Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - The Bitter Truth About Sugar with Dr Robert Lustig (Re-release) #616
Episode Date: January 25, 2026My guest on this week’s Feel Better Live More podcast is Dr Robert Lustig, Professor of Paediatric Endocrinology at the University of California. He’s a leading public health expert who has long b...een exposing the myths of modern medicine and the food industry. His passion is communicating how sugar and ultra-processed food is fuelling the chronic disease epidemic that we are all facing today. Obesity, type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, heart disease and so much more are caused, in Rob’s view, by the foods that we are eating. In his latest book, Metabolical: The Lure and the Lies of Processed Food, Nutrition and Modern Medicine, he outlines what he calls the ‘hateful eight’ – the eight root causes in our body that underlie all chronic disease. He explains how food and sugar impact on them and, most importantly, suggests strategies to counteract them. In this conversation, Rob explains why sugar is so damaging and explains that just like alcohol, our bodies can cope with sugar in small amounts. But in excess will end up in the liver and ultimately trigger us to get sick. Rob’s decades of clinical experience and research has led to his bold and compelling assertion that the answer to all chronic disease can be found in real food. His solution? To ‘protect the liver, feed the gut’. I think these 6 words are an elegant way of summarising the nutritional advice that all of us should consider taking on board in order to improve our health and wellbeing. We talk about what constitutes ‘real food’ and how different levels of food processing are classified. Rob explains why sugar-sweetened drinks are so disastrous for health, particularly in children – and why diet drinks do just as much damage, if not more. We also talk about TOFI (thin on the outside, fat on the inside) and fascinatingly, Rob outlines the three types of fat gain that we can all experience: subcutaneous (which you can see); visceral (stress-related fat around the middle), and liver fat. It’s only the first of these that you’re likely to notice – but it’s the latter two which we really need to fix, especially as they’re already appearing in kids. This conversation is full of mind-blowing facts and insights but it’s also really empowering and contains simple, practical tips that all of us can use to improve our lives. I hope you enjoy listening. Caution: contains mild swearing. Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore. For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com. Thanks to our sponsors: https://ag1.com/livemore https://thewayapp.com/livemore Show notes https://drchatterjee.com/616 DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We underwent a revolution back in the 1930s, 40s with antibiotics,
where we thought a pill could treat everything.
Now we're undergoing a revolution where we realized that was a mistake.
It's time to rethink health.
It's time to rethink health care.
You can't fix health care until you fix health.
You can't fix health until you fix diet,
and you can't fix diet until you know what the hell is wrong.
and what you thought was wrong was basically propaganda for the last 50 years.
Hi, my name is Rongan Chatsky.
Welcome to Feel Better Live More.
My guest on this week's podcast is Dr. Robert Lustig.
Now, Robert is a professor of pediatric endocrinology at the University of California,
but he's also a leading public health experts who for years has been,
eloquently exposing the myths of modern medicine and the food industry.
Now, one of his great passions is communicating how sugar and ultra-processed food
is fueling the chronic disease epidemic that we are all facing today.
Obesity, top-to-diabetes, metabolic syndrome, heart disease, and so much more,
in Robert's view, are primarily caused by the foods that we are eating.
In his latest book, Metabolical, he outlines what he's,
He calls the hatesful eight.
The eight root causes in our body that underlie all chronic disease
and explains how food can impact every single one of them.
In our conversation, Rob explains why too much sugar can be so damaging
and explains that just like alcohol, our bodies can actually cope with sugar in small amounts,
but in excess, that sugar will end up in our liver and ultimately trigger us to get sick.
Rob's decades of clinical experience in research has led to his bold and compelling assertion
that the answer to all chronic disease can be found in real food.
And in our conversation, Rob explains exactly what he means by that term.
Now, his advice to all of us when it comes to eating is to protect the liver and feed the gut.
And I think these six words are a really elegant way of summarizing the nutrition advice
that all of us should consider taking on board in order to improve our health and well-being.
And we cover so many different topics in this conversation,
including why sugar, sweetened drinks are so disastrous for our health,
but also why diet drinks can also do just as much damage, if not more.
We also talk about something called Tofi, T-O-F-I,
thin on the outside and fat on the inside.
And fascinatingly, Rob outlines the three different types of fat gain
that we can all experience.
Subcutaneous, the fact that we can see,
visceral, the stressed-related fat that we often get around our middles,
and liver fats.
And really importantly, it's only the first of these three patterns
that you are likely to notice.
But it's the latitude which we really need to fix,
especially as they're already appearing in kids.
Yes, this conversation is full of mind-blowing facts and insights,
but it's also really, really empowering.
There are simple, practical tips
that all of us can use to improve our own lives
and the lives of the people we love.
I hope you enjoy listening.
And now, my conversation
with Professor Robert Lustig.
What are the key negatives
when we consume too much sugar
or I guess the levels of sugar
that many of us are currently consuming?
Well, first of all, let's make it very clear that sugar is not the only problem in our diet.
It's the big one.
It's the 2,000-pound gorilla in our diet, but there's other stuff too.
But sugar is a particularly egregious molecule.
Once upon a time, trans fats were the worst thing we consumed.
Trans fats are the devil incarnate.
Trans fats, the bacteria can't chew it up, which is why they put the trans fats in.
all right so that you know it would last forever you know the 10 year old twinkie well the fact is our
mitochondria our little energy burning factories inside all ourselves are really refurbished bacteria
we can't chew it up either so the exact same reason for why they put the trans fats in the food
is exactly why you shouldn't eat the food now we know that and they've come out of our diet so now
sugar is public enemy number one so what does sugar do
and the answer is a whole bunch of bad things.
The food industry says sugar's energy.
Well, they're correct if you're a bomb calerimeter.
If you just blow it up, if you explode it, yeah, you get four calories per gram.
But we are not bomb calorimeters.
Turns out that sugar actually poisons the mitochondrial.
It poisons it at three separate enzymes that are necessary for mitochondria to do their job.
The first one, AMP kinase, which is the fuel gauge on the liver cell.
The second one, ACADL, acyl-CoA dehydrogenase long chain, which is necessary to get fatty acids into the mitochondria to be able to oxidize them to create energy.
And the third one is CPT1, carnitine-Pil-Midil-Midivol transferase one, which is the,
enzyme that regenerates carnitine, which is the shuttle mechanism that brings the fatty acids
into the mitochondria in the first place. In other words, when you consume sugar, you are poisoning
your mitochondria. You are generating less of the chemical energy that our cells get powered by,
called ATP. So if you're making less ATP, is that energy? It's the opposite of energy.
So when you consume sugar, you are actually inhibiting your body's energy production.
Can you think of a chemical that inhibits your mitochondria and reduces ATP production?
Cyanide.
Cyanide does that.
Okay?
Sugar and cyanide do the same thing.
Now, obviously, not as severely.
Okay.
You know, cyanide parts per million keel over and die on the spot.
with sugar, you know, it's in the parts per thousand and you don't keel over on the spot,
but you feel lousy, and over time it's going to take its toll.
But ultimately, if you're inhibiting your mitochondria, you are poisoning your body.
And we now have the data to show how that occurs.
So here's my question to you and your audience.
sugar is in virtually all ultra-processed foods and ultra-processed foods are now 56% of the UK diet
and the amount of sugar that Brits eat, 62% of it is found in the ultra-processed food category.
So my question to you and your audience is, is ultra-process food food?
My view is that it's not really. I would say no, but I know to many people that is super
controversial, which we're definitely going to talk about. But yeah, on a straight answer,
I would say no. Depends on your definition, I guess, because it's energy, it's got some
calories in it, which we consume in our mouth that enable us on one level to sort of,
I guess you're saying it's actually reduced.
the energy production, the sugar within it anyway. But yeah, on one level, it sustains people
and they can actually get on with their days, at least in the short term anyway.
Well, you have to know what the definition of food is. So if I had my Webster's dictionary
right here right now, you guys, you know, in the UK probably don't use Webster's. You probably
have something else. But if I pulled it off the shelf, it would say that the definition of food is
the following. And I have no problem with this definition.
definition. Substrate that contributes to either the growth or burning of an organism.
That's the definition. I have no problem with that definition. It's a fine definition.
All right? Substrate that contributes to either the growth or burning of an organism.
So we've just talked about burning. Sugar does not contribute to the burning of an organism.
It actually inhibits the burning of an organism.
And Dr. Kevin Hall at the NIH did a study where he showed that when you give people ultra-processed
food, they burn less and gain more weight when everything else is controlled for compared to the
same diet in real food. Did this in 2019. So ultra-processed food does not contribute to burning.
So now let's go to growth. Does ultra-processed food contribute to growth? My colleague,
Dr. Efrat Monsignigo Ornan, who is the chairman of the Department of Nutrition at Hebrew University, Jerusalem,
just published three papers in bone research showing that ultra-process food actually inhibits skeletal growth,
inhibits the ability of bones to increase in length and in width.
