Huberman Lab - Essentials: How to Optimize Your Hormones for Health & Vitality | Dr. Kyle Gillett
Episode Date: December 25, 2025In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, my guest is Dr. Kyle Gillett, MD, a dual board-certified physician in family medicine and obesity medicine and an expert in optimizing hormone levels to improv...e overall health. We explain how to improve hormone levels across the lifespan in both men and women using behavioral, nutritional and exercise-based tools. We also discuss common clinical topics, including hormone testing, PCOS, hair loss, testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) and peptides, focusing on potential benefits, tradeoffs and risks. Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Maui Nui: https://mauinuivenison.com/huberman Function: https://functionhealth.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Kyle Gillett (00:00:36) Hormone Health; Women vs Men, Tool: Hormone Testing (00:02:35) Tool: Big 6 Lifestyle Pillars to Optimize Hormone Health (00:04:32) Sponsor: AG1 (00:06:17) Diet, Individualization; Bloodwork & Frequency (00:07:20) Exercise, Zone 2 Cardio; Caloric Restriction (00:08:36) Intermittent Fasting, Growth Hormone, IGF-1 (00:11:05) Hormones & Sleep, Growth Hormone, Menopause, Andropause, TRT (00:13:28) Testosterone & Women, SHGB (00:15:19) Sponsor: Maui Nui (00:16:34) Dihydrotestosterone (DHT), Androgens; Turmeric & Black Pepper; Hair Loss (00:19:47) Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS), Symptoms, Metformin, Inositol (00:23:13) Cannabis, Alcohol, Testosterone (00:24:48) Males & Testosterone, TRT, Prostate Cancer (00:26:04) Prolactin, Dopamine "Wave Pool", Tool: Casein & Gluten (00:27:23) Sponsor: Function (00:29:03) Social Relationships & Hormones, Tool: Planning for Crisis (00:31:02) Peptides, Growth Hormone & Risk; BPC 157, Sourcing & LPS (00:36:42) Melanotan, Uses & Risks (00:38:45) Spiritual Health, Interdisciplinary Health Integration (00:41:23) Caffeine & Hormones, Sleep; Acknowledgements Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials, where we revisit past episodes for the most potent and actionable
science-based tools for mental health, physical health, and performance.
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
And now for my discussion about hormone health and optimization with Dr. Kyle Gillette.
Dr. Gillette, welcome.
Thank you for having me.
Well, I'm super excited to talk to you. You are an encyclopedia of knowledge about hormone.
health for men and for women across the lifespan. So I have many, many questions. When someone
comes to you as a patient, in terms of hormone health, what are the sorts of probe questions that
you ask? And what are you looking for? And I ask this because I'd like people to be able to
ask some of these very same questions for themselves. So when you do a physical exam and a history,
you have a lot of different parts. You have your history of present illness if they have a
complaint. Maybe the patient doesn't have a complaint. And that
case, things like their social history and their family history are extremely important because
that gives you an insight into their genetics and an insight into their hormone health.
So a patient will tell me, oh, I'm doing okay, but it helps to ask them, well, how are you now,
let's say the patient is 50, how are you now versus when you were 20 and what has changed?
So I've got the question a lot, how do you get your doctor to order a better lab workup or to
even include your basic hormones. And there's no magic answer to that. But what really helps is
you tell them, you know, my energy is not as good as it used to be. My focus is not as good as it used to
be. My athletic performance is not as good as it used to be. So you don't have to have a pathology
in order for a lab to be indicated. You just need to have that pertinent symptom. Would you say that
using the approach you just described, that it's equally effective for men and women? Or do you find that
for one reason or another that men and women have different challenges and advantages in trying
to access their deeper hormone data. With women, there's a lot more objective data. So if they're
having menstrual irregularities or if they're not having a period, if they're having too heavy of
periods, then those are things that they talk about very frequently with their doctor.
