The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - The No.1 Menopause Doctor: They’re Lying To You About Menopause! Brand New Science! (Men Need To Listen Too!): Mary Claire Haver
Episode Date: December 18, 2023If you enjoy hearing about promoting female health and the power of nutrition, check out my conversation with the nutritional and functional health expert, Dr Mindy Pelz, which you can find here: htt...ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e2mQOGzHtQc When does menopause start? What is menopause? How does menopause affect my marriage? Over 1.2 billion women are going through menopause right now. This leading expert uncovers the myths that have dominated our understanding for years. Dr Mary Claire Haver is a menopause expert, OBGYN, bestselling author and internet personality. She specialises in women's health, focusing on empowering and educating everyone to understand women’s bodies. In 2018, she founded 'The Galveston Diet', which became a bestseller in 2023. The Mary Claire Wellness Clinic, established in 2021, has helped to empower and educate thousands of women. Her new book is out May 2024 and provides everything a woman needs to know to thrive during her hormonal transition and beyond. Follow Mary Claire Haver: Instagram: https://bit.ly/3TtYGrv TikTok: https://bit.ly/3v9U3sq Pre-Order Dr Mary’s new book here: https://amzn.to/41tQtW8 The Galveston Diet: https://amzn.to/3v7g9fu Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
Transcript
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. In 2023, 85% of women are
complaining of menopausal symptoms, 10.5% are receiving
treatment or therapy. I mean, it would be as if your testicles shriveled up and died at 51.
That's the equivalent. Let's get started. Dr. Mary Claire Haver. Renowned menopause expert.
With more than 2 million followers. Helping countless women through their menopause
experiences. Menopause is inevitable, suffering is not. But a woman is more likely to be prescribed an
antidepressant for her menopause than hormone therapy. Women by the thousands are like,
oh my God, I had no idea. That's when I realized no one's talking about this.
So here's their laundry list of symptoms. We've categorized about 70. So there's brain fog,
changes in her sexual function, weight gain. But here's the scary things. And the studies
have been done. We see either a new onset
or worsening of depression anxiety bipolar adhd risk for cardiovascular disease and diabetes
increases recurrent urinary tract infections which is a major cause of death for women they're
suffering in silence and i was one of those women i want to see my grandkids one day i want to watch
these women i've raised grow up and you, be the women they're meant to be.
And that choice might get taken away from me if I'm not careful.
But there's lots of things that we can do.
For example, we see a dramatic loss of muscle mass.
Focus on strength training.
This is going to determine your longevity as you age.
Strength over skinny.
What about your diet?
I developed a program for my patients.
And it's not rocket science, it's...
Whether you're a man or a woman,
menopause is going to affect you
because it's going to affect 50% of our society.
And there is 1.2 billion women
being affected by menopause right now.
And whether you're a man or a woman most of us don't have the answers how do we help how do we talk about it what is it how does it
affect the human body if you're in a relationship with a woman that's in perimenopause which can
start at 30 up to a woman that is currently going through menopause
in her 40s or 50s or 60s what should you do to support her what can she do to support herself
this subject of menopause has exploded in public conversation thankfully but there's still so many
unanswered questions and that's why today i invited one of the leading voices on menopause
globally onto my show even as a man that won't go through menopause myself but has a partner
and a mum that certainly will there's something that everyone can learn from this and I implore
all men who maybe clicked on this episode or were sent this link to listen please just listen because you can learn something
too and for everybody new to this channel can you do me a favor if you like what we do here you like
the guests we have on and you like the show that we bring to you can you hit the subscribe button
it is the single thing and the only thing i'll ever ask of you i would love you to join us on
this journey and if you do i will repay you and that is a promise. Do we have a deal? Thank you.
Dr. Mary Claire Haver, why do you do what you do?
You know, I started out in medicine the way most people do.
I wanted to help people.
And in our training and school,
we get to have a little taste of all the different specialties.
And my very last rotation in my third year was OBGYN.
And I really liked surgery.
I really liked some of the surgical subspecialties.
So I thought that would be my path.
But then when I delivered my first baby and all that rush of emotion and dopamine
and how beautiful that whole process was, I knew that that was going to be my calling.
And so I did the traditional four-year residency and loved it and really did well
and went into private practice.
After about three years of doing the private practice route,
I realized I missed being in academics.
I wanted that ability to do research and be around students
and teach as well as take care of patients.
So I went back on as faculty and everything was going great.
I was very successful.
I was, you know, doing pap smears and babies and birth control
and all the things that traditional OB-GYN does.
And then I was aging as my patients were aging too.
And when I got to my 40s,
I realized that there was a big gap
in my education and knowledge around menopause.
So I started researching.
Most of my patients were coming in,
the pain point was weight gain.
And they were like, I'm not doing anything different.
I'm working out, I haven't changed my diet.
And that little voice in my head was like,
work out more, eat less.
You know, we tend to move less.
We tend to, I was just going with the script
that had been handed to me for years
that calories in, calories out is the only way.
And in medicine in the U.S., we have very little background in nutrition.
We learn nothing in medical school, very little in residency
as far as what nutrition actually is and how it can affect our bodies.
And so I started struggling with my own menopause. My patients were all
struggling. And I decided to go back to school to learn more about nutrition because I felt that
there was a big piece missing here because this weight gain was mostly centered around the mid
section. And I was learning about visceral fat and subcutaneous fat and the differences and what's
going on with our muscle mass. And I'm like, there's a much bigger picture here than just calories in, calories out.
So I enrolled at Tulane University in their culinary medicine program
and just my mind was blown by how much I didn't know
as far as nutrition and inflammation and aging and how it all affects.
But where was this menopause piece?
And so I took everything I learned
and I developed a little program for my patients,
which became the Galveston Diet.
And it really was just a passion project for me.
And then I started talking about it on social media
and realized that as my social media presence grew
and the conversation got bigger and bigger,
that there were so many women
suffering. Probably the majority of women in menopause were suffering, not just from weight
gain, but from musculoskeletal issues, mental health, brain fog, you know, skin changes, hair
changes, nail changes. And I just kept doing deeper and deeper dives and realizing no one's talking
about this. No one's talking about the multi-organ system failure
that a lot of women are going through
and they're suffering in silence
and physicians aren't helping, we're not trained.
And so I thought, it's really my kids who I have two daughters.
One's 23, she's in medical school right now
and she's actually here with us.
And then the other is 20 and they were like mom you've you've got
the social media presence you really need to use it for good and that's kind of where that
conversation exploded for me on social media and where I realized by reading the comments
what a much bigger pick you know what was really happening in the menopause world and how we need
to bring it to the forefront for people that don't understand menopause world and how we need to bring it to the forefront.
For people that don't understand menopause,
they might think that it's a small issue affecting a small group of people.
But how many women are affected currently by perimenopause,
menopause and postmenopause? Sure. So right now, about a third of the female population of the world
is in peri or-menopause.
It's not optional.
All of us go through it.
And because we have such individual expressions of how it affects our bodies,
what we know now is that there are estrogen receptors in every organ system of our body.
And when those levels start declining,
we see a very wide variety of a spectrum of syndrome
where it used to just be thought
it was a few hot flashes and some night sweats.
Maybe your sleep's disrupted.
Your genital urinary system is gonna take a hit.
Your bones are gonna get weaker.
But what we know now is how much it's affecting
our mental health, our capabilities,
our skin, our bones, our kidneys,
vertigo, tinnitus, frozen shoulder.
Anytime I post about those on social media,
the internet explodes.
And women by the thousands are like,
oh my God, I had no idea.
You know, and just the validation piece
was so huge for them to make
because they've been dismissed for so long
until it's all in their head.
And if we think about from sort of peri to postmenopause, what is that sort of typical, and I know that's a tricky word to use,
but what is the sort of average typical age range? And then also what is the sort of more
possible age range? So it could start between this age and this age. So in the US and in most
of Europe, the average age of menopause, which means one year after your last menstrual period, is 51.
Perimenopause, which is when your body recognizes
there's some declining estrogen levels and you're beginning to be symptomatic,
can start 7 to 10 years before that.
So normal menopause is still 45 to 55.
