Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 512: Dr. Michael Ruscio on Gut Health
Episode Date: May 22, 2017Sal, Adam & Justin interview Dr. Michael Ruscio a doctor, researcher, author, and health enthusiast. He is a gut health specialist and in this episode he shares the latest research on maximizing the h...ealth of your microbiome. You can find Dr. Ruscio, Get our newest program, Kettlebells 4 Aesthetics (KB4A), which provides full expert workout programming to sculpt and shape your body using kettlebells. Only $7 at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Got a beard? Condition your beard with Big Top Beard Company’s natural oils and organic essential oil blends to make it not only feel great but smell amazing! Get Big Top Beard Company products at www.bigtopbeardcompany.com, code "mindpump" for 33% off. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So one of the things that's really cool is recently, we had a lot of people that have been just
incredible feedback on our 30 days of coaching and a lot of people were wanting to share that
share it and pass it along. And so Doug actually opened it up so they didn't have to wait for the
email to get dripped over 30 days. So now when you go to the 30 days of coaching, you basically get
all 30 days right up front,
you get the glossary right away.
So if there's specific topics that you wanna learn about,
and we cover everything.
And you can learn it at your own pace.
It's really, I like that we did this
because there were so many people that, number one,
were like, hey, I got through the first topic
or I got through the third topic.
I wanna be able to do more in one day.
So now you can do that if you want to learn about
all those topics you get to learn them right away.
And also like Adam's talked about, it's much better to share it that way.
So it's still free, it's 30 days of coaching, it's at mindpumpmedia.com, all you gotta do is opt in
and you're set.
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, There's only one place to go.
Mind, pop, mind, pop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Ah!
Ah!
Oh my God, you do it better than Justin.
Ah!
You're good.
He he he.
Another handsome devil in this, you know what?
We gotta stop with all these good-looking people
that's making me insecure.
It is, it is.
You talking about Dr. Michael Ruscio?
Yes.
Another stud.
So he was referred to us by Rob Wolf.
Rob Wolf actually said to us.
It came highly recommended.
You need to talk to this guy.
He's like the gut health expert, like the man.
And I tell you what, I've met with quite a few gut health experts.
He blew my mind on a few different things, really shared some information.
You're going to hear in this podcast about everything from gut health inflammation, how
to use probiotics properly and why they're probably working and why some may not work for
you and why others may.
And the individual variance is like, there's a lot of information we talked about in this
podcast with him that I did not know about
that we've never shared on mine pumps.
So if you really wanna learn about gut health,
this is the podcast to listen to.
So it's Dr. Michael Ruscio,
you can find them on Instagram at Dr. Ruscio,
that's DR for Dr. and then RUSCIO,
his website is www.DrRusio.com.
And he's also another speaker at Pay the Effects.
Yes, so we'll get a chance to see him again there,
which I'm really excited.
We're gonna run into him there.
So he's speaking there, he's right down the street from us.
So I bet you're gonna hear more of him on this show.
I mean, I think he'll become after the time that we spent,
you never know, even though he came from Rob Wolf,
and he told us he all the great things about him,
until you get here and we get time to spend with him,
we hit it off big time, shared so much information with us,
and I like the way that he delivers the message to,
which I mean, when you're talking about something like
he's not dogmatic at all.
No, not at all, just, and of course,
we should have known coming from Rob,
because Rob is definitely like that too, another awesome dude. So really excited. I know that Taylor
got a chance to shoot some stuff with him in Whole Foods as far as picking out some different
things. And I know that'll end up dropping on our YouTube channel too. So make sure if you
guys are not subscribed to the YouTube channel, you guys go to my pump TV, subscribe to this
is the type of stuff you're going to start seeing more often is we'll get these guests involved in
Their specialty and get it out there
Do you guys give you guys some practical tips and tools you can use and apply so you guys find that on the YouTube channel at Mind Pump TV
So here you go here. We are talking to Dr. Michael Rousseau
We're part of Italy's your family from Mike. Oh, yeah, I'm Sicilian
We're close 10 10 skin
You guys have hard heads. That's what I remember Yeah, I'm Sicilian. Cool. So we're not too far out of the class. We're close. 10 skin, right?
Down south.
You guys have hard heads.
That's what I remember.
Yeah, about the color president.
What Italian does in though, I guess, right?
That's the point.
That's true.
You came highly recommended by Rob Wolff, who we respect greatly.
We met with him.
How many months ago was that now?
It's like a few months.
Two months.
Two months, two.
We had a great, a great time with him,
and after we were done, he's like,
you gotta talk to Dr. Ruscio.
He's like my dude when it comes to gut health and stuff.
So, I pay him for that endorsement.
I'm just gonna ask you about that.
He is a title, my dude.
How did you get into gut?
Now I'm looking at you, obviously workout,
so you're in fitness.
Have you always been into?
He sizes everybody up as a community.
Yeah, when I was young, I was tired of getting picked on
and my lunch morning getting stolen,
so I decided to start working out now.
I was always an athlete and always really into health.
Actually, there's kind of a circuitous
but interesting story that leads up to this
that I think showcases some of the stuff
that needs to be updated in the fitness industry.
So at first, coming back to the hard-headed Italian,
I wanted to go into law, only because I really liked arguing.
Right?
And I'm gonna hit it off.
And talking to my hands, right?
But, uh, excellent.
So I went into pre-law and I thought it was pretty good at it,
but I saw the negative aspects of my personality kind of
getting pulled out and I was like,
hey, this is not a path that I want to go down
because I didn't like where I was going.
So I then went into biology
because I figured, well, why not just go into science?
And so I was working as a personal trainer at Bally's
and also getting my degree in biology.
And I remember, I'll never forget this.
I was at a meeting with the regional head of personal training.
And he was kind of, you know, going around giving everybody feedback, reviewing their
files or sales, whatever.
And he said, you know, this, this kind of year's Melanie, you're doing a really great job
with her.
Melanie was, I think, 31 obese, sweet as a piece,
just like the nicest girl.
And she was losing weight, she was doing great.
And he said, you know, she's really been progressing nicely.
But why don't you slow things down with her a little bit
because we could have her here for a year
instead of six months.
Wow.
What?
Wow.
What the F are you, like is this guy talking about?
So I started really to see the ugly side
of the fitness industry.
And I was complaining about this to my cousin
who was actually a former WCW wrestler.
And he said, why don't you just go into
the medical end of things?
If you don't like the whole fitness,
why not go into the really scientific side
of it and go into medicine?
And I had never thought about it, but it clicked because I was always a guy who was making
work out routines for my friends or dietary plans just for my own reading of like,
polyquin or check or whatever.
So that was a big thing that kind of put me down the path.
How old are you right here right now?
No, no, no, at this time in your life.
God, now freshman in college, so what's that? Like, we're like 21, 22.
I think you're a little younger than that. Maybe you're in 19, 1920. So, 1920. So,
you know, I was, I was pretty young, but that was a pretty big,
athletic moment just kind of figuring that I could go into this. I never had
thought about, you know, trying to become a doctor or do anything with medicine,
but as soon as you said that, I was like, you know what, this is what I was, I've kind of been interested
in. And, you know, from there, you know, I was telling you guys some of the other story,
which was, I was in college and I thought I wanted to go into orthopedic medicine at first,
because I knew I wanted to go into medicine, but I didn't know just what I wanted to do.
So everyone would say, well, you're kind of a burly guy. You should be an orthopedic surgeon
because those are usually burglary.
Serious.
Serious time.
So I was like, sure, that sounds good.
There was a joke in the medical world.
How do you hide something from an orthopedic surgeon?
How I'd eat in a book?
Yeah.
A parent, no, you don't.
These are other doctors have told me this joke
because they're apparently the jocks
of the medical world, right?
Yeah, so I got lumped into that and rightfully so whatever.
So, you know, I'm trucking along and super type A, you know,
trying to keep my GPA, I'm trying to do all that stuff
and all of a sudden I start having insomnia, fatigue,
depression, feeling cold, feeling tired. And I'm saying to myself, what the hell is wrong with me?
Because at this point I'm like 23 and I'm used to feeling kind of
invincible. I play the cross in college. I was a guy who could get laid out,
pop right back up and almost feel like I had more energy because of it.
You know, you're young and just not.
Oh yeah.
And then all of a sudden I can't sleep and I'm feeling tired and I'm feeling cold
and I'm saying, what the hell is going on?
So I want to see three conventional doctors and they all said yeah, you're super healthy, you've got a low body fat
You know all those standard stuff checks out and I'm saying well, okay
But do you remember what I said before? I was feeling great like three months ago
I know I'm feeling kind of shitty and they said well, you know
There's really maybe it's too much stress or, you know, whatever.
And none of that was sailing it because I was leaving
enough time for sleep, even though I wasn't sleeping well.
I was eating really well.
I loved what I did.
I, you know, I wasn't overstressed.
I wasn't anything way out of sorts.
So, lungs are short and I'm up finding a functional medicine
provider.
He said, I think you have an intestinal parasite.
I remember thinking this guy's full of shit.
Like, I don't have diarrhea.
I never went to a foreign country and got food poisoning,
anything like that.
That can't be, but it turns out that when I did a stool test,
I had amoeba histolytica, which is one of the more pathogenic
amoebas that you can have.
