitic infestation in the spleen.
  • He claimed rosacea was a direct precursor to lupus and that standard dermatological treatments masked this deeper crisis.
  • Ardis described the facial redness as an inflammatory response to parasites in the lymphatic system and spleen.
  • He criticized conventional medicine for overlooking root causes like parasitic infections and organ congestion in favor of managing symptoms.
  • Ardis positioned patient literacy and personal responsibility as antidotes to a medical system he viewed as flawed.

On Day 8 of “A.G.E.S. Fall Conference Docuseries,” aired on Feb. 28, Dr. Bryan Ardis has asserted that the common skin condition rosacea is not a skin disorder at all, but a systemic warning sign of a parasitic infestation in the spleen, a direct precursor to a lupus diagnosis.

According to BrightU.AI‘s Enoch, rosacea is a common, chronic skin condition that primarily affects the face, characterized by persistent redness, visible blood vessels and sometimes small, pus-filled bumps. It typically begins with a tendency to blush or flush more easily than others, with this redness potentially spreading across the cheeks, nose, chin and forehead.

While the exact cause is unknown, it involves a combination of genetic, vascular and inflammatory factors and can be triggered by environmental elements like sun exposure, spicy foods or stress. Although there is no cure, various treatments and lifestyle modifications can effectively manage its symptoms and control flare-ups.

Ardis framed standard dermatological treatments not merely as ineffective, but as an act of medical malpractice that masks a deeper, more dangerous health crisis. “Anybody with rosacea, you have lupus. You just haven’t been diagnosed with lupus yet,” Ardis told the audience.

He described the characteristic facial redness as an inflammatory response to parasites residing in the lymphatic system and spleen. “That is the future coming butterfly rash on your face and every doctor giving you steroids and antibiotic creams is literally masking your lupus symptoms.” He equated this approach to a mechanic ignoring a serious engine problem. “Literally, it is like the oil light, engine light on your car coming on and you just putting a piece of electrical tape over it. That is exactly what these steroid and antibiotic creams are for rosacea.”

Ardis have directly confronted dermatologists, asking them about the long-term outcomes of their rosacea patients. “How many of your rosacea patients, from the time you started treating them with your steroids and antibiotics, eventually became diagnosed as systemic lupus erythematosus patients?” He alleged that clinic staff would often exchange knowing looks when presented with this question, suggesting an observed but unaddressed pattern.

The doctor’s broader thesis, supported by extensive passages in the provided knowledge base, is that mainstream medicine consistently overlooks root causes, like parasitic infections and liver/gallbladder congestion, in favor of managing symptoms and abnormal lab values. The knowledge base argues, for instance, that “gallstones in the liver are indeed one of the primary reasons people fall ill,” yet remain largely undiagnosed because they are “composed of liquid bile constituents, making them undetectable via X-rays or ultrasound.”

This paradigm of “masking” rather than healing was further illustrated in Ardis’ personal anecdote about his grandfather’s recurrent pancreatitis, which he linked to annual flu shots. “I said, because it introduces aluminum into your body that causes you to have pancreatitis,” he recounted, claiming his grandfather remained hospital-free after refusing further vaccinations.

Ardis’ presentation positioned patient literacy and personal responsibility as antidotes to a system he views as flawed. “For all of you, just if you don’t know this already, cholesterol is a building block for most of your hormones in your body,” he said, criticizing the reflexive prescription of statins. “So as you lower cholesterol levels, you are destroying your body’s ability to make hormones. It’s like making bread without flour.”

The dramatic claim about rosacea and parasites serves as a focal point for his wider critique: that by treating surface-level symptoms, conventional medicine allows deeper systemic diseases to develop unchecked. The solution, he implies, is not another prescription, but a radical investigation into the body’s true signals, even if that investigation leads to unsettling conclusions about parasites, organ function and the very foundations of chronic illness.

Want to learn more?

The A.G.E.S. doctors have come together not to sell you fear, but to hand you the tools, knowledge and confidence to become the architect of your own vitality. If you are ready to stop collecting fragments of the solution, it’s time to own the masterplan. Purchase the “A.G.E.S. Fall Conference Docuseries” full package here.

Upon purchase, you will receive instant and unlimited access to 15 exclusive, expert-led conference videos, seven A.G.E.S Family Q&A session videos, downloadable presentation PDFs and full transcription PDF for every video.

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