And so if you do the math and back that up seven to 10 years, it is completely
reasonable for a 35 year old woman to begin to experience some of the symptoms of perimenopause.
So let's start with what is it? And I would love you to explain this to me like I'm a 10 year old.
Because I'm sure there's a lot of people that are both men and women that aren't flea.
So we're going to talk about gonads, right? What's gonads?
Gonads are where our, so in men, it's the testes.
Okay.
And where you're making your genetic material to, you know, where you're making sperm, right?
And in a female, it's going to be ovaries, her ovaries.
So the difference, big differences between male and female and how that process happens
is that males make their genetic material fresh constantly
the minute they go through puberty
until basically they die
unless they have some medical issue.
Females, on the other hand,
our eggs develop while we're in utero in our mothers.
So while we're in the womb,
she's five months pregnant with us,
we have our maximum eggs that we're ever gonna have.
And those are meant to last us until we go through menopause.
And so they lay dormant until we go through puberty
and then they wake up again and we start ovulating.
So we have this monthly in a healthy person,
cyclical, you know, hormones rise and ebb and flow with our cycles each month.
We have a period, you get pregnant, you don't get pregnant,
and the whole process starts over again. Well, because we're born with that egg supply,
through time, we're decreasing the amount and the quality of those eggs. So when a woman hits
the age of 30, she is down to about 10% of the egg supply that she had at birth. And when she's 40, it's down to about 3%.
And it gets harder and harder for that ebb and flow of the natural hormones to do its job.
And we start seeing fluctuations in her periods
and then organ systems that are beginning to notice the lack of estrogen.
Estrogen is a really powerful anti-inflammatory hormone
in most of our body systems. So the musculoskeletal syndrome of menopause is really
starting to be talked about quite a bit now. And we're looking at things like frozen shoulder,
arthralgias, generalized aches and pains, and most physicians aren't aware of this.
Most know about hot flashes and night sweats and sleep disruption. But now
that we're really opening the conversation as to how many organ systems are affected,
we are seeing people coming out of the woodwork just so happy to know that they're not crazy and
they're being validated. And what's happening at these sort of three stages? So we have the
perimenopausal stage, which is from what I've understood there, when estrogen levels start to
drop. Right. So we start seeing disruptions in the force. So instead of that nice monthly estrogen
surge with ovulation, and then the progesterone goes up, we start the elongation sometimes,
or they even get closer together. I call it the zone of chaos. What used to be a very reproducible,
dependable system starts failing. So some women will have irregular periods,
meaning they're spacing out, they're skipping periods.
Others will have really heavy periods,
like hemorrhagic almost.
And again, individual,
the way the body reacts to this is very individualized
from patient to patient.
Doctors love something that follows a list,
a checklist, right? You know,
we have all these complicated things we have to learn and we have these checklists, but menopause,
it's like pinning the tail on a moving donkey. And in perimenopause, it's very, very chaotic.
Estrogen surges, then it goes away for a while. Like a woman in perimenopause can feel completely fine for a few months. Everything goes haywire. then she's fine again, you know, and not only is her estrogen declining, her testosterone is declining as well. So we're
seeing loss of muscle mass, we're seeing changes in her sexual function, we're seeing decreased
strength, you know, there's some really good studies showing how testosterone also affects
our mental health and our cognition as well. Why does this happen from a sort of like an evolutionary?
So the anthropologists have looked at this heavily
and there's only a couple of species in the world
that go through menopause.
Humans are one.
There's a couple of species of whales
and I think they've now discovered one of the giraffes.
Species of giraffes can do it.
But by and large, most mammals will die while they're still ovulating.
You know, like they're not going to go through a menopause.
And so there's something called the grandmother hypothesis
where there was an evolutionary advantage for women to survive
if she stopped the ability to have children at some point.
Now, again, you have to temper this with humans have prolonged their lifespan
and their health span because of modern medicine.
So probably when we evolved, we weren't living this long.
You know, a woman my age was pretty rare.
I'm 55.
And so, you know, it's hard to say.
I think we have outlived how we were genetically built.
And so we're living longer and being forced to deal with the consequences of that.
So then the next stage is menopause.
So menopause itself is really that it's just really one day in your life.
It's when you can throw the hammer down and say, I'm never going to ovulate again.
I'm done.
And so if a woman's over the age of 45 and she hasn't had a period for a year,
that's the definition, okay?
Now it gets confusing because
what if she's had a hysterectomy
or doesn't bleed because of a surgery
or an IUD or something?
Well, then we can't use her periods to help judge
and that's where we start doing blood work
to see where she is in her menopause journey.
And then post-menopause is the rest of your life.
You know, the hot flashes might go away.
Night sweats might go away.
Brain fog might get better.
But pretty much everything else is going to continue to progress
in a very linear fashion until you die without estrogen replacement.
To put it lightly, you seem somewhat dissatisfied
with the current set of answers that the medical field,
but just society at large are offering for women in this sort of peri and post and menopausal phase of their life.
And I've sat here with a lot of women who are experiencing menopause at one stage or the other.
And they also seem to be at a loss for answers.
I was sat here two days ago
with a very, very successful woman
who has all the resources in the world.
And she basically,
and this is someone that has all the answers.
People come to her because she has the answers.
And the one thing she doesn't seem to have answers on
in her own words in her life at the moment is menopause.
She's rummaging around the internet, Googling things, finding contradictory information.
And when you sat down, you had that same energy, like you feel like women have been,
dare I say, let down by a system. I think the medical system is letting them down. I think
society is letting them down, our value and our worth. In medicine, you know, I came through this wonderful training program.
I'm very proud of what I learned.
I'm very proud of the care that I gave,
except I was a horrible menopause provider for probably 15 years.
I knew what I knew.
I relied on my training,
and I didn't look outside of the traditional confines of training.
This is such a systemic problem that, I mean, I'm going to tell you a story,
and this is true, and it's embarrassing, but I think it needs to be said
because I think it really highlights how women are treated in medicine.
When I was in training, we had these upper-level residents.
We have a hierarchy where you have different years of training.
So it was in the early years, maybe my first year.
And we had these clinics that we would run to take care of patients.
And so we have obstetrics and we have gynecology as like divisions in our training.
So in gynecology, everything gets lumped together.
Pediatrics, menopause.
We had no specific menopause clinic.
I maybe got six hours of lecture
in a four-year curriculum. And so we'd have these women coming in in midlife and they had multiple
complaints. They didn't feel good. They weren't sleeping. They were gaining some weight. They were
aching. Just this laundry list of things that were a little on the vague side. And my upper levels would say, oh gosh,
good luck with that. You've got a WW on your hands. And that was code. We never wrote that
in the chart. This was not taught to me by faculty. This was just kind of a handed down
in the lore of training. And a WW was a whiny woman. And that was code. And now I know that she was perimenopausal,
suffering from her list of symptoms of now,
which we've categorized about 70.
And they were frustrated
because they didn't think they could help her.
Now, remember the Women's Health Initiative,
which was a study that was supposed to do a lot of good
for women.
It was originally designed and it was stopped in 2002.
That was the end of my training program was 2002.
So I come from one of the last groups of physicians in the US
that were ever trained in hormone replacement therapy.
And then the rug was pulled out from under us.
So the WHI, there were mistakes,
there was misinformation in the reporting,
and there was a misinterpretation
of the results. All of that has been walked back, relooked at. We know that for the vast majority
of women, hormone replacement therapy is safe and effective and can give a woman her life back
if she chooses to take it. But that option has been taken off the table for the vast majority of women.
Recently, I just saw the numbers.
85% of women will come in complaining of what we know now.
This was in 2023.
FDA looked at the numbers.
85% of women are complaining of menopausal symptoms.
10.5% are receiving treatment or therapy today.
Is there something in you that feels somewhat,
even though you're a doctor,
somewhat let down by the medical system
or skeptical about the medical system for personal reasons?
I, yeah, I'm one of those women, you know?
I thought I'd be one of those girlies
who would just breeze through menopause
because I was thin and thin meant healthy.
I still, you know, that mentality was alive and well when I trained
and through most of my practice.
I came through a very fat phobic, you know, training
and medicine as a whole is very biased against people's weight.