And it wasn't causing any digestive symptoms,
but only causing non-digestive symptoms,
like fatigue, depression, insomnia, what have you?
And that was a huge cathartic for me, and it changed the direction I wanted to go, and I went into alternative medicine
in light of that experience, and now it's that sort of thing I help my patients with, and it's been a great shift ever since.
How long did you stick around with the ballie thing? How long were you a trainer there for? A few more months, I think, and I just,
I was learning some of the trainers
that were the busiest were just the best salesmen,
and some of the best trainers were the ones
that weren't, weren't as busy,
and I remember listening to some of these guys,
just like, now some anthem,
boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,
it was total chisdick salesmen lines.
And, yes.
And like, these people are just like eating it up.
And I'm like, I know that this guy
who is making the sales pitch doesn't know anything
scientifically or from a fitness perspective,
but he had a full book of business.
And so I said, you know what, this,
this is just not the environment that I wanna be in.
Like if I'm the best person at misleading
and selling people, I'm gonna be quote unquote
the best trainer.
And so I just, I just, I just a part of it.
It's hilarious because we literally, this is what we just, this was, this was us in our
20s. And this is a lot of what inspired Mind Pump was all three of us work for 24
our fitness. I did for 10 years.
I mean, we grand open clubs and ran some huge teams.
And what you're saying is 100% true.
And we, we talk about, um, you know, that's part of what it's tough.
We, I was that guy. I was the top in sales,
I was a terrible trainer,
if I'm being completely honest with myself,
and I've shared this on our podcast.
I'm not a cheese dick on our podcast.
No, and this is what bothers me,
but you know, in the defense of, you know,
trainers that are in their early 20s
that are doing this, like,
they're being fed the information for the company.
So all the information that I was getting
were the meetings and the education
that they were providing for me,
which was all things to help them sell supplements,
sell more personal training, keep clients longer.
It wasn't necessarily what's in the best interest
of my clients.
And so through my 20s, I was focused on the dollar
and focused on making more money and doing that.
And so, and in those types of companies, that's what people attribute to being a good trainer,
which is the complete opposite.
So, you know, later on, when we started learning and reaching beyond, you know, our small little
world inside the fitness community at 24-offendists or ballads, gyms like that.
And you know, it's why we speak so passionally is, man, there's so many people have no idea
that there's so much more information out there
and the stuff that they're being fed
is to poke at their insecurities, man,
to sell them or get them to buy something.
It's really, really unfortunate.
So you put that together a lot earlier than we did.
Mike, would you say a lot of the information
that people read about their own health?
The information that's put out there to the public would you say a lot of its false bullshit?
Well, we're really opening like a huge
Can of worms on this one, but as a preface to my answer on that the same thing happens in health medicine in my opinion
And I think this is what has helped me I
Think do a pretty decent job in my opinion. And I think this is what has helped me, I think do a pretty decent job
in my space now, which is alternative and functional medicine, is because I put those things together
early in the fitness industry, went into the health industry and I saw the same stuff repeating.
And so it really helped me kind of pierce through the BS pretty quickly. But yes, I do think that a lot of the same stuff happens.
And I think it may not be kind of as like
mocclevellian or this conspiracy theory sort of,
as sometimes people put it out to be,
I think there's just, there's well intentioned people
that don't know how to use science to update their opinion,
but rather they have an opinion and they use cherry-picked data to reinforce their preexisting belief.
And that, kind of by definition, is dogma.
And one of the things that's been very freeing for me is to learning from these experiences,
approach things objectively and almost assuming anything that I think going into, you know,
a analysis could be wrong. Because I've
been wrong before, right? I used to be that guy totally sold on whatever it was back in the
fitness industry, only to learn that that was totally wrong. So when you do that, you can try to
look at all the data on an issue and look for a trend in the data. And so then you can use data
to update your opinion and craft your opinion.
Rather than just say, well, I believe everyone should be low-carb.
Let me find every low-carb study out there and use that to reinforce.
But it's so freeing if you can just say, let me look at what studies have shown a high-carb
diet can be beneficial.
And then holy shit, there's a ton of studies showing that there can be some benefit here.
So how can I be that dogmatic in my view?
Is there how can I be that strong in my view?
And it reminds me of a quote that I love, which is dogmatism can only exist in the presence
of ignorance.
I don't mean ignorance in an insulting way.
The true definition of ignorance is just not knowing about something, right?
So in my opinion, people can only be hard driving on an opinion if they're ignorant to the
contradictory information on that opinion.
And so I think what ends up happening is in the field you have people that have one position
and they, there's this wealth of science that can support that position but the problem is
they're not looking at the wealth of science that refused that position and trying to craft a
well informed opinion from all the data. So yes, it's pretty common, I think.
You work, you say alternative health,
but you also work in traditional Western health as well.
Do you look at all those,
because when people here are alternative health,
they think of Chinese medicine,
or a vetic medicine, that kind of stuff.
Do you work with all of that,
or how would you explain,
or define kind of the, you know, the
methods that you use?
Sure. Well, the most official description, I guess, is functional medicine. But if you're
not familiar with functional medicine, another proximal term could be natural pathoc medicine,
which is very similar. But to put it really simply, what I try to do is have a very science-based, efficient, and practical application of natural medicine
that also borders, in some areas, unconventional medicine.
It's not about saying your conventional doctor is wrong and we're right.
It's really about looking at the evidence in natural medicine, conventional medicine,
kind of on that line.
And then usually the frontline therapies we're going to use
are going to be more from the natural camp because that's people's preference. I'd rather
cure my IBS with a probiotic than a laxative. Understandable. So we're going to look at the evidence
on both sides and try to best understand what the best way to apply the natural medicines are,
but also when we want to integrate in with the conventional system and not turn a blind eye to some of those things that can be very helpful.
And maybe using thyroid auto-immunity as an example, another area that I work in.
When people have thyroid auto-immunity like Hashimoto's and thyroid auto-immunities, a primary driver of hypothyroidism in westernized countries. Those people are also at elevated risk, not a high elevation, but they're at a small
elevated risk for thyroid cancer.
So we want to make sure that they're continuing with their follow-ups with their endocrinologist
to keep tabs on the thyroid tissue to make sure that there's no cancers or pre-cancer
lesions forming so that they can be detected early.
So it's not to say, you know, I like natural medicine and I think it can cure everything
under the sun and I'm going to turn a blind eye to the fact that, hey, no matter how good
I am, you may get thyroid cancer.
And I'd be an absolute idiot if I delayed the diagnosis of that by five years because
of my philosophical beliefs.
So you might take all those views.
You know, it's interesting you talk about thyroid autoimmunity.
It wasn't that long ago that if you went to the doctor
and got tested and they tested your thyroid hormone
and it looked okay, but you had all these symptoms
of thyroid issues that they'd be like, you're fine.
You're absolutely fine.
Is it more accepted now to test for things like antibodies and to find if somebody has autoimmune issues with their thyroid?
I think it is becoming more accepted. There's a few important things to understand with thyroid autoimmunity, which is
conventional medicine doesn't see a strong
treatment for thyroid autoimmunity itself. So, rightfully so, they're not over the concern about tracking thyroid autoimmunity in a lot rightfully so, they're not over the concern
about tracking thyroid autoimmunity in a lot of cases
because there's not a direct treatment for that.
But rather than they wanna check thyroid function
to determine if you need thyroid home and replacement therapy,
and also keep tabs on the thyroid structure
to make sure you don't have nodules
or other aspects that could become a more serious medical issue that requires
an intervention there.
But there is some data that is showing that certain shifts potentially in diet or certain
gut health interventions or certain vitamins can help with thyroid autoimmunity.
But to be honest, the data there isn't incredibly strong.
So looking at selenium as an example, probably the most common nutrient you'll hear recommended
for thyroid autoimmunity selenium vitamin D. So let's look at selenium.
When you look at the high level science, you do not see agreement in terms of what the
data show us for selenium.
And then the most notable is a recent Cochrane database systematic review with meta-analysis. So the Cochrane database essentially analyzes studies for bias to make
sure there's not bias in this study. And then a systematic review with meta-analysis is,
it sounds complicated, but it's actually quite simple. It's like surveying a bunch of
people who went to a restaurant, right? Let's say there's a new restaurant down the
street, we want to figure out should we go there or should we not go there. So we find out that there have been a hundred
people that went to the restaurant. So we're going to survey each one of them and that's like
a systematic review. It's surveying all the people that went to the restaurant or all the studies
that I've done on an issue. And then the meta analysis is just calculating a numeric score in
terms of what the rating was. So a 70 out of 100, right?
So a systematic review with men analysis
is really just doing something that we all do all the time,
which is let's see if we can get a bunch of data
in terms of what people think on the restaurant
and give that a score, right?
It might be four out of five stars
or 70 out of 100, whatever.
So this is really helpful because when you look
at this higher level science,
you get a summary
of what most of the clinical data says.
So it's basically a study on the studies.
It's a summary of the studies.
Summary of the studies.
Exactly.
So you get a consensus.
Exactly.
Which is important because one study can be misleading.
So with selenium, there are some studies showing benefit, there are some studies showing
no benefit.
