The Dr. Hyman Show - 7 Steps To Biohack Your Health To Live Longer
Episode Date: October 8, 20217 Steps To Biohack Your Health To Live Longer | This episode is brought to you by Paleovalley Increasing lifespan and healthspan are not just about treating disease but about building long-term resili...ence and vitality. Some say if you live longer, you will spend more time with chronic disease and disability,increasing the burden on society and our health care system. Not true. A famous Stanford University study found that if you kept your ideal weight, exercised, and didn’t smoke, you were likely to live a long, healthy life and die painlessly, quickly, and cheaply. In fact, simple, daily habits hold the key to unlocking your longevity potential. As my patients get older and more concerned about longevity, we focus on habits that create the most reward. Today, I dive into seven biohacks you can use to live longer with my guests: Dave Asprey, Dr. Elizabeth Boham, Dr. Cindy Geyer, Drew Ramsey, Gary Taubes, and Dr. Louis Ignarro. This episode is brought to you by Paleovalley. Right now, Paleovalley is offering 15% off your entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com/hyman to check out all their clean Paleo products and take advantage of this deal. Dave Asprey is the founder and CEO of Bulletproof 360, creator of the global phenomenon Bulletproof Coffee, a two-time New York Times bestselling author, the host of the Webby award-winning podcast Bulletproof Radio, serial entrepreneur, and global change agent. Dr. Elizabeth Boham is Board Certified in Family Medicine from Albany Medical School, and she is an Institute for Functional Medicine Certified Practitioner and the Medical Director of The UltraWellness Center. She is on the faculty for the Institute for Functional Medicine. Dr. Cindy Geyer received her bachelor of science and her doctor of medicine degrees, with honors, from the Ohio State University. She completed residency in internal medicine at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, N.Y. and is triple board certified in internal medicine, integrative medicine, and lifestyle medicine. Dr. Drew Ramsey is a writer, farmer, and doctor who focuses on the connection between mental health and food. He is passionate about nutritional interventions and creative media to share a different way of thinking about the brain and mood. He is an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and in active clinical practice in New York City. Gary Taubes is an award-winning science and health journalist, and co-founder and director of the Nutrition Science Initiative. He is the author of The Case Against Sugar, Why We Get Fat, Good Calories, Bad Calories, and, most recently, The Case for Keto. He has received three Science in Society Journalism Awards from the National Association of Science Writers, and is also the recipient of a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Investigator Award in Health Policy Research. Dr. Louis Ignarro is a medical research scientist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his breakthrough discovery of nitric oxide and how it positively impacts health and longevity. His groundbreaking research on nitric oxide paved the way for—among other innovations—Viagra. He is an award-winning Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Molecular & Medical Pharmacology at the University of California, Los Angeles, and has his Ph.D. in Pharmacology with over 35 years of experience teaching.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
You don't have to do anything crazy.
Just move for 20 minutes a day.
That's it?
Well, that's step one.
By fasting from crappy foods,
you actually have more control of who you are.
One of the things people are doing every day
that mess them up, that decrease their energy,
that affect their ability to function, think, and be.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Hyman here.
Now, so many of my patients ask me
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jobs, travel frequently, well, not so much anymore, and spend time with my family and still focus on
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hymen. I definitely recommend stocking up on the grass fed beef sticks to keep in your house and
your car and in your office. It's one of my favorite tricks to staying healthy while on the go.
All right, now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Hi, this is Lauren Feehan, one of the producers of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
There are many things we can do to live longer lives, but nobody wants to live longer if those
last several years are filled with illness and disease. In today's compilation episode,
you'll hear tips on using things like fasting, energy, diet, and sleep for optimal health and
longevity. Dr. Hyman speaks to experts Dave Asprey, Dr. Elizabeth Boham, Dr. Cindy Geyer,
Dr. Drew Ramsey, Gary Taubes, and Dr. Louis Ignaro. Grab your pen and notebook and let's dive in.
Why is it that people are willing to spend an hour a day in a spin class, which is probably
creating overtraining anyway, but they're not willing to skip breakfast sometimes? I think
skipping breakfast is easier and it's okay to do both.
It's just from a return on investment thing that it's the most important thing that I could think of.
Even if you're not committed to changing your diet,
even if you're going to eat all the things that you and I know are not real food,
fasting can still help.
It's just a lot easier and it helps more if you eat the right way.
And one of the things that's really behind fasting, Mark, is the idea that fasting is just
going without. And in the book, I talk about, okay, let's think through what happens emotionally
when you say you're going to go without something. We have other kinds of fasting that you probably
haven't thought of. The keto diet is fasting from carbs. The vegan diet is fasting from animals. I don't know why you'd
want to do that if you want to live healthy for a long time, but maybe for a couple of weeks to
turn on. That's another podcast. Exactly. But, and hey, go pig in. There you go. The, the, the thing
that's also happening, you fast from substances that's called addiction or sobriety, addiction treatment or sobriety. And we have fasting from people. It's called solitude. And we have fasting from body feels like you're going to die if you don't have sex frequently.
You're not going to die if you don't have sex for a couple of weeks.
You're not going to die if you don't have food for a month, but you feel like you're going to die if you don't have food for a brief period.
We're talking about skipping breakfast, but the body's like, no.
So that's the thing.
How do you create a sense of safety when you're going without something that you think you
need, that you feel like you need, but you know you don't need.
And just by doing that for brief periods of time, it's just like lifting weights.
It's just like exercise, but it's exercise for your emotional body.
It's exercise for your spiritual body.
It's exercise for your physical body, including those subcellular things that you just talked
about.
And when we change our mindset to fasting is just exercise,
we can do exercise, right?
And you might feel like you're going to die on the treadmill,
but you know, you won't and you do it anyway every day.
So we're just going to normalize fasting and also acknowledge, Mark,
there are people-
It's a lot less painful than my workouts, my trainer.
I was like, I don't know, that's my, like, no more reps, please. Yeah. He makes me do pushups with bands.'t know that's my like no more reps please yeah he makes me he
makes me do push-ups with bands you know you put like a oh that's so cool i love bands like i'm
like holy cow well i mean you are looking a little bit bigger in the shoulders there so all that tom
brady stuff seems like it's working yes it is there was something else i know i'm not exactly
answering your question but you mentioned tom br. The other part of his longevity, he figured out, like I did, that nightshades, the lectin problem with nightshades, for me, but not for everyone, for about a third of people, man, those things cause cravings like no one's business.
If you give me nightshades like potatoes or bell peppers or eggplants, man, I want to eat sugar like no one's business.
So you got to find the foods that don't trigger.
Can you give up tomatoes? I just can't give up tomatoes.
Yeah. I'll still eat some fresh tomatoes.
I just take out the seeds and you peel them. And this is,
it was a core part of tomato off the vine in the garden and a hot August
summer day.
Well, you have a garden life experience.
I live in an organic farm. And that's something that I also
would encourage people to fast from junk food and industrial meat and things like that.
Now there's a fast I can get behind. Fast from industrial food. I love that.