And so now that I've done a deep dive into nutrition
and done a deep dive into menopause
and really sat there and listened to patients
and realized that women who were gaining weight with menopause,
they've done nothing different.
They're still exercising.
They're eating the same.
The only thing that's changed for them is their hormones.
And they're being categorically dismissed
at multiple doctor's visits or worse.
Here's their laundry list of symptoms.
The root cause is menopause, but it's not recognized.
And one medication could have taken care of everything,
but they're going to seven, eight, nine different specialists
on seven, eight, nine different medications to handle each symptom,
whereas all they needed was just to get her hormones back,
and she would feel amazing and be able to age the way she should.
When we talk about the potential health implications of women
that are going through menopause.
It's not just WW.
Right.
It's much more...
That's how she feels though.
And that's how she's categorized probably by people around her.
But there's real health consequences and life-altering health consequences,
lifespan-reducing health consequences.
Yes.
What are those? So we know that a woman's risk and the studies have been done. It's not just aging. Of course,
aging plays into this. But when you add in menopause as an independent risk factor,
her risk for cardiovascular disease increases, her risk of diabetes increases, her insulin
resistance starts going haywire immediately.
Your listeners and your people who watch on YouTube will be shocked.
I'm going to say how many of their cholesterol levels shot up
in their 30s and 40s with no changes in diet and exercise?
You know, we see cholesterol levels changing, skin, hair, teeth,
the dental changes, the inner ear changes,
the vertigo is incredible, the frozen shoulder is legion.
Frozen shoulder?
Frozen shoulder is an adhesive capsulitis of the shoulder joint.
And it is very common in menopause.
So estrogen has this amazing anti-inflammatory effect,
especially in our bones and joints and muscles.
And frozen shoulder is super common
and it takes about two years of therapy to get it to break up.
So the capsule that is right over the bone where the muscles attach
becomes encapsulated and adhesed and stuck.
And so you have to get in there and break it up and do lots of training.
So like a woman wouldn't be able to reach behind her back to do her bra she that's one of the things or you go
to take a picture with your girlfriends you can't put your arm or you can't lift your arm above here
that's one of the one of the studies that I you know presented a lot of the stuff I do in social
I'll present the studies because I like to I like like to have data and you know, I'll get
10,000 comments on, oh my God, that happened to me. That happened to me. That happened to me.
Not that I can fix it, but at least they know this is something that it's not your fault. You
didn't do anything. You're just estrogen levels dropped, which led to increasing inflammation in
those joints. And have they seen that there's a reduction in lifespan
in women that go through menopause
that aren't treated in a certain way?
So we know that women on HRT
have a lower all-cause mortality.
What's HRT?
Hormone replacement therapy or menopause hormone therapy.
So in the studies that have been done,
the observational studies and in the WHI,
women who were on hormones
especially beginning early in their menopause okay so estrogen there is a window of opportunity
for reduction of some of this burden of disease and it is very in starting in perimenopause or
within the first 10 years of your menopause that's the sweet spot for being able to decrease your risk of diabetes,
decrease your risk of cardiovascular disease and dementia.
When we go beyond that, we start losing those benefits
because estrogen is better at prevention than cure.
And so my medical school daughter was like,
mom, I'm never going to be without estrogen.
I'm going to start in perimenopause.
Like I'm not going to be one of those'm never gonna be without estrogen. I'm gonna start in perimenopause. Like I'm not gonna be one of those women
who's ever off estrogen.
Of course, she's my daughter
and listens to me on social media all day.
So she's a little biased,
but she says, why can't we get to that point
where we have no gaps in our estrogen supply?
We just support starting in perimenopause,
offer it to all women.
Not all women will choose it and I support that,
but we're not having the conversation and they're not being given the
choice. So what age with your daughter would you advise her to start hormone replacement therapy,
if she so chooses? So I would say we start checking levels and we start looking probably
in late 30s. Certainly if she starts having any symptoms out of the normal.
You know, she's living her best life, you know,
doing all the right things for her health. And all of a sudden she's not sleeping well
or she's having aches and pains
or she's noticing, you know, changes in her body.
Most women can tell you something was wrong.
I couldn't put my finger on it,
but I knew that something in me had changed
and I wasn't responding to things the same way.
You know, their mental health had changed or, you know, the way their gut had changed or gut
health, you know, just, just there's barely an organ system that's not affected by this.
I sometimes wonder because, you know, there's the person going through it and then there's
those around them and they might know themselves that something's wrong. The person that's going
through perimenopause or menopause, but the people around them won they might know themselves that something's wrong the person that's going through perimenopause or menopause but the people around them won't understand typically what's going on
with that person so they'll they might do the old ww thing that's you know or they might label them
something else they might misdiagnose it as another man's health predicament i remember a woman in my
life who went whose behavior changed around this age and I didn't know about perimenopause or menopause, it's in hindsight now that I look back and go, oh my God,
everyone around this person thought they had bipolar or something.
Right. I mean, it, it, it's probably contributing to divorce rates, maybe in a good way. You know,
at this time, I, I, one of the positive things I see about menopause
is that women are cutting the things in their life
that don't make sense anymore.
They're not putting up with, you know, as a society,
we tend to take on everyone's burden
and, you know, take on the emotional labor
in a lot of relationships, take on the organizational labor.
And I see because they're struggling so much with just staying afloat, they're able to just
quickly say, no, I'm not doing this anymore. You know, you need to pick up whichever relationship
they're in. You need to pick up your end of the bargain here. You know, I can't do all of the
organizational labor, the emotional labor. And I have a patient who's a divorce attorney.
And she said, I really think a significant percentage is of this divorce is menopause.
And either they're prioritizing what's important to them or they're not getting the support that they need.
And how can we give them the support that they need?
So I think it's important that we talk about it.
I encourage every single patient I have, all my followers on social media, tell your story.
Tell your story to anyone who will listen.
Tell your daughters, tell your nieces, tell your sons, tell your loved ones.
Make this a normal part of a conversation so that we see it coming, we understand what might happen
and that no one feels crazy and alone when they're going through it.
And then we need to do a much better job in our medical system
of providing support for these women in whatever way they need it,
be it hormones, non-hormones, cognitive behavioral therapy.
There's lots of things that we can do.
Not just hormone therapy is not the cure-all for everything.
We have to support the whole toolkit, right?
We have to prioritize our sleep, get the exercise that we need,
focus on strength training.
When a lot of us in my generation never did that,
we were aerobics, you know, focused on being thin and small.
It's time to be strong.
You know, this muscle mass that you have
is going to determine your
longevity and your functionality as you age. And menopause is, you know, that loss of estrogen and
testosterone is tearing our muscle units apart, which is leading to osteoporosis as well.
I want to go through that whole toolkit. But I also want to just, before we move there,
understand why women don't sometimes communicate that they're going through perimenopause or menopause. Is there a stigma associated with talking about it? loss of fertility. And in the medical field, when you look at funding in the US for research studies,
women's health, like I think it's 55 billion,
the National Institutes of Health in the US,
you know, for all research studies.
And that's outside of what pharma is funding.
And women's health gets about 15 billion.
And the majority of that is spent on getting people pregnant,
keeping them pregnant, you know, and fertility issues.
Menopause gets, I think, 15 million.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
It's like 0.03%, if I did the math correctly,
of all, you know,
are we not as important as we were when we were fertile?
Do our lives not matter?
It's ridiculous to me.
When we can intervene and help and give these women a longer life and a better quality of life.
And how many women is that?
I know we said it as a fraction earlier on or a percentage,
but that's like, I think in your book I read it's 1.2 billion women by the end of this year.
Yeah. 1.2 billion women by the end of this year. And there's what, 47 million new entrants into the
sort of perimenopausal, postmenopausal category every year. 1.2 billion.
Billion, right. And so many of them have no education at their fingertips, have nowhere to
turn. Are, you know, 85 are going in to their healthcare provider's office
complaining, help me, and being turned away
and leaving with more questions than answers
and only 10% are even having the discussion
for hormone replacement therapy.
And then if they're given it,
they're so terrified because of the misrepresentation
of the Women's Health Initiative,
they're convinced they're gonna get cancer.
