Dhru Purohit Show - #238: Hormonal Imbalances Can Ruin Your Life, Here’s How to Fix Them with Dr. Sara Gottfried
Episode Date: September 16, 2021Hormonal Imbalances Can Ruin Your Life, Here’s How to Fix Them | This episode is brought to you by ButcherBox and InsideTracker. Mainstream medicine often fails us when it comes to hormonal imbala...nces. Hormones aren’t commonly tested, even when there is a high likelihood of an issue (like cortisol in our overly stressed culture). Since there are so many hormones that can become dysregulated, presenting with a wide variety of symptoms, many of the symptoms are written off to aging and never addressed. In this episode of The Dhru Purohit Podcast, Dhru takes a deep dive into the topic of hormonal imbalances with Dr. Sara Gottfried, along with what you can do to get them back on track. Dr. Sara Gottfried is a board-certified physician who graduated from Harvard and MIT. She practices evidence-based integrative, precision, and Functional Medicine. She is Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Integrative Medicine and Nutritional Sciences at Thomas Jefferson University, and Director of Precision Medicine at the Marcus Institute of Integrative Health. Her three New York Times bestselling books include The Hormone Cure, The Hormone Reset Diet, and Younger. Her latest book is Women, Food, and Hormones. In this episode, we dive into: -Common hormone imbalances that have become normalized in society (7:25) -Signs and symptoms of hormone imbalances (11:35) -Dr. Gottfried’s personal journey of learning how to balance her hormones (20:25) -The top 3 things to prioritize when addressing hormone imbalances (34:46) -Understanding the unique biology of women when it comes to balancing hormones (44:12) -How to uncover the root cause of hormone imbalances (50:10) -How chronic cardio negatively impacts cortisol levels (58:39) -The top 3 mistakes when it comes to diet and how it impacts our hormones (1:05:59) -How to improve metabolic flexibility (1:10:11) -The key pillars of The Gottfried Protocol (1:23:21) Also mentioned in this episode: -Breathing Zone App - https://breathing.zone/ -Perceived Stress Scale Test - https://www.bemindfulonline.com/test-your-stress -Continuous Glucose Monitors - -Levels - levels.link/dhru -January AI - https://january.ai -ZOE - https://joinzoe.com/ -NutriSense - https://www.nutrisense.io/ -Abbott - https://www.abbott.com/ -Dexcom - https://www.dexcom.com/ -Keto-Mojo (ketone and glucose monitor) - https://keto-mojo.com/ For more on Dr. Gottfried you can follow her on Instagram @saragottfriedmd, on Facebook @drgottfried, on Twitter @gottfriedsara, on YouTube @drgottfried, and through her website https://www.saragottfriedmd.com. Get her book Women, Food, and Hormones: A 4-Week Plan to Achieve Hormonal Balance, Lose Weight, and Feel Like Yourself Again, at https://amzn.to/3lopln5. To learn more about becoming a patient in Dr. Gottfried’s Precision Medicine practice, go to https://marcusinstitute.jeffersonhealth.org/ Sign up for Dhru’s Try This Newsletter - https://dhrupurohit.com/newsletter. This episode is brought to you by ButcherBox and InsideTracker. For a limited time, new subscribers to ButcherBox will receive 2 lbs of 100% grass-fed, grass finished beef free in every box for the life of your subscription. To get this limited time offer go to ButcherBox.com/DHRU. Right now, they’re offering my podcast community 25% off. Just go to insidetracker.com/DHRU. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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But the truth is, correcting your hormone imbalances is so much easier than living with your hormones being out of balance.
So the way that you correct them is so much less work than the struggle, the daily struggle when your hormones are not in balance.
Hi, everyone, Drew Prod here.
Question for you.
Do you have extra belly fat around your waist?
Is your hair falling out what feels like earlier or in places that it shouldn't be falling out?
Do you have sleepless nights or breast tenderness or is your period irregular?
Is your symptoms of PMS super strong?
Well, if you can relate to any of these questions or answered, yes, these are signs that you might have a hormonal imbalance.
And today's guest, Dr. Sarah Godfrey, has an important reminder for you.
She says, I can tell you, without a doubt, you cannot achieve true health without achieving hormonal health and balance.
Today's interview is about this topic.
If you suspect that you have a hormonal imbalance, you want to pay attention.
Stay tuned for a fascinating conversation.
This episode is sponsored by ButcherBox.
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podcast. Each week, we explore the inner workings of the brain and the body with one of the
brightest minds and wellness, medicine, and mindset. This week's guest is Dr. Sarah Godfrey.
Dr. Godfrey is a board-certified physician who graduated from Harvard and MIT. She practices
evidence-based, integrative, precision, and functional medicine. She's a clinical assistant
professor of the Department of Integrative Medicine and Nutritional Sciences at Thomas Jefferson
University and the director of precision medicine at the Marcus Institute of Integrative Health.
Today, with Dr. Sarah Godfrey, we're talking all about hormonal balance. And if you feel
exhausted or drained all the time, if you're suffering from infertility, night sweats,
sleeplessness, irregular menstrual cycles, if you have breast tenderness, if you've been
diagnosed with cyst or fibroids or endometriosis and breast cancer, these are all signs that
you have a hormonal imbalance. And it's worth it to start asking the questions as to why. Why are these
things going on? And how can you get to the root? Today's interview with Dr. Sarah Godfrey is going to
talk about all those topics and more. She has three New York Times bestselling books,
including the hormone cure, the hormone reset diet, and younger. Her upcoming book, which we'll
be diving into today, is called Women, Food, and Hormones. I think you're going to enjoy it. It's a
fascinating conversation. Stay tuned. Dr. Sarah Godfried, welcome to the Drew Prod podcast. It's an honor
to have you here. Hey, Drew, so happy to be here. I'm a huge fan and I'm excited about the new book and
let's jump right in. So hormonal imbalances, they'll impact by different estimates up to 85% of women
at some point in time in their lifetime. But because, or rather I should say, and because
hormonal imbalances are so ubiquitous. There is much of the population, not just women, but men too,
that have gotten used to it. It's so common that everybody just thinks that it's normal.
So I'd love to start off with a basic question, which is so important for setting the stage for this
conversation. What are examples of hormonal imbalances and how are some of them things that
people have gotten used to and they just think it's a normal part of life? Terrific question.
I feel like I want to caution people.
Don't get used to it because there's so many things that you can do to get these hormones back into balance, starting with your fork.
So what are some of the most common ones?
I would say cortisol, insulin, estrogen dominance or dysestrogenism, problems with testosterone, problems with growth hormone.
These are some of the most common ones that I see.
The way that you know you have these are basically with cortisol, that means.
stress hormone. You know, what a lot of people describe is that they feel overly stressed. Maybe
they've got high perceived stress. High cortisol has all of these consequences in the body,
including increased belly fat, can make you feel wired but tired. It can also disrupt some of the
other hormones. So another important piece here, Drew, is that these hormones cross talk. So you
don't get a hormonal imbalance in isolation, often you get sort of a pattern of hormone imbalances.
You have a quote, and I want to read this quote here with our audience, because I think it's a,
it's a great one for my next question. And you say, I can tell you without a doubt, you can not
achieve, you cannot achieve true health without achieving hormonal health and balance.
Tell us what you mean by that, quote, and help us understand.
understand what the hell is going on that hormonal imbalances seem to be increasing year over year.
Yeah, you know, what I see in my practice is that people will chase a certain goal.
So that could be their weight, like a number on the scale.
In my husband's case, it's how fast he can do a century.
So people chase different goals related to health.
But I think what I find is that if you're really,
hormones are not in balance, if they're not supporting what those goals are, you're not really
going to get there. So we see people, for instance, who are at a normal weight, and yet their hormones
are out of balance. They're the so-called, I don't love this term, but skinny fat people. You know,
you can have a fasting glucose that's relatively normal and yet have metabolic dysfunction
because insulin is not working the way that it should be. Insulin is that hormone that
opens up the door to the cell and lets glucose in. And what happens with a lot of folks is that
they have issues with insulin, sometimes a decade, even 13 years before it shows up as a problem
like type 2 diabetes. So I think we have to pay attention to a number of different factors
and hormones drive what you're interested in. And that's why I got so excited about hormones
early my career. It's why I think it's so pivotal to one's concept of health.
Before we go into your personal story, I want to tease out a little bit because I think
hormone imbalance is starting to make its way out there a little bit more with the likes of
individuals like yourself, incredible doctors, researchers, putting the spotlight on it.
But still, I think there's a lot of people listening that are going through some signs or
symptoms and they don't understand that there's a connect to hormonal imbalance.
So let's tease this out a little bit more.
What are some other things, especially for women, which your new book is really focused
in on, that are signs and symptoms that there are hormonal imbalances that are going on?
Well, there's a long list of symptoms.
It really depends on which hormone you're talking about.
But if we take a hormone such as thyroid, some of the symptoms that people,
can have include fatigue. You can have a hair loss. That's both head hair, also eyelashes,
eyebrows. Famously, hypothyroidism or low thyroid function is associated with loss of the outer
third of the eyebrows. You can also have constipation. So gut function is a really important
part of this process. Maybe we can talk a little bit later about, you know, I'm an engineer.