It's a real type of fast. You say, look, I'm going to go without because there are people,
in fact, a great many people listening right now, they're going, you mean I can't have Skittles? I can't have Reese's peanut butter cups. I can't have Cheetos
or whatever the thing is. Well, you can have them. I'm telling you that fast from them because your
body feels like you're going to die if you don't have those. And the side effect of a fast like
that, Mark, is as you all know, it builds soil. And we have pigs, sheep, turkeys, chickens, and a great number of vegetables
growing on my organic farm. I feed my local community and I'm building soil like no one's
business. We recovered a five acre gravel pit using animal manure and turned it back into
fertile soil. And we're restoring the forest on a part of the property. When you choose to do that
kind of a fast, you can still eat, but you're giving back to the planet. And the work you've been doing
lately on food policy and all that stuff, that is also a part of the fasting world. You are choosing
to go without the things that make you weak, even though there's a part of your body that wants you
to eat those. And you are becoming master of that part of your body. And when you're a master of
that part of the body, the side effect is you're nicer to everyone around you because you're eating
better food. Like everybody wins when you do this.
It's so important.
Wait, wait, wait.
I don't want to just pass by that.
You just said something that's highly profound because in the middle of this incredibly divisive
world, I mean, I was born 60 years ago and yeah, there were Democrats and Republicans
and there were certainly divisions in society and there was segregationists and there was
hate.
But the level of divisiveness, the level of reactivity, the level of hatred. I mean,
I post a picture of me with now President-elect Biden talking about how we can start to build bridges and have conversations and we don't have to agree. We can, you know, have deep conversations, even if we don't have the same worldview without hating each other. And I mean,
and there was just the most incredible blowback that I just could not believe. And all this
projection of hatred on me and saying I was for vaccine mandates and mask. I mean, mask,
stuff I never even, I was just talking about love and let's, let's all be friends and let's, let's disagree, but let's disagree nicely. Let's not
vilify and hate. And I was like, whoa. And, and, and what really is clear and David Perlmutter's
work and his son, Austin, and in their latest book, brainwash really talked about this,
that our diet, our modern industrial diet has literally hijacked our brain and
activated the amygdala, which is the fight or flight, attack, defend, victim part of our brain.
And so we are operating in a highly activated way in which our frontal lobe becomes disconnected from our amygdala. Our frontal lobe is the adult
in the room. It's our executive functioning. It's the one who doesn't do the stupid thing,
even though he thinks about doing it, right? Instead, it's like Dennis the Menace. And when I
think about what I'm not doing, what I'm going to do, I've already done it. And I think this is
such an important thing you said, that it changes the quality of our behavior, our emotions, our relationships, our fear, our anger,
our hostility. These are things that are killing us society now. And it just breaks my heart.
Me too. I interviewed Dr. Vivek Murthy, former US Surgeon General. He wrote a book saying in his time as Surgeon General,
the number one epidemic that he came across that was causing the most problem wasn't viral at all.
It was connectedness. He said, we have a profound state of loneliness and disconnection in people,
and that's what's making us sick and we have to fix it. So then a week after he comes out on the
podcast, he gets named by Biden to Biden's to co-chair his coronavirus task force.
This is a guy who values connection and connectivity and will value those things so that our policies might say it's kind of important we don't turn on that epidemic when we're trying to turn off another one.
So, OK, that's it.
I said, hey, congratulations.
We got a guy who cares about what we care about on a panel, man, the amount of people saying exactly what you heard,
just projecting all this hate. Here's what's going on, Mark, to take it back to fasting.
Okay. If you don't have a healthy metabolism, your blood sugar can crash. And if you do something
like eat MSG, which as you well know, as you've written about is hidden in so many foods under fake names. And when you eat MSG, it causes hypoglycemia.
When your blood sugar gets really low, your body says, oh, this is kind of an emergency.
I need some blood sugar. Good thing I have built in systems to turn on blood sugar instantly.
It's called cortisol and adrenaline. So your body says, I'm crashing. Let me get you some stress hormones right here. And then you get your energy back, but it's called cortisol and adrenaline. So your body says I'm crashing. Let me get you
some stress hormones right here. And then you get your energy back, but it's fighting energy.
It's stress energy. And then you see someone posts about, Hey, could we have more connection
and empathy and kindness? And they're like, you're a bad man. Well, there's a connection
directly to food. There really is. And it really is by fasting. You train your body to do that.
And by fasting from crappy foods,
you actually have more control of who you are and you can show up as the person that you want to be
instead of the person you are when you're hungry. Cause I don't know about you, but hypoglycemic
is a very real word for me. At least it used to be. Yeah. What is that? I see the nine going to
see 10 code one Oh three, 4.2. Is that it? It's a clear medical diagnosis.
Hypoglycemic.
That's very funny.
No, you sort of, we're sort of kind of squirting around the edges of this, but, but in your
book, you talk about how fasting can be a powerful entry point into honesty and in control
of ourselves.
Yeah.
What do you mean by that?
Well, there's two kinds of fast. There's fasting for health and you can do this intermittent fast
with the hacks you do during the week. And there's another kind of fast, which I call a spiritual
fast. And these tend to be for at least 24 hours, a little bit longer where you actually sit with
what's going on in your feelings, you journal. So what I'm doing for people who order
Fast This Way and send me the receipt at FastThisWay.com, I'm taking them through a two-week,
I'm calling it a fasting challenge, but it's really a fasting course where as an author,
I feel like I haven't done my full job because I'm also a teacher. I taught at the University
of California for five years. So I'm actually teaching people what's in the book for two weeks.
And we're going to all together, thousands of people at the same time, practice intermittent fasting with the
hacks, without the hacks. But for the last two days of this two-week challenge, we're going to
do a spiritual fast. I'm actually going to get you a fasting journal and you're going to be able to
sit there and say, all right, I'm actually going to go for 24, 36, even 48 hours without food,
but I'm going to do it mindfully. I'm going to reduce distractions in my life and I'm going to be hungry. And I'm going to say, wow, how many times am I actually
thinking about food? Do I really want to snap at my kids or am I getting even more angry at the
news that I shouldn't be watching during a spiritual fast anyway? All of those things.
So we can gain awareness of ourselves. And the cool thing is because you're fasting,
you have extra ketones present and you have more energy to think about it. And this is why all the great spiritual traditions include fasting because that little
boost to the neurons is a boost that you can use for self-awareness. And that's why fasting is so
powerful. It puts you back in charge of you instead of letting these automated life systems
like, is that scary? Take my attention. Is that food? Take my attention. Is that a nice pair of
legs? Take my attention, right? You're supposed to own all of that and you can own all of that. And it doesn't
have to be painful to get there. And the reason most of us haven't taken on fasting and the reason
it terrified me, in fact, I was offended when someone told me I should fast when I weighed 300
pounds, because I'm like, I would die. It would be terrible. All of that fear, it's not real.
The fear is real,
but the reality is very different. And the more we can help ourselves live in reality,
the more control we have of our energy, that energy goes to the prefrontal cortex,
which allows us to catch those negative thoughts before they turn into negative behavior.
And the challenge in the book at the end is, look, just spend two hours fasting from hate.
Maybe spend a whole day where you don't say one hateful thing.
You don't think one hateful thing.
And that is really challenging.
I took electrodes up to my head and spent time meditating, a lot of time meditating to get to that point where I can do that.
And even then you'll see these things sneak in.
But just a regular short practice of that allows you to remember the kind of person that you're capable of being instead of the
kind of person you are when you're constantly triggered by industrial foods, by industrial
news sources, and basically by a world that really isn't set up to let you be who you're
supposed to be.
