Change Your Brain Every Day - Can Mushrooms Supercharge Immunity? with Dr. Josh Axe
Episode Date: January 26, 2021In Dr. Josh Axe’s upcoming book “Ancient Remedies”, he takes an in-depth look at many of the time-tested foods and nutrients that have been used in traditional healing. One of these groups of fo...od, mushrooms, has recently cycled back into the public consciousness in a huge way. In this episode of the podcast, Dr. Daniel and Tana Amen and Dr. Axe discuss the types of mushrooms that can give you a major immune system boost. For more info on Dr. Axe's new book, "Ancient Remedies", visit https://www.amazon.com/Ancient-Remedies-Essential-Powerful-Medicine/dp/0316496456
Transcript
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Welcome to the Brain Warriors Way podcast.
I'm Dr. Daniel Amen.
And I'm Tana Amen.
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To learn more, go to brainmd.com. Welcome back. We are still here with Dr. Josh Axe,
and he's just one of our favorite guests to have. And we're talking about ancient remedies. And we
left off in the last episode with mushrooms. So we have to touch on mushrooms because we
are big fans of mushrooms. And we're not talking about magic mushrooms.
Happy mushrooms.
I keep wanting to call it happy mushrooms, but it's not happy mushrooms.
Well, mushrooms, in fact, can make you happy.
Yeah.
So Josh, tell us your experience with mushrooms and how should people think about this?
Yeah.
So I got turned on to what are often called, you know, adapted gin mushrooms or
medicinal mushrooms when actually my mom was struggling with a health issue many years
ago.
She had cancer and I was looking at all the natural ways to support her body and strengthen
her immune system.
And as I was searching all the things about Japanese medicine, Chinese medicine, ancient
forms, herbals, I came across all of these studies on
mushrooms that were used in Asian medicine and Israeli medicine specifically. And so I came
across one. The first one was reishi. And reishi, they actually called it the mushroom of immortality.
And it was known for really supporting the adrenals, the immune system, and the liver,
those three organ systems. And there were clinical studies showing that there was a lot of promising research on it, increasing lifespan, and also
really helping just generally strengthen your immune system. So I started using mushrooms
myself. I gave those to my mom to take the reishi specifically. So I think reishi is one, especially
if you want to, because all these mushrooms, they have some similar benefits,
but some of them are going to be different. In fact, I'll say this. In Chinese medicine,
they kind of talk about, like we talk about vegetables, like eat as many as you can,
a lot of different colors, a lot of different types. In China, they say the same thing about
mushrooms. Get as many different types of mushrooms as you can and eat them on a regular
basis. So reishi is really good for those who are looking
to strengthen their adrenals and their immune system over a long period of time. This is one
you can take every day. Another great one is lion's mane. Lion's mane was known to help support
the gut brain connection and be really, really powerful for the brain. In fact, a lot of studies
show it's good for something called nervine growth factor or supporting any type of regeneration of
nerve tissue.
So Lion's Mane is typically take today for supporting brain and neurology, something obviously we got the world's leading expert here, Dr. Amen knows a thing or two about that.
The other few ones here I want to mention are one for today for fighting viruses is called
turkey tail mushroom. It's a beautiful color. If you look at it, it is purple and orange
and white and blue and green. And you can just go online and actually just search some of these
turkey tail mushroom. It is just, it's this mushroom that has all of these antiviral properties
and it's known for fighting viruses, parasites, bad bacteria, Lyme disease, all of these different
foreign invaders. That's a powerful one. Cordyceps mushrooms.
Yeah, cordyceps. I mean, if somebody is looking to strengthen their endurance and their adrenal and their lung health, it was actually put in a lot of formulas for actually even in, I would say
the two that are probably most prescribed today in China for something like COVID is probably
cordyceps and turkey tail. Turkey tail for
its antiviral properties, but cordyceps because it helps strengthen the lungs.
One of the things a lot of people are susceptible to today is lung issues and cordyceps even in
studies have shown to increase endurance in athletes and respiratory health. So that's
another favorite one. Chaga, which is a little bit of a different one. It's more of a, anyways,
it's still part of the fungi family, but that's known for reducing inflammation and supporting heart health.
So chaga is a great one. And there's a lot of others. Maitake also has some anti-cancer
properties, but those are some of my favorites that I've used on a regular basis. And even just
cooking, like I'll go to the grocery store and buy shiitake and maitake mushrooms and any type of
wild mushroom, throw those in soups with beans or chicken or whatever and vegetables. But again,
mushrooms across the board though, they're all good for the immune system and for supporting
your adrenal glands. So we actually, our general manager for BrainMD, our supplement company, Jim Springer. He worked for me and then
he went away for three years and worked for a mushroom company. So now I have this great product
called Smart Mushrooms. And in it is lion's mane, that's what makes you smart turkey tail cordyceps reishi and shiitake yeah
fantastic i'm so excited you talked about that and i put it in our shade every day yeah and i
remember when i was going through my last uh treatment for thyroid cancer my unfortunately
the way my chemo if you, is they keep me on very high
dose thyroid, which makes my heart rate kind of crazy. And I have to be careful, but I'm an athlete.
And so they wanted me to quit doing what I do, which I did not want to do. So one thing I read
some of the studies on cordyceps, and I felt the difference, because it actually is supposed to
help increase VO2 max, increase cardiac output, increase your strength.
And I felt better taking it.
So it really helped me during that critical time.
I mean, now in our supplement, but yeah.
Incredible.
Yeah.
I love it.
And what's the difference?
What do you tell people, you know,
supplementation versus getting these mushrooms in the store and making them part
of your food or both?
Yeah.
So here's what I would say is a lot of times when we buy mushrooms today in the store,
it's button mushrooms and portabellas.