And in addition, we know from the NutriNet Sante study and many other studies that, in fact,
what sugar does is it feeds cancer cells, it hijacks growth. So, sugar doesn't contribute to burning,
inhibits it, doesn't contribute to growth, inhibits it, or hijacks it. So I pose the question to you again,
Ranga. Is ultra-processed food food? I'll go with my original answer, which is no. That is right. It is no.
ding ding that's right but the point is that the food industry you know refuses to go there
the populace refuses to go there the governments refuse to go there and you and i are both
interested in mitigating chronic disease and you are right if you get people on a real food diet
you can mitigate virtually any and all of their chronic diseases. I completely agree. You give a TEDx
talk, basically saying you can basically take away somebody's chronic disease. I used to do that in my clinic
when I was practicing routinely. Yeah. But only if they changed the food. And if they didn't change the
food, no amount of medicine I threw at them could make a difference. Yeah. I mean, what strikes me
as a really key message is that the majority of what we are buying to feed ourselves and our families
is ultra-processed food, whether it's here in the UK or with you in America,
and that is contributing to this tsunami of chronic ill health that we're seeing.
It's pretty, you know, it's pretty alarming.
But what I think is so key, Rob, for me is that it's so,
so normalized now.
Yeah.
Like it's the norm everywhere,
schools, hospitals.
In fact, if you want to go down the real food routes,
you almost feel like a bit of a,
like, you know, if you try and do it with your kids,
you actually become a social outcast in some ways.
Yep, and a pariah.
And I think this is the problem.
It's just, it's the norm.
We've moved so far away from what we used to do.
In fact, maybe this is a good time for you to explain
what you used to do when you were eight years old,
because I believe you had a granddad,
who lived in Brooklyn.
And every Saturday you would do something,
which I think beautifully illustrates this points.
That's right.
So, yeah, bottom line is I completely agree with you.
What we've done is we've normalized it.
Once upon a time it was actually not normal to eat ultra-processed food.
And today, it is normal.
And I remember when that happened because it happened to me.
It happened to me in two ways.
So on Saturday afternoons, my family would go visit
my grandparents who lived about, oh, I don't know, eight miles away in Brooklyn.
And my grandfather would walk me down to the corner grocery store to buy a comic book
and a six and a half ounce bottle of Coca-Cola.
And I remember, you know, pretty much every Saturday afternoon.
And that was the big treat, you know, the comic book and the Coca-Cola.
That was on Ocean Avenue and Avenue and in Brooklyn.
You know, the fact is that that was once a week and it was six and a half ounces.
Today, you know, children are consuming about, I think, 35 ounces a day, you know, median.
So they are getting about six times the amount of sugar that I did from that one Coke.
And they're doing it every day instead of once a week in addition.
I mean, that's just, can we just pause on that for a second?
You're saying you had six ounces once a week,
and we're assuming back then
that the rest of your diet throughout the week
was low in sugar, low in processed food,
sort of a real food diet.
Well, my mother worked three jobs,
and so I ate a lot of Swanson TV dinners
when they first came out.
And I remember when they came out around 1964.
You know, the fried chicken, the Salisbury steak,
I hated that Salisbury steak.
And I actually, she trained me on how to turn the oven on and how to heat him up because often she wasn't home at night.
You know, so, you know, to some extent, I was a latchkey kid because my mother worked so hard.
You know, my father was in Manhattan all day.
And so, you know, I basically had to sort of take care of myself.
And sometimes I had to eat dinner, you know, out of the freezer.
And so I remember, you know, those swanets.
and TV dinners and, you know, they were a problem and they're still a problem. So you put the two
together and that was the beginning of, you know, the, shall we say, onslaught of processed food
in the United States, about the mid-60s. Then things picked up even more in 1975 when we started
substituting high fructose corn syrup for sucrose because it was half as
expensive and it was homegrown. And then finally, the piesteresistance came in 1977 when the McGovern
Commission released its report saying that we all needed to eat less fat to try to prevent cardiovascular
disease. Well, when you take the fat out of food, it tastes like cardboard. And so what did the food
industry do? It basically replaced the fat with sugar. That's why we ended up with Intamin's fat-free
cakes and, you know, and the like. And that was when the pasta craze, you know, first hit was,
you know, refined carbohydrate because it was low in fat, et cetera. And, you know, now we're off to the
races. And it's just exploded ever since. Is it the sugar that's inherently bad in enough itself,
or is it the excess amounts? I mean, or is it both, right? Because I think a lot of people might say,
well, look, you know what? This never used to be a problem, right? And we would have the odd sweet treat now and
again.
But so, and actually there's quite, there's quite a few prominent scientists as you're,
well-aware world.
We say actually sugar's not a problem.
Sugar's actually completely fine.
We're working on it.
I have a bone to pick with some of those scientists, and we can argue that and talk about
that, if you like, as to exactly why they say what they say.
So here's what I can tell you.
All right.
there are social drinkers and there are alcoholics now social drinkers can pick up a beer and put it down
and they don't need one every day alcoholics pick up a whiskey and can't put it down and they need it
three times a day, right?
Yeah.
Did the one beer that the social drinker drank hurt them?
Unlikely.
Unlikely.
Unlikely.
And the reason it's unlikely is because there is a what is known as a first pass effect.
You drink the alcohol in the beer.
First of all, it's very low percentage, right?
It's only a 3.6% in a beer.
all right and that is about oh 60 calories worth or so of alcohol and what happens is that the first pass
effect the stomach and intestine metabolize that alcohol before any of it ever gets to the liver
and so the amount that actually hits the liver that could do damage is exceedingly small
and as long as you're not following up with a second beer and a third beer and a fourth beer
and a fifth beer, you know, like can happen at the Newcastle pub, you know, you don't usually have a big
problem, right? But if you keep doing that, then that is a problem. So it's a dose-dependent phenomenon
and your intestine is there to try to protect your liver from getting the onslaught before it will do damage.
same with sugar no difference so your intestine can take a small amount of sugar that you consume and can
actually turn it into fat in the intestine intestinal de novo lipogenesis the process of converting
sugar to fat into vl d ldl in the intestine so that it will not go
straight to your liver.
Right?
And about 10% of an initial sugar bolus will undergo intestinal dNL and therefore be diverted away
from the liver and into the bloodstream as VLDL.
Now that VLVL is not great for you because it could ultimately cause heart disease, but it's
protecting the liver.
But if you consume past your intestine's capacity to do that, now the rest of it's going to end up
your liver. And the problem with sugar in the liver is exactly the same as the problem of alcohol in the
liver, because it causes the exact same processes. It causes glycation, it causes oxidative stress,
it causes mitochondrial dysfunction, and basically drives insulin resistance. This phenomenon that we now
know is at the base of virtually all chronic metabolic diseases. Therefore, your pancreas has to make extra
insulin to make the liver do its job because now the liver's not working right because it's been
poisoned and so insulin levels rise all over the body and now you've got you know the risk for
Alzheimer's you've got the risk for heart disease you've got the risk for for cancer you've got
the risk for virtually every other chronic metabolic disease on the plate all because of what
happened to your liver and fructose that sweet molecule and sugar
basically has the same fate as alcohol.
So when people say, oh, you know, little sugar's fine.
Yeah, because your intestine diverts that little bit away from the liver.
As soon as you overwhelm that capacity, now your liver is right in the crosshairs.
And that's when chronic disease is going to start.
Yeah.
Rob, you're a pediatrician.
I've seen videos of you talking with passion about this exact topic,
maybe 15 years ago, still online.
Something like that.
When was it, when was the first time for you that you started to think,
you know, what's going on here?
In the book, you have been pretty, it's pretty provocative at times.
I actually agree with it.
So I like it.
You've really gone out there.
You've sort of, you've ripped into modern medicine at times.
And we're definitely going to talk about that.
But when was it, because you do have this sort of incredible passion and energy to get this message out there.
And I'm just wondering, what was it in your clinical experience that actually really got you into thinking there must be another way here?
This can't be right.
Well, so I had three aha moments.
Three.
And that sort of got me to where I am today and why I'm saying what I am saying today.
The first aha moment came when I worked at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee,
in pediatric cancer hospital. And I went there in 1995 and I was presented with a cadre of about 40 children who had survived their brain tumors,
you know, because of surgery and radiation, sometimes chemotherapy, who had become massively obese.
They were perfectly normal weight before the tumor, and now they were on the order of 350 to 400 pounds.
Okay, normal kids before the tumor and now massively obese.
And there's a name for this. It's called hypothalamic obesity was first written about it, first
described in 1901 by Freelik and Babinski, two of the greats of international neurology.
And I had all these kids with hypothalamic obesity that I had to take care of.
And like, how do you get them to lose weight?
How do you get them to get better?
And it had been shown previously that diet and exercise is useless.
In fact, George Bray, the father of obesity research in America in 1975, had taken eight of these kids on his ward and fed them 500 calories a day for a month.
What do you think their weight did?
Well, you would expect it came down, but I suspect in this case it probably didn't.
It went up.
Yeah.