This last book, Headstrong, was about the mitochondria, which seems like an esoteric thing it seems like
a complicated word but you sort of explain that there's these little bacteria like organelles
inside our cells and there's hundreds to thousands and tens of thousands in some cells and they
basically take food that you eat and they take oxygen that you breathe they turn into energy
that runs every system in your body and there's byproducts there's water and you pee out and carbon dioxide that you breathe out and then there's waste products in your body. And there's byproducts. There's water that you pee out
and carbon dioxide that you breathe out.
And then there's waste products
that your body has to deal with.
And that whole process is at the center
of everything that matters
in terms of cancer, heart disease, diabetes, dementia.
Alzheimer's, yeah.
Yeah, all these things are related.
Even autism are related to mitochondrial dysfunction.
And there's a woman, Suzanne Goh,
who's an extraordinary scientist from Harvard, Oxford,
pediatric neurologist, who's discovered on the autistic
brains that the mitochondria aren't working well.
There's no energy in these kids' brains.
And so they give them mitochondrial stuff, support,
and these kids get better.
You may not know this, but I met the clinical definition
of Asperger's syndrome until my early 20s. Yeah, it's brain mitochondria. You don't make enough energy, you don't have enough energy to
filter out all the noise from the world around you. And of course, you're not going to make
social skills. That's less important than just being able to know what's going on. And what I'm
finding in the research in Headstrong shows 48% of people under age 40 have early onset mitochondrial dysfunction.
Means you take a unit of food and a unit of air
and you get less than a unit of energy.
And everyone over age 40 has mitochondrial dysfunction.
They call it aging.
I think it's still early onset.
Our mitochondria don't have to decline with time
and it comes from poor management.
And if you think about it,
if they really are ancient bacteria,
which we're sure they are,
then what you have is you have a gut biome,
all these bacteria in your gut,
and you have another network of bacteria
that's trying to run your system,
that's an integral part of your system.
And if you treat that as carefully
as you treat the gut in your bacteria,
or frankly, you treat your compost pile
so that it makes good soil,
it's all the same activity.
And bacteria actually do think,
they have not real brains, but they have a process,
they have an algorithm for staying alive.
If you make them happy and you tell them,
only the strong survive, and you do the things
that you would do to maintain any biome like that,
you can actually have way more energy
than really Mother Nature intended.
I think we can do that.
And that's what I wanna dig in.
And I just wanna sort of share this story that I heard the other day about the role of
mitochondrial therapy in treating ALS. Now you might not have heard this study, but the mitochondria
require certain nutrients and certain factors. One of them is called NAD. And we're going to
talk about that. And this is taken as a supplement. It also has some
resveratrol, which is from red wine, also as a mitochondrial regulator. It controls these master
genes that affect inflammation, that affect oxidative stress, that help produce more energy.
And there was a preliminary study done. Now there's been many, many drugs studied for ALS.
None of them work. Even the best, best, best one that got approved reduces the
decline by about 15%, but you still decline. They did an interventional trial using NAD
and resveratrol, which actually stopped and actually improved patients with ALS.
And they regained function, which is something that's completely out of the medical paradigm.
That just doesn't happen. And it's one of 10 different mitochondrial stimulation strategies,
all of which will help ALS.
So what are the things that nuke your mitochondria?
What are the things people are doing every day that mess them up,
that decrease their energy, that affect their ability to function, think, and be?
The first one is eating damaged fats or bad fats.
And we hear about this thing called a cellular membrane,
but it's not really a membrane.
It's a collection of tiny droplets of fat,
and your mitochondria have their own little bag of fat that they're held in.
It's like a baggie that holds all the contents in your cell.
It's made up of fat.
Correct.
And then there's another one that holds the cell itself.
So if you eat the wrong fats, particularly fried foods,
even if you fry them in coconut oil or butter,
it's still not good to fry because the heat damages oils.
Then your body gets these oils and it goes,
what do I do with these?
I'm going to try and build mitochondria
that are supposed to take energy
or take food and air and make energy,
but they can't do it
because their membrane isn't flexible enough.
It gets damaged.
I call them FLS, funny looking fats.
There you go.
And just don't eat that stuff.
You don't need the fried calamari. It's just not good. Eat the guacamole instead. There you go. And just don't eat that stuff. You don't need the fried calamari.
It's just not good.
Eat the guacamole instead.
I like it.
So that's one thing.
Another thing is there are toxins, a variety of toxins,
some of which come from Mother Nature and some of which come from man.
And if you eat these, even in relatively low amounts,
they will affect your mitochondrial function. And the most confusing part that's made this hard for medicine and particularly nutrition
is that different dna different backgrounds can affect which toxins really mess with you
in my case in my family history it turns out somewhere on my mother's side because this is
a mitochondrial thing mitochondria only come from your mom, not your dad.
My people don't handle something called nightshade vegetables very well.
And this is potatoes, tomatoes, hot peppers.
Good thing you're not Italian.
Yeah, no kidding.
Italian and Greek food are full of it.
And I grew up dearly loving green chili in New Mexico.
And if I eat even one bite of foods from that family,
this is the deadly nightshade family,
but some people metabolize it.
For me, I get joint pain, brain fog, muffin top.
It's just, it's bad.
And what if you take the seeds out and peel it?
Even if I do that, it just doesn't matter.
I'm highly sensitized to it.
And my daughter's not that way, but I am.
And it's irritating,
but that doesn't mean
for someone listening that it's bad for them.
So a third of cases of rheumatoid arthritis
are caused by this family.
It's a mitochondrial problem,
but it's only a problem for people with that genetic set.
So what I recommend people do on the Bulletproof Diet,
I put a set of suspect foods.
These are foods that may cause problems for you,
but they may be good for you.
So it's not that simple to say, here's the standard you know mre military ready
to eat ration that everyone can eat it's not like that but you have to know what are your kryptonite
foods that lower your mitochondrial function and the first sign of mitochondrial function even
without lab tests and all the expensive cool stuff if you eat it and you get a massive sugar craving afterwards or you get massively tired and you can't
remember things your brain is stuffed with mitochondria has the most mitochondria of any
part in the body so you're going to feel it in your brain first if you can't focus after lunch
and you're just dying for dessert you ate something that whacked your mitochondria it may have hit
them directly or it may have just crashed your blood sugar like MSG will do. Either way, you crash your blood sugar, your mitochondria freak
out and they get stressed. And it's not a good stress. Exercise is a good stress, but that kind
of stress is not. So you got the fried foods, which is going to kill your mitochondria. You've
got food toxins, but they're different for different people, but you've also got other
things you eat. And what is the main thing? And i've written many books about this it's a clue it's a hint
yes the answer is the answer is grain sugar oh sugar there we go you know i would have i don't
know mark i i don't i don't like sugar sugar is bad for you but i don't know if sugar is worse
than than grains which are essentially made out of sugar,
but covered with other toxins from mother nature.
But I'm 100% with you.
If you eat sugar, especially drink sugar,
what ends up happening is the mitochondria
get a burst of sugar saying, yay,
but then they're dead, like they're not gonna actually die.
But they're out of energy,
and it's that sudden spike and sudden crash.
