Habits and Hustle - Episode 440: The Hidden Benefits of GLP-1s: More Than Just Weight Loss Medication
Episode Date: April 11, 2025Listen to the full episode here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/habits-and-hustle/id1451897026?i=1000674829479 Are there hidden benefits to GLP-1s the FDA doesn’t want us to know? In this ...Fitness Friday episode on the Habits and Hustle Podcast, I speak with Dr. Tyna Moore who cuts through the misconceptions about GLP-1 medications. We explore the true nature of peptides beyond their popular use for weight loss. We also discuss why the current conversation around these medications has become unnecessarily polarized and vilified. Dr. Tyna is a leading expert in holistic regenerative medicine and resilient health with nearly three decades of experience in the medical world. As both a Licensed Naturopathic Physician and a Chiropractor, Dr. Tyna brings a unique perspective to building robust health foundations, having graduated from the National College of Natural Medicine and the University of Western States Chiropractic College. She is also a #1 Best Selling author, international speaker, and host of The Dr Tyna Show Podcast. What we discuss: What GLP-1s actually are (peptides vs. drugs) and how they work in the body The surprising research on GLP-1s' effects on neuroregeneration and inflammation How compounded versions allow for personalized microdosing The controversy surrounding pharmaceutical companies and compounding pharmacies Why these medications should be part of a comprehensive health protocol, not a standalone solution The background of peptide therapies in regenerative medicine and how they work How the FDA has recently restricted access to many peptide treatments Thank you to our sponsor: AquaTru: Get 20% off any purifier at aquatru.com with code HUSTLE Therasage: Head over to therasage.com and use code Be Bold for 15% off TruNiagen: Head over to truniagen.com and use code HUSTLE20 to get $20 off any purchase over $100. Magic Mind: Head over to www.magicmind.com/jen and use code Jen at checkout. BiOptimizers: Want to try Magnesium Breakthrough? Go to https://bioptimizers.com/jennifercohen and use promo code JC10 at checkout to save 10% off your purchase. Timeline Nutrition: Get 10% off your first order at timeline.com/cohen Air Doctor: Go to airdoctorpro.com and use promo code HUSTLE for up to $300 off and a 3-year warranty on air purifiers. Bio.me: Link to daily prebiotic fiber here, code Jennifer20 for 20% off. Momentous: Shop this link and use code Jen for 20% off To learn more about Dr. Tyna Moore: Ozempic Uncovered: https://www.drtyna.com/ozempicuncovered Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drtyna/ Youtube: https://youtube.com/@drtyna Find more from Jen: Website: https://www.jennifercohen.com/ Instagram: @therealjencohen Books: https://www.jennifercohen.com/books Speaking: https://www.jennifercohen.com/speaking-engagements
Transcript
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Hi guys, it's Tony Robbins.
You're listening to Habits and Hustle.
Crush it.
Hey friends, you're listening to Fitness Friday on the Habits and Hustle podcast where myself
and my friends share quick and very actionable advice for you becoming your healthiest self.
So stay tuned and let me know how you leveled up.
Are there hidden benefits to GLP-1s that the FDA just isn't talking about? In this Fitness Friday episode of Habits and Hustle, I sit down with Dr. Tina Moore
to break down the truth about GLP-1 medications and the hype surrounding
them.
Dr. Tina is an expert in holistic regenerative medicine.
She shares why these drugs are more than just weight loss tools and how the conversation
around them has become very polarizing.
This is a short clip from our full interview where you can find the full episode linked
in the show notes
below. Please listen and comment with anything you'd like. Enjoy the episode.
There's so much controversy over Ozempic, right? Like most people are like, oh, you know what, like it's like the easy way out,
you're not learning, you know, behavioral differences or habits, you're just kind of
taking a shot to lose weight. And you are on the opposite side of the fence, right? You actually,
you're a big proponent of using these drugs. Well, I'm talking, I was originally about a
year ago, I found all this data and literature,
like 20 years of studies showing that this class of, they're peptides for one, they just
happen to be owned by big pharma.
Can you talk about what it is?
What is, because I think no one really understands, like, is it a peptide?
Is it a drug?
Like, let's start with what GLP-1 is.
It's a peptide.
So it's a string of amino acids linked together by peptide bonds.
So it's a peptide.
We make GLP-1 in our bodies naturally,
in our brain and in our guts.
We have receptors for GLP-1s all over our body
that do a whole lot of different things.