And that study has been completely dismantled
and walked back. We have good information that cancer. And that study's been completely dismantled and walked
back. We have good information that came out of that study, but the thought that estrogen causes
breast cancer is the worst thing that came out of that study because it's not true.
The mental health implications as well. I really want to get into the hormone replacement therapy
and all that stuff, but the mental health implications for women, do we see an increase in depression and those and the consequences of depression, I guess?
Depression, anxiety, bipolar, the entire spectrum, ADHD. So we see either a new onset
or worsening of disease. So I'm telling my patients or I'm telling people on social media,
you may have done fine and done well with your depression on your SSRI.
Don't be shocked if it is no longer working at that level.
You either have to increase the dose.
So no one right now is advocating for primary therapy of depression
to be estrogen replacement.
But we do know from the studies that it is a very powerful adjunctive tool
and that it can be preventative for new onset depression if you start in perimenopause. Women
who start hormone therapy in perimenopause have a lower incidence of new onset depression
in their menopause. Suicidality?
So I've looked at these numbers and COVID's kind of skewing things because we did see increased
suicide rates,
but we definitely see an uptick,
especially in Caucasian women,
not so much in women of color in the US in the perimenopause and menopause timeframe.
Inflammation.
What is inflammation?
Sure.
So inflammation, there's chronic inflammation
and there's acute inflammation.
So acute inflammation is what we need to survive.
It is the body's reaction to a foreign invader basically
or to an injury or an illness.
So you twist your ankle, right?
And so we injure that tissue.
These chemical messengers are spread
from the injured tissue
which basically tells our immune system
send blood that way,
send the white cells and the red cells and all the cells that are going to fight and heal this.
You're going to swell, you're going to have pain that's going to keep you off of that joint
so that it can heal, right? So acute inflammation also happens when we get viruses and other
illnesses. Chronic inflammation is this low grade kind of under the radar inflammation that's
happening in the background. So autoimmune disease is a lot of chronic inflammation,
but we also see aging itself. You know, we can't change the fact we're aging,
but menopause dramatically increases the amount of chronic inflammation that a female
will go through just based on the lack of estrogen and testosterone in her body. I'm trying to figure out why the lack of estrogen and a drop in estrogen causes inflammation.
So it turns out estrogen is a really powerful anti-inflammatory hormone. So we're just like
removing that protective blanket and now you're just aging faster because of it.
Okay. So we need to make sure that we reduce inflammation by any means necessary.
And that was the sort of the one of, it was the second component of the Galveston diet,
anti-inflammation nutrition. If I wanted to have a low inflammation diet, you said there about the
sugar. Is there anything else that I've got to be aware of or avoid or choose in a supermarket?
So I try to teach the principles in the form of let's add things in rather than restrict because then we get
into eating disorders. And so keeping tabs on your added sugars, keeping those less than 25, but
fiber. And that's one thing most people are not paying attention to. How much fiber are you
getting in your diet per day? And most women are getting about 12 grams per day. And the minimum
we should be getting is 25. Vitamin D is another huge one.
About 85% of my patients and women in menopause are vitamin D deficient, not just low, I mean
deficient.
We are protecting our skin against sun damage, of course.
We're staying indoors more.
We're on our screens all the time, but we're also, our gut's changing and our ability to
absorb vitamin D is decreasing.
So making sure that you are checking your vitamin D levels regularly
and supplementing when you need to or eating foods rich in vitamin D,
that's another one.
And does vitamin D reduce inflammation?
Yes.
So vitamin D is a vitamin, but it's also a hormone
and it has multiple functions in the body.
And so vitamin D deficiencies are linked to lots of chronic diseases.
You're more likely to have hypertension, diabetes, stroke,
you know, all of the top seven of 10 causes of death in women.
And so keeping those low, it's also mental health,
you know, lots of vitamin D receptors in the brain.
And so, you know, first thing I do is check a vitamin D level
on my patients when they come in.
So many of my nutrition-based or medical or doctors
that I've spoken to on this
show have spoken about fiber, especially in the last like six months. You know, people historically
speak a lot about protein and all these kinds of things. But for some reason, everyone seems to be
talking about fiber all of a sudden. So fiber does lots of things for us. It slows down the
absorption of glucose into the bloodstream. So that keeps our insulin levels lower over time.
It feeds our gut microbiome.
Soluble fiber.
So there's two types of fiber.
There's soluble and insoluble.
So insoluble is what kind of when you mix up a fiber supplement,
you see the stuff precipitate down to the bottom.
That's the insoluble fiber.
That's what pulls water into the gut
and kind of moves things quicker through the colon.
Soluble fiber dissolves in water.
That's the cloudy part.
That is the food for our gut microbiome.
That is the prebiotic.
You don't need a prebiotic if you're getting enough fiber in your diet per day.
And so keeping that gut microbiome fed and healthy and happy is going to do a multitude of things.
That kind of data is exploding right now in the research world
as to where the gut microbiome, how to keep it healthy and what organ system it affects.
Our gut microbes make these things called oxybutyrates
which are then absorbed into the bloodstream
and people who have high levels of oxybutyrates are actually healthier
and have less coronary artery disease, less dementia, less everything.
So really nutrition, when I talk about the menopause toolkit,
hormone therapy is just one very small part of the puzzle. But nutrition should always be first.
Like it doesn't matter how many hormones you take if you're not covering your nutritional basis the
way you should. And what are some sort of fiber dense was fiber rich foods that are in, you know,
every supermarket? Avocado, chia seeds, nuts, berries,
your cruciferous vegetables,
things that are crunchy, that's fiber.
That's making the crunch.
Apples, you know, there's so many.
Don't find much fiber in lean meats or any.
So it's going to be your fruits and veggies
and seeds and nuts.
Asparagus, tomato, spinach, celery.
Asparagus, celery, yes. Tomato, not so
much. Just think of things that, you know, the crunch is usually from the fiber. Okay. Fasting.
I'm a fan. It's not for everyone. It's not a great way to lose weight. The data on weight loss is
conflicting at best. You can eat a lot of things that will undo the goodness of fasting
in your eating window if you're not careful.
And so there's good data though
on neuroinflammation and fasting
and on systemic inflammation and fasting.
So I recommend fasting
for the systemic inflammatory benefits.
And we do see some really nice
lowering of insulin levels overall from fasting.
There's so many different types of fasting people talk about.
So when I'm teaching fasting to my students or to my patients,
I recommend the 16-8.
So that's where Mark Mattson's data.
So that's 16 hours of fasting in a row
followed by about an eight-hour eating window.
Now, for other, you know, again, it's individualized.
Some people do great with a 14 hour fast,
you know, the 15 hour fast.
16 is just kind of something to shoot for.
And if someone's gonna consider
incorporating fasting into their life,
give yourself about a six week trial.
You know, don't just try to go 16 hours without food
if you've never done it before.
Your body will adapt.
And so the advice I got and what I do and what I teach now,
so I used to break my fast about six in the morning before I exercised.
So I pushed that window to 6.15 and I did that for three or four days
until it felt normal, natural, I wasn't hungry.
Then I moved it to 6.30 and then I just kept bumping that window out
in 15-minute increments over weeks.
And by week five, I remember sitting at my desk and I had my lunch ready to go.
And I was still at the hospital at the time and saying,
oh my God, I made it.
It's noon and I don't feel bad.
So I had just slowly, slowly let my body adapt and adjust.
And then I've been fasting, gosh, since 2015, probably 2014.
And it's just a normal, natural part of my life. I don't even
think about it anymore. Have you noticed any effects of that? You know, I do so many things.
Yes, it's hard to tell. And so it's hard to tell. But initially, I do find when I'm fasting,
the clarity of my thought is much better. I get much more work done. It's when I do my best
research. It's when I do my best communicating with my followers is in the morning. You'll often, if you follow me on social, I'm always in my pajamas with a cup of
coffee while I'm getting ready for work because I just get so excited about something I learn and I
want to share it with everyone. And so I do find that once I break my fast, the synapses tend to
not work as quickly for me. I was thinking about this through like an evolutionary lens, why fasting
makes sense and why this sort of narrative that we're meant to have breakfast, lunch and dinner, you know, maybe breakfast at 7.