It causes metabolic damage far beyond just mitochondria. I mean, we eat 152 pounds of sugar and 133 pounds of flour, which
is worse than sugar. That's almost three quarters of a pound a day of flour and sugar. That is
poison for a mitochondria. It really is. And that accelerates aging and causes this pre-diabetes
and insulin resistance. That is a huge driver. And then there's also other things, toxins,
other toxins. And I had mercury poisoning. I was about to say mercury, good.
I had mercury poisoning and I had chronic fatigue syndrome
and my muscles were damaged.
I had a muscle enzyme called CPK really high,
which is really a sign of your muscle cells exploding
because there's no energy.
And I had severe pain and aching all the time.
And it was because of these environmental toxins.
And there's a lot of them.
And some people are more susceptible than others. mercury is a big issue because we've been
burning coal for so long that when you burn coal it releases mercury into the air and then it comes
down in rain and gets in our fish and some types of fish are much better than others and you and
i've both written about yeah the type of fish that you want to eat like salmon not not farm
salmon wild salmon sardines herrings yeah anchovies you know- All the stuff that people don't like, I like them.
All the stinky fish, right?
But those are the ones that are safest.
But I also had mercury poisoning and lead poisoning
when I was younger.
And I remember the first time I got treated for it,
my wife was like, Dave, your skin is pink.
I've never, you've always been gray.
And what happens when these toxins are present?
Just look a little lead-like. Yeah, you look lead- gray. And what happens when these toxins are present? Just look a little lead-like.
Yeah, you look lead-like.
And you're actually creating a condition
called pseudohypoxia,
which is when your mitochondria just can't use air and food
because they've been poisoned.
So you get this sort of backed up system metabolically
and you feel gray and your skin looks gray.
Your circulation isn't good
and you get that horrible muscle pain
that was just a part of my life until I was about 30.
So what do you do to rebuild
and revitalize your mitochondria?
Stay away from sugar, fried foods,
environmental toxins, your kryptonite foods,
but what are the things that we can actually do
to rejuvenate them and to live to be 180?
Well, the good thing is there's way more
mitochondrial organelles, these little bacteria,
in your body than there are cells in your body.
And they are replaceable.
So the first thing you wanna do is you wanna tell them
only the strong survive.
And there's a few ways to do that.
Is that why you call your book Headstrong?
Yeah, exactly.
And so you sort of need to manage them like a system
instead of like little individual things.
So you wanna take the weakest 20% of your mitochondria
and you wanna tell them die
and that sounds a little bit brutal but here's what happens when they die fresh new young ones
how do you kill them all right here's one of my favorite techniques from headstrong
tomorrow morning when you take a shower take a nice warm shower at the end of the shower with
the water hitting you right in the forehead and chest turn it to full cold and now after about
sounds like great advice that's not so much fun i can't wait to do it in the morning after eight seconds you're
going to be like dave asprey's a jerk but if you stick with me for four days the next day you'll do
it you'll last like 20 seconds and what's going to happen is the voice in your head which is your
mitochondria is going to say you're going to die you must get out it's unbearable to be in here
but you rationally know if i'm in here for one minute i'm not going to die. You must get out. It's unbearable to be in here. But you rationally know if I'm in here for one minute, I'm not going to die, but it feels like it. And you believe that
feeling. But what you're doing is you're telling the mitochondria, if you can't make enough energy
to keep yourself warm for just a minute of cold water, then you're weak and you should die. And
that's them saying, please don't kill me. Please don't kill me. And you're going to die. And when
you do that after the fourth day, you're like, you know what?
This isn't that cold.
In fact, I feel invigorated.
My skin is tighter.
I'm losing weight.
I feel good.
I sleep better.
It's really powerful.
And we're talking one minute of cold water.
Wow.
But four days of pain first.
And then all of a sudden, just believe me.
Just try it for a week.
You're like, you know what?
I like my life when I do this.
You're like the ice man.
Yeah.
This is like the weak version of that.
You don't have to go swim in the bleachers.
I find when I was sick with chronic fatigue, the only thing that would give me
like a few hours of relief
would be to take a steam or a really hot bath.
And then I would jump in an ice bath.
Correct.
And that would kind of flush everything out.
And I'd feel like a minute of clarity and energy.
And the thing is, this doesn't require liquid nitrogen,
like we have at Bulletproof Labs do cryotherapy. It's low tech, it's free, everyone can do it.
And if we all just did that, the measurable incidence of all chronic disease would go down
across the country. Okay, that's a great tip. So what else can we do for a mitochondria?
There's two kinds of exercise that matter. And I looked up all the research on this stuff. And
your job with exercise is to make
yourself grow healthy young mitochondria but also to grow more mitochondria because who wouldn't
want a bigger battery on their iPhone right so one kind of exercise in there that low battery mode
right right that shut off all the operating apps and just like our body will do that you know the
last thing is your brain but you know the rest of you it's like you don't have to repair and regenerate why would you do that you don't have enough energy just keep
it for the brain keep it for the lungs you're totally right and what i end up doing uh for this
exercise stuff is one body of research says if you move for 20 minutes a day it has a set of
behavior on maintaining youthful mitochondria. So this means not like running.
You don't have to go get all dressed up
in your Lulu outfit, although you might want to.
But all you have to do is just go for a walk.
You don't have to run.
You don't have to do anything crazy.
Just move for 20 minutes a day.
That's it?
Well, that's step one.
Okay, all right, that's not too easy.
And if you wanna really grow more mitochondria
and get all the benefits for anti-aging,
there's another body of research that says
at least once and maybe twice a week,
you need to do something really hard for 10 to 15 minutes.
Meaning basically, actually it's hard enough
so you're going to throw up.
Pretty much.
What I recommend in the book is that once a week,
you want to sprint and you want to run about 400 yards like a tiger's chasing
you and then lay down on your back it's actually important to lay down on your back instead of
stand there and there's a whole different thing that happens in the brain when you do that around
recovering faster you do that three times and then you know you can just say all right i'm done
that's not very much pain and it's not very much work and it actually is going to replace being on
a spinning thing you know every day for the week the idea here is you can exercise far less time
and get far more benefit in fact we created bulletproof labs in santa monica which is a
facility that has equipment to help people do this with technology because the idea is if you're
commuting home every day and you're commuting to work and you have kids and a family and
responsibilities you just don't have time to do 90 minutes a day that's the good news yeah i
mean i read a study years ago where they looked at uh giving people 30 minutes of interval training
which is what you're talking about three times a week versus 60 minutes six days a week of just
like a run light job like a regular aerobic exercise and And at the end of 12 weeks, the group that only exercised 30 minutes,
three times a week, far less exercise,
had 9% less body fat and were far more fit
doing far less exercise.
If you get more fit in less time, it's awesome.
And here's what's really going on, Mark.
And this ties into your functional medicine background.
It's relatively easy to whack yourself
over the head in the gym.
And I see so many CEOs who,
well, I'm running my company,
I just flew to Japan and back
and I'm gonna do an Ironman triathlon.
And I'm like, let me guess.
Your adrenals are shut.
Yeah, you can't sleep, you have no sex drive,
your joints hurt all the time.
And like, how did you know?