Men are more hesitant. Men really want to know what their testosterone is. But at the same time,
they really don't want to tell their doctor how their libido is or how their energy is
because it's almost like they feel less masculine or they feel less like a guy when they say that
even if they're just talking to their doctor about it. I'd love to just kind of take a snapshot of
what you think everybody should be thinking about or doing to optimize their hormone health,
male or female, from puberty onward. The law of diminishing returns applies. So doing a little amount
of what I call lifestyle interventions
over a long period of time
is going to be far more helpful or efficacious
than doing a lot and then doing nothing.
So I talk about the big six pillars.
The two strongest ones are likely diet and exercise.
For hormone health,
specifically resistance training is particularly helpful.
For diet, caloric restriction
can be particularly helpful,
especially with the epidemic of metabolic
syndrome that is continuing to on go in this country and in developed countries in general.
Those are the two most powerful. For the last four, I have a little bit of alliteration. So there's
stress and stress optimization that has to do with cortisol, that has to do with your mental
health, that has to do with societal health and collective health of your family as well.
When you're a member of a family or even a very close friend, trying to achieve optimal health
together is very important. It's the same thing with nicotine cessation. It's the same thing with
hormone optimization. If you do it as a household unit, it's far more helpful. So after stress,
you have sleep optimization. Sleep is extremely important, especially for mitochondrial health as well.
And then you have sunlight, which encompasses anything that's outdoors. So you move more. You have
cold exposure. You have heat exposure. That's sunlight. And then the last one is spirit. So that's
kind of the body, mind, and soul. If you have all the other five in, they're dialed in completely,
but you don't have your spiritual health, whatever you believe, then that's going to profoundly
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of trillions of little microorganisms that line your digestive tract and impact things such as
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Huberman to get started. What would you say is it a really terrific way to think about an approach
diet? Yeah, diet should be an individualized approach. So if you have a car, each car is made
different and requires a different sort of fuel, whether it's a race car, whether it's a diesel
truck. They have different fuels for different performance outcomes. So if you're trying to tow
something or you're trying to go fast, it also depends on your genetics. So you can have a genetic
polymorphism and you metabolize carbs and sugar better, even when they're unopposed by fiber.
Basically, you can use your biofeedback, how you're feeling to guess what you tolerate
well, or you can just get genetic testing, which can be fairly expensive, but most of all,
it requires a physician or someone who knows how to interpret the test accurately.
And if someone had the means or would you say that getting regular blood testing is a good idea?
And if so, what is regular blood testing? Is it every three months? Is it every six months?
is it every six months.
Every three to six months for preventative purposes.
You should also get a blood test when you're fasting and when you're not fasting.
And in terms of general recommendations around exercise,
I'm of the mind based on the data that I've seen that almost everybody should,
or everybody should be getting 150 to 180 minutes minimum of zone two cardio per week.
Yeah, that's more or less the contour.
The more you're doing your zone two cardiovascular exercise,
the slightly less important a long duration of caloric restriction is.
And that brings us to caloric restriction.
How does someone know if they should use caloric restriction or avoid caloric restriction?
The reason for exercise and the reason for caloric restriction in general,
including intermittent fasting, is health reasons.
That's how you increase your health span.
It's not necessarily going to make the weight on the scale change,
but that doesn't matter as much.
So the easy way to think about it is if you're obese or you have metabolites,
syndrome, caloric restriction will improve your testosterone. There has been a study, and they talk about
all these studies in a systematic review from the Mayo Clinic proceedings. They note that there is a
study in young, healthy men, and they chlorically restrict them, and their testosterone does decrease.
So if you're young and healthy and you don't have metabolic syndrome, then chloric restriction will
likely decrease your testosterone. For the healthy, lean enough person, right, non-obese person,
Is intermittent fasting a bad idea in terms of hormone health?
Is oscillating between this period of feast and famine within a 24 hours
a problem if one is getting sufficient calories to maintain weight?
So if they're in a caloric maintenance,
then it's not going to be, it's not going to be deleterious.