So I think about the control system for hormones. And when we think about the control system for
hormones. It involves the gut. So it involves the brain talking to the adrenal glands, talking to
the ovaries or testes in men, talking to the thyroid, but also talking to the gut. So constipation
is one of those signs of low thyroid function. You can have rising cholesterol levels, dyslipidemia.
You can also have cold intolerance. So those are some classic symptoms of a thyroid that's out
of balance. That's something that tends to affect women much more than men. Women are more vulnerable
to hormone imbalances. So I think that's part of why we especially need to be educated and empowered about it.
But men experience a lot of these symptoms, too. They have issues with cortisol. Cortisol problems can
lead to low testosterone, which I think has gotten a lot of press recently. Low testosterone in both men and
women is also associated with loss of muscle mass. So the way that it can show up is that maybe
you're going to the gym or you're doing home workouts during the pandemic and you're just not seeing
a response maybe to strength training or to other forms of exercise. Another factor is sex
drive. What's happening with your libido? There's a number of different hormones that are involved
with that, testosterone being the most common. And then there's mood issues too. So estrogen, testosterone,
cortisol are all involved in depression, anxiety. I just had a patient last week who was having
these really steep glucose excursions on her continuous glucose monitoring. Maybe we'll talk
more about this later. Well, one of the things I found was that she would get panic attacks
when her glucose was too low. So her insulin wasn't working the way that it should be.
So we want to be thinking about this full scope of symptoms, you know, not just
sex drive, not just hair loss, but this fuller scope. You know, we know, for instance, that cortisol
is a biomarker for depression and suicide. So about half of people with depression have high cortisol
levels. So those are a few examples I could go on. I've written a few books about it because I think
it's so common. And unfortunately, this is the part that I think is very frustrating. I believe that
mainstream medicine fails people when it comes to hormone imbalances. We don't look for them.
We often don't test them unless you're trying to get pregnant and you're having difficulty.
And the solutions that are often offered are things like, why don't you take this birth control
pill? Sounds like you might have a hormone issue. How about this birth control pill? Or how about
this selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor? Because it sounds like you might have some hormone issues,
is maybe a little depression.
So we have to be looking at the root cause.
The root cause often maps to hormone imbalance.
It's fascinating.
You know, really the takeaway that I'm getting from that,
and I think that the audience is getting from it as well,
what you just covered,
there are very few things that are hormones
do not either intersect with or touch.
And because of that, an imbalance that's there.
And many of the things that you read off,
the signs and symptoms,
they many people have multiple aspects of them you often find individuals who are struggling with
extra belly fat and low sex drive and they notice that their hair is thinning or somebody with
super low energy but then also is noticing one of the other areas that you brought up so it's
so integral our hormones that when they're often imbalanced there's a whole host of things
that we have names for to describe when our health stops working the way that it should.
Drew, this is what I love so much about your podcast and the way that your mind works,
because you make some of these things that I think physicians often don't understand
as so foundational.
You make them really explicit.
And the point that you're making that hormones are involved in so many functions in the
body is such an important part of this conversation.
The way I think of it, you know, I think a national.
can sometimes be helpful when you're talking about hormones and complex biochemistry.
The way that I think of it is that your hormones are like the text message system of your body.
So the way that your brain is telling your adrenal glands to make more cortisol,
it's a text message that gets sent through the bloodstream to your adrenal glands.
The way that your hypothalamus and pituitary talks to your thyroid to like, okay, let's pick up the clip here,
is again through these text messages.
So unless you're aware of these text messages
and kind of how they're originating,
how they're regulated,
how food is such an important factor for them,
how other lifestyle choices like sleep and exercise
and your stress level,
unless you understand some of these factors
that are affecting those text messages,
it's going to be really confusing.
But once you get sort of this text message idea,
these things fall into place.
And it becomes much easier to say,
okay, I'm mapping to this particular hormone imbalance.
My metabolic hormones are a mess.
Here's how I can fix it.
It's beautifully said.
And I often think of it as imagine you're getting mail
and you live in a house or email in this day and age.
And you have a notification that there's a bill that's coming due for your internet.
And you miss that bill because that message doesn't get translated over.
So you don't pay your bill.
And then one day you're just trying to function and on Zoom or doing an interview like we are here.
And then your internet goes out and you're wondering, why did my internet go out?
Or why do the lights get turned off?
Or why is the trash not getting taken out?
So these messenger molecules are happening all the time.
And if we don't create the right environment for it, then the messages get lost in translation.
And a whole host of things end up happening.
So I'd love to come back to your personal story.
I say one quick thing about that.
Please jump in.
So this, I really love this analogy too.
And I think one piece of hope I want to give to folks is that this may sound like a complicated
system, but the truth is correcting your hormone imbalances is so much easier than living
with your hormones being out of balance.
So the way that you correct them is so much.
less work than the struggle, the daily struggle when your hormones are not in balance. So I think
that's really important to give people, you know, kind of the wind at their back to pursue this
and to understand what's going on hormonally with your body. And also, don't outsource that
to your health care professionals. I think it's important for us to know what's going on
hormonally, individually.
Thank you for jumping in.
And please jump in any time because you have so much experience working directly with
patients and seeing, I've seen so many people feel this sense of, okay, I know I have
hormonal imbalance.
I know I can relate to these things that Dr. Godfrey is talking about right now.
But if my own doctor doesn't understand it for the care that I'm getting right now,
how the heck am I supposed to wrap my arms around it?
But there is hope. And your doctor is part of your team. They're not you. They're not in charge of you. They're part of your team and you work in coordination with them. But you're the CEO of your own health. And with the right information, you can navigate what direction this company. If you're the CEO, the company is your body, what direction it wants to go in. And that's really the hope of this conversation in your book. So I'm excited to jump a little bit more into it. So I want to start off with your personal journey.
You know, you grew up in a very healthy and progressive family.
You had examples of eating whole foods and positive examples in relationship to food and health from what I understand, you know, growing up.
At what point in time did this understanding for hormonal imbalance, which you've written multiple books on, at one point in time did it become real?
And did you start to fully understand it on your own personal level that this thing,
exist and is a problem for many people, including women like myself.
It's a great question because I would say I was always integrative.
I was always, you know, looking beyond just a pill bottle to answer the question of how do I
create the best health. But it wasn't until I was in my 30s that I really feel like I got it
when it comes to hormones. And what was happening for me, I think is something that happens
for many women especially, but men too, I was struggling in my mid-30s. I was working too hard.
I was seeing patients in what I call fondly McMedic Medicine. So I was seeing 30 to 40 patients a day.
And I was pretty frustrated with that because I felt like I went through, you know, I went through my medical training in my 20s.
And yet here I was in my 30s not able to deliver the kind of care that I wanted to give.
So there was this mismatch with the work that I was doing, which created stress.
I had a couple of kids, and I couldn't lose the baby weight.
So all the old tricks that got me to my goal weight, got me to fit into the clothes in my closet,
they no longer worked.
And I remember driving home one day from work and sitting in my car in the driveway of my house,
knowing that, you know, my two kids were inside the house with the nanny. And I just was struggling to
get out of that car and go open the front door. I just felt so exhausted and way too young to feel so
tired. I was married. I was attracted to my husband, but my sex drive was almost zero. And I, I just
felt like, wow, this is no way to live. This is no way to live. I don't want to live. I don't want to live
this for the rest of my life. And so I did what many people do. I went to my primary care provider.
And I said, you know, here's my list of woes. I've got PMS. I don't want to have sex with my husband.
I can't lose this baby weight. I'm fatigued. I'm burned out at work. What do you suggest?
And that's where I got offered a birth control pill and also at the time, Prozac.
So at first I was kind of ashamed and put off.
I remember he even wrote on a whiteboard, Drew.
He wrote on a whiteboard in his office, eat less plus exercise more equals weight loss.
He's like, you know this.
You learned this in medical school.
And that's where I got angry because I realized that so many millions of people were being told this very same thing.
and it was wrong. So yes, calories matter, but hormones matter more. And so I had that righteous
indignation that then led to, you know, writing books and really looking at the ways in which
medicine fails us, both men and women. And how can we work around it? How can I empower people
to use lifestyle redesign to correct these most common hormone imbalances? So I left his office. I went
to the lab. I ordered my own test. I science myself. I found that my cortisol was three times
what it should have been. My estrogen was too high. Progesterone had left the building. Progesterone is like
nature Xanax and I had almost none. My thyroid was not working properly in part because my
cortisol was so high. My testosterone was low. I was basically a hot mess, Drew. So that's what
really got me to turn that corner and to say, okay, I got failed by the
medical system. If I got failed, so many other people are getting failed too, we've got to do something
about this. You know, after that major awakening and part of your own hero's journey, you went through
something that a lot of people who might even be watching right now go through is once they
understand that there's a problem, the next question that comes up is why. And as you started to
ask yourself why, what came up for you as some of the core root issues?
that were playing into the imbalances for the hormones that you were running on yourself and getting
the test results back from.
So yet another reason why I love talking to you, Drew, because it's all about root cause
analysis.
So in addition to those hormones that I mentioned, one of the things I found, and this was, you know,
at age 35 or so, my glucose was elevated.