It just was serendipitous that it got figured out
for type two diabetes.
It does a whole lot of other things in the body.
And this was really interesting to me
when I started studying it.
It's a peptide in that it's in and out of the body very quickly.
So the body produces it and the half-life is very short.
The pharmaceutical version has been tinkered with so that the half-life is much longer.
So the half-life is maybe four to seven days.
So that's it. It's bioidentical.
At least Ozempic, which is semaclutide, is bioidentical to our own GLP-1 for the most part.
And about a year ago, I started finding literature outside of what most people understand it for.
Most people understand it for reducing appetite
because it plays on the centers of our brain
that control appetite, for slowing gut motility
so you feel fuller longer.
And that's kind of where the story ends.
That's kind of where people understood how it works
and that's why it's a weight loss drug
and that's why it's for type 2 diabetes.
It has multiple impacts on our metabolic health in a myriad of ways that have a lot more to do than just that. And there are
receptors in our brains, in our heart, in our pancreas, in our immune cells. And I started
finding literature that was really, really interesting about this. And I started going
on podcasts and sharing about it and finding information like recent studies have come out showing significant reduction in all-cause mortality for those who are on
it, reduction in different types of cancers.
But cancers.
But colon cancer specifically, this was correlative, not causative, but they were finding they
were comparing people on some acclutide versus or even some of the other GLP ones for a period of time
versus I think insulin and not a great,
I mean, it's not a super clear comparison
because insulin is pro-grow.
So insulin can cause problems in and of itself,
but interesting data coming out there recently,
13 different types of potentially reducing 13 different types
of obesity related cancers.
And then I was finding data and sharing out
about potential protection against
COVID and upper respiratory illness. And I was sharing about it on podcast thinking, well,
if anything, I'm helping big pharma sell their peptides, so they'll probably leave me alone.
Like I didn't think I was a threat there, you know? And honestly, the microdose is completely
independent to the individual sitting in front of me. And that person, for that person, it might be the standard starting dose.
Like that might be their micro dose, right?
So I have no idea.
But then I started a second account a few days later
and it grew to 15,000 followers pretty quickly.
And it was shut down within 36 hours.
And that's when I realized like, oh, somebody wants me to shut up.
Nicole Zwaard Right, right, right.
Well, I mean, if you're trying to take business away, who makes Ozempic?
Who's the company that makes Ozempic?
Novo Nordisk and then Monjoro is Tersepidide and that's Eli Lilly.
And so I, but I mean, I have no interest in keeping people away from the standard.
I don't care.
What's interesting is when I started talking about this,
I was like, you guys,
I'm finding all this amazing literature supporting GLP-1s
for neuro regeneration and decreases in inflammation
and neuro inflammation, which I think is really cool.
That's where I got most interested.
And potential, there's studies being done right now
on potential improvements in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. And like, this is super exciting guys. And my followers, so many of them turned on me
and they're like, when did you get, they were like, when did you get bought out by Big Pharma?
When did you become a Big Pharma shill? So they're screaming at me in my comment section,
accusing me of being a Big Pharma shill. And I'm like, no, I'm talking about compounded versions,
you guys. I'm not even talking about the standard brand name.
But if you want to use the standard, great.
And many of the people that I talked to in my following have said, you know, I could
only get ahold of the standard brand name through my regular doctor, through regular
pharmacy and it's changed my life.
So I'm like, cool.
You know, I don't have any favoritism either way.
I'm just saying that if for someone like you, as lean as you are and metabolically optimized as you are, if you had maybe cardiovascular disease in your family or
you were dealing with some kind of neurodegenerative condition, we would need tiny, tiny doses for you.
So, wait, like, so, so yeah, that's what's interesting. So in your opinion, should everybody
be on one of these GLP-1, like an an ozempic form for their metabolic health?
I think that I get asked that a lot. I think that's kind of a bold statement to make and I
wouldn't say yes to that. I think the way that I've always practiced medicine is I'm just trying to
treat the person in front of me and I'm trying, I don't use this in isolation. It's not a monotherapy.
It's part of a comprehensive protocol. So I'm a big fan of biodynamic hormone replacement.
I've been using it in practice for a long time.
My background was actually as a regenerative medicine doctor.
So I was doing prolotherapy, PRP, stem cells, exosomes,
regenerative therapies in my clinic for decades.