That's a social construct. There's really not great science. Now, there are humans that will do better by eating more meals more frequently. And that's why I say fasting is not for everyone, especially if it triggers an eating disorder. If you have diabetes or you have, you know, hypoglycemia,
fasting may not be for you,
but most people can do it successfully.
And so I really encourage people to experiment with it and see how they do.
I was wondering if,
I always try and think through like an evolutionary framework
and I was thinking about how in our hunter-gatherer past,
we would have-
Meals were not available 24-7.
Yeah.
And we would have needed like a really focused brain
to go out on the hunt. So this explains why when we're like hungry, our brains
working better. It almost seems like there's more, I don't know, oxygen or nutrients in the brain.
Brain tends to work better using the ketones for fuel than glucose. So the glucose is the
preferred fuel in the body, you know, and, um, but, but when they did studies, they were animal studies. So take this with a grain of salt, but, you know, and they did their mazes, you know, and, but, but when they did studies, they were animal studies. So
take this with a grain of salt, but, you know, and they did their mazes, you know, the animals
tended to get through the maze quicker and learn quicker when they were fasted rather than after
they were fed. They're a little lazier. Ketones, you can also use ketones as an energy source if
you use the keto diet. You can, you can. But I think, you know, when Mattson and that those researchers
were doing their work, their research in Alzheimer's and dementia, you know, there was no
keto diet, they were just knowing that people were utilizing ketones for fuel, which is a normal
natural process, we sleep. And so we burn through the glucose in our bloodstream, then we burn up
what's in our liver and the, you know, gluconeogenesis, and then it switches to fat to burn for fuel. And so now there's people who like to take exogenous
ketones. I've never experimented with that. I don't have any literature on menopause to support
that use. And the third component of the Galveston diet is this idea of fuel refocus. Right. So that's looking at, you know, food.
We're looking at the macro and micronutrients. So I'm really going hard on fiber and vitamin D
and magnesium and things that we tend to as a gender be deficient in, especially with menopause.
I'm really trying to highlight those things to make sure instead of counting calories,
let's see how much vitamin D you're getting every day. Let's see how much fiber you're getting every day. And is there a certain sort of ratio of foods that we should be having
in terms of that? So I originally developed Galveston diet for weight loss, you know,
but if I had to write it over again, so I went really heavy on fats, you know, healthy fats, lower on carbohydrates and
20% protein. But I think if, you know, doing it again, the way I'm counseling my patients now
is I'm going much higher on protein. What I've learned since that book was written
was how important protein intake is to maintaining muscle mass. I'm also talking a lot about creatine. And there's some nice studies done
in the, we call it the elderly,
65-year-olds and above,
which I'm nine years from that right now.
And so, and how creatine supplementation,
just creatine supplementation on its own,
well, combined with weightlifting,
we're seeing bigger gains
in the menopausal patient,
postmenopausal patient, yeah.
Bigger gains in muscle mass.
Bigger muscle mass and strength.
Yeah. I was going to ask you about this whole muscle mass point. Why is muscle mass so sort
of pertinent to this conversation?
So what we're, well, what we know in menopause is that, you know, aging combined with menopause,
we see a dramatic loss of muscle mass with the menopause process and so in that first 10 years of menopause we could lose up to
10 sometimes 15 percent of our muscle mass and that muscle mass is going to determine your
resistance to sugars so your insulin resistance is really tied to your muscle mass your functionality
your ability to recover from a fall and the other thing is what most people don't understand is the musculoskeletal
unit acts as one. So when we have low muscle mass, you are dramatically increasing your risk of
osteoporosis. Now, right now, this might shock you, but 50% of females will have an osteoporotic
fracture before they die. And this is almost completely preventable. What is an osteopathic fracture?
So osteoporosis is when we lose the density of our bones through, so estrogen, so all of our life,
we remodel our bones, right? We chew up bone and we lay down new bone. And so we reach our maximum
bone density as females at about age 35. And then it slowly starts to decline through the aging
process. And then when we get to menopause, it dramatically, we see a just massive loss of bone.
So this loss of bone makes the bone weaker and much more likely to fracture when we fall.
And so if you fall and break your hip in menopause, 30% of women with surgery will die in the first year.
70% will die without surgery.
And that year is marked by horrific pain
and not being able to move
and just really, really miserable people.
And so much of this is preventable.
Going on hormone therapy, getting adequate exercise,
doing the resistance training, eating the protein, adding in the creatine,
making sure you're getting enough vitamin D
is going to be huge at protecting my population from this happening as we age.
We can prevent the majority of this.
I want to talk specifically then about this hormone replacement therapy you mentioned there. You also referenced a study previously which
sort of scared people. Yes, the Women's Health Initiative, yeah.
And that study suggested that there was an increase in breast cancer if someone
did hormone replacement therapy. So let's break it down. Originally,
the study was designed to see if we knew it from observational studies,
was hormone replacement therapy going to truly be protective for cardiovascular disease?
That was the function of the study in women who took it versus women who did not.
We knew from observational studies that, yes,
they had a much lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality,
meaning death from any cause, as well as heart disease in itself, okay?
Atherosclerotic heart disease.
So, but that's observational.
The way to prove these things is to do a randomized,
controlled study versus placebo.
So finally, finally, this is 1998,
women were getting money.
Like there was a new female head
of the National Institutes of Health.
They were funding this study.
This was so exciting.
Women were lining up in droves to sign up for it.
But because the end game was to prove
whether or not it was protective for cardiovascular disease,
the average age of the patient was 63 years old
so that they could see if it was gonna affect heart disease
because women tend to get that in their 60s and 70s, right?
So they recruit, they develop two groups.
We have women with uteruses and women without women
who had had hysterectomies or were born without uteruses.
And so each of them had a placebo arm
and then a medication arm.
When you don't have a uterus,
you don't absolutely have to have progesterone.
When you have a uterus, it's required to give a woman progesterone as well
or progestin as well to protect the lining of the uterus from the estrogen.
Unopposed estrogen can cause endometrial cancer,
but we can negate that by giving her progesterone.
You follow me?
So, we have an estrogen-only arm and an estrogen and progesterone arm
and they each have a placebo.
So, off we go, let's take our meds,
let's take our placebo and let's start measuring.
What they saw in the estrogen plus progesterone arm
after two years was a very slight increased risk
of breast cancer versus placebo.
Now, you have to understand there's a difference
between absolute risk and relative risk.
So the relative risk went from... So the absolute risk went from four out of a thousand women per year
to five out of a thousand women per year.
So one out of a thousand women treated in estrogen and progestin norm
developed breast cancer over placebo.
That is a 25% relative risk increase.
And that is the statistic that set the world on fire.
So the researchers held a huge press conference at the Watergate Hotel in DC,
every major news outlet, this was before the internet
and announced that estrogen causes breast cancer.
Now remember, these women were on estrogen
plus the progestin,
which is called Provera.
The estrogen-only arm continued for a few more years
because the women on estrogen-only,
not only did they not see an increased risk of breast cancer,
they had a, I think it was a 20% decreased risk of breast cancer.
Relative.
Yeah, relative risk.
And the relative mortality went down 40%.
So we think it's because estrogen feeds a breast cancer cell,
but it doesn't cause breast cancer.
Our highest levels of estrogen are in pregnancy
and it's so rare to ever be diagnosed with breast cancer.
And a healthy breast cell has estrogen receptors.
And all that estrogen receptor positive means
is that that breast cancer cell went from healthy to cancer through a mutation, but retained its estrogen
receptors. And so we can use those receptors against the cancer cell to treat the breast cancer.
So that study has been walked back. Multiple studies have been done, but like the whole
mindset has not changed. Myself as an OB-GYN was still the lowest dose for the shortest amount of time
and only in women where absolutely nothing else is helping her hot flashes.
Menopause was defined by the vasomotor symptoms.
That's it.
You know, vaginal estrogen, which is just putting estrogen locally in the vagina.
So one of the biggest things we see in a huge amount of patients,
like well over 50%,
is something we call genital urinary syndrome of menopause.
And it is the bladder, the vagina,
and all of the tissue in between all has a lot of estrogen receptors.