I had high insulin.
So I checked my fasting glucose. I hadn't checked it since maybe medical school. My fasting glucose was about 105.
And I thought, wow, that's weird. What's going on? My doctor said, oh, this is fine. Don't worry about it.
But my insulin was also elevated. It was like in the 20s. And this was after fasting for about 12 hours.
So I felt like there was something going on that was related to all these other hormone imbalances.
What I found was that the primary drivers were my metabolic health.
So that includes insulin, glucose.
There are so many different ways that we can assess this now,
leptin, adiponectin, glucosamine.
But it was also related to cortisol.
It was related to the way I was interacting with my environment,
especially work.
That was dysfunctional.
So I had too much stress,
even though, you know, I started transcendental meditation in college and I grew up practicing
yoga with my great-grandmother, the dose of meditation, the dose of kind of managing my cortisol
was not sufficient for my demands.
So that's, I would say, kind of the root cause.
It showed me that I was on this path of metabolic dysfunction that was totally flying
below the radar of mainstream medicine. And I'm not faulty mainstream medicine. I mean, I went through
the same training as my primary care doctor. We were at Harvard Medical School. I was taught
maybe 30 minutes of nutrition. It was considered kind of the lowest on the hierarchy scale.
Imminology and, you know, kind of molecular biology was considered the highest in terms of that
hierarchy. And so I realized, even as a physician, I'm going to have to teach this to myself.
So that got me on this path of, you know, listening to Jeff Bland and starting to read these
books that are written for a lay audience, but they actually, you know, books like Mark Hyman's
that teach us so much about the physiology of the body and these root cause, root causes that
we need to be paying attention to. So the short answer is,
My metabolic health was a total wreck, and I needed to turn it around.
Well, we like the long answer here, so you can go along anytime you want to.
You know, you talked about two distinct categories that were there that have interplay on each other.
One was food and one was stress, and they can both have impacts on your metabolic health.
Let's zoom out for a second and put your sort of evolutionary hat on.
And, you know, what is happening in our society that is going on that has so significantly
impacted those two categories, food and the term of stress, which bundles a lot of different
things inside of it.
So help our audience understand contextually what's going on that we are seeing year
after year, these increases in hormonal imbalances and the severity in symptoms that you described
at the beginning of the podcast. Well, there's so many, and I'll probably leave out a few,
but I'll hit the highlights that I think are the most important. The first is our food system
has completely changed. So, you know, I mentioned my great-grandmother earlier. She was born in
1900. So it's really easy to do the math on her. She's no longer with us. But she died in her sleep
with no chronic disease very peacefully at 97 after coming to my wedding and dancing and
flirting shamelessly with every man that was, you know, at the ceremony. So she's a great model
for me. But when she was growing up, you know, apples were these small little tart green things.
They weren't these big, huge, you know, hybrid altered apples that are associated with higher
fructose and kind of a change in the physiology that they create in the body.
She was not eating processed foods.
She was eating whole foods.
We know that a whole foods diet is the healthiest that we have.
If we look at the data, we know that a Mediterranean diet is the most proven in terms of health.
And she was eating a Mediterranean diet.
It was altered a little bit because, for instance, she found that alcohol didn't agree with her,
so she didn't drink alcohol.
So our food system has completely changed.
And in many ways, I think you and Mark have done such a stellar job talking about this,
about, you know, how we have lost the small farmer.
We've lost, you know, the number of fields that are organic is so tiny.
we're using glyphosate, which has all of these downstream consequences.
It's one of the most important disruptors of the integrity of the gut lining.
So food is completely changed.
And we also have more of it.
So we live in this time of abundance.
I'm someone who struggled with disordered eating when I was in high school and in my 20s.
And so, you know, when you're faced with this bountiful amount of food,
it can be very tricky to make decisions about what to eat and what not to eat, especially if
you're the way that I was in my teenage years where you use food for emotional reasons.
So we've seen this rise of eating disorders.
We've seen these changes in terms of the food system.
We've seen the rise of pollutants, herbicides, pesticides, things like glyphosate.
And then in terms of stress, we know that stress is increasing.
We also know from the annual survey by the American Psychological Association that women are more affected by stress than men.
We know that during the pandemic, stress levels, numbers of depression, incidents of depression has dramatically increased in some reports 3X.
So I think we're faced with a lot of environmental unknowns.
some people are able to manage that and have found, you know, sort of the gifts of the pandemic.
Other people are really strongly affected by it.
I think there's also economic forces here, too, in terms of both the richer, getting richer, the poorer, getting poorer, as well as racial trauma.
I think trauma in some ways has either increased or our awareness of it.
some of the downstream consequences has increased. You know, we look at, for instance, the adverse
childhood experiences study that was done at Kaiser 20 years ago. We know that women experience more
trauma than men. We know that trauma in childhood is associated with more adverse effects later
in life, whether that's heart disease or alcoholism or even early mortality. And as you can
imagine, trauma is one of the most important disruptors of hormone imbalance. Because when you're
growing up and these caretakers who are supposed to be looking out for your best interest
aren't doing their job, you're neglected, maybe there's some abuse, maybe your parent went to
prison or your parents got divorced, often that leads to dysregulation of the control system
of your hormones. So here we're talking mostly about the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal
axis and the release of cortisol. And we're also talking about
post-traumatic stress disorder and even what I see more often in my practice, subthreshold
post-traumatic stress disorder, which doesn't meet criteria for PTSD, but it's something that I see
pretty commonly. So I think trauma is a big piece here under the rubric of stress. There's these
gigantic changes in our food system. And then there's also the way that this affects sleep.
So you look at sleep, you look at sleep debt, how sleep.
debt is increasing even with all the things we know about how sleep is so important for your
cortisol level the next day, your insulin level the next day. If you get short sleep, which for
most of us is less than 7 to 8.5 hours, that leads to more carbohydrate cravings the next day.
So I think sleep is another really important piece. And once again, women are differentially
affected. So women have about twice the rate of insomnia as men. I think some of that gets
kicked up postpartum during pregnancy and also postpartum. And then it also becomes an issue in
perimenopause and menopause. That's a great lay of a land. And it's a perfect segue into our next
chunk that I want to dive into. The new book is called Women, Food, and Hormones. And on top of
everything that you shared here about the high level statistics of how women are more impacted by
especially stress in their lives, what is it,
that fundamentally you want, again, hormone imbalances, they impact men, they impact women,
but there's something that uniquely is there for women. So when you sit down with your
patients, which I would say you see both men and women, but for the ones that are women,
what do you want them to understand about a lot of the solutions that are out there, well-intentioned,
well-meaning solutions that work for a lot of people? What do you want them to understand
about those solutions in the context of their unique biology and hormones.
Yeah, there's a lot that I want them to understand.
And I think the subtext of your question is really great, which is how do we prioritize this?
Like, how do we not overwhelm somebody?
How do we really figure out, okay, here are the three things I want you to focus on initially?
So the way that I rank order what to focus on, what to understand, I would say metabolism is first.
Because metabolism is not just your weight on, you know, the bathroom scale.
It's not just belly fat or how much fat mass you have.
I think a lot of people think of it in that more narrow context.
Metabolism is much bigger, broader, deeper than that.
It is the aggregate of all of the biochemical pathways in your body.
And that includes your hormones.
So I like to start first with metabolism.
I want to make it come alive.
for my patients. And the way that I do that is through precision medicine. So I really believe that
we have to democratize data. We can't take, you know, that annual test for fasting glucose
and hemoglobin A1C and have that just be owned by the clinicians that are taking care of the patient.
I think it's important that we use any means possible to really help people understand where they
are on the continuum of health. So I'll start, you know, with blood testing. I'll do some genomic
testing to look at metabolism. I'll look at particular biomarkers. I'll look for micronutrient
deficiencies so that we can really customize and personalize a food plan. But one of the things I
love to do is to really solicit from the patient, what are your values? Like, what is most important
for you. And then how can I tie what we're learning about you, about your metabolism, about your
metabolic health, to those values. So I'll give you an example. For me, I want to live a long life.
I've got a couple of daughters. I want to be, if I could, like my great grandmother and dance at their
weddings, you know, to really see how they turn out to be part of their lives, to have that feeling of
connection and love and intimacy.
So that's a really high value for me.
And, you know, if I'm still able to dance reasonably when I'm in my 90s, that would be like,
that would be really awesome.
You have the dance part, but don't forget, your grandmother was also flirting with
the other men that was there.
So you got to have both of them.
Yeah, we got it.
We got to have both.
You know, for other people, my husband jokes that one of the reasons why he wants his health
is because he loves lemon ricotta pancakes, gluten-free.
And so he wants to eat as many of those as possible as he gets older.
So we all have different values.
And for some people, it's a particular mission.
One of his missions is to reverse climate change.
So mission can pull us forward to.
But then let's connect it to metabolism.
Because that's the way I think that you get the best buy-in.
And when you can democratize the data.