When we put them all together, we show no consistent or overly favorable benefit with selenium supplementation
Which may sound odd to some people listening however if you read this study more closely
You see that most of the benefit with selenium was achieved by at three months of supplementation
Less so at six months and after six months the benefit completely drops off
So what that probably tells you or what that should tell us if we draw an inference here is that there's probably an of supplementation less so it's six months and after six months the benefit completely drops off.
So what that probably tells you or what that should tell us if we draw an inference here is
that there's probably an aspect of short-term salineum replicion that's helpful for thyroid
auto-immunity, but outside of that window there's no more benefit.
And why that's relevant is because people may read about salineum being good for thyroid
health and take it every day for the rest of their life when they really don't need to.
So it's kind of coming back to that theme
of trying to be progressive but conservative.
Let's not just fall off the deep end with selenium
and give everyone selenium high doses
for the rest of their life, but realize that there's this
reasonable window in maybe three to six months
that it has its primary utility for.
So I've had a few clients in the past
who've had symptoms of thyroid autoimmunity have gone to traditional doctors got tested
and found that they're thyroid hormone.
What are some of those symptoms?
Yeah, that's not an ask.
What are some things that people can look for?
Because obviously, if you go get tested and you're like, hey, you've got your thyroid hormone
is fine, but you've got all these symptoms that could point to an autoimmunity there.
What do they look like?
Well, that's a challenge with symptoms, in some cases, especially with thyroid.
They're very non-specific.
So there could be fatigue, weight gain, constipation, dry skin, feeling cold, thinning hair.
Those are depression.
Those are probably some of the most common.
Symptoms can be suggestive, but really there are
many other things that can look like a problem with thyroid.
So here's kind of the general way I would approach thyroid generally speaking.
Have a standard evaluation to see if you have frank hypothyroidism because that's easy
to detect and that's easy to treat.
So if someone has frank hypothyroidism that means that they'll have according to the conventional range high TSH low T4, right? If that's the case, they want
to go on a medication. There's a bait as to whether or not a straight T4 medication or a T4
T3 combination medication are better. The consensus does seem to show that most patients prefer a T4
T3 combination. So that may be something for people to try first.
If their doctor doesn't wanna do that,
say, okay, I'll start with the T4, give it a few months,
but if I'm not feeling totally well,
I'd appreciate it if you would humor me
and add T3 into the mix.
I think that's totally reasonable.
So check off that box.
Am I frankly hypothyroid and required medication or not?
If you're not hypothyroid,
meaning if your thyroid levels
are normal according to the conventional ranges,
I would then look to another cause of the symptoms.
And oftentimes, and as I found myself,
I had hypothyroid-like symptoms,
but we're being driven by a problem in the gut.
So if you're not, frankly, hypothyroid,
the next thing I would do would be
to investigate your gut health,
because that may be where, and I should preface, I'm assuming your diet
and lifestyle are already dialed in.
That's always the first step.
Sure.
So if you're, I'm so tired, you know, I only sleep two hours every night.
Exactly.
So assuming you're getting sleep, getting some time outside, getting some exercise, managing
your stress, assuming those basics are in place and you're still not feeling well and
you've checked the box meaning
you're not hypothyroid.
I would then recommend looking into your gut health, not to say that gut health is a panacea,
but gut problems are very common and they can cause many of the symptoms that look like
hypothyroidism.
Excellent.
What are your thoughts on, when you're talking about T3, T4 right away pops in my head,
there's a lot of supplements that are out there to manipulate these things.
What are your thoughts on that?
What are your thoughts on supplements like T3, T4?
And are there risks to taking that?
And are they at any value whatsoever?
Does it really benefit anything?
I know a lot of people use that to try and lose body fat.
I think that argument is most salient
when people are trying to use thyroid hormone.
So prescription thyroid hormone, they get their levels back into the normal range. And
there is some data that shows that if people are in the upper half for T4 and T3, they
may feel a little bit better. But, you know, the supplements that kind of help with conversion
of T4 to T3, they may be mildly
beneficial, but usually what I found is there's a cause of that problem, where there's a cause
for the non-optimal conversion or the symptoms that you think are because of the non-optimal
conversion.
So in other words, it's not treating the root.
Right.
You're just putting a band here.
Exactly.
So these natural agents that help with conversion of T4 and T3
are helped to boost T4 and T3.
I tried them.
I had a lot of patients that come in to me
after trying them.
They may garner some benefit, but I think it's really,
those things are more an end of the line therapy,
and it's better to start off with diet lifestyle
and then gut health, because that can actually,
in itself, cause problems with the
levels of T4 and T3, especially conversion of T3. That's what I was wondering. So autoimmune
disorders and diseases in particular seem to be on an explosive rise over the last maybe 20,
30 years. Is that because we're diagnosing them more accurately or is there, I mean, and if I'll
throw all of autoimmune issues including food allergies, there, I mean, and if I, I'll throw all of, you know,
autoimmune issues including food allergies, which, you know, I have kids. And, you know,
when I was a kid, I remember, I think one kid who had a peanut allergy, and now you've
got entire classrooms that are peanut and egg-free and all these different things. Are they,
are they really on a rise or is it just because we're diagnosing it?
Because we're not aware of them.
There's probably a component of it that has to do with increased diagnostic capability,
but clearly, autoimmune conditions are on the rise.
It's likely because of the environment that we live in.
And said simply, the hygienic environment that we live in now also combined with the use
of antibiotics, which can be life-saving in certain applications, the unintended side effect of that is kind of partially
impairing the development of the immune system,
which then opens the door for the increased prevalence
of auto-meanity.
So it's kind of like this, you know,
inverse biological scale where if you go to 100
gatherer population, they're gonna have a shorter life
expectancy and higher infant mortality
But like no auto-meanity. Mm-hmm. You come here and it all flips, right?
Longer life expectancy, lower infant mortality, more auto-meanity.
So I think it's just important to keep that in mind because sometimes people when they have an auto-mean condition They beat themselves up like it's something that they did and oftentimes, you know, it's a genetic hand that you've been dealt and
That combined with the environment that we're in today.
Yeah, I mean,
Just getting the epigenetics and that's a surprise.
Well, classic, you know, studies have demonstrated that like kids that grow up on farms,
far lower rates of autoimmune disorders, why?
Probably because they were exposed to animals and more bacteria and dirt and that kind of stuff.
And the other side of that is they tend to take less antibiotics. because they were exposed to animals and more bacteria and dirt and that kind of stuff.
And the other side of that is they tend to take less antibiotics.
In our generation, we grew up antibiotics were given out like candy.
Right.
I mean, for every single thing that we had, how about some of the stuff that we eat,
like they're finding out artificial sweeteners, alter gut flora, and glyphosate, which are
found in genetically modified foods, alter gut flora and stuff, and glyphosate, which are found in genetically
modified foods, alter-gup flora and stuff like that.
Do you think those play a role?
There's been some published evidence showing that omulsifiers, which are oftentimes found
in processed foods, do have a correlation to auto-immunity.
But I think it's hard to parse out is that because Western societies are already more
processed foods or is the processed food consumption directly in or of itself. I do think there's some plausibility of that argument
that homophilic in processed foods are driving auto-immunity because the homophilic
can partially irritate and break down the lining of the gut. So I do think that that's plausible
and it comes back to a simple principle which is avoid processed food as much as you can.
The artificial sweeteners piece is interesting.
And there's got so much to say about so many of these things.
There's so much to say about thyroid artery immunity, so much to say about artificial sweeteners,
but a few broad strokes with artificial sweeteners.
Do they affect our microbiota?
Yes, they do.
And there's been one very interesting study where they found people to be either artificial sweetener
responders or non-responders.
What they did was they gave two groups of people artificial sweeteners.
They noticed that one group had negative changes in their blood glucose, and the other group
didn't.
The people that had the negative changes were labeled as artificial sweetener responders,
meaning they had this negative kind of response.
The others were non-responders.
The researchers then looked at their microbiodes and found there was a change pre and post artificial
sweeteners in their microbiota.
So the people that had the negative glucose changes, you know, insulin resistance, your
fasting blood glucose, they had a change in the microbiota that correlated with those
negative metabolic changes.
Then they took the microbiodes from each group transplanted them into mice.
And it was only the mice from the negative responding group that saw also negative responses
in their blood glucose, whereas the other group did not.
So it's something to do with certain groups of people have this predisposition to have
their microbiota negatively affected,
and that seems to be causal
in causing problems with glucose.
Now, that's just one study.
So coming back to my earlier point
of not just looking at one study,
what does the larger body of evidence show
regarding artificial sweeteners?
The body of evidence shows there does not seem
to be any benefit to artificial sweeteners in terms
of preventing weight gain or aiding and weight loss.
So there's no clear benefit, and some data, not conclusively, but some data suggests there
may actually be a detriment.
So when you look at the fact that there's no clear benefit and a potential detriment,
I think the conclusion to draw there is fairly clear, which is the conservative use of artificial sweeteners.
And there was one study in particular
that really looked at this.
It was called the San Antonio Longitude
and we'll study on aging.
And they prospectively broke people in the two groups,
meaning they said this half will have
artificial sweeteners, this half won't.
And then they tracked them over time.