Okay, 500 calories a day, and their weight did.
it went up like how does that happen the answer is it happens because they were burning it slower
than they were taking it in because their metabolism of calories had actually come to a virtual standstill
so even 500 calories a day was too much and these kids have like no energy they
sit on a couch, they're not interested in anything. The parents would actually complain that that was
the worst thing about this. They'd say, this is double jeopardy. My kid has survived the tumor
only to succumb to the therapy because my kid is a lump on a log and he's lost interest
in everything. He's lost interest in school. He's lost interest in life. He's lost interested
in activity. He's lost interest in friends. He's lost interest in everything. All he wants to do is
sit and sleep.
And so I had to take care of these kids.
So I went to the literature and I said, oh, the other thing was that this was exactly when
the hormone leptin had been discovered.
Leptin was discovered in 1994.
And I was prepared for that discovery because I worked at Rockefeller University with the guys
who discovered it, Jeff Friedman and Rudy Libel.
All the MDs at Rockefeller University all had to take call.
in the hospital together. So we were always trading, you know, call dates and everything. So everybody
knew what everybody else was doing. So I knew that they were trying to clone this, you know, this hormone,
you know, out of these mice. And so when they did in 1994, I was very prepared for it. So I moved to
St. Jude and I had these kids and it's like, what am I going to do for? And I postulated right then that
these kids must have leptin resistance.
These kids can't see their leptin.
And the reason is because their hypothalamus is dead because we killed it because of the tumor or the
surgery of the radiation.
And so because they can't see their leptin, their brain thinks they're starving.
So the question was, okay, their brain thinks they're starving.
Is there what's downstream of leptin?
what's actually making them gain the weight?
The starvation is why they're hungry,
but what's making them gain the weight?
Well, we knew that these kids made a lot of insulin,
and we knew that there's this animal model
of damaging the hypothalamus,
and they put out enormous amounts of insulin,
and you could actually stop that
by cutting the vagus nerve.
The vagus nerve is the nerve that leads from the brain to the pancreas,
and then the insulin would go down.
So I said, well, I can't cut their vagus nerve.
I'm not a surgeon and that's a little drastic.
But what if I gave them a medicine that suppressed their insulin release?
So we gave them a drug called octetide, the drug that is used by endocrinologists
to usually suppress growth hormone release, but it also suppresses insulin release.
So we repurposed it.
And we gave it to these kids, and lo and behold,
I started losing weight.
They couldn't lose weight before.
You know, George Bray showed they gained weight.
They were losing weight.
And something even more remarkable happened.
Today's episode is sponsored by AG1,
a daily health drink that has been in my own life for over seven years.
Now, the colder months can make it harder to stay motivated.
Less sunlight, reduce movements,
and seasonal mood dips can leave people feeling physically,
and mentally drained, especially when trying to maintain healthy routines.
Now, a lot of us rely on coffee or energy drinks to push through,
but these often lead to crashes and poor sleep quality,
and really are not the best long-term solution.
AG1 is a daily health drink that can support our energy
through its blend of B vitamins, vitamin C and magnesium.
These nutrients help reduce tiredness and fatigue,
while supporting normal, psychological and nervous system function.
And unlike caffeine, these nutrients actually work with the body's natural energy systems.
I know myself that I can feel a significant difference in energy levels
on the days where I have taken my AG1.
And if you struggle to stay consistent with energy boosting habits like exercise
or prepping food in advance,
AG1 could be a simple and effective way to help.
For a limited time only, get a free AG1 flavour sampler and AGZ sampler to try all the flavors,
plus free vitamin D3 and K2 and AG1 Welcome Kit with your first monthly subscription or details at drinkag1.com forward slash live more.
They started exercising spontaneously.
One kid started competitive swimming.
Two kids started lifting weights at home.
One kid became the manager of his high school basketball team,
running around, collecting all the basketballs.
I mean, these were kids who sat on the couch, ate Doritos, and slept.
And now they're active again.
And the parents would say, oh, my God, I've got my kid back.
And the kid would say, this is the first time my head hasn't been in the cloud since the tumor.
Yeah.
So something had changed.
changed their relationship to the world, not just their relationship to food, but their relationship
to the world. So we said, this is very interesting. So we did a double-blind placebo-control trial,
and this time built a quality of life measure into the protocol. And sure enough, the lower we got
the insulin with the drug, not only the more weight they lost, but the more active they were. So what this did,
The reason why this is so important and the reason I'm spending so much time on it,
Ranga, is because this turns the first law of thermodynamics on its head.
Because the standard interpretation of the first law goes like this.
The first law is, you know, the total energy inside a closed system remains constant.
Your energy can neither be created nor destroyed, just shifted around.
The standard interpretation that we learn in medical school and what the general public learns is,
if you eat it, you better burn it or are you going to store it?
In which case, the storing part, the fat gain, is secondary to the primary problems,
which are the eating and the burning, the gluttony and the sloth.
therefore the weight gain is secondary to the gluttony and the sloth.
Therefore, it's about behavior.
Fix the behavior, fix the weight.
What we showed in these kids was it's exactly the opposite.
Turn it around.
What we showed was if you're going to store it,
that is a high insulin level leading to obligate weight gain,
and you expect to burn it, that is normal energy expenditure for normal quality of life,
because energy expenditure and quality of life are synonyms for each other.
Then you're going to have to eat it.
And now the storage is primary, and the behaviors are secondary.
The gluttonian sloth are actually because of leptin resistance.
So we get sick first, and then the weight comes.
afterwards. That's right. We get sick first and the weight is secondary. That's exactly right.
So this is, you know, monumental. This is huge. But of course, you know, it goes against everything that we are
taught and it goes against everything that, you know, doctors routinely believe. But this was my first
aha moment. My second aha moment.
came in 2006. So I realized that insulin was the bad guy and we started then changing what we did
in clinic. Instead of worrying about weight, we worried about insulin. We said get the insulin down
any way you can. And that's what my clinic became. It became an insulin reduction clinic.
It didn't be it wasn't a weight loss clinic. It was an insulin reduction clinic. And when we got
the insulin down, then they lost weight.
So in 2006, I was asked to give a talk at the NIH, specifically the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
They were having their 100 anniversary of public health.
And it was a two-day symposium.
The first day was on their successes, like lead poisoning and pollution and asthma, things they'd figured out and, you know, been able to do something for the public health.
And the second day was on challenges.
And the morning was going to be obesity and metabolic syndrome.
And the afternoon was going to be ADD in autism.
Okay.
So they asked me to give a talk.
What do you think is the single most important environmental exposure that leads to obesity and metabolic
syndrome?
And they probably figured I was going to give a talk about some, you know, like,
BPA or some other, you know, environmental, you know, toxicant, you know, that's in the water or in
the air, you know, something like that. And I thought to myself, how am I going to, you know, make this
worthwhile? And I thought to myself, all right, wait a second. Let's let's go backwards here.
Children today get two diseases they never got before. Type 2 diabetes and fatty liver disease.
Those two. Children never got those before. Now, lots of kids get them. All right. So I looked up type 2 diabetes and fatty liver disease. And of course, you know, I know a lot about both of them, but I very specifically looked for origins and causation. It turns out that in the old days, you know, back in the 1970s before this pandemic of chronic disease started, those both those diseases were the diseases of
type 2 diabetes and fatty liver disease were the diseases of alcohol.
But kids don't drink alcohol.
So I said, all right, is there something they're exposed to that's like alcohol?
So I opened up my Leninger, you know, biochemistry textbook from 1974,
sitting at this table that I'm at right now.
I said, what the hell is like alcohol?
And there it was and stared me right in the friggin' face.
Right off the page from 1974.
And the answer was fructose.
Fructose and alcohol are metabolized virtually identically.
And it makes sense that that would be the case, because after all, where do you get alcohol from?
Fermentation of fructose.
It's called wine.
Yeah.
We do it in Napa and Sonoma every day.
The big difference between fructose and alcohol is that for alcohol, the yeast does the first step of metabolism called glycolysis.
For fructose, we do our own first step of metabolism.
But after that, what the mitochondria see are exactly the same, as to Koe.
It's just a question of which was the substrate.
Was it the ethanol or was it the fructose?
But ultimately, they end up with the same fate.
So it's very clear, all of a sudden, looking at that right there, that this is the substrate
that is driving both the type 2 diabetes and the fatty liver disease.
So I put together a talk and I went to North Carolina and I said, this is what I think's going on.
And here's why, half hour talk.
And then there was the bathroom break.
And, you know, I got my applause and then everyone left the room and they didn't come back.
You know, I'm standing there at the podium talking with, you know, this person, that person.
And no one's coming back for the next session.
And then I had to use the bathroom.
So I went out and I actually got tackled in the friggin' bathroom of the NIH by a bunch of crazed toxicologists screaming at me saying, oh, my God, oh my God.
You're right.
This makes perfect sense.
This is the toxin.
You have to tell everyone about this.
I guess I'm still doing it.
I guess you still are.
So if the toxicologist went berserk, it might be true.
And then that was the second aha.
And then the third aha was not even my aha.
It was my colleague's aha, but I adopted it.
So we got very interested in sugar here at UCSF after that.