It's not going to be bad for their hormone health.
There's a couple different hormones that we can talk about.
We can talk about testosterone.
We can talk about DHA, which you usually go hand in hand.
And then we can also talk about growth hormone, which is not a steroid hormone, but it's a peptide hormone.
So it's a chain of proteins, amino acids that are put together instead of a sterol. Think of sterile hormones as coming from cholesterol.
So you do get a little spike in growth hormone after you eat. But you also get a huge spike in growth hormone, a more significant, less negligible spike overnight and that is improved.
if you are intermittent fasting.
So it's probably going to help your growth hormone
and subsequently IGF1 levels,
which will help more in older age groups
than younger age groups.
Can I still achieve a high degree of growth hormone output
if, let's say I avoid food in the two to three hours
before going to sleep?
Or does one have to be very deep into a fast
in order to achieve the increase in growth hormone?
There's still pretty good growth hormone output,
But even if you eat two or three hours before you sleep, it's just the law of diminishing returns.
The longer you go, you get slightly more and slightly more.
But I think about it in terms of endocrine IGF-1, mostly IGF-1 that's synthesized in the liver
and released in the liver versus IGF-1 that's released.
Classically, an example of this would be your IGF-1 levels increase after resistance training
or exercise.
And that's more of like paracrin or autocrine, and they have more local.
action. So that IGF1, it's pretty well studied that if you just give people IGF1, it's not going to,
at physiologic levels, it's not going to improve their body composition. However, that IGF1,
that's autocrine and paracrine, just working in those local tissues and muscles, is likely part of
the reason why you get a improved body composition response after exercise. Are there any aspects of
hormone optimization that can improve sleep?
I know sleep can improve hormone optimization,
but for people that are suffering from this common syndrome
of going to sleep and then waking up at three or four in the morning,
we know that can be associated with depression,
but are there any hormonal indications
that might lead to that kind of situation?
There's three big ones.
The first one is not super common,
but it's a very direct correlation.
If you have a growth hormone deficiency,
a true deficiency, whether you're an adult or a child,
then your sleep is likely going to be affected.
and let's say you're a child with growth hormone deficiency.
Once that is replaced with therapy, your sleep is going to get significantly better.
The second one that's a very common scenario is if you're having what's called vasomotor symptoms of menopause
or vasomotor symptoms of andropause, which are also applicable.
That's why a lot of women in menopause feel like their sleep is much worse
is because they have lower activity of those progestogens.
And for men in so-called andropause, low testosterone is that also one of the causes of poor sleep?
Low testosterone can lead to poor sleep, but my third scenario is actually, if a man begins TRT, then they develop poor sleep because of sleep apnea.
It drastically raises the risk that somebody is going to have sleep apnea.
And then a lot of people, especially when they first started in the first month or two, it puts them into this hyper-sympathetic state.
because they have overactive androgen receptors,
especially after a long time of being hypogynatal.
Then they have a physiologic dose of TRT,
and that causes the sleep issue itself.
Is that also the case in people that are using TRT who are not hypogynatal?
Many people nowadays, let's be honest,
are taking doses of testosterone,
even though they are in the sort of standard range,
because the range is so large because of other symptomology.
Is that right?
If you're eugenaddle before you start testosterone,
meaning you have normal testosterone,
and then you start TRT or self-administered TRT,
steroids, however you want to look at it,
then your risk of sleep apnea still goes up
in a dose-dependent fashion.
So the higher the dose, the more risky.
I want to touch on testosterone and women.
I'd like to know whether or not
knowing a woman's testosterone,
for her to know her testosterone,
is of equal, less than, or more value than knowing, for instance, progesterone and estrogen
levels, because I think there are a lot of misconceptions about the roles of testosterone and
women. For health optimization, testosterone is just as important to know. For pathology prevention,
for example, breast cancer, osteoporosis, estrogen and progesterone are more important to know.