That partitioning is important because part of the reason why we may see some of the data
showing that artificial sweeteners correlates with weight gain is because people who are
overweight are drinking more of them.
Sure.
So they factored out for that and they had an equal allocation of this group. They
showed that the people who consumed artificial sweeteners over the course of, I believe it was nine years,
saw a 3.1 inch circumference gain in their waist
compared to the other groups saw a 0.8 who are not using.
Wow.
Wow.
And so artificial sweeteners make you fatter.
Yeah, based on that.
And they found, and they actually also found
a dose dependent relationship.
So the more that the people in the use
of artificial sweetener group were drinking, the higher their waste newcomers.
Oh, wow.
See, this is huge for a lot of our listeners
because a lot of our listeners are in the, you know,
their gym rats, right?
They work out, they want to build muscle burn body fat.
And a lot of the products that they use,
all the products that they use are sweetened
with artificial low calorie option.
That's right, like I want to take a protein powder,
but I don't want anything by protein in it,
or I'm gonna take this pre-workout,
and I want to have zero calories.
And they're all artificially sweetened.
And if you work out five, six days a week,
and you take a pre-workout supplement,
you take one or two protein shakes a day,
and a protein bar a day, it's a lot of artificial sweetener
that you're taking for a long time over the course of
You know some of these people decades. Yeah, is that one of the things you recommend here your patients eliminate
When you're when they're coming with you with get issues. Yeah
It's I don't make that direct recommendation, but we put them on diet plans where that's implicit in the diet
So yes, yeah, it's I mean it's certainly
Constant use of artificial sweeteners is not doing you any favors and potentially harming you.
So why would you do them?
And they even showed that same study,
the other group, they were drinking
regular sugar sweeten sodas, and they gained a lot less weight.
Wow.
So clearly, like the benefit from artificial sweeteners
has been overstated.
Which I think that's a big point, because I think the argument that most people use to
justify that is the calorie thing, right?
Is that, oh, well, you know, saving me a 200 calories plus a day by me having these sugar-free
drinks or these foods that are sweetened with artificial sweeteners and in reality, they
were better off probably having something that's got real cane sugar in it versus trying to avoid a couple hundred calories to save them.
And that's a conclusion you see made in many of the research papers.
When you have to use a sweetener, use a natural sweetener like juice or agave or sugar,
you know, try to use it minimally, but that is probably better than the artificial sweetener
sugar.
What about, because what's interesting about,
when we talk about gut health,
it's kind of becoming a big thing now, right?
There's lots of now conventional studies
and science that is showing just how important
your gut health is and your microbiome is
to everything almost.
I mean, they're connecting it to people's emotions
in state of mind even.
I remember reading a study where they had women go in
and get a FMRI, which is a functional MRI machine
where they can see actual function in the brain.
And they had them take a probiotic
and they could see changes in the way
that the brain actually worked after taking a probiotic.
So there's obviously an influence there
with even in the mind.
So it's this big thing now.
And one thing that a lot of people don't realize
is when we've tested food additives and sweeteners,
especially those of the past three, four decades,
we didn't even know to test them against the microbiome
because we didn't even know that that was important.
So is there anything else people should look out for?
Like dyes and, you know, preservatives.
Have we, do we see any changes in microbiome
from those things?
Yeah, you know, maybe the easiest way to paint this
would be just to make what sounds like a simple recommendation,
but it's probably the most profound,
which is eat a diet as devoid as you can
of processed foods or artificial sweeteners
or anything synthetic or chemical
and just focus on whole fresh foods.
You can get into some nuance in terms of diet
from there, low-carb, moderate-carb, high-carb,
low-fob-map, paleo, what have you,
and we can talk about some of those if you want,
but that's really probably all people have to be worried about.
You can get so sucked into the rabbit hole with all these details,
only to eventually detail your way back to that simple recommendation.
So I would say that's a hugely important thing.
And the other thing that I would throw out there is remembering that it's not the microbeata
is driving every disease.
You create an environment with the stuff
that you do in your day to day,
and that environment is the environment
that houses the microbiota.
So the better you create your internal environment,
the healthier your microbiota will be.
They've shown, for example, that exercise
improves the health of your microbiota,
irrespective of diet.
Well, sunshine can help improve
your microbiota irrespective of diet. Even things like can help improve your microbiota irrespective of diet.
Even things like type 1 diabetics who don't make insulin but need it when they start insulin
therapy, that improves their microbiota.
Stress can either have a negative or positive impact on your microbiota.
Sleep can have a negative or positive impact.
If you wash your dishes with a sponge or use a dishwasher, that can have an impact.
So there's a little bit of like a overzealousness
forming about the microbiota driving every disease.
But you really have to get big step back and remember
that it's not to say that the cause of every disease
is the microbiota.
There's an equal input and output from the microbiota.
So keep your diet generally healthy
and keep your lifestyle generally healthy.
That's gonna be the foundation.
From there, then we can get in some more clinical interventions healthy and keep your lifestyle generally healthy. That's going to be the foundation. From
there, then we can get in some more clinical interventions for improving your gut health.
But you have to be careful going down that rabbit hole because you can get so deep in it.
And I read most of these abstracts and they all kind of come back to the same corgubo
fundamentals. Healthy diet, healthy lifestyle, and then things are still all right. Look
into working with the clinician. It can help you sort out where the imbalance is in
your microbiota because an imbalance can create, it can kind of create this self-fulfilling
imbalance where if you have an overgrowth of one thing, that overgrowth poisons the other
good guys and until that bad guy is knocked out, the good guys can't flourish.
Right, so start with the foundation and then get clinical
from there.
It's truly a symbiotic relationship.
It goes both ways.
Yeah, 100%.
Do you see, do you seem to, like so when we,
when I'm coaching a client and I'm always trying
to help them connect the dots and be more aware
of what they're in taking consuming.
So I make them track and I say, don't change the way
you're eating, just eat how you normally eat eat and we're going to track it together.
We're going to look at it.
And for me, one of the biggest culprits I see is this overconsumption of just sugar in
general.
Do you see a common theme in people when you look at their diet as far as culprits that
could be affecting their gut negatively that tend to help them in general.
Like, hey, most people tend to do this and this is probably not ideal for our gut. Do you see something
like that? Yeah, I mean, and a lot of this depends on where you're coming into the conversation. If you
haven't even really changed your diet much, then just shifting to some type of healthy diet plan,
you're going to see a lot of benefit. So that could be Mediterranean, it could be Paleo, it could even be vegetarian, even though
I'm not a huge advocate of vegetarian diets.
If you're coming from the standard American diet, shifting to a healthy diet plan that
avoids added sugar to your point and processed foods, you're going to see a lot of benefit.
We can talk in a second if you want about the comparative studies looking at these different diets to see what diet actually has the edge to be the healthiest, but
there's something else that may be salient for athletes and this has to do with or exercise
enthusiast. This has to do with how exercise impacts the microbat. And I'm being a little
bit speculative here, but I think this is somewhat well you know, well-reinforced of an argument.
We see in athletes that are overtraining or training excessively increased risk for infection. I'm sure you guys have an effort to that.
Part of this, oh, let me take a step back and say so too much exercise can increase your risk of infection,
but some exercise can actually increase the diversity of healthy bacteria in your gut.
And why this probably is is because exercise can be a little bit immunosuppressive. And so in the right dose, it can prevent your
immune system from killing the good bacteria in your gut, having it too overzealous of an
immune system. So a little bit of immunosuppression good, too much now you're so immunosuppressed,
you have an increased risk of infection. But the problem can be, too much exercise may down regulate the immune system in the gut
to a point where it allows small intestinal bacterial overgrowth to occur, or other
like in balances.
I use the example of SIBO or small intestinal bacterial overgrowth because it's pretty
invoked right now.
And so some athletes are really noticing that their digestion is not great, right?
Probably because of over exercising, also maybe because of some of the garbage and the
powders and the pills and whatever.
And then they're finding benefit in diets that restrict foods that feed bacteria.
And this is known as a low-fod map diet, most typically.
And what's interesting, or maybe counterintuitive about these these diets is at face value, they seem healthy.
These foods that are restricted by the low-fabum diet seem healthy, asparagus,
cauliflower. Aren't those healthy foods? Well, it depends. If you have bacterial overgrowth,
those foods have a lot of prebiotic in them that feed bacteria and they may actually make you
feel worse.
And increase inflammation in the gut, increase the spectrilover growth.
So some athletes are finding benefit from going to these low fob-mamp diets to kind of help
rebalance this altered gut flora.
So that may be something a little outside of the typical healthy diet recommendations that
could be salient to your audience
is that a low-fob-mamp diet for those with IPS,
like symptoms, gas, bloating,
constipation, loose-dose abdominal pain, reflux,
may be helpful because of an underlying imbalance
that's been driven by that kind of exercise,
slash athlete lifestyle, lots of exercise,
potential immunosuppression,
and then some of the other garbage
that is in the supplements. Now, is this why you're not a huge fan of vegan diet? Is that why?
That's, yeah, that's part of the reason I think the vegan diet may be a little bit extreme, where if
you look at our evolutionary history, you know, there's not a strong argument for a vegan diet,
and this is as someone who I really appreciate looking at evolution.