We actually have a group of us, we call the Sugar Hill,
gang. They're actually referenced in the book here. But my colleagues, Kristen Carnes, Laura Schmidt,
and Stan Glance started looking at the paper trail of the food industry back in the 1960s and found
the actual paper trail that showed that the food industry paid off scientists to exonerate sugar
and finger saturated fat is the bad guy.
We actually found their documents that showed the money transfer and the communications,
just like what the January 6th committee is doing now, follow the money.
And so we actually proved that the sugar industry put their thumb on the scale back in the 1960s
to exonerate their product because there had been data that have been coming out at that point
showing that sugar was not good for you.
In fact, that's what John Yudkin found.
Remember, pure white and deadly.
And he had found, you know, shown that data.
And so people were starting to cast a, you know, a fish eye at sugar.
And so they had to go into overdrive mode to PR this problem away.
And so they approached the chairman of the Department of Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, Fred Stair.
And his associate, Mark Hengstead, who ended up becoming the head of the head of
the US Department of Agriculture in 1970, to pay them off $6,500 back then, which would be about
50,000 today, to write two review articles to appear in the New England Journal of Medicine that
basically said saturated fats the bad guy and sugar is no problem whatsoever. That's the third
aha moment. It's all a scam. The whole things have put up job. And that's why I wrote
metabolic.
Sugar and alcohol, I don't think people commonly would put the two things together.
People I think, like Joe Public, I think would think, okay, alcohol, I know, if I drink too
much, it's not good for me, it's going to cause problems with my liver.
I think there's that understanding.
And if I drink a little bit, have some days off a week, you know, the odd glass of wine here
and there is probably not going to be too bad for me.
I think is what most people tend to think.
That's true.
And if that were the case, that would be true.
And that's true for about the 40% of Americans who are social drinkers.
You know, 40% are teetotlers, don't touch your stuff.
Okay.
40% are social drinkers.
Can pick up a beer, put it down like me.
Okay.
But 10% are binge drinkers and 10% are hardcore alcoholics.
Yeah.
But I don't think people think of sugar in the same way
in terms of what it does for the liver.
And I think that's a really, I think eye-opening comparison for a lot of people.
The other thing you said, which I think really beautifully ties into the start of this conversation,
is that you started running an insulin reduction clinic.
And, you know, like you, I'm very passionate in root causes.
And this idea that we've labelled all these so-called separate diseases,
we get taught about them at medical school.
There's other all separate entities.
and then for this treatment, for this disease, you take this drug and you have this sort of treatment.
And we look at that downstream pathology, don't we?
But you mentioned mitochondria at the start in terms of what sugar or excess sugar can do to mitochondria.
And that, you know, mitochondrial dysfunction sits at the heart of so many different conditions.
But also insulin resistance, right?
So that insulin resistance, that insulin lowering clinic actually,
would probably depend on who was coming in.
I appreciate you're a pediatrician.
But if all of us as doctors ran insulin reduction clinics,
we would get rid of 75% of the chronic disease in the world.
Exactly.
It's that root cause again, isn't it?
Yeah, absolutely.
I totally agree, which is what I'm trying to, you know, bring to, you know, medicine.
Unfortunately, you know, medicine is provincial.
medicine doesn't, you know, respond very well to, you know, new ideas.
It's a, you know, it's a cartel, if you will.
You're very critical of modern medicine in the book.
You say modern medicine treats symptoms.
You say modern medicine is not the solution.
I do indeed.
And I agree with this.
It's something I'm, it's one of my big frustrations in my, what, now,
20, 21 year career, seeing patients. It's like, you know, I sometimes wonder,
if doctors honestly ask themselves sometimes at the end of their day, and obviously it depends
where you work, I'm not talking about intensive care necessarily. I'm talking about, you know,
chronic patients that, and I did this once, Rob, I did this in general practice once. I asked
myself at the end of the day, how many patients do you honestly think you've really helped today?
And quite a few years ago, it was 20%.
I thought, I've only helped 20% of people.
The other 80% I've done something.
I've sent them off for a test.
I've referred them or I've given them a drug.
But I kind of knew they'd be back.
I thought, I'm not really getting to the heart of this problem.
I knew it.
And I kind of feel the patient knew it as well.
And that's kind of one of the things that led me on this journey
to try and understand that there must be a different way.
And that's why I think metabolic.
is such a wonderful book. It outlines the history. It outlines the science. But it also gives
some really practical solutions. You know, we treat medicine. And unfortunately, medical schools
treat medicine like a big game of clue. You know, Colonel Mustard in the conservatory with the
candlestick. Match the symptom card with the diagnosis card with the treatment card and discharge
your patient. In fact, in 1980, there was a game that we used to play in residency, you know,
on like Sunday mornings before things got busy in the ER called intern. And that was what you did.
You basically took your symptom card, you got a symptom card, you got a diagnostic card,
and you got a treatment card. And once you got the three of them together, you got rid of the
patient first player to discharge, you know, to discharge all their patients won the game.
You know, and that's how we treated it. So, you know, these disease,
diseases, you know, got a meningitis, here's an antibiotic, you know, got a cancer, here's a chemotherapy,
you know, but the fact is chronic disease doesn't, you know, really fit into that.
There are, there are eight, count them, eight chronic diseases that have completely taken over
modern medicine, eight, and here they are.
type 2 diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia, cardiovascular disease, cancer, dementia, fatty liver
disease, polycystic ovarian disease, those eight. Those eight now account together for 75% of all
health care costs. And none of them have a cure. None of them even have a treatment,
but they all have a prevention. We're not preventing it.
We're handing out, you know, statins or, you know, oral hypoglycemics or, you know, antihpertensives, you know, like candy.
But that's treating the symptoms, you know, the manifestations of the disease, not actually treating the cause.
And the reason is because those diseases are not really the diseases.
What's going on underneath to cause all eight of those diseases are exactly the same.
They're just in different organs.
And here are the eight things that I outline in the book, what I call the diseases that are not diseases.
I call them the hateful eight.
And here they are.
And these are things that people don't know because they don't have ICD-11 codes.
And doctors don't know what to do about them so they don't even mention them.
So no one's ever heard of them.
And they didn't learn them in medical school either.
So here they are.
Eight.
Number one, glycation.
Number two, oxidative stress.
Number three, mitochondrial dysfunction.
Number four, insulin resistance. Number five, membrane instability, number six, inflammation,
number seven, methylation, number eight, autophagy.
Now, these are all normal phenomena that happen, but they can be speeded up or slowed down
by what you eat. Now, it turns out when you have control over all eight of those things,
you will be 110 playing tennis.
And when you don't have control over those eight things,
you will be 40 years old in a wheelchair with two stumps on dialysis waiting for your next stroke.
And of course, everything in between.
So those are the choices.
Those are the options.
And because none of those eight, the hateful eight that I just mentioned,
None of them have a cure.
None of them even have a treatment.
They only have a prevention.
We're not preventing anything.
And that's why you felt like you were not helping any of your patients,
because you weren't addressing those eight root causes
that you yourself know to be the big problem in medicine.
Yeah, it's like a leaking roof, isn't it? The roof's leaking and you're just putting a bucket there to pick up the water. That's kind of what the drugs are doing. Yeah, it's great. There's no water there on the floor so you can live a little bit better. But you're not getting to the cause, right? You need to fix the leak in the roof and then actually you no longer need the buckets.
Right. And the problem is if you don't fix the leak in the roof, you won't have a house.
Yeah. That was one of my favorite parts of the book, these eight processes that are recurring in all of us,
and they're either promoting health and longevity or they're actually the opposite and creating illness and ultimately disease.
And I really love the way you said that actually medicines aren't really tackling those things.
And I just want to be really clear for people that anti-hypertensives or, you know, drugs in general, they have a role sometimes, right?
They can be helpful in certain situations.
I think you're in agreement with that.
It's just we over-
I'm not against them.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm not against them per se.
But the problem is that if you don't fix the underlying problem,
what have you done?
So it's fine to give a statin to lower an LDL,
but what have you done?
Have you actually fixed the problem?
You haven't done a damn thing about the problem.
The problem's still there.
Okay?
So, you know, the very first sentence of the book,
okay?
Starts like this.
You find a wasp in your attic.
What do you do?
kill the wasp or find the wasps nest.
You have to work upstream of a problem to solve a problem.
Working downstream of a problem only fixes the result of the problem.
The problem's still there.
And if you can kill the wasp,
but then the next time you go up into the attic,
you're going to be stung into submission by all the other wasps.
because you didn't fix the problem.
I think we really say,
I want to make sure everyone listening and watching this has got this
that what you're talking about is really at the heart
of pretty much every single chronic disease
that's going on at the moment,
that is afflicting families, it's overwhelming healthcare systems,
it's causing disability,
it's causing reduction in the quality of life.
And actually most of them are caused by
you know, malfunction in these eight areas. But ultimately, what you're making a very strong case for
is that it's actually the modern food environment, this highly ultra-processed food that we are consuming
in inordinate quantities is actually at the root cause. And unless we deal with that as a root cause,
we're going to be struggling. People are going to be suffering. Health care systems are going to
be suffering and we're not going to get anywhere. Your intro to the book was,
it literally was so punchy.
Like, we could just do a podcast on the introduction, frankly.