So when you're thinking about women, women think that they have such a tiny amount of testosterone
because you test it. Most people test a free testosterone. So it,
testosterone that's unbound, which is by far the smallest proportion of testosterone.
Any androgen is bound by lots of different steroid binding proteins, but the ones that are
most pertinent are called SHBG or sex hormone binding globulin. And that binds the
androgenic steroid, for example, Dht or dihydrotestosterone. It's associated with prostate
enlargement, associated with male pattern baldness. It binds that the most strongly. And then it
binds testosterone next most strongly and then it binds things like androstinidione or dhia dehydroepiandrosterone
and then it binds the estrogens the weakest like estradile so if you look at the total amount of
testosterone women actually have almost all women not all women but almost all of them have significantly
more testosterone than estradile but it's because it's in different measurements so
So esterdial a lot of time is, you know, grams per mill as opposed to nanograms per deciliter.
So women have more testosterone than estrogen and significantly more DHEA than either.
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I'd like to ask about D.H.T. in men. So often we hear about testosterone and men and free testosterone
and being the unbound form, of course, but dihydro testosterone, but what is it doing?
DHT is a very androgenic hormone. So whether you're talking about DHA, which is a mild, a weak
androgen, or testosterone, which is a relatively strong androgen, or DHT, which is a very strong
androgen, they bind to the androgen receptor in both men and in women. So the effect of all three
of those is mediated by the androgen receptor. Intriguingly, it is on the X chromosome. So men get
their androgen receptor gene from their mother. So Dht helps a lot for the same reason why
testosterone helps. It helps effort feel good. So it can be motivating. There's lots of dietary
changes and supplementation that you're probably doing right now that's affecting your
dh t you mean me personally well every everybody all of the listeners um because let's say you have a diet
high in plant polyphenols many of those inhibit the enzyme that converts testosterone to dh t
could you give us an example of of one of those um either in supplementation form or in food
form yeah turmeric black pepper extract do you recommend that people avoid curcumin and turmeric for that
reason if someone's dh t is already low or if they have somewhat
insensitive androgen receptor via genetics or via lifestyle, then I recommend they avoid
bioavailable curcuminoids like bioavailable turmeric, black pepper extract.
I know many people want to avoid the hair loss that can sometimes be associated with
dh t levels going too high. If somebody is concerned about or is experiencing hair loss,
male or female, what are their options of ways to offset that hair loss?
that are not going to negatively impact other tissues sensitive to DHD.
And what I'm basically saying here is I could imagine taking a DHD inhibitor,
a pill of some sort or an injection of some sort,
and offsetting hair loss, maybe even stimulating more hair growth.
It's clear that I'm not doing that.
But I know people that do, but then experience some of the other negative effects
of blunting D.H.T. reduced affect, reduced libido, reduced drive,
disruptions and prostate function or even sexual function generally. So what can people do if they
want to maintain or grow back hair, but they don't want all those other effects? What should they
avoid and what should they perhaps consider talking to their doctor about? You want some sort of
strategy to decrease the activity of that androgen receptor. There's a lot of different things that
you can do that are topical. The most promising is called dutasteride mesotherapy. Essentially what
it is, is it's very localized injections in areas that are prone to male pattern baldness,
whether they're a female or a male. And it acts locally only. And you repeat these injections
from time to time. It decreases the conversion of testosterone to dh-ht just in the scalp.
How does a woman know if she has PCOS, polycystic ovarian syndrome? I know you have treated a lot of
PCOS. What age women should be thinking about PCOS? What's PCOS? Teach us about PCOS, please.
Yeah. So PCOS is polycystic ovarian syndrome. And this is one of those conditions which is
underdiagnosed. So its prevalence is much higher than we think it is. There's been a lot of
studies and some some studies say prevalence of 10%, some say 20%. It's not completely clinically
penetrant. So most people don't know they have PCOS until they have infertility or subfertility.