And if you look at our evolution, there's actually a few pivotal points in time that have steered us
away from a vegetarian type diet and a vegetarian type gut. And I'll bore you with some details about
early hominid history. But there were two competing ancestors hominids at the same time. And when one of them would become us and the other one would go extinct, you had a
parenthesis boyzii, which was like a gorilla, right?
A really big hominid, lived predominantly on the ground, had very strong jaw structure,
and could just eat nuts and roots, and this very tough vegetative matter, like a cow
almost, right?
And he had a very long
Testinal tract to help break that down
So he was a specialist and the stuff that was just right there on the ground
He was competing with homo habilis who was more like us. He was omnivorous
He could climb up in a tree and eat honey
He could scavenge off of a kiln eats a meat. He could eat some fruits or berries
but
He was a omnivorous and the other was more of a vegetarian specialist.
Now, at some point, and we believe it's when the Himalayan mountains formed, that changed
the global climate to where Africa, where these hominids were, became much more arid.
And so a lot of the vegetation died, right?
And so with that, parenthesis, Boah, who only ate vegetation, became extinct.
But the clever, crafty, adaptive,
omnivorous, homo-habeless lived on,
and part of his diet was the diet
that allowed him to survive on things like, yes,
honey and ripe fruits,
but also a heavy amount of scavenging off carcasses that involve
a lot of meat consumption.
And that actually changed the anatomy of our intestines where we became more dependent
upon the small intestine and less dependent upon the fermentative large intestine, which
is more of like a vegetarian diet centered intestinal tract.
So there's a lot of evolution suggesting that we shouldn't be strictly vegetarian.
But when you look at the comparative studies, like coming modern day and trying to filter
this through clinical trials, we have had studies done that look at a low-carb diet next
to a vegetarian diet for numerous conditions.
And to put it simply, studies generally compare low-carb, vegetarian, and paleo in some of these setups.
And compared to no diet at all,
all the diets show benefit.
It's important to establish that,
because your vegetarian friend may say,
well, what about this study?
Yes, they're out there.
But the comparative studies that have compared one to the other
to see if one has a slight edge show general favorability
of either a low-carb diet or a paleo diet.
Again, they all work, but there seems to be a favorability of either a low carb diet or a paleo diet. Again, they all work, but there seems to be a favorability toward a lower carb diet or a paleo diet according to the best evidence that we have right now.
Yeah, I think in modern times you can eat vegan and be perfectly fine, but it takes a lot more planning.
It's very difficult to get certain nutrients. It's just as fat. You're not going to get
as bioavailable forms of iron. You're not going to get certain nutrients. It's just as fat. You're not going to get as bioavailable forms of iron.
You're not going to get certain B vitamins.
When you give creatine to vegans, it's a neutropic.
It actually boosts their IQ a little bit and you give it to an omnivore and it doesn't
really do that.
And that suggests that there's a little bit of a deficiency in creatine, what you get
from.
Interesting. You know that. Yeah. that there's a little bit of a deficiency in creating what you get from, you know, from meat products.
So, and again, I respect people's moral reasons
for eating vegan, but when someone says,
it's the healthiest way to eat,
I usually shake my head,
roll my eyes a little bit.
It's really if you're objective, it's not supported
to say it's the healthiest.
It's a healthy way to eat compared to no diet at all.
But if you're gonna be objective, it's not the healthiest.
And we tend to tell people, like,
pay attention to what you were doing
before you switched over to that because
it might be more about what you're not eating anymore
than what you're eating more.
Exactly, I mean, most people that go vegan
after not doing anything whatsoever
were grossly under eating vegetables.
And it's like, man, when you,
it's amazing when you all said start introducing
four or five servings of vegetables in a day. How
great you feel. And that's probably why people feel better on virtually any
diet plan when they're coming from no diet at all. But you know, there's one other
point that I think is interesting here that may help satisfy some of the
debate in terms of carbon take. So Christopher Gardner is a PhD researcher over at
Stanford. And he did a great study
called the A-Z weight loss trial. He compared Ackins, Pritikin, Ornish and Zone. So kind of low
carb all the way up through high carb. And what he found is that all of the groups saw a weight
loss or a weight reduction and an improvement in their blood lipid profiles.
But there was a slight edge for the Ackons diet.
So he said to himself, why is it that everyone's responding, but the Ackons has a slight
edge.
So we did a subanalysis.
And in the subanalysis, he was able to figure out that while some people can respond
to any diet,
there are some people that only respond
to a low carb diet.
And it's the people that have the worst insulin sensitivity
who will only respond to low carb.
People with good insulin sensitivity will respond to any diet.
That's important to factor into our conversation here
because it cuts through the, this diet is better
because it worked for Susie Smith,
but it didn't work for me.
It's yes, because not every diet can work for everyone.
People with good baseline insulin sensitivity can go on any of these plans and have success.
People with compromised insulin sensitivity will probably only find success in a lower
car.
So, for the layman, you take a thousand average Americans and a good chunk of them, a large
chunk of them, we're going to have insulin issues,
which is why low-carb works seems to be work best for most people.
Not for everybody, but for most people because a lot of people have...
And that's what I did in the studies, like we just talked about.
Exactly.
So you've got a little bit of that, what's that quote they call self-selection or that selection
bias or whatever because of the sample size.
I wanted to ask you a little bit about leaky gut syndrome.
It is not accepted yet because I think it will be eventually.
I'd like to know your opinion on it by Western medicine.
I hear people laugh at it sometimes when I talk about it.
What is leaky gut syndrome and what is your opinion on it and what are some of the symptoms?
Well, I partially see where more conventional medicine is coming from with kind of chastising
that he got syndrome because in some circles it's almost used as a term kind of like a
adrenal fatigue where people just use it as a description.
Oh, my adrenal fatigue today.
That's not really.
First of all, the whole concept of adrenal fatigue is being seriously questioned right now. The method of testing that is being seriously called in the carpet.
It's one of those things that's this self-feeding prophecy where people just blame all my
leaky gut today.
I understand where they're coming from.
There's a couple of different ways to assess it.
There's the lactoblast manitone test, which can produce a false negative or false positive
if someone does or does not have SIBO,
so it don't like that test.
And then there's antibodies against things like Zonulin
and Acludin.
And I tell you the truth,
I don't really do any lehigot testing
because to the degree to which someone is ill,
especially if they have digestive symptoms,
I'm assuming they have a degree of lehigot.
Now, to your question, what is leaky gut,
it's essentially when your gut is letting
too much stuff through, right?
They put it really simply, your gut is this
selectively permeable membrane that wants to absorb
things like nutrients and wants to keep out things like
parasites and toxins and what have you.
So it's a selectively permeable membrane
and when there's damage in the gut or inflammation in the gut, you can let too much stuff through.
That can cause an overactivation of the immune system, and this has been correlated with
autoimmune conditions.
But then the question is, what do you do about that?
And that's really where I jump in, right?
I'm assuming, if you have autoimmunity, if you're ill, if you have IBS, if you have IBD,
if you have depression, if you have insomnia, if youomnia fatigue, I'm assuming your gut health's probably not great.
So I don't necessarily need to quantify that.
What I do need to quantify are the things
that we can treat that will improve the leaky gut.
So I just make that recommendation
because a lot of patients come in reading about leaky gut
and thinking that there's some leaky gut test
that then has this corresponding leaky gut treatment.
And what it really has is a bunch of supplements that may help with leaky gut, but don't fix the underlying problem of the leaky gut test that then has this corresponding leaky gut treatment. And what it really has is a bunch of supplements that may help with leaky gut, but don't fix the
underlying problem of the leaky gut.
And so a lot of people come in spinning their wheels, not realizing that you don't have
holes in the bowel of a ship just because, right?
You're sailing in rough waters or your wood is rotting, you have termite infection, right?
So leaky gut doesn't happen just because.
So I kind of circumvent and I go right to what right? So leaky gut doesn't happen just because. So I kind
of circumvent and I go right to what the cause of leaky gut could be. So it's definitely something
that I think has validity to it and has been correlated in some of the research literature with
different conditions. It's just in my opinion, it's just an intermediary between disease and
an underlying deeper cause of that. Hearing you say that makes me, I have to ask you then how
frustrating or how often do you get this where
Something comes out like leaky-go and it becomes popular and then before you know it
There is a supplement to treat this symptom
Versus you know is this something you see a lot of is it something that just recently something that has just came up recently that
Frustrate you how often does this piss you off stuff like this
happens all the time.
And admittedly, I may come off a little bit jaded or passionate about this sort of issue
because I see so many patients that come into my clinic and they've taken so many supplements
and they've done so many self tests and they've just wasted so much time and so much money.
Likigat is a shining example of that.ikki got is the shining example of that.
Adrenal fatigue is the shining example of that.
Many of the thyroid conversion supplements
are another shining example of that.
And these are all things that I did.
I'm not criticizing.
These are things I did myself when I was in college
not feeling well.
The same thing, right?
When on the internet took the thyroid symptom quiz,
thought I had hypothyroid.
So I went to Whole Foods and I bought the iodine
kelp supplement plus the Google
low thyroid conversion compound with Selenium, right?
I get it.
It makes a lot of sense, moderatively.
But you know, there's this, a simple kind of analogy where if your car broke down and
we let you into the machine shop, could you fix your car?