But there's a couple of bits I've underlined,
which if you don't mind me reading it back to you, your own book.
I so appreciate that you called my intro punchy
because several people on, you know, Amazon have said, you know,
all he did was rant.
But, you know, I guess it depends on how concerned you are about the problem.
Yeah.
And this is such a big problem.
like it's arguably the biggest problem that's going on across the globe at the moment.
Because you see in your kids, right? You see kids. I see kids. And when you see a seven-year-old
with pre-diabetes, you're like, this wasn't happening 25 years ago. Something is going on.
We can't just give them metformin or we have to try and figure out what's causing this.
Canaries, if kids are the canaries in the coal mine. And if you ignore it, you know, you do it at your own risk.
That's just that simple. And that's what we're doing. We've done. We've ignored it.
The other thing is that everybody right now is completely distracted. Okay, they're distracted by this
thing called COVID. Okay. And I understand why. And, you know, it's just, it's certainly distracting.
However, let's talk about that for a minute. Okay. People are dying in droves in every country.
UK, US, you know, you name it. Do you know where they're not dying?
They're not dying in countries that actually still have real food.
Third world countries actually have a very low death rate.
And it's not because they're using masks or hand washing, you know, or social distancing.
The reason is because they're eating real food.
We have the data on mortality rates of the different countries.
I can put it up on the screen if you want.
But the bottom line is it's only the developed countries that have the high mortality rates.
Now, why is that?
So we've identified the elderly, and they have immune dysfunction.
We understand that.
They can't generate the same cytokine response that you need, you know, that everyone else should be able to.
Okay, let's put the elderly aside for a moment, because that's true everywhere.
It was true in Italy, too.
But the other three things, the other three demographics that were shown to be, you know, related to COVID mortality.
Here they are. People of color, the obese, and pre-existing conditions. Those three. People of color, the obese, pre-existing conditions. What do those three demographics share in common?
Probably poor socioeconomic conditions, poor diet, lots of highly processed food. Right. Ultra-processed food consumption.
crappy diet, ultra-processed food consumption. So why should your food make a difference as to whether
you die from COVID or not? Why is that? Here's why. Three reasons. Number one, the virus is very smart.
It wants to attack all your cells. And every cell in your body has a receptor that helps regulate
water within the cell. And that receptor is called ACE2, ACE2, angiotensin converting enzyme
to. It's an endocrine receptor. And that's where angiotensin works and it involves water
transport. All right. So every cell has it. Turns out the virus uses that protein as its injector
point. Well, high insulin increases ACE2 because high insulin causes water retention.
And so there are more ACE2s on all your cells, so you are more at risk of being infected
when your insulin's high.
And your insulin's high because of processed food.
That's one.
Number two, diabetes, high blood glucose.
High blood glucose turns out the glucose actually crystallizes around the edges of those
ACE2s, holding them open, making it even easier for the virus to inject its
RNA. Number three, short chain fatty acids. So short chain fatty acids come from fiber consumption.
And of course, ultra-processed food is devoid of fiber. Short-chain fatty acids suppress the cytokine
response. And we now know it's not the virus that kills you. It's your cytokine response
that kills you because your cytokine response is basically sort of like a nuclear blast that affects
even your normal cells, but it's trying to get rid of the foreign invader. But you have to temper it.
You have to be able to manage it. You have to be able to pull it back. You have to be able to minimize it.
Short-chain fatty acids that come from the digestion of fiber in the gut are one of the things
that improves that cytokine response. That's why fiber is anti-inflammatory and also improves
insulin sensitivity. But processed food doesn't have any fiber. It's been, you know, that's been
removed for shelf life. So those three demographics, people of color, the obese, preexisting conditions,
big ultra-processed food consumers, high sugar, low fiber, processed food, processed food, not real food.
The CDC and the NIH and the MRC and everyone and Public Health England, no one is talking.
talking about food in COVID.
This is the fourth leg of the stool.
We all talk about masking and hand washing and social distancing.
Garbage.
Fix the food.
Now I think when we're talking about foods,
I think we need to get clear on terminology for people who are listening and they think,
okay, look, I get this.
Highly processed food is at the root cause of many of these chronic diseases.
over half of what we're consuming as a country, as a Western society, are these foods.
So I guess we need to really help people understand, you know, what are these foods?
There's this part in the introduction where you actually, I've underlined it.
You said, what if this slow consumable poison looks like everything else in the store?
How do you protect yourself?
And that's kind of part of the problem, isn't it?
I don't, it's so normalized that I think many people don't really understand anymore.
well, what is a processed food?
What is real food?
So can you help us try and understand that?
Yeah.
One of the first questions we ask in clinic, we used to ask is, you know, mom, you know,
the mom and the kid come in, you know, for, you know, obesity clinic.
And we ask the, you know, mom, you know, what do you consider food?
You know, do you think Cheetos is food?
If you think Cheetos is food, then basically nothing's going to help.
So that's the first thing we do is we disavow them of this concept, of this knowledge.
So what we did in our clinic to be effective, and we actually studied this, we published on it.
We validated it as an instrument.
What we did was we took all newcomers, all new referrals to our clinic.
And we did a teaching breakfast.
So these kids came in fasting, you know, so we could get comorbidity and safety.
labs. And we, you know, they saw the doctor, they got their blood drawn, they got their
physical exam. And then they went to the teaching breakfast. Six kids, six parents, around the
table, one dietician, English and Spanish, you know, different times. All right? So that everybody,
you know, got a teaching breakfast. And we got a $100 gift certificate from Trader Joe's every month
to basically buy the food for the teaching breakfast.
And of course, our dietitian went out and bought the right stuff, not the wrong stuff.
And we would then, she would then narrate for an, or he would narrate for an hour,
why these foods were on the table for breakfast and why the stuff they were buying at home
was the wrong stuff.
Okay?
And we would explain insulin and we would show them how much sugar was in each of the things that they were getting at home.
and versus, you know, what was on the table. And four things had to come out of that. And we actually
validated this. Four points, four different points that conferred success. Number one, the parent had to
see the kid would eat the food. Number two, the parent had to see the parent would eat the food.
Number three, the parent had to see other kids would eat the food because they got other kids at home.
Number four, we showed them the bill.
They had to see they could afford the food.
All four.
If we got all four boxes ticked, those patients did well.
And then there was no going back.
So this was a training moment.
This was a teaching moment.
This was a way we could explain to parents and to kids what was going on and model for them.
So they can see one, do one, teach one.
We're like we always do in medical school.
If you tell people what to do, they will not do it.
If you show people what to do and they do it, then they'll do it again.
Yeah.
And not until.
The term real foods, I like it, you use it.
but it does get a bit of pushback from certain academics.
And, you know, I saw one, I think on Instagram just a couple of weeks ago,
a very prominent researcher in obesity in the UK,
denigrating the terms saying it smacks a privilege,
it's, you know, all kinds of things about it.
And here's the thing, you know, my view, Bob, is that I found it to be very useful with my patients.
Of course, if my patients don't like it, I'd come up with something else that they understand.
But generally speaking, I think the things like, you know, would your grandparents recognize it as foods,
I think people find it quite helpful or does the food packet have more than five ingredients on it or not?
As a kind of general rough rule, they're not perfect, but they're all kind of guidelines to try and help people make sense of this ultra-process food environment in which they're living.
And I kind of, I wonder why there's so much criticism.
It's like these things are there to help people.
If you find it helpful, great, if you don't, fine, use something else.
But I don't, like, I find a lot of people, particularly in medicine and academia, look down on these kind of what are considered simplistic terms.
Yeah, I've heard those complaints also before.
And I've heard about the quote, smacks of privilege also.
Basically, what we're saying is real food is food that.
came out of the ground or animals that ate the food that came out of the ground. That's real
food. Okay? As soon as a human touched it, now it's processed. Just a question of the degree of processing
also. And you know, I'm sure you're familiar with Carlos Montero at University of Sao Paulo,
developed this system called the Nova system for the degree of processing, which I actually think
is, you know, the right way to go. It's not because that's not what's in the food. It's what's
been done to the food that matters. All food is inherently good.
It's what we do to the food that's not.
And that's the point I try to make in the book,
and I have an entire section on what we did to the food
that actually turned it from food into poison.
That classification system is brilliant.
And perhaps you could take a kind of readily available, simple food
and just explain how it can go through these four stages
to help people really understand this.
Sure. I can do this in one minute.
Let's take an apple.
Class one on the Nova side.
system would be an apple. Class two on the Nova system would be apple slices. Class three on the Nova
system would be apple sauce unsweetened. Class four on the Nova system would be an apple pie.
There you go. Turns out that only the class four foods are associated with chronic disease.
So we can have minimally, that's really encouraging.
So we can have, you know, minimally processed foods that are done to make our life easier a little bit or, you know, but it's when it goes to that extreme where it's actually, there's no resemblance to actually what actually came out of the ground in the first place.
That's right.
And so what is different about that apple pie versus the apple?
And the answer is the addition of sugar and the removal of fiber.