And we take the estrogen away, that tissue becomes very thin,
we lose elasticity, we see recurrent urinary tract infections.
The most likely treatment to help a woman in menopause
with recurrent urinary tract infections,
which is a major cause of death for women,
is vaginal estrogen.
And it's safe for everyone, even with breast cancer.
And so even that option is taken off the table
for so many women who are suffering needlessly
with horrible, painful intercourse,
dryness, you know, recurrent UTIs.
And it's just such a simple thing to help a woman and fix.
And they're not being offered that treatment.
Is vaginal estrogen the only form of administering estrogen?
So we have, no.
So when we look at hormone replacement therapy,
we have, or any medication we have,
like steroids is a good way to think of it.
So say you have a rash and you go to your pharmacy
and you pick up a cortisone cream,
that's local therapy, right?
So vaginal estrogen, cream, there's pills,
there's different ways to put it in the vagina,
but that's considered local therapy.
It's not absorbed systemically.
We're just treating it kind of at the moment.
Systemic therapy is when it's treating everything, our brains, our bones, our
general urinary system, you know, from the inside out. And so you can ingest it. There's creams,
there's patches, there's rings, there's pellets that are now available. There's multiple ways
to get this medication into your body. And what's the most popular form of administering hormone replacement therapy?
So it depends on the country. So in the UK, it tends to be a gel or a cream, which is where most
GPs, if you can get one that will follow the guidelines and prescribe it, I think it's the
most easiest pharmacologic option to get in the UK. In the US, it tends to be the patch for the
non-oral form. We also have
pills available as well. There's a caveat with estrogen pills. There's something whenever we
ingest anything, food, medication goes into our stomach, into the intestines, and then it gets
picked up by the portal hepatic circulation, the liver. And so the portal vein goes straight to the
liver for processing. And when that bump of estrogen or testosterone typically hits the liver,
we see some problems with...
And for testosterone, it's liver toxicity.
And for estrogen, we see bumps in our clotting factor.
And so you'll see a lot of women who are terrified of hormone therapy
because of this potential risk of blood clots.
They either have a genetic risk of blood clots or a gene
or they've had a clot in the past.
But if they avoid oral estrogen and go with a
non-oral form like the patch or the ring or or even a pellet then we bypass the liver and we
don't have the increased risk of clotting are there any other side effects you know in life
there's no such thing as of course free lunch yes and so um it estrogen so we have to look at each
so when we look at hormone replacement therapy we have have our estrogens, we have our androgens,
which would be testosterone, DHEA and androstenedione.
And then we have our progesterone,
which is the bioidentical form progesterone.
There are synthetic progestins available,
but I tend to just prescribe the progesterone.
And so each of them has issues that might happen.
So with estrogen, you can see headaches.
So that's kind of a red flag for us.
We worry.
You can see migraines getting worse.
So those are patients you have to be really careful with going low dose.
You can see unexplained.
So 40% of patients on menopausal hormone therapy will have vaginal bleeding.
Doesn't mean it's a period.
We have not woken your ovaries up. They're gone.
We are just stimulating that tissue in the lining of the uterus and it's bleeding a little bit.
It's usually self-limited. It can go away on its own. If it persists past several months,
we'll get ultrasounds to make sure we're not missing a polyp or something there.
But it's one of the things I warn my patients about. So things I worry about, you know,
headaches, some women, depending on the
formulation. So for the patch, it has an adhesive, right, to get it to stick to your skin. And
there's probably 10% of women will have some kind of an allergic reaction to the adhesive. So then
we have to look for alternative forms. So thankfully, there are multiple forms on the market.
And for patients, we have to do some trial and error to find out not only which formulation is
going to work best for her, but also what which formulation is going to work best for her,
but also what dosing is going to work best for her.
So if I was a menopausal woman and I came to you and I said, I need help,
you must get thousands of messages like that.
Thousands of messages a week probably.
And I walked into your practice, where would you start with me?
So I start by letting you tell your story.
I tell my story and it's a typical story that you hear.
Right, yeah.
What happens next?
Symptoms.
So I will get blood work.
Sometimes I'm getting hormones to see
if I'm not clear where she is in her journey,
I may get blood work to help me define
if she's peri or postmenopausal,
especially if she's had a hysterectomy.
I'll get a lot of blood work around checking her thyroid.
A lot of things look like menopause, right?
So, you know, fatigue and night sweats,
that might be hypothyroidism, weight gain, hypothyroidism,
autoimmune disease, all this rheumatoid arthritis.
I want to make sure I'm not missing something else
that looks a lot like perimenopause.
So I'm doing blood work around that,
nutrition deficiencies, vitamin D,
her basic labs for her blood count and her electrolytes. I'm doing this full panel.
Okay. But then I'm beginning to treat immediately. And so we have a discussion around her sexual
wellness. Is she struggling with desire? Then we'll have a discussion around testosterone.
So I'm struggling. I've got my desires gone.
Okay. So it's very common.
So when we talk about female sexual function,
there's kind of five buckets why a woman would be suffering or not happy, okay?
One is a relationship disorder
and no amount of medication really helps with that.
So we wanna make sure she's in a good place
with her relationship, supportive partner, all that.
So we have a discussion about that.
Then there's an arousal disorder
where that's what most men are treated for when they
talk about libido issues. It's really nothing's wrong here. They're struggling to maintain an
erection. And so we use Viagra and those type of medications for that. So if a woman has an
arousal disorder, vaginal Viagra can be helpful for that. So we talk about that. We talk about
orgasmic disorders. Some women have about 10% of women will never have an orgasm in their life.
Imagine if that was 10% of men. I think it would be a national emergency. I think there would be,
you know, we would divert military funding in the U.S. to get this fixed. And it's just something
we don't talk about or offer much help. And so then that leaves desire. So most women who are
in secure relationships, love their partner,
miss that part of the intimacy that they used to have,
that desire to initiate, that desire,
yes, this seems like a good idea,
that goes away with menopause a lot.
And so for those women, testosterone might be helpful,
or there's a couple of FDA approved medications as well,
Addi and Vilesi.
And so we have talked about costs
and how to get it prescribed and testosterone.
There's no FDA approved option for women.
So quite often I will have to compound that medication
for them at a local compounding pharmacy
versus going to a Duane Reade or a CVS or Walgreens
to pick it up using their insurance.
So I know that you're coming from the UK,
our health systems are a little bit different,
but because my reach is so large now, I try coming from the UK our health systems you know are a little bit different but because my reach is so large now I try to include you know all the different health systems when I'm talking about your options give me a case study of a patient that walked into your door
and gosh you know I had okay I had a patient who came in and uh her name is Michael.
And she won't mind me saying it because we're really good friends.
And she came in and typical,
overweight, not sleeping,
some brain fog issues,
some joints aching, aches and pains,
all the things.
And sweetest woman,
absolutely adored her husband,
but was struggling with desire as well.
So we started her, I developed a nutrition plan for her.
She hired a personal trainer.
She got to the gym.
She got serious about lifting.
She started on hormone therapy
and she is my biggest cheerleader on social
because she's constantly,
she's lost probably about 60 pounds of body fat because we get to measure her. So in my clinic,
I have a in-body scanner where I can measure muscle mass and visceral fat. So it's not just
the number on the scale I'm able to tell them. So she's probably gained maybe 10 pounds of muscle,
lost a tremendous amount of fat. She feels amazing. She has this beautiful, you know,
she's back to her intimacy level that she desired so much before. She is absolutely thriving on all
aspects and she's constantly sharing her studies, her story online so that other women can learn
that they don't have to suffer as well. And she just can't believe the thing that makes her angry is that she didn't come sooner and that she
suffered for so long without looking for help. And she couldn't find it. She came from San Antonio,
which is about a three and a half hour drive to come and see me. So here's the scary thing for me,
or it's honorable. I have patients. So I have this menopause clinic I started two years ago.
And I have a waiting list that's longer than this wall. And women are flying in regularly to come and see me,
which is such an honor.
And I'm so grateful that they trust me,
but it's ridiculous that they can't find menopause care
in their backyard, you know,
that they have to get on a plane to come and see me
because they cannot find care wherever they are.