You have access to all the tools.
Do you know how to use them?
No, you don't know how to use them.
Chances are you're going to waste a lot of time and money in the machine shop trying
to fiddle around and fix your car if you don't know how to use them. Chances are you're going to waste a lot of time and money in the machine shop trying to fiddle around and fix your car
if you don't know how to use the tool.
So I would say I spend probably 30% of my time
talking people out of a disease they think they have.
Or from doing a test, I think they need to do
or from taking a supplement they think they need to take.
Because in clinical practice, these things tend to be pretty simple.
It's a lot of complexity in terms of analysis, but then what you do ends up being kind of
simple.
So yes, things like this irritate me all the time in terms of people doing these self-test
and self-treatments, and I'm all for self-education.
But if you've done a little bit of tinkering and you haven't gotten anywhere, it's really
going to be in your best interest in my opinion to turn things over to a clinician because
in a long run, they'll save you time and money.
And what kind of tests do you run to figure these things out for people?
Is there a stool sample test?
For a gut workup?
Yeah.
So, for a gut workup, what I like to do, in most cases, there's some nuance here, but I almost
always will perform a SIBO breath test.
Now, let me just preface by saying, most of the people
come in to my clinic have already done some dietary tinkering. They're
lifestyles in somewhat decent order. And so we're not gonna start there. We're
gonna kind of go to level two, right? If someone comes in, which occasionally
someone, because you're not usually the first person, exactly. Exactly. Or they've
they've done a little bit of research and they said, oh, the paleo diet, let me
try this or, you know, let me try probiotics. So if someone comes in like that
and they haven't even gone on the paleo diet,
I'll say, Fred, take this book home with you
on the paleo diet, I'll see you back in 30 days
and we'll check in.
And oftentimes, 70 to 80% of improvement
is yielded just by that, right?
So, but for the people that have done some dietary tinkering,
I'll almost always do a seabull breath test and it's a three
hour lactelose, hydrogen, methane assessment via a breath test.
And then I'll usually do a stool sample, depending on their insurance, if we can go through
lab corporate quest, that's great.
Then we'll do a combination of stool, blood, breath, and urine.
And all those markers are looking for different things in the gut.
You can look for antigens in the stool, antibodies in the blood, certain organic acids in the urine,
and then an H-pilory assessment via the breath.
And so I'll usually do that kind of workup.
Now, if I'm suspicious of inflammatory bowel disease, then we'll add in some inflammatory
markers that are consistent with inflammatory bowel disease.
But that's generally the workup.
And then in conjunction with that, we'll do kind of a general core wellness panel where
we'll do a preliminary thyroid screening for overt hypothyroidism.
Look at vitamin D, screen for anemia, look at liver and kidney function.
But the initial assessment while thorough, it's not excessive, right?
And that's, I think, an important thing for the healthcare consumer to be cognizant of
is, I think, with only good intentions, sometimes functional providers, or even your conventional
doctor who's trying to get into more alternative medicine, you know, maybe is getting information
that's a little bit biased by lab company or supplement company educational materials.
And so you end up with a testing or supplement model that's a bit excessive.
So you mean someone goes home with 15 different bottles of...
15 bottles of supplements or like thousands of dollars worth of lab testing.
Now if you have no health insurance, your lab bill, your initial lab bill,
would be between $900 and $1,500, isn't unreasonable.
If you have no insurance at all.
But if you're using insurance in maybe a hybrid model
where you can get some test covered and some test not,
you should be looking at maybe a few hundred dollars.
So somewhere between a few hundred and maybe $1,500
is in my opinion, the max for what a reasonable initial lab bill
should be.
But it's fairly common for people to be spending
in excess of $3,000, $5,000 on their initial lab
testing evaluation.
And I know that there can be a time and a place for that,
but I think that's a very excessive model
that needs to be re-examined.
Because it can end up doing more harm for the patient
than good because it creates financial stress.
Also, on the clinical end of things,
if you have too much information,
it's very hard to analyze that data
and know what's helping and what's not helping. So it's better, I think, to use what's termed as a horizontal
differential diagnosis compared to a vertical differential diagnosis rather than a horizontal.
Horizontal means you're going to attack everything at once. Vertical means you're going to organize
a hierarchy based on the person's presentation
and say, we're going to start with items 1 and 2. We're going to see those through to fruition
and then reevaluate. If everything's improved after 1 and 2, we're done. If not, we move
on to 3 and 4, or 5 and so. So when you go through these things in a vertical kind of
hierarchical fashion, you make the treatment much simpler, much more cost effective, and much less excessive.
So those are some of the tests that I do initially,
and I'm always kind of looking at the person
in kind of this vertical model,
because of those things don't work.
There's, you know, the secondary, interstery,
and questionnaire-free fallbacks that we look into.
Now, when you came in here, you were,
what was it called, the Sony Digital Paper?
Okay, the Sony Digital Paper. You were reading some studies it called? The Sony, the Kendo. The Sony digital paper.
Okay, the Sony digital paper.
You were reading some studies, by the way, that's really cool.
We'll make sure to put that in the show notes.
Yeah, but I love to ask someone like you, who's got a specialty like this, what are you
reading right now that is, is got you excited or very intrigued in this, in this world
as far as the gut? And what are you diving
into right now or learning?
Well, the gut histamine piece is interesting. Let me pin a pin there for one second because
there's something non-get related that I think is really important, which is thyroid auto
immunity. So, you know, this auto-immune epidemic, I think many people have heard about it.
And there's just a few important things for thyroid auto-meater day. I think many people have heard about it. And there's just a few important things for thyroid autoimmune, or do I think it's important
for people to understand,
because it can potentially save them,
heartache, fear, what have you.
So if you're reading up on this,
you figure out that Hashimoto's
is an autoimmune process that causes hypothyroid.
And that Hashimoto's is important to treat
and the monitor and what have you, which yes it is.
But there's some nuance.
So the main lab marker that's used to track Hashimoto's
is an antibiotic called TPO, a thyroid proxidase, right?
You can get a lab corp quest, any doctor can do it for you.
Now, anything above usually 35 is considered positive, right?
So oftentimes people will have this test done
and they'll see that they yes, they have Hashimoto's,
their antibodies are elevated.
But the level of elevation
dictates risk. Why this is important is because if people are above 500, then they are increased risk. But if people are below 500, they're at minimal risk. So why is this important? Because when people
Because when people come in initially, they may be at, you know, 800, 1200, 1400, 1500, right, very high.
But then they make some healthy diet and lifestyle changes, maybe use some vitamin D,
maybe use some selenium, maybe investigate a problem in the gut, treat that problem,
and they're feeling at the end of all that much better.
We retest their antibodies, and their antibodies are now 225. Now, depending on the
type of clinician that you are and how you're trained, you can take that and manage a conversation
one of two ways. One way, the way I would not recommend, you still have autoimmunity, there's
still a problem, we still have to treat you, we still have to do stuff, and you still need to be
afraid of this chronic internal inflammatory bird, and people get really fearful about that,
and they walk around every day thinking that there's a smoldering fire about immunity
and their body is going to be problematic.
However, if you look at some of the contemporary studies with a critical and conservative
eye, you see that when people are between 100 and 300, really kind of below that 500 mark,
they are at minimal risk for any kind of regression of the disease and it's what I would
term a clinical win. So why that's important is because there's a lot of people walking around
with positive TPO antibodies, but in the lower end of the range that don't have to be fearful anymore
about their auto-immunity and can just kind of focus on living their life. I think that's something
that's really important because I see a lot of patients that come in and they think that they're still
something wrong with them when there's probably not.
So that would be one important thing that I've been reading up on and seeing this trend
in the literature that it's not like a light swish on or off and maybe looking at diabetes,
right?
Your blood sugar shouldn't be above 99.
But if you come in at 103, we're not going to scare the Bajeeza out of you, right? If blood sugar shouldn't be above 99. But if you come in at 103, we're not gonna scare
the Bajisas out of you, right?
If you're 203, different story.
Same thing with the thyroid antibodies, right?
If you're just over the edge there, 200,
not that big of a deal.
If you're 1200, 1900, okay,
we need to start looking into this more deeply.
So that's one thing.
Now in terms of nutrition,
we talked a little bit about paleo and vegetarianism.
Is it beneficial for people to vary not only the foods that they eat, but their macronutrient
profile to foster a more diverse microbiota?
Does it do that?
Or is it okay to stay?
Is it better to stay in one one way like if I like for me for example
I for sure have gut issues and have had them for a long time and I just feel at my best at a very very low carbohydrate
Kind of higher fat diet, but I also found over time that when I throw in
Days where I'd have more starches or I'd eat even I even have
Vegan days that I'll do for myself, that
I seem to feel much better. Is it because am I promoting a better microbiota or does
I have nothing to do with that?
Well, I think there's some benefit to variability and that's probably just replicating kind
of like the feed, fasting, and food variability cycles that we experienced when we were
100 gatherers. It wasn't always going to be the same.
So I definitely think there's some plausibility to that.
It's also important to keep in mind that globally, the 100-gatherer diet changes from equator
to the poles.
And this has been well confirmed in the public's anthropology literature, the closer you are
to the equator, the more of a high-carb diet.