So that's with, you know, I share every single lab that I,
collect on a patient, we talk about it because this is owned by the patient. This is the patient's
physiology. And there's something incredibly enchanting about looking at and understanding your
own physiology. Instead of outsourcing it to somebody else, the way that, you know, more patriarchal
medicine is practiced, but really understanding, okay, when I eat sweet potatoes makes my glucose spike.
when I am in a fight with my husband, it raises my cortisol.
And once again, it makes my glucose go up.
So understanding kind of those moment by moment changes that can happen in your physiology,
I think is very helpful.
The last thing I'll finish with on this particular question is that I'm a bioengineer.
So I think a lot about systems biology.
And if you can bear with me for a nerd moment here.
And one of the things I think about is how do you define health? Because in medicine, we've done a really lousy job of defining health. We define it in a circular fashion as the absence of disease. And that really is not a gold standard. That just centers our inquiry around disease. So if you really look at health and you really understand what the drivers of health are, and I'm saying metabolism is one of the most important, it's not the only one, but it's to me the most important.
And then you look at these transitions that can occur along a continuum, from health to pre-disease.
So, for instance, insulin resistance or pre-diabetes.
And then another transition later to maybe type 2 diabetes.
When you understand where you are on that line, it gives you this feeling of, oh my gosh, I can do something about this.
And one of the cool things when it comes to metabolism is that the most proven way to correct
your metabolism to reverse metabolic inflexibility or metabolic dysregulation is through
diet and lifestyle change. So that's been proven over and over again, even though our medical
training system does not show physicians how to do this. So this is where I really invite our
listeners to step into that place of not outsourcing the assessment of your metabolism to someone
else. Really understand it yourself because it's as important as your savings account. It's as
important as your retirement account. You know, in many ways, it doesn't matter how much you have in your
401k or defined benefits. What matters is your metabolism because that is such a key driver
of health span, that period of time that you feel fantastic and you're relatively disease-free.
To me, it's really a message I'm hearing from you of empowerment because the law
responsibility says that if it was your fault, and I don't mean that in the sense of blame,
but in the sense of control, if you had a part to play in it, if it was partly your fault in
some way or another, then you can do something about it. If it wasn't your fault,
if this is all genetics, if this is all somebody else is dealing, then we lose the power
to change it. And so when we remember that it's in our control, that's a positive
That's a beautiful thing because we can do something about it.
Now, I want to ask one question off of that.
Can I say one quick thing about that, Drew?
I love that point about responsibility.
And what I hear you talking about is ownership.
You know, we, if you look at the amount of time you spend in a doctor's office or a nutritionist
office or on Zoom, since that's what we do so much more now, we know that it's probably
less than 1% of your life.
Less than 1%.
So you have this other 99% of your life
where your health is unfolding before your eyes.
And if you're just outsourcing all of the metrics,
kind of the understanding of health to that 1%,
you are really selling yourself short.
So the point that you made about genomics
and, you know, kind of the, you know,
our idea with genomics is that genomics may load the gun.
I think Francis Collins said this or someone else.
Genomics load the gun, but it's really environment that pulls the trigger.
And there is almost no condition that is 100% genetic.
Environment plays a role in somewhere or another.
The impact of that, kind of the relative contribution varies from condition to condition.
But if you look at something like metabolic health, genomics probably plays somewhere around
a 20 to 70% role. So you have this remainder that really is under your power to address. So I'm
sorry for cutting you off. I just wanted to fit that in. You know, I see cutting people off in the
context of friends and education as a positive sign that people have things to say. So please,
cut me off. You have something really amazing to say. I want you to jump right in as you did.
And vice versa. Cut me off anytime you want.
On the topic of empowerment, there has been more education, and you've been a huge part of this,
around helping women, and of course, men too, right, the men that love them and are there to support them,
but really helping women understand that they are not just smaller men in the context of their bodies.
Yes, women know that they have a period every month, a monthly menstrual cycle,
and yet hormones go a lot deeper than that.
Can you talk a little bit about the unique makeup that is there for women that has to be
kept into account when they're looking to apply personalized medicine or personalized approach
to their lifestyle?
Yeah, another great question.
So when it comes to your hormones, we'll start with that in terms of some of the sex
differences, the biological differences between men and women.
There's also gender differences, which are the socially-conferences, which are the socially
constructed differences between men and women that are, you know, things like
increased responsibility for child care and child rearing and other things, household
responsibilities. But when it comes to sex differences, let's start maybe with testosterone.
So a lot of people think of testosterone as a male hormone. And it certainly is a really important
regulator, a primary regulator of the male body. But it's also a primary regulatory.
of the female body, a lot of folks don't realize that testosterone is the most abundant hormone
that women have. The most abundant hormone. So if you look at your level, if you get a hormone
panel and you're looking at your serum level of total testosterone, free testosterone,
maybe progesterone, estradiol, what you'll see is that the concentration is highest for testosterone.
So that means that women have less of it.
So men have about 10 to 20x the amount of women.
But women are exquisitely sensitive to it, exquisitely sensitive.
So it's involved in many of those things that we talked about already, such as sex drive, muscle mass.
But it's also involved in confidence, agency, vitality, mood.
In men, it's associated with low levels of testosterone or
associated with more anxiety and depression. That's been less proven in women. But what we know is that
it's really important to pay attention to these testosterone levels. So even though there's a sex difference,
don't ignore some of these metabolic hormones like testosterone. Another key difference is maybe the
reverse, which is estradial, which is the most potent type of estrogen that women make. Men make it too.
women make much more of it. And the level of estradile fluctuates considerably over a female
life cycle. So it increases at puberty. It goes through, you know, kind of this maturing process
with the control system. Sometimes periods are irregular during that time. During pregnancy
and postpartum, there's really dramatic changes with estradial. And we know, for instance,
that postpartum, when you go from these sky-high levels of estrogen, in this case, estriol,
together with progesterone, down to delivering your baby, delivering the placenta, and then
having very low levels of these, it's similar to perimenopause. So that sudden change can really
trigger mood issues for women. It can trigger postpartum depression, postpartum anxiety. It also can
trigger because these hormones are signaling molecules. It can trigger autoimmune.
attack, such as Hashimoto's thyroiditis and all other autoimmune thyroid diseases.
And then in perimenopause and menopause, there's again these dramatic changes with
estrogenial.
Typically in perimenopause, the first half, it's wildly fluctuating, which can trigger a lot
of mood issues and, again, anxiety, as well as estrogen has about 400 jobs in the body,
so there's a long list of symptoms.
And so we really know that that is a time of tremendous flux.
Another hormone that's quite different in terms of the sexes is growth hormone.
So women make more growth hormone until menopause, and then they make less growth hormone than men after menopause.
So there's this change that occurs right around somewhere around 50 to 52.
The way that we secrete growth hormone is different.
So women make it more continuously, whereas men pulse it more.
And I'll back up for a second.
What does growth hormone do?
It's a hormone just like its name that's involved in growth.
So the growth and repair of cells, it's when you're a kid, it's involved in your height.
So kind of your growth pattern, people who have short stature sometimes have some issues
with growth hormone like growth hormone insufficiency.
It's also involved in modulating things like belly fat and insulin regulation.
So it's got its hands and all.
a lot of different functions and levels can change significantly for women after menopause.
So these are a few examples of some of the sex differences between men and women that I think
are important to know about.
Powerful.
And thank you for that review.
I think a lot of that understanding is most helpful, especially when people are looking at
how to personalize their approaches.
And since we've started talking about solutions to get to the root causes of addressing
hormonal imbalances, again, both for men, women, or any other gender that somebody identifies
with, but talking biologically. Now comes the question of how do we begin? You've already talked
about metabolism. You talked about the power of continuous glucose monitors and how you use
that to democratize medicine as well as give patients access. And the analogy that I love about
continuous glucose monitors, it's like, imagine if you only were able to check your bank account,
you know, once to twice a year. You know, you would have no idea, are you on track for your budget?
Are you not on track for your budget? Are things going well? Are they not going well? And I'd see
glucose monitors operating in that same way. And I know you have some recommendations on that,
which we'll talk about in a little bit. What are some other things in the context of getting to the
root causes of hormonal imbalances that you want people to know are within their power to make a
change and a difference on? There's a long list once again. I think cortisol is probably the low
hanging fruit when it comes to the way that your physiology is behaving. And the reason why I say that
next after talking about metabolism is because cortisol is a priority hormone, meaning that you need
it to live. You can live without estrogenial. You can live without testosterone. You can live without testosterone.
You can live without many hormones. But cortisol is essential to life. It's involved in so many
different things. It is involved in regulating glucose. It works together with insulin. It's also
involved in immune function. It's part of your circadian rhythm. So it's got this really
foundational role in your health. And I think what's interesting about cortisol is how much you can
modulate it with mindset, with food. So reducing food stress. For instance, not eating foods that
you're intolerant to. I happen to be intolerant to gluten and dairy. So it raises my cortisol
if I get exposed to those foods. So cortisol, I would say, is really a low-hanging fruit.
Understanding where you are with perceived stress, I'll give an example of how you can test this.