So the addition of sugar is what.
basically floods the liver because the liver only like alcohol only has an innate capacity to
metabolize a small amount we know how much sugar we can metabolize and it's not that
different from the amount of alcohol but we can metabolize because the treatment you know the
the metabolism is virtually the same point is you can overwhelm your liver's capacity to
metabolize sugar. And when that happens, just like what happens when you overmetabolize alcohol,
is your liver can handle the onslaught. And so it has to take the extra and turn it into fat.
And there are enzymes in your liver that turns sugar into fat. It's called de novo
lipogenesis, new fat making. And there are three enzymes in concert that do this. One is called ATP citrate
liase, the other one's called asthtil-CoA carboxylase, and the last one's called fatty acid synthase.
These three enzymes are being driven by excess substrate, and that substrate is fructose,
then turned into asthyl-CoA by glycolysis. So, bottom line, you're flooding your liver,
and the goal is protect the liver. And when you flood your liver, now your liver makes fat,
and that fat precipitates.
Now you've got fatty liver,
and now you got insulin resistance.
Yeah.
And now you got chronic metabolic disease.
So protect the liver.
Second part, feed the gut.
Everyone now knows that the microbiome talks to your brain,
which is true.
It does.
So feed the gut.
That's what a prebiotic does.
So what's a prebiotic does.
and prebiotic is food for those bacteria that will feed them so that they can grow.
And what's the nature's perfect prebiotic?
Fiber. Fiber is not food for you. Fiber is food for your bacteria.
But when we took the fiber out of the food to process it, because fiber basically reduces shelf life,
when we took the fiber out of the food to process it, we are now depriving our bacteria of the food they need to be able to live in symbiosis with us.
And so those bacteria, the good bacteria are dead, the bad bacteria have taken over.
And the bad bacteria is sending all sorts of bad signals actually suppressing serotonin generation in the intestine, thereby reducing the retrograde,
entergrade transport of serotonin back up into the nucleus tractus solitarious, and that's called depression.
Also, because you're not feeding those bacteria, the bacteria are basically stripping the mucin layer
right off your intestinal epithelial cells because they can eat that.
And that's then exposing and denuding your intestine and making it, you know, all the junk that's in your
intestine basically can get through called leaky gut, contributing to inflammation,
inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome, and insulin resistance,
all because you didn't feed your gut.
And that's how the whole thing gets tied together here.
That's some very simple but very, very brilliant advice, protect the liver, feed the gut.
but the modern food environments, the ultra-processing of food, is overwhelming the liver with sugar
and it's starving the gut through its lack of fibre. And then the consequences are the liver
could be fatty liver, type 2 diabetes, but the problem when the gut gets starved and, as you say,
leaky gut or increased intestinal permobility sets in, then you're opening up for everything
autoimmune disease, food allergies, Alzheimer's, depression, all these things have been associated with
increased permeability in the gut. So it's a very simple maxim, but one that actually, again, going to that
nexus of the root cause, it's kind of right there, isn't it? And that's, you know, this is the other thing
I really like, Rob, is that you don't seem to have a preferred diet, very much like me. I'm always
like you. It's unprocessed the diet first.
Let's just get out the junk. Let's get the real food in.
And then let's see where we are.
So how does you feel that like a vegan diet or a low carb diet or a whole manner of diets can fit this maxim of protecting the liver and feeding the guts?
Today's episode is sponsored by the Way Meditation app.
Now, you probably heard me talk about this app over the past few months.
And that is because I absolutely love it.
meditation has so many benefits for our physical health and mental well-being,
but only if we do it.
And that's one of the reasons I love the way so much.
It makes it really easy to establish a meditation practice that sticks.
One of the most unique things about the way is that it is a meditation app with no choice.
They understand that too much choice is stressful and can lead to
procrastination and indecision. And so with the way, you only ever have one choice, which makes
things really easy. Just open the app, follow the path, and your transformation will unfold.
Now, there's no question that for me, using the way, has helped me feel calmer, more relaxed,
and I would say it's also broadened my perspective on life and what is truly important.
The creator of the app is Henry Shuckman, a Zen Master, with a most wonderful relaxing voice,
who actually was a guest on this podcast a few months ago on episode 590.
So if you think 2026 is finally going to be the year when you start and stick to a meditation practice,
I'd highly encourage you to check out The Way.
And to give you a little extra motivation, the Way is offering my best.
podcast listeners, 30 free sessions to get you started with your practice. That is a fantastic
offer. What have you got to lose? To take advantage, all you have to do is go to thewayapp.com
forward slash live more to get started and begin your journey towards peace, calm, and purpose.
Yeah, I'm agnostic as to the whole vegan keto thing. I, you know, look, if people who
want to be vegan, you know, fine, whatever. You want to be vegan? Great. Don't make anybody else
feel bad about their choice, but you know, you can feel good about your choice. That's fine.
Okay. There are a lot of reasons to be vegan, you know, animal welfare, religion, cost,
uh, uh, coolness, if you will. But, but metabolic health is not one of them.
Okay. And I can prove it. Because Coke,
Doritos and Oreos are all vegan. So you can do vegan right or you can do vegan wrong. Keto.
Okay, I'm not against keto. I used ketogenic diets in my patients when their insulin resistance was so
severe that nothing else would work, where they had insulin hypersecretion. And basically,
we had to control their blood glucose rises in an attempt to try to stave off continued weight gain,
either one. So we use the ketogenic diet, okay, and I'm not against that. The problem with the
ketogenic diet is not the diet. The problem with the diet is that it's really easy to fall off it.
Because as soon as you have given a little bit of carbohydrate, a little bit of carbohydrate is going to
raise your blood glucose, therefore raise your blood insulin, and therefore stop the ketogenesis.
because insulin blocks lipolis at the level of the fat cell.
And there goes your lack of substrate.
And so it's been shown that people who are left to their own devices
in terms of doing a ketogenic diet,
they can start with all good intentions.
And by two months into it,
they're basically not on,
they're not ketogenic anymore.
They're not making ketones.
Basically.
And then they're on the worst diet because they're on a high fat, medium carbohydrate diet,
which generates both insulin and loads and loads of LDL.
And that's kind of like the worst thing you can be on.
So if you're fastidious, then the ketogenic diet is a great diet.
If you're not fastidious, then you shouldn't be on a ketogenic diet.
So it kind of depends on whether or not you can actually, you know, keep it up.
And a lot of people, you know, fall prey to, you know, the croissants on the, you know, that the other guy at work brought in.
So, you know, bottom line is I don't have a preferred diet.
I don't, I'm agnostic on it.
I think there are a lot of ways to skin this cat.
I think ultimately we will learn the genetics of who does better with which diet.
And it will turn out that certain diets are better for certain people and other diets are better for other people.
and I'm very interested and, you know, involved in this personalized nutrition, you know,
concept and movement that's going on right now.
So it may be that there are certain people out there who are on a vegan diet who ought to be on a keto
and there are certain people who are on a ketogenic diet who probably ought to be an aviguan one.
And they don't know it yet.
So why would you basically put all your marbles in one, you know, goldfish bowl?
So I'm for both diets.
The only diet I'm not for is the Western diet.
And the reality is, I think any clinician who has utilized food as one of their tools in their toolbox with their patients,
which I hope more and more are starting to do, although it's clearly not enough,
you will see that different people thrive on different diets.
I think real-life clinical practice teaches you that, well, these guys here are literally rocking a low-carb, real-food diet, their markers look good, their bloods look great, and all these people here are doing great on a whole-food vegan diet.
As you say, the commonality is no processed food or very, very low amount of ultra-processed foods.
The commonality is low-sugar, high-fiber.
Both diets work when they're low sugar high fiber.
And so that's why I think those are the two sort of linchpins in this whole story.
But unfortunately, that's exactly what processed food is not.
You used apples before to demonstrate those four categories of processing, which I thought was a really nice example.
Where would apple juice fit into that?
Because that's something that many people are consuming every.
day, thinking it's healthy. Hopefully they might be re-evaluating that at the end of this conversation.
But yeah, where does that fit in? So what happens with apple juice, whether it's, let's just take
apple juice that's not also sweetened, right? Because, you know, sometimes they add extra sugar.
Just taking an apple and putting it in the Vitamix. Okay. Right? Let's do that kind of apple juice,
okay? Apple juice that's been Vitamix or the Jamba juice. Okay.
people say, that's great, right? Because that's whole fruit. Well, it was whole fruit. Now it's not.
So you have to understand the problem of fiber. Now, fiber, we've been talking about it like it's one thing.
And that's not correct. Fibre's two things. Two. One's called soluble fiber. And an example of that would be like inulin or pectins, like what holds jelly together.
a hydrogel.
So it's in cream cheese.
And then there's a second fiber called insoluble fiber.
And that's like cellulose.
That's like the stringy stuff in celery.
It's also what's in cardboard.
Okay?
So cream cheese cardboard.
Okay?
Both fiber.
Ha ha.
All right?
Well, it turns out that real food has both.
Now, when you,
put the apple in the Vitamix, you are shearing the insoluble fiber, the cellulose, to smithereens.