And is this, is PCOS happening at this frequency in 20-year-old women and 30-year-old women,
and 40 and onward? Most women find out they have PCOS in their 30s, especially, it's on a
spectrum or a continuum, like a lot of things, where you can have a weaker version or a very
severe version. What are the symptoms? There's a criteria called the Rotterdam criteria.
And in the Rotterdam criteria, there's a couple different ways.
you can diagnose it. You're looking for androgen excess, insulin resistance, and you can also
look for polycystic ovaries. You don't actually have to have polycystic ovaries or get an ultrasound of
your ovaries to be diagnosed. If you have androgen access, for example, androgenic acne or hormonal
acne, if you have hair growth, like a hair growth on the chin, it's called herstitism, or if you
have, you know, like deep meaning of the voice, any symptom of too much and, you know,
male pattern baldness if you're a female. That's a symptom of PCOS as well. Then you can also
have insulin resistance. So this is obesity, it's pre-diabetes, a high fasting insulin, a homo-ir-I-R over two,
a fasting insulin of over six. So if you have significant insulin resistance and also androgen
dominance, that's a sign of it. Androgen dominance often leads to what's called oligomenorrhea. So if you're
having more than 35-day intervals in between a period, or if you have less than nine per year,
then that can be a sign that you have oligo, which means too little minarea, which means
mincees. So that's a very common sign of PCOS. If you have infertility, so if you're under the
age of 35 and you've been trying for more than a year, or if you're over the age of 35 and you've
been trying for more than six months, then that can also be, it's a very common presenting complaint
when somebody presents with PCOS. If they're very strong on the insulin resistance spectrum,
then optimizing their body composition, decreasing their body fat, and treating that metabolic
syndrome can help. So a lot of people ask, well, does everybody that's on, like, does everybody
need to be on metformin that has PCOS? Not necessarily, but metformin is one of the tools that can
help with insulin sensitization. Other tools that can help are anostitol. So, myoanostitol is an
insulin sensitizer. Its cousin, dechiroinostatal, is a weak antihandrogen. A lot of types of inostatal have
both of those in it. So depending on if you're a female or a male and you're on an ostetol,
the type of anostitol does matter. Marijuana. I've heard that it can decrease testosterone,
in men and women.
I've heard that it can increase testosterone.
Alcohol, I think there's general consensus
that high alcohol intake, high barbiturate intake,
does in fact reduce testosterone.
I'm not a drinker, so I'm not asking these questions for me.
I don't smoke pot, I'm just never really like marijuana or alcohol.
They're not my thing, but many people want to know the answers to these.
So what about marijuana?
Does it reduce testosterone to a significant degree or not?
Cannabinoids itself, whether it's THC or CBD, are not going to reduce testosterone by
themselves. If it's smoked marijuana, then it's very likely to increase your aromatase,
which increases your estrogen. And, you know, it's rheumatizing from testosterone. So that is
going to decrease testosterone. When you have an increased estrogen like estradile,
that's going to work on your pituitary to make less hormones that cause
the release of testosterone. So you're going to have less LH and less FSAH. So it's almost kind of like
opiates are well known to opiate agonists. They're going to decrease LH and FSAH and subsequently
testosterone. Smoked marijuana will as well. As far as alcohol, high alcohol will decrease testosterone,
as will any very potent GABA agonist, whether it's a barbiturate or a benzodiazepine or a non-benzo
or alcohol, they're definitely going to.
So let's talk about testosterone in males.
I'm aware that a lot of people are considering increasing their testosterone by taking testosterone.
A few years ago, that was considered steroid use and it was really extreme kind of stance.
Nowadays, it seems like there's more discussion about it.
Does testosterone supplementation, and here I'm talking about prescription from a doctor,
does it make one more prone to prostate cancer?
That seems to always be the first question that comes out.
So testosterone is not going to cause a prostate cancer.
However, normal aging causes prostate cancer, and testosterone will grow your prostate cancer.
So if you're an 80-year-old male and you have an autopsy, then there's at least a 50% chance that you have a prostate cancer.