And I don't mean if you're living there currently, I mean, if you're genes evolved there, of course.
So if you're a genetic lineage of an Ecuadorian, then you probably do better on a high-carb diet
if you're of irish descent, you're probably going to do better on a low-carb diet.
Because what we see is, at the equator from about 0 to 30 degrees of latitude, it tends
to be a higher-carb lower fat diet.
Then from the 30 to 40, where are we?
Mediterranean.
Guess what you have?
Kind of an intermediary between high carb and low carb.
Then you go plus 40 and you have a lower carb type of diet.
So there's definitely this variability built into the system.
In terms of who will do best on what kind of macronutrient
composition?
To your question, I think variability definitely has
some plausibility to it.
But there's another point here, which is,
now that we're learning that the microbiota is important
and having a diverse microbiota is important.
And that fiber carbs and probiotic can feed your microbiota.
There's this erroneous assumption,
formerly forming, that essentially states
that if you want to have a healthy gut,
you need to eat a lot of carbs fiber and prebiotics and that's wrong
And it's wrong because the people who have the worst gut health
Will do the worst on those interventions
So the highest risk of a negative reaction to fiber and prebiotics are those with IBS and IBD
That's me clearly clearly been shown and part of this may have to do you're feeding the bad stuff maybe Well, it may not even be the best of part of this may have to do. You're feeding the bad stuff, maybe. Well, it may not even be the best of. Part of it may have to do with the fact that your
commensal microbiota, this stuff that should be there, your immune system is not well calibrated
to manage that. So even if you have a growth of the good guys, your immune system isn't getting
along with the good guys to begin with. So if you go and you feed the good guys, you're feeding what is pissing off your min system, right? So I think that that is one of the
things that underlies that. Now, there's so many levels of, of, God, complexity of this argument
because we see in healthier populations generally higher diversity, right? So when people with IBS and IBD, we see lower diversity.
So it's easy to draw the inference
that we should be giving people with IBS and IBD
lots of fiber and lots of prebiotics.
But it's not that simple, right?
This is a biological system,
and I think what happens is the immune systems
and IBS and IBD are forming an adeptative response
to try to kind of diminish the commensal population
because the immune system doesn't get along well
with the commensals.
And there's the clinical data reinforces that.
The observational data reinforces
eat a bunch of fibromperiabatics.
But when we do that with people,
when we take people who have cron disease, for example,
and we put them on a high-fobumab diet,
we see they have more inflammation, more disease activity, but yet their microbiota
starts to look healthier, and they have more short-chain fatty acids, which may be healthy.
So we see these glaring discrepancies.
There have also been some studies showing that after the administration of certain antibiotics,
we can see diversity increase.
And that may be because of your earlier comment
that we're killing off some of the bad guys
that have been poisoning the good guys from growing, right?
So dysbiosis and inflammation can kind of poison
the environment and make it harder
for the good guys to grow.
So it's not just to say we have to feed the good guys.
Sometimes it's looking at this more
from an environmental perspective
of trying to figure out
what the ecosystem needs.
And the analogy I like to use is different ecosystems
require different parameters to be healthy.
So if we say that carbs, fiber, and pre-biotics
are like rain, because they feed stuff.
So a Southern California, too much rain causes mudslides
and kills people, right?
So we shouldn't say because there's such pretty vegetation in the rainforest, every geographical
climate should have a lot of rain.
No.
Like do you see how stupid of an assumption that is?
Right.
But we do that where the African hunter-gatherers eat lots of fiber and have healthy guts,
so we should all do that.
Well no, we shouldn't do that because if your ecosystem, like in your case,
if your immune system hasn't been ideally calibrated to deal with your
commensal microbiota, then we can try to feed that. You may have more inflammation
because we're feeding the thing that the immune system is struggling to keep in
check to begin with.
This is something that we talked about with Rob. It's just so ironic that Western
medicine doesn't take like anthropology
into consideration when diagnosing.
I just find that so fascinating
that we don't take that into consideration.
It just seems so obvious when you use analogies like that.
It seems like anybody can benefit from getting their gut tested
and just kind of finding out like how you respond best to it.
My, I wrote a ebook called Start With a Gut
that kind of talks about this because I've seen
over so many years this concept is completely reinforced, which is once you get your diet
and lifestyle in order, if you're not feeling well, the place that's most efficient to
start is the gut.
It's not a guarantee, it's not a panesia, but there are other things that are less common
that you want to make sure you
do after the gut and only after the gut.
So Lyme disease, mold the mycotoxin toxicity, heavy mental toxicity, I think any expert in
those areas will agree, get your gut healthy first, because it's going to be easier to heal
from this once you have that in order.
So I think that's the one message to take away from this podcast of nothing else is start
with your gut.
Yeah.
I was just saying I had an interesting experience more recently over the past few years where I've had to
take antibiotics a couple times.
With my antibiotics, I'll separate and I've read that this is the way you're supposed
to do it.
I don't even know if this is accurate, but I'll take my probiotic in the morning and
four hours later I'll take a probiotic obviously because I'm trying to protect my probiotic in the morning and four hours later, I'll take a probiotic, obviously, because I'm trying to protect my antibiotic and probiotic.
That's excuse me, antibiotic and probiotic.
And my gut health is amazing when I do this.
It's like, I'm on an antibiotic
and then I have the best gut health ever.
And then I go off the antibiotic
and then it takes like two to four weeks
and then I go back to my old self.
What's going on?
I must have something that's overgrowing
or I'm killing with the antibiotic, but then comes back.
So I've got to get you a copy of my book,
which hopefully it'll be out late this year,
or I'll just kill myself because at this point
it's been so long that I'm just getting sick of writing it.
But we go through a process exactly for those types of people
because there's definitely a subset of people
that kind of always feel better on some type of antimicrobial approach.
Now that might be a low carb diet, it might be a low carb low phob amph diet, it might be
cyclical use of herbs that are antibacterial in nature.
Like what, by the way, which ones?
Arraygano, grapefruit seed, burbring, Alice inland garlic, there's a whole bunch that can be used, but there's definitely
a subset of people that need to kind of work to keep their microbiota in check, right?
So there are other foundational things that may preclude you from meeting ongoing antimicrobial,
right?
The right probiotic regimen and the right dietary regimen may get you there, but there
are definitely people that notice that they feel better when they're on
antibacterial type treatments.
So what that may mean, in your case,
you may fit kind of a more standard moderate
IBS or a presentation where you need to kind of
keep the shrubs trimmed, right?
And so an analogy I like to use is we pull weeds
and we trim shrubs, right? And so sometimes people have like to use is we pull weeds and we trim shrubs.
And so sometimes people have a hard time thinking, well, don't we not want to kill stuff in
the gut?
Well, it's not all about killing.
Sometimes it's just about trimming.
And so sometimes when people are learning about SIBO or Candida, they're saying, well,
don't I want to completely eradicate my SIBO?
Well, it's not that you want to eradicate those bacteria because those bacteria should be there
and the fungus and candida should be there.
It's just you don't want them to be overgrown.
Just the same way to trim your shrubs,
you don't rip them out, you trim them.
So some people need this kind of ongoing trimming approach
to keep things in balance.
So that might be me.
So along these lines too, we talked.
We don't know that long.
I don't trim. long. I don't try them.
After the podcast, Taylor mentioned wanting
to take you to Whole Foods and you suggested something.
I want you to kind of share with what you suggested
and why you suggested that.
I think it's an awesome thing that we've been
about probiotics.
Yeah, yeah.
So you can get really, I think one,
you can get easily confused regarding probiotics.
There's so many different formulas out there.
But I think an easy way to approach probiotics is to try to organize them generally into
classes.
And there's about four classes of probiotics.
You have your lactobacillus bifurobacterium mixtures.
So when you look in the label, you'll see predominantly lactobacillus and bifurobacterium
listed.
That's class one. Another class is sacramoisee
spallardi, which is a healthy type of fungus. And on the label there, you'll see just sacramoisee spallardi.
A third is known as soil-based organisms. And you'll see here mostly bacillus type species on the label.
And there'll be many of them, but you're going to see bacillus, bac, Basilis, Basilis, Basilis, Prominally. And then the fourth, you can't buy it in the U.S. but you can't go on the
internet and buy it from Canada or wherever. And this is Ecoli Nissel 1917. And people sometimes
think, ooh, Ecoli is in that bad. Someone Ecoli, yes. But one of the major gut commensals,
good guys, is actually Ecoli. So you want to have robust E. coli in your gut naturally.
And this E. coli 1917, trade name is Mutaflore.
There's one other brain, but Mutaflore's probably
the most well known is kind of the fourth class.
And so what you can do is just try a probiotic
of each one of those classes.
If you're sensitive, I would try them one at a time
so that you can preempt or determine easily
where a reaction is going to be.
I was just going to ask you don't want to take do you want to take them all together?
Well, the healthier you are, the lower your probability of a reaction,
so you can take them all together.
Right? But if you're more sensitive, you know it's your more reactive,
I do them one at a time so you can parse out where a reaction is coming from.
Because while they're, in my opinion, is an overwhelming number of literature
that probiotics can help everything from depression to SIBO.
Not everyone is going to have a positive response.
There's a small subset that will have a negative response.