There's a perceived stress deal that I think is very helpful.
that was published by Cohen. And you can Google the perceived stress scale to take this really simple
test, takes about five minutes, and see where you are. You know, especially when you're under
a fair amount of stress and you're not sure how resilient you are, I think measuring can be very
helpful. So cortisol, I would say, is one of those low-hanging fruits. I've had someone on a podcast
before say, oh, it's like Michael Cortisol Leone. Like it's a little bit of a like the godfather.
father in the body. And that's true because it's such a high priority. It's also so involved in this
interdependence with other hormones that it's good to know about. So once again, lifestyle factors
can modulate cortisol so readily, whether that's practicing yoga, which we know reduces cortisol
and by consequence that also affects interleukin-6 and other biomarkers associated with inflammation.
you can, you know, meditation, I think is a very powerful way to change cortisol levels.
And can I jump in for a second?
I saw a really great video that you made on Instagram not too long ago talking about also,
again, I love simple, practical solutions that anybody can do.
And it was about a breathing technique that was there.
Would you mind sharing about that?
Of course.
So this is Batako breathing.
There's a Ukrainian physician who developed this one.
way of breathing. And it was so interesting to me when I first learned about it because I have a
voice disorder, which you can probably hear. It's just as a result of doing so much public speaking
and not breathing properly for many decades. So Batako breathing is one of the recommendations
that came from my voice therapist who said, you seem like an over-breather. And what I was doing,
Drew is what I think a lot of yogis do in that I'm a certified yoga teacher. I take these deep
inhales. I extend the exhale. And that can create some inefficiencies in terms of gas exchange.
So the work of Batako, Dr. Batako, is to change your breathing pattern, to do this for about
20 minutes twice a day, to make your breathing more efficient. So the way that I do it is I use an app.
breathing zone, and it counts out the breath and kind of guides me. So I just did my 20 minutes
this morning before we got together. And I start off with about five breaths per minute, and then I
get down to about four breasts per minute. You get a little bit of air hunger, but you learn how to
tolerate it. You learn how to tolerate, especially the retention. So I use this with my athletes.
I work with an MBA team back east.
I use it with people who struggle with cortisol issues.
It's a very efficient way of improving your breath pattern.
And it's been mostly studied in asthma.
It's been shown to help quite a bit with asthmatics.
It doesn't have a ton of research behind it,
but lack of proof is not proof against.
This is one of those interventions that I think doesn't require
some complex randomized trial to show that it's useful.
That's great. Meditation, yoga, breathing, all simple things. Even sometimes people practicing self-compassion and talking to themselves and letting themselves know. You know, the research on self-compassion shows that our body doesn't know the difference between us comforting ourselves and putting our hand on our chest. You know, we had Dr. Kristen Neff on the podcast. There's a leader in this space. She said, you know, your body doesn't know. So you calm me your body down, even at
night, especially if somebody's dealing with insomnia, other things that would affect their
cortisol levels in the morning or would throw off their hormones, telling yourself, it's all good,
telling yourself that you're there for yourself, telling yourself that it's okay, you tried
your hardest today, and tomorrow's another day, we'll have another crack at the bat.
Those things are all key because they get to, as you mentioned earlier, these sub-traumas
that often don't get diagnosed or addressed that we all as human beings are going through on a
regular basis.
I love that, Drew.
Yeah, I would say trauma is part of the human condition.
And the question is, how do you respond to it, especially as an adult when we have more
resources than we did as children?
So I love that you brought this up because it makes me think of this concept of social
genomics and how, you know, we're not just these stable human beings that don't change moment to
moment second by second. We change a lot in response to me talking to you right now. My matrix is
changing through social genomics. So when you're around people who, you know, lift you up,
light you up, that has all of these benefits. There's less data on that self-compassion and the way that
you talk to yourself, but I imagine that also affects your genomics quite dramatically.
So we want to be having the best possible conversation with ourselves, especially when it comes
to stress. And this is one of those places where I think women often get the short end of the
stick. And they, you know, maybe they didn't have a good stress response modeled for them by
their parents. And so they end up having kids. They're like trying to balance work life and can
really be struggling. So it can lead to these hormone issues that, you know, I then pick up and
measure. But I really want people to have the sense of agency that you can talk to yourself in a
different way. You can change your perceived stress level. And you can become more resilient.
Like all of that is within your power. It is in your power. And, you know, before we jump into
your protocol that you've designed, that really helps and walks people through all these, uh,
aspects and puts it all together and some new things that we'll get a chance to cover,
like intermittent fasting that we didn't get a chance to go deep into on a personal level,
because stress, there can be a targeted amount of stress that's good for us, right?
Exercise, you know, going in a really hot sauna and even some of the life stresses that are out
there, you know, getting ready for a big public speaking event or even your first speaking event.
That can be stressful, but it builds courage, it builds resilience when we come out on
other side and know that like we can handle a certain amount of what life throws at us.
Now, in the context of Dr. Godfrey being a human being and a mother and a wife and a physician
today, as much as all the things that you practice and talk about, naturally, I'm sure there's
days that are more stressful for you.
What are your personal go-toes or what have been things that have been a game changer
in your journey to continue to help you bring in resilience in the face of the natural
stresses that we all go through. What a lovely question. I would say the biggest game changers for me
were the way that I exercise. I've always been an exerciser, but I changed the way that I exercise
starting in my mid-30s. And I exercise with friends. I think there's something about being together
with, in my case, a girlfriend. We've been exercising together every weekend for 16.
years. And I feel like that is probably the biggest game changer that I've seen in my life.
So that, again, is kind of one of these social genomics ideas. But there's something about
being together with your girlfriends that just really changes perceived stress. So it's one of the
most helpful things that I found. When I was in that doctor's office, kind of shivering in one of
those paper gowns and he was writing on the whiteboard, I was running a,
about four to five miles, four days a week, totally unaware that my chronic cardio was raising
my cortisol levels even higher. And so I realized when I saw this crazy high cortisol level that
was three times what it should have been, I realized, oh my gosh, I need more adaptive exercise.
I need yoga. I need ploddies. I need to do more walks, like walking meditations. So I changed
the way that I exercised, I started doing more hit training because I still love, you know,
kind of that power, adrenaline, endorphin rush. But I really changed away from chronic cardio,
which was driving up that cortisol level. So another thing that happened that I think is really
important, it's funny, this is such a game changer and yet it's such a simple thing.
I read the book by Gary Chapman, the five love languages.
And that's one of those teeny little books that was, seriously, it saved my marriage.
It went from, you know, what happens with most people.
I don't know if you've talked about this book before, Drew.
Have you heard of it?
We haven't talked about it, but I'm very familiar with it.
I've done the quiz and everything.
Okay.
So what are your love languages?
Yeah, my love languages are quality time and physical touch.
Yeah, that's beautiful.
Well, this is interesting because what happens in most couples is that one person, so I'll refer to myself first here, has two different love languages.
So for me, it's acts of service and words of affirmation.
And we tend to marry somebody who's got completely different love languages.
So my husband, for instance, is quality time and physical touch.
So the way that I would show him love, you know, the first five, ten years of our marriage was I would do acts of service and I would give him words of affirmation. He's like, I don't really care about these. And I wasn't showing him love in his own language. So I think for me, in terms of stress, kind of that day-to-day feeling of emotional currency with my husband and, you know, kind of getting rid of most of the conflict that we had.
was all about learning how to talk to him in his love language.
And of course, he's done the same.
He's realized, wow, when I balance the bank account, you see that as love.
That's so weird, but okay.
So that's been a huge game changer.
There's many other things, too.
I think for me, what I find really helpful is measurement.
So, you know, this is a particular bias that I have.
I feel like, you know, what Kelvin said, I think he said this, what you measure improves.
So measuring my cortisol levels, doing that on a regular basis, not just, you know, an AM serum
cortisol, but looking at my diurnal pattern, what happens over the course of the day with my cortisol,
looking at my cortisol awakening response, looking at this once a year and kind of gauging how I'm
doing, that has been really helpful for me. So measurement is really key.
Great, great reminders. And also, I,
I think the big reminder within everything you shared, and thank you for being open about that
and sharing about your marriage and your husband and a book that was really important to both of you
is that there's so many pathways to creating balance for areas of your life that you don't feel
balance.
And food tends to get so much attention.
And in this day and age, also fasting gets a lot of attention.
But sometimes take a step back and take a look at your life and see, actually, do I need some support in my relationship?
do me and my partner need maybe a third party like a therapist? I'm a big fan of the Gottman
Institute and Gottman therapy and their sort of approach. Do we need somebody to help us
facilitate our communication to bring a deeper sense of intimacy? Do we need to work with a therapist
to help with our relationship with our son or daughter or child who's struggling with
something? So it's not always the next most important path for somebody is directly food. Food is a
low-hanging fruit and one that we all do, you know, a couple times a day at least. But it's just
another reminder that there's so many aspects that could impacting, especially the context of
stress. So it's important for people to find their own version of that so they can work on it.
Yeah, such a good point. I mean, I imagine we're going to get to food next because it is such a
huge game changer. And, you know, I think many of the things that I thought were so healthy
that I was eating, you know, if I go back to my 35-year-old self, the oatmeal for
breakfast, the orange juice, the, you know, I would do juice fast. A lot of the things that I was
doing was creating excess stress in my body. So changing the way that I ate was probably the biggest
game changer of all. Yeah, I'd love to talk about that. When you look, you know, you just mentioned a
few yourself. When you extrapolate that to our modern world and, you know, wellness has become a
big business. And there's even people that are suffering from major hormonal imbalances that are
pretty knowledgeable and consider themselves to be healthy eaters, quote unquote.