Like that's, so to me, peptides are just part of that.
And this is just another peptide.
So-
But where did peptides even come from?
I feel like the word peptide has become very popular, very trendy
only in the last few years, like before, like five years ago, I never even
heard of a peptide, most of my friends never heard of a peptide.
And then in the last four or five years, it's all, there's lots of peptides
that people are taking the BPC 157, the CJC 1290,
whatever it is for all, there's so many. And I think number one, it's inconclusive from what
I've heard. And so people don't, there's not much to, but most people don't know much about them.
Right.
And so it's scary. And I don't even think people that mass, and I only say that for people who are in my world,
who are in the health and wellness space
or longevity space or the fitness space.
If I'm like confused, I can only imagine
how people who are just layman's,
like an accountant working at, you know what I mean?
Or someone in the marketing department at like Hasbro.
Like, what do you mean?
Like, how do you even,
like I feel like, can you start for the beginning?
Like, where did it even,
how did it become even something that was even to be taken
for optimizing your health or for your longevity?
Well, these started popping up
in the regenerative medicine space,
at least in my, you know, when I caught wind of them,
I would say 2017, 2018.
And we were, we used them short term and we used them, we cycle them. So say you injured your
shoulder. We put you on a stack of peptides to optimize your shoulder. I would probably do some
regenerative injections. You can even inject these locally to the engineering. Yeah, you could do
however you want. They seem quite safe.
They're strings of amino acids and they insert themselves in.
Many of them have anti-inflammatory properties.
Many of them have regenerative properties.
When I say regenerative, I think people get confused.
It's not like we're going to drop some BPC157 on a heart cell in a Petri dish or some GLP-1
and it's going to make new heart cells.
What I mean when I say regenerative in the regenerative medicine world is that
often we're just abating pathology. So when you hurt yourself, there's a whole downstream
process of cytokines and inflammatory molecules that happen as the body's trying to heal itself.
And sometimes the body gets caught in a loop. So a herniated disc is a great example. The
nucleus pulpulsa will squish out of the disc and it's called the annulus, the
protective coating of the intervertebral disc. And it's not supposed to be on the
outside. And once it's on the outside, the body freaks out and sends in
everything. And that's why the initial injury hurts and then two days later
you're like, good god, I'm really in a lot of pain. It's because of that
inflammatory process. Your body's trying to wall it off, control it,
contain it, and heal it.
But sometimes people's systems go berserk
and it's a horrible mess.
And that horrible mess can actually damage
the tissues worse.
And so we are trying to get in there with something
that's going to be anti-inflammatory healing
and abate that pathological process
and like slow the roll if you will.
And that's where I think peptides really shine. And so we have a variety of different peptides.
In November, I believe it was of 2023, all of a sudden there was a meeting at the FDA
and I know people that usually are in on these meetings and they told me like pretty secret
meeting just happened and many of those peptides got wiped from the, from,
for those of us who are licensed, we can only prescribe them. So I can only speak to the
ones I'm still allowed to prescribe.
So that's what I'm going to ask you. So like a lot of them you can't even get in California
anymore, but you can get them in other states.
Well, prescription versions, I'm not sure about. And I know that there are places that
sell peptides online still, and I can't speak to those because they're research labs for research
purposes and not for human consumption and I know that's where people are buying a lot of them
But I can't speak to that because I'm licensed to prescribe so in Oregon I can prescribe there's a couple growth hormone
Supporting peptides that we still have left like tessamoral and surmoralin
We still have the GLP-1s available to us via
prescription, via compounding pharmacies, but even those pharmacies are getting in trouble.
And for what? Well, other compounding pharmacies are turning on them and turning them in. It's
really crazy what's happening right now. Like it's really crazy what's happening. And I'm somehow
caught up in all of this and my name seems to be circulating everywhere
because I was just trying to introduce a new way
of using these GLP ones that might be outside
of what we know them for.
That was all I was trying to get at.
Like everyone's obsessed with weight loss
and they've really vilified it and polarized it.
And I'm over here like, okay,
can we forget about that conversation for a minute?
I mean, that's awesome.
And I actually will support that
because not without the lifestyle factors, not as a substitute, but in conjunction with adjunctively, I'm
going to give a patient every tool I have available to get them on the path. Right.
And there are actually metabolic healing properties to these GLP ones that people don't understand.
But over here, I'm like, look at this whole buffet of other impacts that I found to add
on.