They don't actually have as great of benefits as a lot of the mushrooms we're talking about okay and we're typically talking about when you go to the grocery store you
typically buy the top of the mushroom when you're buying mushroom and supplements and by the way i
think we should get both that's my answer but i want to say you know especially shiitake and
maitake and some of these other just cool looking mushrooms that you might find at your health food
store or a specialty store.
Sometimes even major grocery stores now are carrying things like shiitake, but definitely
do those in soup. So the top of that mushroom has all of these benefits, but also most of the time
in supplements, they're using something called the mushroom mycelia, which is actually more of
the root of the mushroom, that bottom part that's more chewy that sometimes you're not even getting
when you buy them in the store. So I do think getting a great quality mushroom supplement
that has many of the ones you just shared there, I think that's what I would look at.
So I take a lot of times a multi-mushroom supplement or sometimes singles. And I cover
this even more in my book, Ancient Nutrition, but all the different mushrooms for all of the
different organ systems and what
to use there. There's a compounded mushroom called beta glucans. And these things are really,
really powerful immune boosters. That's what makes them so powerful for our immune systems.
And so again, and you can look these up beta glucans, but there are just so many benefits
of these in mushrooms. But I do think, hey, try to use them in your cooking. But I think on a
daily basis, taking a supplement like the one you mentioned that you produced, Dr. Raymond,
that's a great thing for people to do long-term. Let's also talk a little bit about probiotics.
There has been just such wonderful research in the last 10 years about the gut brain connection we talk about it a lot it's
why in large part food is so important the microbiome is a hundred trillion uh organisms
and if they're not healthy odds are you're not not going to be healthy. Talk to us about that.
Yeah. So there's two important things I think for everyone to think about when it comes to your,
and here's what I've said, Dr. Raymond too. So, and you've probably said something similar with
brain health, but it's immune health starts with gut health. I think that's an important thing to
remember. We've heard these quotes, 70% of your immune system lives in your gut. When they're talking about that,
it tends to be that gut lining and all of those probiotics and microorganisms that line that gut
lining. I think of their gut lining as sort of that fortress wall that's protecting the inner
city of your body. And then you have all of the soldiers lining the wall. Those soldiers
are essentially probiotics and you need a healthy gut integrity and you need those little warriors that are fighting for you that are part of your
immune system there on the outside. When it comes to probiotics, I feel really similarly. We should
be getting a lot of these different types of probiotics in our diet, eating sauerkraut,
kimchi, and other forms of fermented vegetables. There's a fermented vegetable beverage called kvass, which is great.
You have the fermented soybeans that's used in Japanese medicine today, like miso and natto are used frequently.
In fact, they have a really unique probiotic called bacillus subtilis, which has been shown to clear out candida and yeast and those sort of things out of the body, which is great.
And then, you know, there are other probiotic rich foods, of course, yogurt and kefir. You know, if you don't tolerate dairy well today, there's so many great options for coconut kefir, coconut yogurt, those sort of
options. So I think, you know, those are some good things we should be trying to get in our body.
And even apple cider vinegar to a degree has organic acids that support the growth of probiotics
within our system.
So probiotics are really important for several reasons. One big one is they support nutrient
absorption. You know, we've heard the principle, you are what you eat, but truly you are what you
digest. And if you're not digesting well, if you have an issue like leaky gut, in fact,
there's studies that show that a lot of people have nutritional deficiencies because they're
eating foods that aren't prepared properly. For instance, if somebody is eating a raw nut or seed or a lot
of raw grains that have not been cooked or they're not sprouted, there are something called phytates
that sort of keep you from fully absorbing those. So that's another thing. But probiotics help break
some of those down to help you better than absorb nutrients like iron and zinc and some
of these other nutrients that are so important for us. So I think that's a big thing there with
probiotics is that they help you absorb your nutrients. They also help you, they actually
create enzymes, which help you break down your food. So it's more easy on your digestive system.
They clear out bad bacteria like candida and yeast and fungal infections and those sort of things.
So they're good for that as well.
So the big thing is they also, they bolster your immune system and your digestion just as much or more than anything.
So I think probiotics are good for that reason.
I want to mention this.
There are really two big types of probiotics we should be getting.
There's food-based that are in things like yogurt and sauerkraut, but there's also something called soil-based organisms that
are found in our soil and other certain fermented foods like miso today or natto has a soil-based
organism called bacillus subtilis. But these types of probiotics that are known as SBO probiotics,
they're heat resistant, they're acid resistant, and they make it from our mouth all the way
through our colon. And so I think
really getting both of those. Our ancient ancestors got them. For instance, if you went to your local
farmer's market or had a garden, you go and pick up carrots and beets. And even when you wash them
off, there's still little brown specks embedded in there. Those are actually soil-based organisms.
And studies have shown out of Japan that they actually help you better break down and digest your food. And so anyways, and you can look this up. I've written about this online.
You could look up SBO probiotics, Dr. Axe. I've written about this, but I think if we can get
some soil organisms and some of these food-based probiotics via fermentation, it's going to go a
long way. Is that part of the eat dirt book that you were so popular? Exactly. Yeah. I
wrote a book all about this and this is a whole nother topic we can talk about too,
over sanitization. And I really talk about how we naturally strengthen our-
Save that for the next one. But in the age of COVID, when people got pretty crazy about disinfecting things.
I'm a nurse.
I'm so worried about this.
All right, we're here with Dr. Josh Axe,
just such a wealth of knowledge.
I can't believe you gave me a dirty look.
That was a look of love.
I thought that was a look of love over there.
Disinfectant look.
I'm a nurse.
New book, Ancient Remedies, is coming out February 2nd.
We're going to come back and talk about not disinfecting everything on your body.
Your skin has microorganisms.
Who knew?
Stay with us.
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