What do you see, right?
I want to set this up for social media.
I think this will be a great clip.
Give us three top things that are mistakes.
Again, they can be well-intentioned that people have when it comes to their diet
and how that impacts hormonal imbalance.
Love those too.
So I would say number one is juice. A lot of us think that juice is healthy. We think it's an efficient way to get, you know, maybe a green juice with celery and apple and spinach is so healthy for you. But we're really designed to eat those foods together with the fiber. So juice is not the panacea that a lot of people think it is. I think that's really essential to know. And one of the things that I would
was doing back in my 30s was that I would do these juice vass and then I would refeed and I would gain all
the way back. So it just wasn't a helpful thing for me. It set me up for yo-yo dieting and really,
in some ways, ruined my metabolic health. So that's number one. Number two, I would say, is
villainizing carbs. So I think we've gotten to a place where people,
People hear about low-carb diet. They hear about the ketogenic diet. And they think, oh, my gosh,
I just need to cut carbs out of my life. I don't need carbs. I need protein. I need fat. Maybe they go on a
classic ketogenic diet. And I think we have to be really careful about that because the data
looking at folks who follow a classic ketogenic diet, we know that there's some significant changes
that can occur to the gut microbes. So to the microbes, the microbes, the microbes, the
themselves, plus their DNA, which is known as the microbiome. There can be a decrease in diversity,
alpha diversity in particular. There can be a decrease in stool volume. And so we want to figure out,
okay, it's not that carbs are the villain. It's actually metabolic inflexibility. That's the villain.
So that's what we want to address. Maybe we could talk a little bit about metabolic flexibility versus
in flexibility. The third thing is, oh, if I have to pick a third, I would say villainizing fat.
So I grew up with Dean Ornish. I remember reading his books in high school. And when I went off to
college and medical school, I would make, you know, these pasta dishes with tons of vegetables
and zero oil. And I remember in anatomy and medical school,
So this is 1989, I was so disturbed and freaked out about working with a cadaver that I just couldn't
imagine eating meat.
So I stopped eating meat.
I was continuing with this low fat plan.
And what I found was that my hormones just became a total mess.
I remember my breast size went down by about two cups because I just, my cholesterol, I remember
measuring it right around then after I went on this vegan food plan with very little fat.
What happened for me was that my total cholesterol went down to like 120.
And cholesterol is the backbone of all the sex hormones that you make.
If you look at the sex hormone pathway, it goes from cholesterol to pregninolone,
the mother hormone of all of your sex hormones.
And it goes on to progesterone and cortisol and DHA and testosterone and estrogen.
So fat is not the villain.
We went through that low fat phase, which I think did more harm than good.
And we're still recovering from it.
So healthy fat is really important for you.
It's the way that you make a healthy balance of hormones.
So those are the three that I think are the most important.
Those are three great ones.
And I think we should absolutely go into metabolic flexibility because this is really the sophistication of the wellness,
movement, you know, kind of the culmination, and we'll grow every year and we'll learn more.
But this is a term that a lot more people are getting familiar with because there's been all
sorts of diets that have steered us in one direction or another.
And kind of like the Buddha used to say, the middle path is there's something to say about
the middle path.
So talk to us about metabolic flexibility and how it's understanding when we incorporate it
into our, not only our body, but our mindset can be a,
better way to navigate life and also a little bit more of an enjoyable way to navigate life.
It's definitely more fun than I think the alternative, which is metabolic and flexibility.
So the definition of metabolic flexibility is the ability to switch between burning carbs and
burning fat depending on what type of fuel is available. You can think of it like a hybrid car
that can switch between electricity and gas, depending on the type of fuel that's available.
And what happens is that a lot of folks become less metabolically flexible over time because they're snacking all the time or they've got too much stress or maybe they've got some of those genetic variations that are associated with insulin resistance.
They become metabolically and flexible and they often get stuck in burning glucose, burning carbs.
So that was my own story.
When I first tried the ketogenic diet, I remember going on Atkins before I got.
married and my husband lost about 20 pounds in a short amount of time and I maybe lost two pounds.
What I realized was that now I know in retrospect, I was carbon tolerant and I was also
metabolically inflexible. I then went a few years ago in 2016. I tried the ketogenic diet
a couple of times. I had a lot of patients who were coming to me on keto and I wanted to learn
more about it myself. I tried keto a couple times and I just couldn't get it to work.
And part of what was the problem for me was that I was metabolically inflexible.
So for instance, to get into ketosis, it would take me about 10 to 14 days just to start to make ketones
because my body was so used to burning carbs.
So metabolic flexibility is really the goal.
It's not that, you know, I recommend that people go on a ketogenic diet and stay on a ketogenic diet
for, you know, long periods of time.
what I recommend is using a ketogenic diet as a therapeutic pulse.
So typically four weeks, which is what I cover in my book, and then to start to bring more
carbohydrates in while you're tracking metabolic flexibility.
You can track it as your ketones.
You can track it as you can use a breath meter like Lumen.
You can use a continuous glucose monitor.
You can use glucose ketone index.
There's many different ways to track this.
But what we're looking for is that.
ease with which you can flip the switch between burning glucose and burning fat,
depending on the type of fuel that's available.
It's a powerful way to really see that metabolic flexibility as a human being, as an organism,
the human species, has been probably a big part of what has allowed us to become the species
that we are.
Travel all around the world, be able to think of advanced technologies,
be able to expand our brain size because we had that flexibility, especially at times of
major changes in the climate that could affect food sources and other aspects.
It's also great because diets sometimes can get so tribal and really between using these tools,
as you mentioned, the continuous glucose monitor, you know, using things like Lumen or other
breathometers that are there, you can really dial into what we're.
works well for you. On a personal anecdote, if I could add in, you know, a few years ago when I
started going to keto and a big part of keto in the more traditional sense is making sure
you get a higher amount of saturated fat inside of your diet, you know, the clean sources of
saturated fat that are there, I noticed that my health journey originally started because
I had really bad acne. And I noticed that because I've dealt with so many gut issues from
being on antibiotics as a child, that the saturated fat would trigger almost like a
an endotoxemia effect inside, and I started getting a lot of flare-up of almost acne-like symptoms.
My face would be red all the time.
And then on top of that, as I would track my blood results on a pretty regular basis, getting
blood work every month, I notice again for myself personally, and the big part of this is
genetics coming from a South Asian background.
Even though I was not worried about cholesterol, I was paying attention to my NMR particle
size and I was noticing that my lipoprotein A was getting quite high up there. And I just saw that my
body genetically, for who knows what all the different reasons are, was not as efficient as somebody
else's body at utilizing that saturated fat and putting it to work. So just another reminder
of how you can try things, see the actual difference that it makes for you, get your blood work done,
use things like continuous glucose monitors,
and then you can personalize it to what makes sense for you.
You're in cases sometimes biological sex,
which you write a lot about inside of your book,
your ethnic background,
which plays a role into it,
and your personal lifestyle choices and goals that are there.
So I think it's the combination of all that,
that just like you personalized it,
we can all take a lesson from that
and look at how we can personalize all these things
that broad strokes seem to work for a lot of people, but might need to be tweaked to work for us
uniquely. That was such a helpful illustration of how keto can increase inflammation in some
people, especially the dose of saturated fat. So I really appreciate how you shared that story with
acne. Thank you so much. Your skin looks amazing, by the way, Drew, I must say. But I think this
brings up some really important points, which include, you know, when I put someone on a ketogenic diet
or when people follow the four-week pulse that's in my book, what we know is that it's pretty
significantly changing hormones, signaling pathways. And there's this, you know, there's genomic
drivers. So, for instance, part of the genetics that you inherited from your parents determine
the way that you respond to saturated fat. And the way that you respond to saturated fat and the way
that it affects the glucose and insulin pathways. So sometimes knowing that information can be very
helpful or you can track some of these biomarkers, such as the NMR lipofraction assessment that you were
describing. And we know for a lot of people that LDL goes up. If we just look at, you know,
low density lipoprotein, LDL goes up in about 10%, well, about one and four people that are on the
ketogenic diet. Sometimes it's not clinically significant, but it's something that we want to track
and understand, especially if people are staying on it for a longer period of time, such as they do
in the VERDA study, which enrolled type 2 diabetics and put them on a ketogenic diet.
Overall, they had about a 10% increase in LDL. So I think this individualization is so important.
You said something else that I really liked, which is the tribalism that occurs around food.
And what I really hope that people hear from us in our conversation today is that I'm food agnostic.
So I really believe that, you know, even though a lot of my friends are keto or their paleo or they're vegan or vegetarian,
I think it's important to understand what works the best for you.
So I learned, for instance, in medical school, when I went vegan, low fat, that was not a good fit for me.
I needed more fat.
I needed more protein for my hormone balance.
So being able to understand that feedback loop, I think is such an essential part of this empowerment conversation we want to be having with our body, our health, our hormones.