The most common negative response is bloating.
Now, bloating for a couple of days, not abnormal, as things are adjusting.
But after three, four, five days, you're still having persistent bloating or other negative
symptoms, then that probiotic may not be for you.
Try the others.
And if after trying all the probiotics,
you can't find any that work well for you.
You may just be as a general class
a probiotic non-responder and you don't want to use.
I was just going to ask you because I've used most of those.
I bought the soil-based one, prescripticist,
I think was the brand,
and the lactobacillus bifidol one that I'll use
is Ultimate Flora.
And I tried the, what was the second one you named?
It was a fungus, saccharomyces, bloody.
Saccharomyces destroyed me.
Like I would take it and I'd have horrible gastro issues
from it, and I'd tried it a few times,
and it was just horrible for me.
And so you're obviously I stopped taking it,
and so that means very simply not for me.
It's probably not the right one to take.
Yeah.
And so, you know, two things I should maybe mention
really quick, with probiotics,
you want to be careful that your probiotic
does not have a high level of prebiotic in it.
So you want to shoot for,
So it does not,
does not have a lot of prebiotic.
That's funny,
because some of them include prebiotic,
saying it's better for you.
Well, theoretically yes, because the prebiotic feeds
the probiotic, but for people with IBS and IBD,
they're more prone to negatively react to prebiotics.
So I'd recommend, I recommend you shoot for underneath
a thousand milligrams, you know,
a thousand, underneath a thousand milligrams,
probably gonna be okay.
Most of the studies I've shown that you can get away
with three to five grams without risking
a lot of negative reactions, but that's something
to be kind of, for example, that second mic is a ballardi.
If it had two, three, four, five grams of inulin in it,
that may have been what you're reacting to.
So just try to do your best to isolate
for the probiotics with a lower level of
Prebiotic and start with a low dose like you said now
How hard is this to find in just whole foods where can you shouldn't be too hard
Just you want to read the label and maybe ask a person there
You know are any of these things
Prebiotics and then look and see if the milligrams listed and well the lact, the lacto, bacillus, and bifidol ones, you can find easily the soil-based ones.
I had a tough time finding.
I had to go online.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I thought you were asking how to determine
the level of prebiotic in them.
In terms of finding the formulas,
yeah, the lactose and the second miceese,
probably at most health food stores,
the soil-based, probably online.
And then the E. coli or trade name,
mutilthlor, definitely online online because you can't buy that
here.
Now, here's another thing that I observed with myself is that I'll take lactobacillus
and pifidobacillus probiotics for a while.
And they'll be great.
And then after a while, they seem to affect me negatively.
And I'll have to switch to the soil based one.
And then I'll do great on that one.
And then that will affect me negatively. And then I have to switch again. What-based one, and then I'll do great on that one, and then that will affect me negatively,
and then I'll have to switch again.
What's going on with that?
Am I getting overgrowth?
Well, it is possible that you're overdosing,
and so you may need to say,
cyclical dosing of it, or you may just need less of a dose
of the ones that you are getting.
And I don't think there's an answer here.
I don't think we have an answer here scientifically. So experimentation and your own response as a barometer would be what
I would use. However, I'm inclined to think that consistent dosing may be better, just knowing
the way the immune system works. It seems that consistent exposure is more synchronistic
for the immune system, whereas episodic exposure may be problematic.
So maybe you cut your dose lower,
or you do it like three days a week,
but you try to use all the probiotic classes at once
in a lower dose and maybe a little less often
rather than cycling.
Now with the probiotic,
because when people take them, they take them all the time,
is that showing that it's more of a bandaid than anything?
Because it's not populating your gut
or it's not really changing anything
that you're just kind of taking it to deal with your symptoms?
Well, probiotics, most probiotics do not colonize you.
So that's important to establish.
Now, okay, so I'm glad you said that.
Let's talk about that for a second.
So what do you mean by that?
It doesn't actually help populate your gut
with what you're taking.
Yeah, that's a misnomer.
Probiotics don't colonize you.
Most, most don't.
And they've even done studies using what's called
heat-killed probiotics, where they heat up
probiotics until they're dead.
And then they administer them.
And they've shown benefit with even those.
So there may be more to the probiotics than,
a live probiotic may not be essential
for some of the benefit.
Probiotics do a couple of things.
They transiently, because they're mostly can transient in nature.
They don't populate you.
They release antibacterial peptides.
They can actually kill sebum, kill fungus.
Part of what they may be doing is combating overgrowth.
They are antibacterial.
They are also anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory.
They dampen the inflammatory and immune response in the gut.
They help with leaky gut by doing that.
They may also partially degrade biofilms.
They help make the microbiota less skewed by antibiotic use.
They actually even have been shown to enhance the effect
in this of certain anthobatics when used for the treatment of certain infections.
So there's many benefits of probiotics, but they tend to be somewhat transient.
Now the way I would recommend using a probiotic is using them in more of a clinical application
while you're trying to get your gut rebalanced and then try to find the minimum dose needed in the long term. And in my print book that's hopefully coming late
this, late 2017, we go through the whole story like all of a stuff we've been talking about. But
then the end codifies all the information into an H step process that's personalized. So at the
end of every step, we reassess and you either go one way or the
other, right? If people respond, optimally, at step one, they go right to step five and
finish. If they respond optimally, at step two, they go right to step five and finish. If
they aren't there by step two, they go through step three and four, which are built to be
together, right? But things like your response, which are you feel better on an antibiotic,
but then you regress afterward, those are factoring to the plan. And it really is, it's just kind of this algorithm that I go through in the clinic. And so what I recommend, you know,
in the book and just as a general practice is try to be a little bit more robust in your
intervention in the short term, see if we can get your microbiota to balance back out and then we
off the interventions in terms of supplements or whatever,
and then also try to broaden your diet. So at the end, the end game is minimally use of supplements,
maximally broad diet, and that's what we do in the long run.
Awesome. Lastly, I wanted to ask you about fermented foods. What role do they play in?
Oh, and that's a good question. That's a good question. So I'm glad you asked that.
So we can tie back into that.
So for men and foods can be great for your gut.
They're food form of probiotic.
So like kombucha or?
Kombucha, kimchi, sour, cow.
Yeah, so they can definitely be helpful for men and yogurts.
There's definitely some studies showing that these types
of foods can be helpful for various conditions,
including gastrointestinal conditions.
However, there's one important caveat with fermenting foods, and that is there are some people,
and some estimates come in that maybe 22% of patients with digestive symptoms may have what's
known as histamine intolerance. Now, what is histamine? Histamine is a byproduct of the form
from bacteria, right? So, in fermenting foods, because there's a lot of bacteria like tibia, you're going to
have a lot of histamine.
And for some people, what I notice is they go to a kind of like paleolowercarb type diet
and they inadvertently start eating lots of histamine.
Probiotic rich foods like fermented foods, plus things like spinach, avocado,
fermented meats like jerkeys and canned salmon,
things like that, they all have a pretty whopping dose of histamine in them.
Now for most people, it's not a problem,
but if you're histamine sensitive,
it can start manifesting as a histamine sensitive reaction.
And there's a few things that can happen there.
There's a few, there's neurological symptoms, brain fog, irritability.
There's skin reactions, hives, rashing, flush feeling.
It also caused insomnia.
It can cause things like joint pain, and can also cause gastrointestinal distress, like
bloating or loose stools, some of the most typical, and maybe even joint pain.
So some of the key things there are,
if people notice they feel worse
when they eat lots of fermented foods,
then they may be histamine sensitive.
And then you can look up,
although histamine diet,
try following that diet for a few days,
and usually it only takes,
maybe a few days to start at least getting an inkling
in terms of if you're histamine sensitive or not.
And this actually happened to me.
I was eating lots of histamine foods.
I was eating tons of avocados and spinach and jerky
because it was also convenient.
And then watching about it down with the canbucha.
And I'd be at my home office on a beautiful sunny day.
No reason not to be perfectly happy.
And I'd be like, what the frick?
Like I'm pissed off.
What am I mad about, right?
And I felt foggy and irritated,
and I finally dis-reflected, and I'm like, wow,
like there's been a lot of histamine in my diet lately.
And so I cut out all those histamine foods,
and I quickly figured out that I am a little bit histamine
sensitive, so now I can have those foods.
I just can't have a high histamine food,
every meal for like days on end
That's interesting because I'll especially if I take really hot showers
I'll get some hive sometimes and I notice if I take like claritan or you know, anti histamine type medication
My gut will feel better
Yeah, your high arrest so the IBS population is a higher risk for that histamine sensitivity
Son of a bitch
Torrible you're like yeah, now you know, this is this has been great, man.
It's been awesome. I'm excited. You're close. I didn't realize how close you were us. We'll definitely have to do this again.
I'm pretty pretty pumped. I'm excited to go to the store with you right now and
and talk a little bit more about what, you know, products and stuff people should look look for and what they should get and what not. So
look for and what they should get and what not. So, excellent.
Listen, go to mindpumpmedia.com, 30 days of coaching is still available and it's still
absolutely for free.
Also check us out on Instagram at MindPumpMedia.
You can find my personal page at MindPumpStyle.
Adam is at MindPumpAtom and Justin is at MindPumpChestom.
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