So I've started a list of providers
on my website that my followers recommend where they found good menopause care. They write a
testimonial and we just compile them and we just look online and make sure it's a real doctor and
they have a phone number that works, you know. And then the North American Menopause Society,
now called NAMS, now called the Menopause Society, they rebranded, has a list of certified providers
on their website as well. I got an email sent to me after listening to one of the episodes on this podcast from
what appears to be a very helpless husband it was a very very very long email and they'd said that
one of the conversations we'd had on this podcast about menopause at one point had really helped
them but the key question that remained for that person was, when does
a supporting partner know how and really at what point to help? Because, you know,
no male partner wants to turn around to their wife and go, I think you've got menopause
and starts diagnosing them. But they also don't want to just sit back and be quiet? I think it usually begins with something you can't
quite put your finger on. She's reacting differently. She's not as resilient as she
used to be. She's not managing situations the same way. And I think once we start taking the shame and the stigma out,
him suggesting that perhaps this is menopause will not cause her to fly off the handle.
I think, you know, normalizing this conversation, removing the stigma, it might make everyone go,
oh, I mean, I didn't realize it in myself. You know, I thought it was grief related.
And, and I was like, wait, when was my last period? When was my last period? Oh, I think I'm in
menopause. I mean, I was, and then I was like, oh God, menopause, you know, even for myself,
it was such a negative connotation. I had that sex in the city episode in my head when Samantha
thought she was in menopause and how horrible it was for her.
And then it turns out she wasn't and everything was better again.
And I'm like, gosh, is this?
First of all, I applaud him for wanting to try to do something because so many, you think
women don't understand what's going on.
And so one, bravo for wanting to be helpful. Two, say it with love, say it gently.
Let's, and then find a provider or find a healthcare provider to go in and start the
conversation. And I, one of my best, my best visits with my patients are when their partners come
and that the conversation is held together. And it really opens their minds,
you know, to what's going on in her body and helps understand like what we can do therapeutically,
what needs to be done at home. This is a special time for her. She's going to need extra help.
We're going to get through this. You know, it doesn't have to destroy your sexual life or your
relationship or whatever. It definitely can take a toll if left untreated. But, you know, bless him for doing it.
Like we talked about a little bit earlier,
you know, there's probably a fair amount
of dissolutions of relationships
because no one's talking about this process
and what it could do to someone.
This might be a really stupid question.
But I'm no, I'm no,
I'd ask a lot of stupid questions do men go through anything
like this so there's a lot of debate about menopause um the short answer is not really
we see men's testosterone levels peak at about age 19 no shocker there and then this very slow
kind of downtick
until they stabilize at about age 35 to 40,
and then they stay stable for the rest of their lives.
But there's a difference between,
there's a big variation from man to man
where the shape of the curve looks the same.
But as far as normal men's range
is from 236 to about a thousand.
So there's a big, you know, man-to-man variation.
And there is a lot of men who are supplementing
when they come in on the low end
and they're feeling a lot better.
Now, this is not my area of expertise.
This is not, you know, I just read a lot of this research,
you know, on testosterone and men are included in it.
And so they are finding that they are having better cognition, feeling better, having more energy,
et cetera. But there is no manopause. Their testicles don't stop working. I mean,
it would be as if your testicles shriveled up and died at 51. That's the equivalent. Gosh.
I do have to say, at the start of this conversation,
when you said if that was happening to men,
the reaction would be different.
I have to say, I think I agree.
I think that because it's one side of the population, I think it's kind of been overlooked over the last 10, 20, 30 years.
But if it was men or both genders, I think it would be a different response.
And so much of what women were going through in menopause
were dismissed as psychological.
And really at multiple times in their life.
You know, it's all in her head.
We never said it's all in his head.
That's not a thing on the wards. You know, it's all in her head. We never said it's all in his head. That's not a thing on the wards.
You know, it's all in her head was very much alive and well in my training
and along a lot of my practice.
I find myself now even having to pull myself back
a little bit just because that was ingrained so much
to always look for the psychological reason.
I mean, a woman right now in 2023
is more likely to be prescribed an antidepressant for her menopause than hormone therapy.
Multiple reasons for that.
The way we were trained, the way we were taught to approach a woman's medical issues,
and also the fear, unfounded fear around the Women's Health Initiative
and what it did to physicians feeling confident about prescribing hormone therapy.
Is there anything else that you do on a day-to-day basis in your life that
we haven't talked about yet? Is there any sort of apps or tools?
So I really like Headspace. I know there's some good meditation apps. I really thought meditation was woo-woo and not
anything that, you know, I would just sit there and my brain would be bouncing all over the place.
But once I went through menopause and suffered so horribly from the mental side effects and the
death, you know, all of this happening at once to me with my brother's death, aging parents, teenage girls in the house,
and realized something's got to give.
And so I hired like a counselor and I went to therapy
and she recommended getting an app
to help guide me through meditation.
And that has really turned the needle for me.
Really?
Yeah.
How?
You know, carving out that it's just five or 10 minutes in the morning
to think of what I'm grateful for, focus on that gratitude, you know, and I love teaching that to
patients and to my followers of, of really putting yourself first, you know, the thought of you have
to put your own oxygen mask on first before you can go take care of your family and all the other things on your plate. And just giving my brain that time to just relax and let it flow and just let the thoughts, you
know, and just focus on me for that. That's really made a huge difference for me.
What role does sleep play in all of this?
So sleep disruption is massive, massive, massive in perimenopause and menopause.
And when we don't sleep, we see everything.
I tell patients, that's the thing we need to work on first.
We need to get you sleeping because nothing's going to work
until your body is able to restore itself.
That's when we build muscle.
That's when our brain resets. That's when we build muscle. That's when, you know, our brain resets.
That's when our whole body, you know,
and if you're having disrupted sleep
and you're waking up at three in the morning
and your brain is racing, I mean, everything is worse.
Your cortisol levels spike, your insulin resistance goes up,
your, you know, everything gets worse.
And so when my patients come in,
we focus on sleep first and nutrition pretty much. And if
Easier said than done though, right?
Yes. If their sleep disruption is due to hormones, then it's such an easy fix. I just give them the
water they were drinking and they sleep again. Where the struggle is if someone's never been
a good sleeper, then that's probably out of my area of expertise.
I'm going to send them to a sleep medicine specialist.
One of the things that we now see a correlation is a sleep apnea,
even in a thin patient and menopause in women.
We're seeing a big bump in the sleep apnea rates in women
who are, they don't even have to have a weight problem.
And what is sleep apnea?
So sleep apnea is when you stop breathing or you snore quite a
bit. You see the palate relaxes and you're not getting as much oxygen, you know, into the body
and into the brain. It's a big health risk. And what is your personal sort of exercise regime?
So, you know, I came from the long 20 years of just trying, I was exercising to be smaller
and now I'm moving to be stronger.
And so now I'm doing resistance training.
So I have a treadmill that I set up on an incline and I do a lot of Zoom calls there.
I do lots of meetings there.
So when I'm working from home
and working on the Galveston Diet or the new book,
I'm doing it on my treadmill, but at an incline.
So I'm really working on my legs.
I will wear a weighted vest
so that I'm getting the upper body. So I'm doing this for bone density. I'm doing a lot more lifting than I ever, ever, ever did in
my life because I have a body scanner in my office. I have sarcopenia. I have a genetic low,
I'm very thin individual and was not blessed with a lot of muscle mass. And the fact that I focused
on being thin for so long, and that was my social currency you know I was thin I was healthy probably I've lost you know I lost that that window of opportunity to gain more muscle
easily in my 20s and 30s so what I what I would tell my 35 year old self what I preached to my
daughters is focus on being strong not small you know muscles strength over skinny and so
the muscle mass that you develop now is going to serve
you so much more than the lack of fat or this perceived lack of fat that you think you need.
Don't worry about the curves that you have. That's natural. That's the way you're built.
Let's get some muscle. And what about your diet?