What I also love about your journey, Dr. Gottfried, is that you're trained at some of the best institutions out there and you have this willingness and openness to try.
and also not just to try, but to be open to change your mind when something wasn't working out.
And you've shared a couple examples of how you tried something and it wasn't working on, working out.
So you tried something different.
I think that's so important, especially for, I would say, the intellectual types that are listening here, that you might have a very advanced degree.
Maybe it's not in medicine.
Maybe it's an engineering.
Maybe it's a lawyer.
Maybe you think of yourself as just a very smart person.
And there is nothing smarter than trial and error and then pivoting after that.
You will never, even if you read every single book that's out there in the world,
you will never be as smart as trial and error when it comes to your ability to figure out
what works for you.
And so I applaud you in openly sharing that and also having done that in your journey
because our audience, myself, we get to benefit from all this wisdom that you've built up
over the years.
Well, I think beginner's mind is such an important part of health.
You know, having that openness to change your mind.
You raise something else that I just want to emphasize.
And that is I'm a big fan of trial and error.
I'm an even bigger fan of trial and success.
We design these experiments in the type of work that I do.
So a lot of what I do in precision medicine is multi-yomic phenotyping.
So we take someone like you, Drew, we look at your genomics, especially nutrigenomics.
We look at your biomarkers, like your micronutrients, your level of magnesium,
COQ10, glutathione, all those things.
We look at your hormones, do a hormone panel.
And then once we have that data and we know what your values are and what's most important to you in terms of your health,
we can then design these end-of-one experiments.
And I was taught at Harvard Medical School that in the hierarchy of evidence, scientific evidence,
there is observational studies.
There's expert opinion, anecdotal evidence, which is the lowest.
Then there's observational data like the nurse's health study.
Then there's randomized trials where you're usually looking at just one intervention,
like metformin to prevent the progression of pre-diabetes.
to diabetes. And then above that is the end of one experiment. Because instead of looking at populations,
we're looking at you, Drew, and we're designing a study to say, okay, what happens when you change
your exercise in this way? What happens when we define your carb threshold? What then happens to your
glucose and your metabolic flexibility? So that end of one experimentation, I think, is really the key here.
And, you know, this idea of open-mindedness, I think we often forget this in medicine.
Science requires us to be open-minded.
Science requires us to change our mind.
If there's evidence that is not supporting what you're doing and the guideline needs to change,
we have to pay attention to that.
And there are many times over the course of a career as a physician that you have to change
your mind.
And if you're more close-minded, oh, my gosh.
I really fear for the patients of that particular physician.
So I think that open-mindedness in many ways is part of the scientific process.
And it's the scientific method.
And it's essential to anyone who works in health care.
I think it's such an important rinder, especially in this day and age where also the tendency
now is because we had one political party that maybe went in the opposite direction
when it came to some of the science information.
We're seeing a little bit of the consensus science
has now kind of gone in the other direction.
And consensus science cannot be the answer to every question.
We still have to keep an open mind.
We have to understand that sometimes the most crazy ideas
that come out of the blue are an important part of the conversation.
And that's why we need to allow certain debates to take place.
and, you know, and obviously encourage civility and, you know, true scientific discourse.
But anyways, that's for a different podcast and a different conversation.
Let's come back to the Godfrey Protocol.
While we have a little bit of time here towards the end of our interview, what is it,
who is it designed for?
And can you walk us through what are the key pillars that are part of it?
The key pillars start first with detoxification.
So I want to talk, maybe I'll give an overview and then we'll circle back to why I designed it in this particular sequence.
So step one is detoxification, opening up your detox pathways.
That includes methylation.
It includes cruciferous vegetables.
It includes paying attention to antioxidants.
The second part is the ketogenic diet.
So really following a ketogenic diet in a particular way, using net carbs.
So I was told when I first started on keto not to use net carbs, but I think we have to, especially for women.
And then the third part is to layer in intermittent fasting.
But to do it in a particular way that doesn't cause hormone imbalances like disrupted cortisol.
So if I take a step back now, what I found Drew was that about seven or so years ago,
I suddenly had all of these patients who came to me who were struggling with the ketogenic diet.
So they were early adopters.
They were following different thought leaders.
They were trying keto.
They were doing the macronutrients.
They were eating the fat bombs and the bacon.
And they just weren't getting the results that they were hoping for.
Often they would do it.
They do keto with a colleague from work like a male colleague.
And the male colleague would get all the benefits.
And they were struggling.
These were mostly women.
So I saw this sex difference.
I saw that my male patients were doing a lot better on keto.
They were becoming metabolically flexible.
And the women were really struggling.
And I called them my keto refugees because they were so frustrated.
And they felt like I'm doing everything right.
What is wrong?
Why is this not happening?
So as I was struggling on my own with the ketogenic diet, I realized one of the first
pieces that's so important for women is to make sure that those detox pathways are
open. So I see a lot of women who struggle with constipation, who are not pooping every single
morning with that feeling of utter relief, like you have evacuated completely and you are ready to
start your day. So we need that in place before you can really be successful on a ketogenic diet.
You have to be eliminating. That is priority number one when it comes to many of these metabolic
hormones, especially the estrogens, because the gut is so involved.
in estrogen balance, especially estradile.
So detox, getting that dialed in is so essential that I put it first.
And also getting the vegetables that you need, the allium vegetables that raise glutathione,
the dark green leafies that help you with the B vitamins, that help you with methylation,
really important to have that in place.
Then the ketogenic diet itself, again, I said before that I used net carbs,
because I find that women who restrict total carbs too much often end up having menstrual irregularity.
We see that in up to 45% of people on classic keto.
They often have thyroid issues because reverse T3 can be raised by restricting carbohydrates
successively.
And I also see that they have issues with cortisol, so too much food stress.
So if you adapt the ketogenic diet, you focus on net carbs.
I have people begin with 20 to 25 net carbs each day.
I find that that is so much better in terms of keeping the gut component of the control
system for your hormones really working.
And then I like to layer in intermittent fasting.
And the evidence right now, you know, there's a lot of different people giving conflicting
information about intermittent fasting.
My review of the literature is that 14 hours is probably the right number in terms of an
overnight fast for women. That's not associated with too much cortisol or other hormone
disruption. So this comes from UCSD, the work of Barbara Patterson. She's done some work
looking at breast cancer risk and a few other hormonal factors. And I think 14 hours is probably
the best way to go. And I recommend that people kind of ramp up slowly to intermittent fasting.
I like to combine it with the well-formulated ketogenic diet because it's a backdoor to ketosis.
So most people can get into ketosis after some period of an overnight fast, typically 14 to 18 hours.
So that's basically the protocol.
And then when you come off the protocol, it's really important, almost like an elimination diet,
to very gradually add those net carbs back in.
So five grams of net carbs per day is what I recommend, where you're tracking
metabolic flexibility. So you're looking at glucose, you're looking at your weight, you're looking at
inflammatory fluid, you're also looking, if you want to test a little further, you're looking
at glucose ketone index. So that's a quick overview of the four-week protocol. That's great. And what are
some signs, you know, especially for somebody who comes from this background of, you know, pretty
major hormonal imbalances. What are some of the leading indicators that they should, you know,
should notice during the program and especially afterwards that they're headed in the right
direction. What should they pay attention to? Well, the first reaction is satiety, which is a very
lovely reaction where you just don't feel as hungry. You know, if I take a step back, if you look at
the literature on glucose and insulin, probably the most proven diet is a whole foods diet with no
animal protein or fat. So this is very well proven to help with glucose control. My problem is
when I eat that way, I actually gain weight. So it doesn't work for me personally. And so I have to
find a way to eat clean, but to follow a ketogenic diet. The main issue when I eat a whole foods,
plant-based, 100% plant-based diet is that I'm hungry. I'm really hungry.
And so I end up eating excessive calories.
So for me, the satiety that you get from producing ketones as a result of burning fat really
helps me with creating that metabolic flexibility that I'm after.
And of course, it's not about me.
It's about other people when they follow a low carbohydrate, high fat food plan, moderate protein.
they have this feeling of satiety that comes from the ketones that are produced,
mostly beta-hydroxybutyrate.
So that's one example, the feeling of being satisfied, not being hungry.
I haven't eaten yet today because my ketones are relatively high.
I cycle in and out of ketosis kind of as needed.
Another benefit is there should be some weight loss.
So especially for people who are overweight or.
obese, we expect as you start to burn more fat, we expect that you're going to have some fat loss.
So technically it's fat loss. I don't want people to lose muscle. I want them to lose fat.
And if you have fat to lose, that's one of the benefits that you should see from this type of
program. Another one is relationship health. Since we talked about this earlier, I think this is a really
key concept. I was just, I was filling out a functional medicine matrix and under relationship
and community, which is something we pay a lot of attention to at the Institute for Functional
medicine, I was thinking about how relationships are affected by someone becoming metabolically
flexible. So when you're metabolically flexible, your blood sugar is kind of where it should be
and not like spiking high after you have, I don't know, an assyible.
and then crashing down low right afterwards, you know, that's the kind of situation where you are just
a set up for a fight with the people that you love. And so I think another benefit is that you feel
more even. Your mood is better. You might find that anxiety is improved and that the quality of
your relationships gets better. So those are a few examples. There's a long list in the book,
but those are the three that I'm thinking about right now. Well, I can't think of anybody that
wouldn't want those three things in kind of their life. So those are three great ones. And if you can
relate to that, you know, highly recommended to pick up the book and to dive deeper into it. And
then there's a few other areas that we didn't get a chance to dive into, which you do talk about
in the book. You know, you mentioned about fat loss, not muscle loss, you know, especially as
women and men, anybody gets older, you know, muscle mass and maintaining that with targeted amounts
of protein and of course, you know, some form of resistance, you know, training that we can
incorporate in is a huge part of that. You do a deep dive into that inside of your book.