It's like, well, here's what happens
when you don't recover enough. Well, what happens is exactly that hormones crash adrenals crash uh testosterone goes
down women oftentimes get monthly hormone problems and it just goes over exercise your sex life goes
to pot it really does and also if you're constantly stimulating instead of recovering
it it just doesn't work so our job is to actually be masters of recovery,
which means small amounts of targeted stimulation.
Great news, that takes less time.
And then recovery.
And recovery means you sleep.
It also means that if you're in a toxic relationship,
that you fix it.
It means that if you have a lot of emotional stress,
old trauma, PTSD, substance abuse problems,
eating disorders, you deal with that stuff.
Because if you have chronic stress from just being unhappy, that's enough stress even without
exercise. And if you have lots of travel stress, you're jet lagged, maybe you don't want to hit
the gym really hard. Maybe you just want to take it easy and get some extra sleep and get a massage.
And to recognize that the massage makes you just as good of a person as going to the gym and lifting
heavy things. It's recovery that matters. That's good to know.
I'm going to write that down.
Yeah, you said something there very hopeful.
We can actually change our mitochondria by changing our thoughts.
That our thoughts actually are being eavesdropped on by our mitochondria.
And that if you have a set of beliefs or attitudes that are
keeping you stressed because you know you and I live very crazy lives but oh
yeah both of us aren't really stressed we just seem to kind of go through every
day and have a good time and you enjoy life right you can do big things and
still be happy in fact my next book comes on December one of the big themes
in it is that you can only do big things if you work on
happiness first, right? And whether your goal is to do big things or just do the things that make
you happy, you will not have healthy functioning cells if you have a belief system that says
everything's a threat. Because the mitochondria, they want to keep your petri dish alive no matter
what. And if they believe that you believe there's a tiger present, even if the tiger is just the
next email or the next Facebook post or the next time that you believe there's a tiger present even if the tiger is just the next email the next facebook post or the next you know time that you're getting in a
fight with your boss or whatever it is if that looks like a tiger to a dumb little bacteria
they're going to constantly change their metabolism be ready to fight and you'll be in that fight or
flight mode and there's a complex thing that happens with neuropeptides these little tiny
chains of amino acids little protein fragments that are signals throughout the body.
And another thing that most people don't know about,
when your heartbeat changes to get ready
to run away from a tiger,
there's a magnetic field around your heart
shaped like a donut, and it's tipped eight degrees
to the left, and you can measure this.
This isn't the woo-woo side of things.
This is hard physics.
And if there's the electrical current,
it makes a magnetic field.
We also have proven that
mitochondria are sensitive to magnetic fields yeah that means that they're listening to your heart
and when you're ready to run your heartbeat changes predictably and if they're getting that signal and
they're getting neuropeptides of stress they're gonna be like screw recovery screw repair who
cares about cancer there's a tiger here it's going to eat me cancer doesn't matter it doesn't know
it's just your imagination that you think your spouse
has having an affair, which may not be true.
You still get the same response.
Exactly.
And if that's running the show,
your body will naturally make sure
that you stay alive right now
and not worry about preventing death 20 years from now.
Because if you miss this one,
the one down the road doesn't matter.
And if you realize they're dumb,
they're a little bacteria,
they care about three things, Mark.
This is mitochondria. Number one, run away from, kill or hide from scary things. Because if you realize they're dumb, they're a little bacteria, they care about three things, Mark. This is mitochondria.
Number one, run away from, kill, or hide from scary things.
Because if you miss that one, it's game over.
The Petri dish is dead.
Okay.
Number two, eat everything.
Because otherwise, if you don't eat, within a month, you're going to starve to death.
And maybe that's not true for us, but that's what they think.
They're dumb little bacteria.
So the algorithm is eat everything.
And this is why if someone puts a plate of cookies in front of you,
it's really hard not to think about the cookies.
They just keep calling to you.
They're actually not calling to you.
It's your mitochondria going, hey, is that food?
Hey, is that food?
Eat it, eat it, eat it.
Although I believe if you change your brain chemistry and your hormones,
that it won't really look like food anymore.
I walk by the Starbucks caray of pastries,
those cakes and scones and donuts and muffins
and I'm like, it doesn't look like
food. Even if I'm hungry, I'm like, oh, that doesn't
look like food. It's a rock. Why would I eat a rock?
You are absolutely
correct. I used to want to eat it.
I used to go to the airport when I was
traveling around and you can sneak around and buy a Cinnabon
when no one was looking and I'd get the one with nuts
because I thought that was healthier.
We've had such a similar path. I used to have these cravings like I've got willpower.
I forget willpower comes from mitochondria. It's energy. I've got willpower. But every time you say no to these, you're using a little bit of willpower until you run out and you're like,
I'll just have half the cookie. And then you feel like a bad person.
You're using science and a willpower to fix the problem.
What happens with me now, the same thing. You look at that and I'm like, those don't make me feel good. Those aren't food.
And I just, I would never eat one. I would rather eat nothing. Like I would eat it if I wanted to,
like, I'm not going to go, I'm not gonna eat if I want to, but like, I just, it doesn't attract me.
The desire is gone. And it's sort of striking. And sometimes if I get eating a little too much
chocolate and sugar, then it starts, oh, that might be interesting to eat. And then I stop
and I'm like, it goes away. So it's all hormones and biology.
It really is.
I can tell you in the last 10 years,
there's one time I've had grains
and it was actually when we were hanging out, Mark,
in Greece at Vishen Lakhiani's event.
And we're on some little Greek island
and there's a guy at a little guest house
and he said, here's some baklava.
It was made by my grandmother from local wheat and honey.
Like, you know, I'm eating that.
Yeah, it was good. I took some charcoal with it. I felt better the next day. It was fine. It was in Europe, grandmother from local wheat and honey. Like, you know, I'm eating that. I took some charcoal with it.
I felt great the next day.
It was fine.
In Europe, it's better, right?
It is.
But that sort of thing, to be willing and acceptance,
but just to not see it that way, it's mitochondrial.
It's part of the approach of functional medicine.
We start them on the elimination diet.
So eliminating all the inflammatory foods,
gluten, dairy, processed foods, all that stuff.
And then you- That you remove, right?
That's the remove.
Right.
The five R's.
We remove, replace, re-inoculate, repair, rebalance.
Yep.
And we'll go into each of those because they're really important.
But the next step is also there's other things we may need to remove.
There's tests we need to do.
Yes.
So what kind of tests would you look at as a functional medicine doctor that you wouldn't see at a traditional doctor's office that give us
a roadmap of how to treat these patients? Right. So we did a stool test that looked at his
microbiome. And what we noticed is that there was an overgrowth of unhealthy bacteria and unhealthy
yeast. So he had this, you know, probably because of years of antibiotics he developed this dysbiosis this
imbalance in the bacteria and yeast and so there was an overgrowth of the unhealthy things it's
like weeds having a lot of weeds in your garden right right it's not it's it's not always like
one of those you think of a stomach infection and you're getting really really sick you're
throwing up or having diarrhea this is this it's a it's an imbalance and it's called dysbiosis, but that imbalance causes a lot of symptoms in people.