So what my personal... Yeah, yeah, yeah. Eating window, i think we talked about yeah so i tend to um i break my fast
at around noon ish typically if i'm hungry before if i'm traveling or you know on a plane i don't do
well on a plane without food and so but on a normal day when i'm like going to clinic and the night
before is when my diet starts i will pack up my meals and snacks that i'm going to take to the
office with me when i see patients and so i know what what I've got. I'm doing, you know, I'm loading up on protein. I'm doing
something green, some kind of a green veggie. I'm doing lots of fruit. I've got nuts and seeds. I
eat nuts and seeds all day long for the anti-inflammatory benefits and for the healthy
fats and for the fiber. And so I've got all that.
So I'll break my fast at about noon.
And then between patients, I'm constantly snacking.
I'm really focusing on protein for myself.
I don't have a weight problem.
And so I'm trying to get stronger.
And so my protein needs have really increased.
And so I'm sometimes doing a protein bar or a shake middle of the day to help with that.
And then in the evening,
now we're empty nesting. So it's just my husband and I. And so he, you know, we'll kind of discuss
what do we have in the freezer? We'll pull out some salmon or, you know, we'll make some, I don't
know, burgers or something. And, you know, we try to be protein centric and then we're adding in
like a beautiful salad with lots of avocado and chickpeas on the side. So I think I've covered it all. Yeah. So I'm typically done eating by 8pm.
If it's an office day, I'll either exercise when I get back. I'm struggling to get up. I do a lot
of great work in the morning. So it's hard for me to get to the gym and the office. So I'll save my
workout for when I get home from work. If you had a megaphone and you could speak to every woman right now,
the 1.2 billion that we talked about earlier that are in that perimenopausal or the menopausal phase
or postmenopausal, and you had to communicate one message to them. I'm actually going to bring in
everybody else as well, because although it's just those women I've mentioned,
everyone around them in
their life probably needs to hear some somewhat similar message so they can play supporting roles
in that individual struggle. What would you say down that menopause to those women and their
loved ones? So my mantra is menopause is inevitable. Suffering is not. But you're going to have to advocate for yourself because society has failed us
our medical system is built to fail the menopausal woman and there is good help out there you're
gonna have to do the legwork i've got tons of resources on my website to help you you know
lists of articles to print out and hand to your doctor system you know um uh symptomatic sheets
that you can like keep track journals that you can hand to your physician symptomatic sheets that you can keep track,
journals that you can hand to your physician,
any way that I can help you advocate for yourself,
because I can't be everyone's doctor,
but that this is real, you're not crazy, this is happening,
and there are lots of things that we can do, even non-hormonal.
Don't feel like if you're not a candidate for hormone therapy that you're stuck.
Exercise, nutrition, other pharmacology, stress reduction, sleep.
It's time to take care of yourself first
so that you can have the best end of your life that you deserve.
Your family have a history of health complications and illnesses, right?
Yeah.
What is that history?
But also, has that played into your overarching perspective about nutrition, the healthcare system, how it treats people? So my, I'm one of
eight children. I have six brothers and my oldest brother, Jep, died when I was nine years old from
acute lymphocytic leukemia, one of the most common forms of childhood leukemia. Now the cure rate is 95%.
But at the time, he was put into remission.
And then he came out of remission in his late teens and died like a year and a half later.
So my childhood was that that year and a half was all about trying to save him.
And everything my family did of taking him to Memphis,
which was so far from
Louisiana, where I grew up to St. Jude's Hospital, the last ditch effort to try to, you know, find
another chemotherapy regimen, which he failed. And that kind of drove me. But you know, it was
leukemia. It was childhood. It was one of those things. Fast forward to 20, he died in 2015. So 2010, my brother, I knew had HIV and had also contracted
hepatitis. And he was doing great on his HIV meds. His counts were good. He was healthy,
functional. He'd been with the same partner for over 30 years, but then his liver was getting
worse and worse and worse. He also struggled with alcoholism. and so that kind of combination was really hard to watch
and love him through his choices you know and he ultimately died in 2015 he had a stroke and then
I was able to go do his end of life care and the first book I wrote I talk about him in the book
because in my rush to deliver his care I forgot forgot my own. And that's when I realized
I was menopausal was through my grief process. I thought I was grieving. I gaslit myself.
Like, no, no, you're not sleeping. You're, you're waking up all night. You're, you know, upset and
your mental health and your brain fog is all because you're just grieving his death. And then
my next brother, Jude, was diagnosed with stage four esophageal cancer.
Shortly, he was diagnosed when Bob died and then he survived a few years.
So Bob died at 56 and Jude died at 57 and I'm 55.
And I know a lot of it was lifestyle, but I still have those genetics.
And I'm about to survive three of my six brothers and outlive.
And I know that these choices that I make with my nutrition, my exercise,
my sleep, my stress reduction, what I call the menopause toolkit,
and my choice for HRT are all, I want to see my
grandkids one day. If I'm lucky enough to have any, I want to watch these women I've raised
grow up and, you know, be the women they're meant to be. And that choice might get taken away from
me if I'm not careful. So, you know, a lot of what I do and why I do it is because I have to,
I may not get the choice.
What an incredibly important mission you're on and what incredible work you're doing.
Because there are, as we've talked about, there's been a group of people in society that haven't, have kind of been, I guess, disillusioned, but they've also must've felt incredibly isolated in
their experience and what they were going through. And it seems that there's been a real shift in recent times towards
the conversation around menopause and hopefully these conversations if anything at all will
dismantle the stigma which is often the first sort of wall that needs to fall for people to be able
to take action and have those conversations and just speaking from my own experience I didn't
really understand what any of this stuff meant until I started doing this podcast
and I had the first couple of guests on
and then someone said the word menopause to me
and then we started having a conversation about it
and I go, oh my gosh, like, you know,
maybe when I was in school,
someone should have told me about this phase of life.
We talk about how to get a job,
but it seems to fall off, you know,
the education system seems to stop caring once we've had kids
almost. That's what we're experiencing here as well. It's really, really crazy. And the work
you're doing is so unbelievably necessary. And what I love about the way that you,
you write and how you educate people is it's so science-based, but it's so accessible at the same
time. That's always been my superpower, I think, and I realized that very
quickly in my career was that I had this knack of being able to take something really complicated
and break it down into terms that people could understand, that most people would be able to
grasp and walk away from. And you have nuance and empathy, which is the necessary ingredients when
you're talking about subject matter like this, where everyone's symptoms are typically quite different from one another,
and they all have different circumstances.
We talked about other conditions and contraindications that might be complicating things.
And you seem to have a really wonderful empathetic view on all of those things
and an appreciation that everyone's circumstances are entirely different.
I'm excited and I'm really
looking forward to having more conversations like this and learning more because although I am a
30 year old man, I have a partner that I love. I have a mother that I love. I have an older sister
that I love. My sister is, my partner's 30 as well. My sister's 36. My mom is 60 now, nearly 60 now.
I challenge you to have this conversation with her and ask her about her experience.
I really applaud all the, and I don't know whether I should say this or not,
but I really applaud all the men that got this far in this conversation and chose to listen
and have an appreciation that the betterment of 50% of our population
who are going to go through something is the betterment of all of us.
And that they also have a role that they can play in being a support
and encouraging and having the conversations that will bring down the stigma
and the suffering of what is currently about 1.2 billion people,
but will be 50% of people in our population.
So I highly recommend everybody goes and checks out both this book,
which is The Galveston Diet, but also, can we pre-order the upcoming book now?
Yes, yeah. It's available for pre-order wherever you buy books.
And you'll think it'll be out in 2024?
For sure. The latest May.
The latest May, okay. And that's called The New Menopause.
So you can pre-order that now wherever you get your books.
And that's the culmination of many decades of very, very hard work.
So I'm very, very excited to read through that myself.
And the Galveston Diet book is out now as well.
It's been out for a little while.
We have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest,
and also your website's an incredible resource for all of this,
all of the things you talk about, right, and your social channels, etc.
We have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who they're leaving it for and the question here is you get one last
conversation with somebody you love a child maybe your husband maybe someone else. What you say to them in that conversation that maybe they haven't already heard.
I love you.
There's nothing more than love.
I've done it three times.
My dad too.
My,
um,
Bob and Jude were five years apart.
My dad was shortly after Jude,
you know,
I'm watching my parents bury three kids was a lot.
Um,
just love.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Thank you so much.
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