You are cutting it up into such little small, little fragments that it's not going to be functional
afterward. So here's how the soluble and insoluble fiber work together.
imagine a fish net all right so you know plastic you know matrix right with holes in it right
and when the fish net is working okay what happens is you can catch fish but then the kelp the seaweed
is going to plug the holes in the fish net and now you're not going to be able to drag it through
and catch the fish anymore right so you're
you've created a barrier so that the insoluble fiber is like the fish net itself.
And the soluble fiber is like the kelp.
And so together, they form a barrier.
Or think of it this way, like a spaghetti colander, okay, metal bowl with holes in it, right?
You run the water, water runs through.
Now take a blob of petroleum jelly, throw it into the center of the colander.
Run the water, still runs through.
Now take your finger and rub the petroleum,
jelly all around the inside of the colander. Now run the water. Now the water doesn't run through.
You've created a barrier, right? And you needed three things. You needed the colander. You needed the jelly.
And lastly, you needed the geometry of plugging all those holes. For the fish net, you needed the
net and you needed the kelp together, right?
Somebody came along and took a scissor to that fish net.
You know, all of a sudden, now you don't have a barrier anymore.
So this is what's going on in your gut.
The insoluble fiber, the cellulose, the stringy stuff in the celery, is forming a lattice
work on the inside of your intestine.
The soluble fiber, like the pectins and inulent, they're globular, they're plugging the holes
in that lattice work.
And together they form a white-ishy gel
on the inside of your intestine.
And that gel is a secondary barrier
that prevents early absorption
of glucose, fructose, sucrose, simple starches
so that they don't end up going to the liver.
So they don't flood the liver
so that your liver doesn't turn them into fat
so that your liver can stay healthy.
healthy. So the apple juice, the Vitamix to apple juice, it still has the soluble fiber. And that still has a benefit because that can still go down to your colon and make short chain fatty acids. And that's good. But it won't protect your liver. So you've taken one of the two cardinal phenomena of health and you've basically thrown it in the garbage camp.
So apple juice, better than soda because it has soluble fiber.
But not better than soda because it floods your liver.
But soda presumably also floods your liver.
Absolutely.
Of course.
Yeah.
And what's the relationship?
Obviously, we're now moving from food into, I guess, drinks, although apple juice,
of course, comes from an apple.
soft drinks, diet drinks. These are things which are routinely consumed.
Perhaps you could talk about the relationship between these drinks and our wider health.
Right. So first of all, it's now been shown 50 ways from Sunday that sweetened beverages,
sugar-sweetened beverages, soft drinks, are disastrous. They're disastrous for adults. They're disastrous for kids.
okay and we have quantitation on just how many deaths per year occur in both the u.s and the
UK due to soft drinks alone this has been done by numerous investigators most notably the
ones at tufts friedman like derrish mozaferi and his group renan amica etc um no question so then you say okay
that's true but what about diatrix they have no fructose they have no fructose they have
have no calories. They should work. They should be fine, right? Not so much. So here's why.
A couple of studies have now shown exactly why. A couple of years ago, I wouldn't have been
able to tell you this, but now we have the data that explains why this is. Number one,
you put something sweet on the tongue. Message goes, tongue to brain, sugar's coming. Message goes
brain to pancreas.
Sugar's coming, release the insulin.
But then the sugar never comes because it was a diet sweetener.
What does the pancreas do?
Does it say, oh man, I was waiting for that, you know, I'll just wait till tomorrow.
Or does it go, you know, I got all these insulin vesicles sitting here,
wearing to go, okay, I'm going to go find me some calories to work on.
you end up overeating.
Turns out it's the latter.
We now have the data to show it's the latter.
So, in fact, all the studies of diet drinks show that caloric intake, total caloric intake, does not change.
So you think you're doing well by taking 150 calories in sugar out of your diet.
But it turns out, you end up making up those 150 calories elsewhere in your diet.
diet. It's been shown in different experimental conditions that basically it sensitizes your
pancreas to actually make more insulin those diet drinks. This was work from Janina Pepino
when she worked with Sam Klein at Washu St. Louis. And also Tay et al that showed that if you consume
diet sweeteners, instead of sucrose, you will not consume as much, many calories.
in the morning because of the diet soda that you drank in the morning, but you will actually
increase your food intake later on in the afternoon and evening. So the total number of calories
you ate ends up being exactly the same, which is why diet drinks have not caused anybody to lose weight,
because you end up making it up later. That's number one. Number two, we now know that certain
diet sweeteners actually alter the microbiome in a negative fashion and contribute to leaky gut,
the most famous of which is sucralose, you know, or splenda.
And worse yet, we now know that adipocytes, you know, fat cells have receptors for diet sweeteners.
And so if you absorb those diet sweeteners, they go through your bloodstream, end up at your fat cell.
They can cause fat deposition in the fat irrespective of insulin.
So the bottom line is diet sweeteners might trick your tight.
tongue, but they don't trick your body.
Yeah, and it kind of sort of makes sense, doesn't it?
If we go back to the fact that, you know, our biology, we've been wired over hundreds
of thousands of years to, you know, respond a certain way to certain things in our
environments, we've just changed that so much.
And, you know, did artificial sweetness exist?
A hundred years ago, 150 years ago, you know, has our biology learned how to adapt?
Of course it doesn't mean we can't learn, but I've always, I've all, I know it's a very controversial
area, but my advice with my patience has always been, look, I'd be really cautious with this.
I don't think you should go to that. I think I'd much prefer water or, you know, something else,
but I've always taken that more precautionary principle. I know many people,
vocal on social media, will say that there's no problem with artificial sweeteners,
but you think it's pretty clear now with artificial sweeteners.
Yeah, I think.
The data are in.
There was a paper that came out in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition about 2017.
What they did was they showed, we're using a meta-analysis,
that the toxicity of one Coca-Cola equals the toxicity of two diet Coca-Cola's.
Wow. Half is bad.
That doesn't mean good.
That means half as bad.
Now, the problem is,
Okay, it's half as bad.
But people who are drinking diastodias say, oh, no fructose, no calories.
I'll drink five of them.
Now it's two and a half times as bad.
We've mentioned sugar as a mitochondrial poison.
We've mentioned insulin resistance as a root cause of many of these chronic diseases.
And we mentioned obesity and weight gain as a symptom,
rather than the cause.
What that we haven't quite mentioned yet is thin people who think they're okay
because they don't look overweight.
Yet on the inside, there's a very different story.
And I wonder if I could just frame that around the statistic,
which I've heard before.
You've written about it in your book that 88% of Americans have a degree of metabolic dysfunction.
But I also love the way that you describe metabolic syndrome.
Maybe you could describe how you say it.
I think it's a beautifully simplistic way of looking at it
and then put it in the context of that thin person
who thinks they're doing okay.
So here's the problem.
Everybody thinks that the scale tells the truth.
The scale tells you how much you weigh.
Who cares?
Seriously.
Who cares?
And here's why the scale lies.
Because there's not one fat depot.
There are three.
Three separate fat depots and they contribute different to your health.
Here they are.
First one, the one you can see, the subcutaneous fat, the big butt fat, as it were, as in,
do these genes make me look fat?
never answer that question.
Bad idea.
Turns out the subcutaneous fat,
while potentially cosmetically undesirable,
is metabolically inert.
Our subcutaneous fat is there,
very specifically to store energy
for periods of famine.
And it has an innate,
expansive capacity
to a certain point before it gets into trouble.
In fact, you can basically put on about 10 kilos of subcutaneous fat,
about 22 pounds of subcutaneous fat before you will have over-expanded those cells.
Those cells will then have choked off and died,
will have released their grease into the area,
will have recruited macrophages in to clean up the grease,
and will then have released cytokines into the bloodstream,
which will, by the way, go into the systemic circulation.
So you have to have a lot of grease in order to get a concentration high enough
to go back to the liver to activate the cytokine response to the liver
and cause insulin resistance.
So 10 kilos of subcutaneous fat before you get sick.
that's depot number one depot number two the visceral fat the belly fat okay the you know beer belly
if you will fat right now that fat turns out not to be from beer that fat turns out to be
from stress from stress you know a lot about stress that fat in your belly fat
Okay, visceral fat is due to cortisol. And cortisol is because our world is now overly stressful and people are
overly stressed like all the time. So how do we know that? The answer is because we can take patients
with clinical depression, endogenous clinical depression, suicidal depression, get admitted to the
hospital to keep them from themselves, put them in a scanner and quantitate the amount of visceral fat.
Now, they're losing weight because they're not eating.
They're losing subcube fat because they're not eating, but they're gaining visceral fat because their cortisol is so high.
That is metabolically active fat.
And it drains directly into the liver because it drains into the portal vein, not into the systemic circulation.
So a small amount of visceral fat will generate enough cytokines for your liver to be able to see.
it because it's concentrated because it's not being diluted over the entire volume of distribution
of your systemic circulation. So it turns out about five to six pounds of visceral fat
before your liver gets sick. So for subcube fat, 22 pounds. For visceral fat, five to six pounds.
Now, can you see five to six pounds on the scale? Maybe, maybe not.
Now let's do the third fat depot, the liver fat.