When you have the wrong bacteria and the wrong yeast levels, you know, you can get a lot of
bloating after you eat. You can get a lot of fatigue after you eat. You can get those symptoms
of constipation and diarrhea. And that causes this inflammation in the digestive system so all
of your digestive enzymes don't work well so you're not breaking down your food well you're
not absorbing your nutrients well and it becomes this vicious cycle that people are dealing with
and we see all the time yeah it's so it's so powerful so so you know you know when i see this
patient i'm like okay you don't have to do all the tests.
But sometimes when you get stuck, you look at, you know, various tests that look at antibodies against things that are in the gut that determine a leaky gut.
Right.
And we call it Cyrex 2 testing, which is a test you can get through functional medicine.
Right.
You can test to see if there's leaky gut.
I love that test too, because it's a great way for us to follow up and see how much
we're seeing improvement. Are we doing enough? Are we seeing improvement in their leaky gut or
increased intestinal permeability? And then we look at poop testing, where we do thousands and
thousands of these tests. And it's so helpful. And it doesn't just look at the microbiome,
it actually looks at the function of the gut. Like whether there's malabsorption, whether you have no digestive enzymes,
whether there's inflammation, whether there's overactive antibodies in there,
whether you have imbalances in what we call the short-chain fats,
which are the food for the colon that are produced by bacteria eating the right kinds of fiber.
And if they're low, it means there's an imbalance.
Then we look at the microbiome.
We look at what grows. We look at parasites. And then we target and
micro-target the things that are out of balance for that person. And it's different for everybody.
And we might look at food sensitivity testing. We might look at, and even things like heavy metals
or other things which can also cause it. I had a patient with ulcerative colitis once and I did
everything right. I did the whole 5R. It wasn't working, but I forgot the first part of the R, which is remove. And I thought,
well, maybe, you know, heavy metals can cause autoimmunity. Maybe it's a problem. And so I
tested him and he was like wasted away. And he was like, it was terrible. He actually had high
levels of mercury. We treated mercury and his colitis went away. Which is phenomenal. Yeah.
So I think it's so powerful. This case is so important because it really describes how a patient, you know, goes to a traditional doctor, is diagnosed with a disease,
irritable bowel syndrome. By the way, anytime you hear syndrome, it means doctors know what
the heck's going on. It's just a collection of symptoms that we agree we're going to put in this
bucket. And if you have those symptoms, you have this disease, but it's not really a disease.
And so that's what functional medicine is. It sort of looks upstream to figure out what the root causes are and personalize the treatment for everybody.
And there's common things that we do like the 5R, but it may be different R's for each patient,
right? Right. So for him, we removed the inflammatory foods and we removed the
bacteria and yeast. I actually treated him with an an antibiotic a non-absorbed antibiotic
and an antifungal so I treated him with a prescription medication a weed killer so that
was the remove right and then the replace because he was underweight and because of that inflammation
in his digestive system I gave him some digestive enzymes for a short period of time just to help
him to help it so the food wasn't as inflammatory for him and to help him
absorb more nutrients and then we then we worked on re-inoculating right so
after we gave him some good probiotics put in the healthy bacteria put in the
healthy bacteria some good prebiotics right so we know that what are prebiotics
prebiotics are the are the things know that there's... What are prebiotics? Prebiotics are the things that
help feed the good bacteria. So they're the food for the probiotics. Which is usually what? Like
fibers. Fibers are amazing prebiotics. We know a lot of phytonutrients are prebiotics. So this,
I think, is really exciting research when we're looking at our phytonutrients.
You know, we know that... What are phytonutrients? Right. So I know it's amazing, right? So our food has minerals in it, it has vitamins,
but it also has these things called phytonutrients, which are these components
in our plant foods that have this amazing health benefits for us. So that can include things like
ellagic acid that we see in pomegranate that can feed some
of the good bacteria that acromantia that we know can lower inflammation we
know that just just as back up on that acromantia thing so when we look at the
poop we can tell if there's like good levels of different bugs yeah one of
them we look at is acromantia and it turns out that that is so important for
protecting your gut it helps you keep your biofilm or that little coating over the gut so you don't have a leaky gut.
And it's involved in so many autoimmune diseases and response to cancer therapy and metabolic issues and weight.
And it's such an overlooked thing.
And you can't take a probiotic of it, at least not yet.
But you can feed it the good guys.
We can feed it.
We can feed it with all these amazing phytonutrients like what's in pomegranate, the ellagic acid.
And also we know that sulforaphane from our cruciferous vegetables feeds the good bacteria.
You know?
So broccoli, collards, kale, but not juicing it.
Right.
Brussels sprouts, all those good ones.
We know that green tea, you know, that has good phytonutrients in it that's good for the digestive system.
So we always say to people, you know, get something from every color of the rainbow every day.
You know, get some plant foods from every color of the rainbow every day.
Get some good red foods like the pomegranate or cranberry.
Get something orange and yellow and green, blue, purple, white, tan, you know, those,
all those good, healthy plant foods that we, you know, like our vegetables, our fruits, our spices,
our teas, our coffees really actually are impacting our microbiome, which is fascinating.
It's so great. And, you know, just a great anecdote from a colleague of mine, Dr. Lee,
who was on our podcast talking about eat to beat disease.
His mother had stage four uterine cancer. And being the smart doc he is, he understood from the research that if you have low acromantia, patients don't respond to the immunotherapy,
what they call the checkpoint inhibitors, which is this new form of cancer therapy that helps
activate your immune system. So if your gut isn't't healthy you can't actually get the cancer cells
to die with immunotherapy right so basically you die unless you have good bacteria in your gut and
so his mother was had stage four uterine cancer and was going to die and wasn't responding and
he gave her pomegranate cranberry green tea all these phytochemicals got her acromantia levels up and she was cured of her
stage four cancer within a month. That's a phenomenal story. It's an incredible story.
And I think that just shows the power of these plant foods and of getting focused on the gut.
So sleep is when we're repairing the powers of both the mind and the body. Sleep is when we reduce inflammation, repair tissues. The discovery of
the glymphatic system in 2012, 2013 is this passive channel that runs alongside our arteries
and veins in the brain that fills with fluid when we're in deep sleep and allows a washing
out of debris we may have accumulated during the day. So all those bad thoughts get washed out?
Well, not the bad thoughts. No, but the amyloid plaque, that sticky plaque that we secrete in
response to inflammation or injury, if it accumulates, of course, it can damage surrounding
neurons and is associated with neurodegenerative disease and Alzheimer's disease.
So in English, that means if you don't sleep, you're likely to get demented.
It's definitely playing a role. And this concept of bi-directionality,
we know that sleep disruption, circadian rhythm disruption, sleep apnea is present in two-thirds
of people with insulin resistance, prediabetes, diabetes. And it is a chicken and the egg thing.
It is driving the bus. We used to think, well, you get the sleep apnea because you have insulin
resistance and gain weight. But if you have disrupted sleep, your insulins are higher,
your cortisols are higher, your glucose is higher. You're looking for highly processed,
quick, energy-dense foods and less able to resist them.
Wow. So not sleeping is a risk factor for obesity.
Absolutely.
And heart disease.
Yes.
And cancer.
And cancer.
And dementia.
And flares of autoimmune conditions. Yeah. And chronic pain. Yes. And cancer. And cancer. And dementia. And flares of autoimmune conditions. Yeah. And chronic pain. And fibromyalgia. And anxiety and
depression. I mean, it really affects everything. Oh my God. If I don't sleep, I'm depressed and
anxious. But the more you worry about it, the harder it gets to sleep. Yeah, it's true. So,
okay. So we have that chronic stress. What else is driving this insomnia pandemic, which is huge, right?