If you're 90 or 100 years old, there's at least a 90% chance.
So for humans with a prostate, it's only a matter.
of time until you get a prostate cancer. So that begs the question, do you want to take something
that's going to grow it for sure once you have it? So it's an individual assessment with aging.
You know, fast aging is abnormal. Very slow aging is normal. There's a fine line to walk between those two.
What about prolactin? Just as testosterone and estrogen need to be in the proper ratios,
dopamine and prolactin need to be in the appropriate ratios. How should we think about it? How should we think
about and perhaps act on our prolactin systems? The way I describe it is the dopamine wave
pool. So if you're increasing your dopamine too much, you're going to overflow and then you're
going to have that wave crash too much. So you want to have nice, even waves that are not going
too far above the pool of dopamine, and prolactin will follow. So prolactin and estrogen are
quite close cousins. Estrogen upregulates a gene called a PRL gene or prolactin gene that directly
increases prolactin synthesis. So prolactin is going to also inhibit the release of testosterone
from the pituitary. So if you're using a dopamine agonist, then you're going to help decrease
the prolactin producing cells. So if someone's concerned about dopamine, or maybe they have a
slightly higher prolactin, then they eliminate things that could be increasing that prolactin.
Such as.
casein or gluten, which are mu-opioid receptor agonists, or any mu-opioid receptor agonist in the gut.
It's casein, so milk protein?
Correct.
Can increase prolactin?
Correct.
Interesting.
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I'd like to shift gears slightly and talk about
social interactions and relational effects on hormones.
What would you suggest people do or think about as they enter relationship or for people
that are in long-term relationships where they feel like something has shifted?
And indeed, those shifts may reflect the output of different hormone systems and neurotransmitter
systems. It almost certainly has to be the case, right?
Yeah. So just like women who spend a lot of time together, whether they're COVID,
workers or whatever. A lot of times their menstrual cycles will align. There is a lot of
pheromonal and hormonal cross-talk, including prolactin between men and women. So spending 100%
of the time together. This is why people think it's so hard to work together and live together.
They're around each other 24-7. You don't have the reprieve where you let that dopamine
settle down and then you're excited when you see them again. A lot of guys know that they've gone on a trip
for a long time they come back and they see their partner and it's like a new not quite like a new
relationship but almost like a new relationship and they have that excitement again and purposely
building that into every relationship can help significantly especially if you choose to have a
child or get pregnant or be breastfeeding because you just plan ahead for both of your prolactants to be
high and both of your dopamines to be low and both of your testosterone's to be low so there's a there's a lot
planning that you can do essentially every relationship goes through a crisis and that crisis is
personal between the two of you and you can plan ahead and figure out a way maybe it's not
supplementation maybe it's not even the amount of time you spend away from each other but plan
ahead to have good times if you know you're about to go into a crisis peptides a lot of
these days about peptides. What can we say generally about peptides? Are they safe? Are they not
safe? What about sourcing? And are there any peptides that you think could be a particular use for
people? And we should probably also touch on peptides that people shouldn't go anywhere near with a 10-foot
pole. Yeah, definitely. So peptides are very heterogeneous. There's very dangerous ones and very
safe ones. My favorite peptide is the original peptide, which is insulin. And yet insulin can kill you
if you take it at the incorrect dose.
Yeah.
So just like insulin should be prescribed by a doctor,
there is over-the-counter insulin, rely on our NPH,
but ideally your insulin is prescribed by your doctor
for your diabetes as it's life-saving.
Peptides should be prescribed by doctors as well.
And there's several that are FDA-approved.
Growth hormone itself is also a peptide.
It's a peptide hormone, not a steroid hormone.
So if somebody wants to increase their growth hormone output,
But what are the risks and benefits of taking a growth hormone, releasing hormone peptide prescribed
by a doctor, of course.
What should one be concerned about?
There's definitely a lot of risk, tumor growth and cancer.