The fat in your liver turns out to be the most egregious, because it's right there.
It's causing the problem, right where the action is, right there in your liver.
It turns out only a half a pound of visceral fat.
I'm sorry, a liver fat, half a pound of liver fat, and you will end up with metabolic dysfunction insulin resistance.
can you see a half a pound on the scale? No.
All right.
So three different fat deep.
So the one question is, what makes the liver fat?
Answer.
Sugar.
Because of this phenomenon, the de novo lipogenesis that we've been talking about.
So you are mainlining it right into the organ that is the most susceptible to the problem.
And you can't even see it on the scale.
So there are people walking around with fatty liver and don't know it because they say, well, I'm thin.
No problem.
Except they have a problem.
And that's why 88% of Americans now have some form of metabolic dysfunction because either sugar or alcohol is causing liver fat
irrespective of what it's doing the rest of your body.
And they don't know it.
that's the nugget of truth that people, you know, that doctors are ignoring.
Of course, that begs the question, how can people find that out? I will say, because we don't
have much long left, I don't want to be respectful of your time, that in your book, there is a
whole section on the various blood tests that you should go and get. They're very simple and actually
very readily available. And actually, you've had a beautiful section on, you know, what the actual
values are, but also what's optimal, what we should really be gunning for. Obviously, there's things
like Dexter scans, there's waste to hip ratios that people can do. But I guess, you know, from
in my culture, a lot of people from my ethnicity are walking around. It's quite, it was almost a joke
growing up. Like, you'd see dads, not a joke, but you'd see, you know, dad's friends after they
hit a certain age, it'd still be thin everywhere, but the belly would just start to go out. But
but thin arms, thin legs, just that belly. And of course, you know, many South Asians do have an
increased risk of toe feed, thin on the outside, fat on the inside and all those sort of things.
But I really wanted to highlight this because I think many of us think, oh, it's all right for them.
They can eat whatever they want and they don't put on weight. It's like, well, wait a minute.
Yeah, cosmetically, they may not be looking, they may look as though they're getting away with it,
but they may not be. I also just want to finish off on kids. You just want to finish off on kids. You just
mentioned liver fats. I've heard you say before that you've had to send two children at least for
liver transplants because that that is absolutely alarming Rob. From soda drinking. From soda drinking.
So maybe before we get to the final point, I just wonder if you could, there's many parents
who listen to this podcast. And of course, a lot of people can take the advice of themselves,
right, I need to have a low sugar diet. I need to have high fiber, whatever my preference.
differences are. But with kids, like it seems to be quite different. Kids meals are a joke in
most places. It's like the adults can have proper food and the kids have the junk in bars and
restaurants, right? It's the same in the US. Chicken nuggets and French fries and a Coke.
So what is it doing to kids at this early age when they're having regular juices,
regular soda drinks, regular highly processed foods? It's not really necessarily about their weight,
is it? It's about, is it setting the tone for later on in life? And then what advice would you give
to parents? First of all, sugar downregulates its own receptor on the tongue. So the more sugar,
the less sweet, therefore you need more sugar so it becomes a vicious cycle. That's one thing.
Second of all, it still causes liver fat accumulation in kids. We now have shown that 20% of
children have liver fat unrelated to obesity. People, you know, kids who have died in auto accidents,
you know, autopsies show 20% of kids have liver fat and it's unrelated to their obesity, you know,
to obesity. You know, where did they get liver fat from? They never had it before. This is where.
The bottom line is that this phenomenon is also, you know, the sugar is also causing change.
changes in behavior. Now, we don't have enough time to go into this, but sugar inhibits an enzyme
in the brain in astrocytes called glutamine synthetase. And glutamine synthetase is necessary
to turn glutamate into glutamine, which then will go to GABA. GABA is the inhibitory
neurotransmitter, glutamates the excitatory neurotransmitter. So there's a balance between excitation
and ambition and sugar basically breaks that balance. And so sugar's been associated with irritability.
It's been associated with violent behavior. It's been associated with cognition problems.
It's been associated with dementia in adults. It's been associated with changes in the prefrontal
cortex thickness. It's been associated with problems in school. It's been associated with all sorts
problems. Now, associations, not causation. We are still working on putting all the causation pieces
together. So, you know, I'm not here to tell you that sugar's poisoning your brain yet. But, you know,
there's a lot of data, and the data in animals is pretty darn good. You know, you really want to
go this route, people? And you're not talking about just white table sugar. You're talking about the
process food. You're talking about the fruit juices. Right. Absolutely. If you're talking about the
caprice sons, I'm talking about, you know, the stuff that the parents are putting in the
lunchbox. Yeah. And that statistic, 20% of kids have liver fat. That's, there could be parents
listening to this who think my kids look fine weight wise, you know, so what's the problem
with a glass of apple juice a day? That's the problem. Yeah, exactly. And so I'm not
This conversation is not meant to shame anyone.
It's just meant to try and raise awareness as something that we both feel could be really,
really helpful.
Rob, I've got to say that if people want more, and I hope they do,
well, at some point, if we can get a second conversation, I'd love that.
But the book Metabolical is, it's really thorough.
It's really comprehensive.
I really would recommend people who want to learn more about this to get a copy.
I think it's something you can keep dipping back in and out of over time.
I really do think it's a fantastic reads.
And you cover the planet.
as well in it, which we didn't get a chance to talk about today. Just to finish off, this podcast
is called Feel Better, Live More. When we feel better in ourselves, we get more out of our lives.
And if you have everything you've said, if you have all your passion about this area, I just wonder
if you could just leave my audience with some of your final thoughts and a few top tips that
they can think about applying into their lives.
No, the most important thing people have to understand is, and you say it yourself, I'm basically trumpeting what you say.
To solve a problem, you have to solve the cause of the problem, not the result of the problem.
Doctors don't know how to do that.
And I can say that because I'm one of them.
okay and i didn't i didn't understand that going through medical school and i didn't understand that
for the first 20 years of my practice i did what i was told i practiced the way they taught me to do
i got woke you got woke there are doctors around now who are getting woke and they're starting
to make some shall we say noise they're being cast off as you know heretics and you know rabble rousers
and, you know, troublemakers and whatever.
And some of them have even gone on trial in their respective countries.
Tim Noakes in South Africa, Carrie Fetke in Australia, Evelyn Bordur, Roy, and Canada.
Don't know if there are any in the UK that have had that happen.
But the bottom line is we are undergoing a revolution in modern medicine.
We underwent a revolution back in the 1930s, 40s with Amnamborneux.
antibiotics, where we thought a pill could treat everything. Now we're undergoing a revolution
where we realized that was a mistake. It's time to rethink health. It's time to rethink
health care. You can't fix health care until you fix health. You can't fix health until you fix
diet and you can't fix diet until you know what the hell is wrong. And what you thought was wrong
was basically propaganda for the last 50 years.
We've had to undo that.
We've had to basically turn it over.
We've had to rethink all of modern medicine.
And for your audience out there,
what I'm telling you is not everything is wrong,
but a lot of it is.
When I went to medical school in 1976,
A very, very famous clinician stood up in front of our class on the very first day,
and you've probably heard this yourself wrong.
And he said, 50% of everything we teach you is wrong.
We just don't know which 50%.
This is the 50%.
Robert Lustig, you have been doing incredible advocacy for many, many years.
You continue to do it.
You're helping the lives of hundreds of thousands of people, if not millions,
around the world. Thank you for joining us on the podcast and hopefully we'll get a chance to
talk again in the future. It's my pleasure. Hope to come to the UK and we'll have a beer. Just one.
Really hope you enjoyed that conversation. Do think about one thing that you can take away
and apply into your own life. And also have a think about one thing from this conversation that you
can teach to somebody else. Remember when you teach someone, it only helps them. It also
helps you learn and retain the information. Now before you go, just wanted to let you know about
Friday 5. It's my free weekly email containing five simple ideas to improve your health and happiness.
In that email, I share exclusive insights that I do not share anywhere else, including health advice,
how to manage your time better, interesting articles or videos that I'd be consuming,
and quotes that have caused me to stop and reflect. And I have to say in a world of
For endless emails, it really is delightful that many of you tell me it is one of the only weekly
emails that you actively look forward to receiving. So if that sounds like something you would
like to receive each and every Friday, you can sign it for free at Dr.chatsy.com forward slash
Friday 5. Now, if you are new to my podcast, you may be interested to know that I have written
five books that have been bestsellers all over the world, covering all kinds of different topics,
happiness, food, stress, sleep, behaviour change and movement, weight loss and so much more.
So please do take a moment to check them out.
They are all available as paperbacks, e-books and as audiobooks, which I am narrating.
If you enjoyed today's episode, it is always appreciated if you can take a moment to share
the podcast with your friends and family or leave a review on Apple Podcasts.
Thank you so much for listening.
Have a wonderful week.
and please note that if you want to listen to this show without any adverts at all,
that option is now available for a small monthly fee on Apple and on Android.
All you have to do is click the link in the episode notes in your podcast app.
And always remember, you are the architect of your own health.
Making lifestyle change is always worth it,
because when you feel better, you live more.