How many, 70, 90 million people are struggling with insomnia?
Right.
So I do think that there's a need to address underlying contributors to anxiety and depression
independent of their impact on sleep.
So talking about what's going on, bringing in some kind of breath-based practice, whether
that's yoga or Tai Chi or meditation, just to ratchet everything down.
That's another important component of it. And thirdly, you've already touched on a little bit
about the dopamine with the phone, but it's also the dysregulation in our circadian rhythms.
You know, we think about how I, there's been a lot of research about how important it is to avoid
light exposure at night, for example, but everything we do during the day and when we do it
is ultimately going to influence our ability to go to sleep
when we want to and get the rest that we want to.
So in other words, when we're eating all day long
and snacking late at night and watching TV at night,
that's signaling on our computers,
that's telling our bodies and brain that it's day, it's day, it's day.
So we want to actually reestablish a consistent circadian rhythm.
Meal timing, so we're eating earlier in the day and then building in a fasting interval before we go to bed.
So don't eat three hours before bed.
No. Interestingly enough, as you know, there's a connection as well with digestive function that eating late at night not only disrupts your sleep, but it's contributing to higher
reflux which can also interrupt sleep.
So everything's interconnected.
That happened to me last night actually.
I went hiking and it's summer and it's so beautiful and it's late at night.
So we were like, didn't get down from the mountain till eight o'clock at night.
And I'm like, oh, let's go eat. I'm hungry. But then by the time we ate from the mountain till eight o'clock at night and i'm like oh let's go eat i'm hungry but then by the time we ate it was like nine o'clock
and i like last night i tossed and turned for a couple hours before i went to bed which i usually
don't do i was like oh it was the you know so there's there's eating late night there's there's
the circadian rhythm disruption this morning i went out and sat on my deck and the sunshine was
out so getting light in the morning is so important. Absolutely. So we don't do that. We're all like on our phones
or computers right away. We need the natural light to reset our brain. It makes a big difference.
Because light is medicine, right? It is. Light is medicine. It is. And also it could be bad
medicine if it's the wrong light at the wrong time, right? Exactly. So we have all this like,
there's this great book called Lights Out that I read years ago, Cindy, that was really talking
about the advent of the light bulb
driving chronic disease because of the disruption in our rhythms and so on.
It's interesting.
They even looked at LED streetlights disrupting the circadian rhythm
of animals and insects too.
So it's not just humans that are being impacted by this.
And there's some other weird stuff that affects sleep
that we don't think about.
Like what else?
Well, one of the conditions is restless
leg syndrome. And that's, it's hard to diagnose. It's more of what we call a clinical diagnosis.
People describe this creepy crawly sensation in their legs or this irresistible urge to rub their
feet together. And typically, it's treated with dopamine medications. It's connected to relatively
low dopamine levels in the brain.
You know, dopamine, yes, revs you up, but dopamine also seems to play a role with movement.
So it's treated with some of the same medications they use to treat Parkinson's disease.
But it turns out that that can be more prevalent in people who have autoimmune conditions,
in which case we want to address the underlying autoimmune conditions.
There are some nutrient deficiencies that are going to make the symptom of restless legs more
significant. Low iron, low vitamin D, low folic acid, low magnesium. So we really want to look
at somebody's nutritional status. Yeah. And by the way, 80% of the population is efficient vitamin D,
50% in magnesium, you know, like 20% in iron. I mean,
it's like a lot of people are deficient in B vitamins and they don't even know it.
Right.
You know, and you go to your doctor and you have insomnia, they're not checking those things.
Exactly.
And there's even weirder things in nutritional stuff, right?
So if we identify a nutrient deficiency, for example, the next step is why? What's the why
that somebody's
nutrients might be low? And there we come back, like so many other things, to the function of the
gut. And interestingly enough, there is a higher correlation in people who have small intestinal
bacterial overgrowth also having restless leg syndrome. Maybe because it's contributing to
ongoing inflammation. Maybe because it's also contributing to difficulty absorbing those nutrients from your food.
So we're even going to go a step further and say, is there an underlying issue with digestive function absorption and assimilation of nutrients?
So if your gut's a mess, it can also cause insomnia.
Absolutely.
And then heavy metals are another big one that we don't really hear about.
Right.
Lead, mercury, things that are under the radar for
many many people and unfortunately can be a problem yeah and i i um i had that and we talked
on the show but i've had mercury poisoning um 30 years ago almost and it really totally screwed up
my sleep what happened with your sleep i just couldn't sleep like i just i was just really
couldn't fall asleep couldn't stay stay asleep, never felt rested, had chronic fatigue syndrome
until I got the mercury out, got my fillings out, chelation, everything. I couldn't sleep.
And it really took a long time to reset that. Okay. So we've got all these different things
that traditional medicine ignoring, the hormonal fluctuations, the gut issues, heavy metals,
nutrient deficiencies. I mean, doctors know about about sleep apnea but they often miss it in thin women because that's not
the archetype of someone who actually like the pickwickian figure with you know a huge belly
and a thick throat and size 17 neck i mean you know uh so there's all these issues and yet, you know, this continues to be such
a struggle for so many people.
And the traditional treatments really are just stopgap.
They don't really address the cause.
So in functional medicine, the way we think about things is to look at some of these other
factors.
So in your practice, how do you start to dig down?
What are the kinds of diagnostic things you look at differently?
We talked about all these different factors, but how do you identify what's the problem
in this or that particular person?
Well, I think it's the time to take a history and really understand all of the other
interconnectedness that could be going on.
For example, somebody with sleep concerns might also have digestive concerns.
And then we might be thinking about assessing their digestive function, looking at a nutritional assessment. But I think there's a time and a place
and there's tremendous value in screening somebody with a portable sleep study, because that gives
you a tremendous amount of information. And we're using it, yes, to diagnose sleep apnea, but also
to say, how often do you wake up during the night? How much percentage of time are you spending
in REM sleep and deep sleep?
Are you tossing and turning all night long?
So it can give us a tremendous overview
in terms of somebody's sleep throughout the night.
And from that, we can also decide,
okay, what else do we need to explore?
And then we do some testing, right?
You can look at nutritional levels.
You can look at these vitamin D and magnesium and folate and iron studies.
You can look at, obviously, the sleep apnea test.
And there's home tests now you can do that really great.
We look at heavy metals, right?
And the hormones.
You can really get a sense of what's going on with hormones for people.
If they're estrogen and progesterone is all out of balance,
it just happens in menopause.
You see a lot of sleep issues. Heavy metals, like I said, we can test. So there's a lot of ways we
can diagnose using functional medicine testing that you don't really get with traditional doctors
that can help get underneath things. So tell me about this patient you had, because it sort of
speaks to a lot of the issues that we're talking
about. And it gives you a little unusual approach to insomnia, something you wouldn't really get
from a traditional doctor. Right. So this is somebody that, and one of the things I want to
plant the seed for is sometimes we start with what we think is the most likely issue, and we
gradually uncover more potential contributing issues and peel the layers of the onion.
And this was a woman that I had known for years. She was pretty healthy in terms of her lifestyle.