I do. Before I let you go, there are some tools. You know, you've talked about ketos,
you've talked about glucose monitoring. There's a few tools that are out there that I think
would be helpful to just share with our audience that, you know, trial and error, as you said,
rather, trial and success is a really beautiful thing. And one way that we can increase the speed
of trial and success is by getting data and information quicker. So I'd love for you to share
some of your most used tools that you have in addition to the blood work that you normally
get done that have helped you to be successful on your journey that maybe our audience can get a
chance to check out. First, I would say a glucose monitor. So we've been talking about continuous
glucose monitors. When I first started to do this work and to look at my metabolic health,
I bought one of those $25 glucose meters from Amazon. You can also get it from your local drugstore.
And it just involves pricking your finger, looking at your capillary blood the way that a lot of
diabetics do. But what we're doing is we're democratizing the data. So you don't have to wait
until you're a type two diabetic or a type one diabetic to check a finger stick. You can do it now
and assess your own metabolic health.
So I find that very helpful.
I've used tons of different meters over the years.
I've been doing this for 15 or so years.
Precision.
I don't use these as much.
I use it as a backup with my continuous glucose monitor,
but that is one way to go.
I also use a keto mojo.
So I like keto mojo.
I hope I can mention brands.
Please, please.
So keto mojo is one of my favorites because you can check both your glucose,
and you can also check your ketones and it will calculate for you your G-K-I, your glucose ketone index.
I find that very helpful, especially towards the end of the four weeks on this protocol,
where you're starting to add back more carbs and you're looking at your response.
I like a continuous glucose monitor, so I've got one right here.
There's a few different manufacturers.
There's Abbott, there's Dexcom, there's Metamptrics.
I use mostly the first two.
I like the Dexcom because it gives you continuous data.
I do research on pre-diabetes.
So I love that data doesn't get dropped, although the Abbott allows me to look at my panel of patients.
So I track their glucose on my phone, which I find very helpful.
I can kind of ping them and say, hey, what happened?
Oh, it was your son's birthday.
Okay.
All right, we can deal with that.
So I find continuous glucose testing super helpful, and it's more expensive than using a glucose meter,
which, as I said, costs about $25, $30. Keto Moja is a little bit more expensive because we're adding on ketones.
Whereas the CGMs now using them for people who don't have diabetes, so using it for folks who have
pre-diabetes, and we know that about two-thirds or more of those people don't know that they
have pre-diabetes.
What we know is that this is a little more expensive.
Sometimes insurance pays for it.
Sometimes it doesn't.
You can also, you have to get one with a prescription.
So you can get that from your clinician, or you can go to some of the direct-to-consumer
groups that offer a telehealth platform to get CGMs.
And there's a long list of those, including Nutrisense,
levels, January AI, Zoe. And I should disclose that I'm a research advisor to levels. So I have a grant
to Thomas Jefferson University to research early biomarkers of prediabetes. Yeah, it's great to see an
explosion in this space. And it's one of the reasons that, you know, I also got involved. I'm an
investor to, you know, a bunch of different companies, but in the context of this, I invested in levels.
I met Casey, one of the founders, Dr. Casey means, and she just really helped me understand, you know, where this is going in the future.
So great that you mentioned all those different ones because I love seeing innovation in this space because you know, you know, good stuff is going to come out of it.
And you know that the price is going to come down and make it more accessible.
You know, just like Tesla did with electric cars, you know, they were, first one was like super expensive.
And they still are pretty expensive out there for the average person.
but that technology is now being used by other companies to make electric cars more affordable.
And I love that.
Innovation is often such a huge part of helping us get healthier.
And in this case, it's going in the right direction.
So we'll have links to those, definitely in the show notes for the companies you mentioned,
Kido, your link with levels and some of the other groups that you mentioned.
I also want to give you a hats off as people are thinking about next steps after this interview.
I love your social media, by the way.
You do such a great job on your Instagram page, especially of breaking down.
A lot of these concepts that we talked about here in very simple, beautiful charts and videos that you also record there, too.
So be sure to follow Dr. Godfrey on Instagram as well.
The book, it's going to be out soon, September, September 21st.
So congratulations on that.
Women, Food, and Hormones.
if somebody's listening here and they know somebody who's dealing with this.
You know, hormones can be a very, it's a delicate, it can be a delicate conversation sometimes, right,
to want to support the people in your life who are dealing with challenges.
In addition to, you know, picking up the book for yourself,
are there any other resources or content that you've put out there that could be a little bit of a
teaser to get people excited about diving in and reading a book and then starting a plan,
you know, or just anything that you've seen with patience, you know, what gets them really
invested into saying, this is important to me? And so I want to go deeper and read this and
start a program that can impact my health. The thing that often gets people in the door is that
they're struggling with their weight and they're suffering over it. There's this private suffering.
I think that happens for both men and women. And I think women,
especially experience it because of some of those gender differences that we have in our culture.
So often it starts with a desire for weight loss.
And what I hope is that we're taking the middle path here, where it's not just about losing fat.
It's about this much bigger picture of your metabolic health.
So in terms of a teaser, I would say paying attention to your metabolic health,
is the best thing that you can do in terms of supporting those values that are important to you.
So I think really owning your metabolic health, taking responsibility for it,
that's what this book is about.
I take you by the hand to show you how to do it.
Some of the hormones that are involved, you can skip the science section if you don't want to get into the weeds.
But I provide the kind of step-by-step sequence that I know is effective because I did,
end-of-one experiments with my patients, with the subjects that are in this book, the cases that are in
this book. I had vegans and vegetarians and people who were on paleo before, people on the
carnivore diet, who then followed this program, followed the tenants of this program, and made it
work for them. So I think that this is an accessible way to do a ketogenic diet. It's also safe.
I think it's important to also talk about some of the contraindications to the ketogenic diet,
which I've got a few sections in the book on that. I also have some social media posts about that.
And, you know, if you're ever unsure about whether it's a good fit for you, you can always talk to your
healthcare professional about that. My favorite part of the book is the case studies because, you know,
human beings, we learn through stories. We learn through seeing other people's journeys.
That's how we've done it throughout history up until, you know, a lot more, a lot less recently,
but we still are fundamentally wired to learn from stories. So I love that aspect.
of the book. So we talked about some of the devices that are out there. We talked about where and how to
find the book. It's the first link inside the show notes. So definitely check it out. Buy a copy for
someone in your life that you love and want to see their health get better in every context
and have them feel better. And lastly, you also still, the practice still see some patients. So people can
check that out as well. Is that correct? That's right. Yeah. So I'm booked out for a while. But yes,
my practice is still open. Okay, great. Fantastic. Well, another link that we'll add into it.
Dr. Godfrey, I want to thank you for coming on our podcast and making the time for a deep dive
on all these things that you're just so knowledgeable about and have so many years of clinical experience
in addition to all the, you know, training and research that you've done on your own.
And you were truly, truly a guiding light in this space of staying away from tribalism,
providing education and practical science that can be applied right away.
And positive words of encouragement for people who feel like,
this is all so overwhelming,
you always provide the reminder of all we have to do is take it step by step.
And it's not, is it tough?
Because it is sometimes a little bit tough?
It's, is it worth it?
And when you're suffering and you're at the depths of your worst health
or you don't feel good,
anybody knows in that situation that it would be worth it.
Some people would pay everything that they have to feel better.
So thank you for being that voice and that reminder,
because it's very hopeful for people who are listening.
So I really appreciate you.
And thank you for coming on the podcast.
Thank you so much, Drew.
I mean, you just spoke my love language there,
which I so appreciate.
You know, you mentioned overwhelm.
Let me say one quick thing about that.
Overwhelm is a summary.
is the symptom of hormone imbalance. So if you find this information somewhat overwhelming,
it's not a moral failing. It's not that you're doing anything wrong. It could be your hormones.
So it's another encouragement to check out your hormones. And I just want to say to you, Drew,
every time I talked to you, I met you many years ago. Every time I talk to you, I just feel graced
by your presence. I love the opportunity to spend quality time with you, even if it's, you know,
online, I just really love what you're doing in the world and how you're making it a better place.
One podcast at a time, all the work that you do, just so impressed with your gifts and your achievements.
Thank you.
Thank you.
The gratitude means the world, and I really take it in and sit with it.
So thank you for that.
Dr. Godfrey, you are amazing.
and I'm so happy that you came on to provide our audience with this education.
So hope to have you back on soon, to have the next part of this conversation and whatever
shape or form, we want to take it.
So thank you again for being here.
Thanks, Drew.