So you look at a type 1 diabetic.
They have very high incidences of various types of cancer.
They have very high growth hormone, but low IGF1, paradoxically.
So they would likely give you a similar cancer risk to a type 1 diabetic that has very high
growth hormone. However, there are the benefits of it, you think of lipolysis, decreased body fat,
increased lean body mass. A lot of those can, you can use other things to get those benefits.
So then, you know, you don't need growth hormone for those benefits. It just leaves cosmetic benefit,
to which you can usually use topicals to get, you know, your hair and your skin and your nails.
There's a lot of other things that you can do other than growth hormone.
So a lot of people just don't need these GHRPs.
Yeah, let's talk about BPC 157 and melanotan,
because I think those are the ones that most people are eyeing, so to speak.
Yeah.
So BPC 157 is body protective compound 157.
It's identical or bioidentical to gastric protective compound 157 that's produced in the stomach.
So as you age, you get atrophic gastritis very often.
That's why you have less intrinsic factor, which is kind of another peptide that binds to vitamin B12.
That's why you can get age-related B-12 deficiencies.
So that's one reason why you have more colitis, more diverticulitis as you age.
You don't have that gastroprotective compound.
It increases veg-f, vascular endothelial growth factor, which basically makes your blood vessels grow
more. So that's what causes your body to form a blood vessel. So another medication known as
Avastin, it's on the WHO's list of essential medications for cancer. So many different types of
cancer, including colon cancer, you treat it with Avastin, which is a VEGF inhibitor. So if you
have cancer or a high cancer risk, you probably don't want to be taking a medication. That's the
exact opposite mechanism of action as your essential anti-cancer med.
In other words, if you have cancer or you're at risk of cancer, avoid BPC 157.
Correct. BPC 157 is not FDA approved, but it is essentially standard of care at this point.
I would say it's, you know, if you're not counting insulin or growth hormone as peptides,
it's one of the most commonly used peptides.
And anecdotally and in some clinical literature, it's fairly well tolerated for short periods of time.
I'm not in the camp that everybody needs to do it two to three times a week or even daily.
for six weeks no matter what.
The major benefit is when you're gonna take it early on
because it's gonna allow your body
to increase blood flow to the injured area.
And the less blood flow it has,
for example, cartilage ligaments have horrible blood flow,
especially as people age.
It's gonna make a significant difference.
So I would wager that that Russian gymnast
that Achilles healed in one month
completely from a full rupture
was likely taking BPC-157 or something very similar.
Yeah, I'm willing to wager
on that as well, a remarkable recovery.
And so because it is prescription,
there are non-prescription forms.
My understanding of the non-prescription forms
and the danger of going after non-prescription forms
is that oftentimes they will contain
what they claim they contain, BPC 157 in this case,
but they are not adequately cleaning out the LPS,
the lipopolysaccharide, which can cause inflammation.
In fact, in the laboratory, we use LPS
to deliberately induce fever and inflammation
to study systemic inflammation.
inflammation. So this is a warning to people. If you're interested in peptides, you absolutely need to work with a physician, in my opinion. Get it from a really good compounding pharmacy who will clean out, that cleans out the LPS. Because if you're buying it through a source that, you know, a lot of people, I don't want to name sources, but there are these common sources on the internet that everyone knows about. They're buying these sources. They'll ship it to anyone essentially. But then the LPS is really causing inflammation. And many people experience a kind of mild fever or tingling from that when they
inject it and like, oh, I can feel it working. That's probably LPS action, which is not good
for the brain. I don't know about the, on other peripheral tissues. I haven't heard of people
dropping dead from this stuff yet, but I certainly wouldn't want to be ingesting any LPS
unnecessarily. You mentioned melanotan. There are several kinds of melanotan. I first learned
about melanotan from reading about peptides and discovering that people were taking, injecting
melanotan to get tan because it's in the melanin synthesis pathway. Are there any clinical
usage of melanotan. There's actually three FDA-approved indications, believe it or not. Not many people
know about this, but there's three well-accepted indications. One of them is the hypoactive sexual
disorder and more in women. That's for brim melanotide. So those are women that have essentially
no libido whatsoever. But other hormones are in check. Yeah. Classically, it's before menopause.
So those hormonal issues are not contributing.
And when you give them this peptide, it's also known as PT-141.
It helps significantly.
A lot of times you use it in nasal spray.
It goes straight into the central nervous system and act centrally.
You can also inject it, and you can also take it via troki.
Men and women take it?
Correct.
It's approved for women, but it can also help men.
And it's relatively safe.
The only relative contraindication that I tell people,
and a lot of people say, oh, there's no side effects that I know.
of but if you have a family history of melanoma or potentially have a melanoma and don't know
about it that's why i'm a big advocate of dermoscopy as well on regular skin checks then
theoretically it's going to increase that alpha melanocyte stimulating hormone and it can grow that so
that's definitely not a good thing um so be very careful about long-term administration of it
it's also approved for lipodistrophy which is the same exact thing as tessimoralin which i believe
is also known as Evista or Agrifta.
And then it's also approved for the rare genetic condition
where your receptors or your melanocytes don't proliferate as well.
So you usually have hypopigmentation.
It's not true albinism,
but it's associated with morbid, morbid obesity
and very poor outcomes from that in childhood.
So it's used in kids, actually.
Interesting.
I want to talk about the sixth pillar, spirit.
How do you conceptualize the spirit,
spiritual aspect. And how do you talk to patients about this, given that people walking into your
clinic presumably have a bunch of different religious and not a religious backgrounds? I'm sure
some are atheists. Some are probably strong believers. How do you deal with that? And how should
people think about this? Yeah, it is surprisingly well received. You wouldn't think at first
glance that a patient really wants to talk about their spiritual health with their doctor. But the way
I think about it, and the way that it really is, is it's like a Venn diagram. And you have a body
and a mind and a soul.
And you can't have one healthy without the other healthy.
Even if your mental health is phenomenal
and even if your physical health is phenomenal,
the mental aspect of spirituality,
if that piece is not there,
then that's going to affect your body physiologically as well.
And regardless of someone's an atheist
or regardless of what someone believes
as far as religion or the origin of the species,
they can know that their spirituality,
is going to have a profound effect
on their mental and physical health as well.
People like to compartmentalize it.
So they like to talk to their doctor
only about the physical health
because it's comfortable to do that.
They only talk to their pastor or a mom
or, you know, Reiki healer for their spiritual health
and they just talk to their therapist
or psychiatrist about their mental health.
But you need to bring all three of those things together.
It's well known that interdisciplinary clinics
lead to improved patient outcomes,
and that's just disciplines within medicine.
So that's just doctors that are specializing in this or this.
So this takes a step back, an upper part of that tree
before you reach those dichotomies or the split-offs.
You have your body and your mind and your soul,
so your spiritual health and your mental health
and your physical health.
So if you're in line in all three of those things,
that builds the cornerstone for the rest of your health
and the rest of your life.
I hope that everybody does find what they truly believe in as far as their own spirituality.
But, yeah, that's a personal journey from a physician standpoint.
And even if I'm friends with them as well, from a friend standpoint, I don't like to push
anybody in any specific direction.
So I don't think that everybody should believe what I believe.
And I don't feel like there should be any pressure for them to believe something different.
So I think that there can be excellent physician-patient rapport
regardless of what we believe and what our backgrounds are.
I have one final question.
Is caffeine having an effect one way or the other
on testosterone, estrogen, or other hormones that is positive, negative, or neutral?
Only if it affects your sleep.
So it works on adenosine, and it can actually slightly improve allergies as well.
But negligible effect otherwise.
us.
Kyle, Dr. Gillette, I should say.
Thanks so much for your time.
I really appreciate it.
I know the listeners will too.
Thank you.
My pleasure.