She exercised. She wasn't overweight. She ate a healthy diet. She didn't drink any alcohol.
She was treated with antidepressants. She was on a serotonin reuptake inhibitor and Welbutrin for
her depression. And she started, she was also on hormone replacement therapy. She was post-menopausal in her sixties. And she started complaining of fatigue and difficulty concentrating
and just felt scattered. And by Sundays she would have the need to take a three hour nap.
So, well, that's unusual. So we did some of the usual testing for causes of fatigue. We tested
her thyroid. It was okay. We looked at her iron levels or sugar levels.
They were okay. So I decided to do screen her with a sleep study. And it turned out you would
not have looked at her and said, Oh yes, she is the poster child for sleep apnea. Um, she turned
out to have one of the most striking positional components to sleep apnea I've ever seen.
When she was on her side, her sleep was normal. But when she was on her back,
she had respiratory events that count as either a slowing of airflow or stopping of airflow more
than 60 times an hour. Wow. She stopped breathing 60 times an hour. Yes. Yes. Like once a minute.
That's a lot. No wonder she was exhausted, right? So when you see a positional component like that,
you know, I have people who don't
want to do a sleep study because they don't want to, I'd never wear that stupid mask.
But for her, we said, okay, well, let's start with retraining you to learn to sleep on your side.
And she tried that. There's some commercially available positional devices. There are all
kinds of strategies you can do. There's a very, very sophisticated technology. It's called the tennis ball
strategy, where you sew a tennis ball into a t-shirt on the back. So if you roll over on your
back, it makes you flip over to your side. Or the fanny pack with the pillow stuffed in it. Yes,
there's all kinds of strategies you can do. And of course, it's big business, right? You can buy a
slumber bump or a bumper belt. Oh, I didn't know they had those. I was on the tennis ball track.
Even more sophisticated, there's now a biofeedback device that's a strap around that vibrates when you roll on your back. So it's sort of autogenic nighttime training to get you.
So that's what she used, interestingly enough. And it helped a little, but she was still tired.
So as we're peeling the layers of the onion, she had some digestive symptoms, a lot of bloating, a lot of discomfort.
And we had done a full sleep study.
She had restless legs and periodic limb movements.
She turned out to have a very abnormal breath test for small intestinal bacterial overgrowth.
That means bugs growing in your small intestine where they really shouldn't grow.
Where they don't belong.
Right.
Right.
Which can cause inflammation.
Absolutely. And low iron. Her iron wasn't terribly low, but one of the sidebars here,
I think the other thing we do in functional and integrative medicine is understand the difference
between a normal blood test. I should put, quote, normal blood test and an optimal blood test.
Yeah. Ferritin is a classic example of that. Ferritin looks at your total tissue iron.
How much iron is in your iron bank, in your body?
In your iron bank, your iron stores, right. And normal can be anywhere from 15 to 250.
Yeah. It's a big range.
It's a big range. And what we know the threshold is for somebody who's got restless leg symptoms
is you actually don't want to be normal. You to be over a hundred because there's some evidence even comparing it head-to-head with those dopamine
drugs we mentioned earlier getting somebody's ferritin over a hundred was as effective as the
dopamine medications that's amazing that's amazing right as simple as correcting a nutrient deficiency
not to the normal range but the optimal range for that condition. Yeah. What's interesting is, you know, if, you know, heme iron is the best absorbed kind
of iron, but that usually comes from meat. Right. And if people are vegan, the platforms of iron
are as well absorbed. Right. And you often see very significant iron deficiency in these patients,
especially women who are menstruating. And I think that, you know, I learned actually in
traditional medicine that ferritin was connected to sleep, actually. Interesting. Yeah. I learned actually in traditional medicine that ferritin was connected to sleep.
Interesting.
I learned that in a lecture on insomnia that I went to by some drug company.
That's great.
I was like, wow, that's interesting.
But yeah, I think it's something that's often overlooked.
And it's an easy blood test to check your ferritin, which most doctors won't look at.
And Mark, I think from the internal medicine standpoint too,
it's equally important to say,
don't just correct the iron, figure out the why. You don't want to miss blood loss somewhere.
Yeah, she got a colon cancer. Absolutely.
She had a stomach ulcer. She's just menstruating heavily. She has a bladder cancer or just
like something, right? So I think that's really important. You're right. Just don't look at the
symptom, look at the cause. Because low iron is a symptom. It's not a cause, right? Low iron may
cause insomnia, but what causes low low iron so that's what functional medicine does
keeps going upstream and you you said something a couple of times that i just want to come back to
which is peeling the onion so one of the principles of functional medicine from our mentor sid baker
who is this a cool old guy yale professor uh erudite, super smart, one of the most thoughtful
men in medicine, people in medicine, period. And he said, you know, we have the TAC rules that help
us sort of determine how to figure things out. One is if you're standing on a TAC, it takes a lot of
aspirin to make you feel better, right? Take out the TAC. So if, you know, the bacterial overgrowth
is causing the restless leg syndrome, you can
take a lot of these traditional medications, but you can take a lot of medication to make
it away.
Or if you fix the bacterial overgrowth and the, you know, that'll help.
But then also if you're standing on two tacks, taking one of them out doesn't make you 50%
better.
So she had bacterial overgrowth and she had iron and she had the positional thing. So it's
like usually three or four or five things. And the problem with medicine is we are so focused on the
one thing, you know. You know, there was one other piece related to her story that I think is also
important to call out. Addressing all of those things, her sleep quality was still not what she
wanted to be. So we had a conversation
and she relayed the fact that when she was growing up, things were pretty unsettled in her home of
origin. There were a lot of late night parties, a lot of noise and bedtime became a time where
she didn't really feel safe and quiet and comfortable. So we also talked about referring
her to a life management behavioral therapist to really talk about what it meant to be safe and regaining that sense of being okay being in bed.
And I think that goes hidden as well, that a previous history of trauma or not feeling safe can also show up with insomnia and difficulty sleeping.
Yeah, and I think that's a big thing for a lot of people. There's a questionnaire you can do online called the ACE questionnaire.
It's Adverse Childhood Events.
And you get a score.
And if you have a high score, it means you've had a crappy childhood.
And you probably have some level of trauma.
And different people respond differently to the trauma.
Of course.
But PTSD is so prevalent.
And our nervous systems are so jacked up in general.
So it's sort of like
acute on chronic absolutely we've got like our acute stresses on this chronic level of ptsd
and it leads to so many physical psychological emotional stresses for people that and there's
a lot of ways to sort of access that you know i mean there's you you shared about how you use
cognitive behavioral therapy or yoga or meditation or breath work or, you know, emotional freedom techniques.
There's all kinds of techniques out there.
But now people are exploring, you know, psychedelic-assisted therapy, MDMA, psilocybin therapy.
It's legal in Oregon now.
And, you know, there's some interesting research going on.
Johns Hopkins and NYU and others are really looking at how do we help people with some of these chronic long-term traumatic events and experiences. And I think, you know, sort of
listening to, it's just so interesting to hear that dealing with, you know, something as simple
as insomnia can be quite complicated. You have to look at inflammation in the body. It's like,
where's it coming from? Is it the gut? Is it heavy metals? Is it hormonal changes? Is it
nutrient deficiencies? Is it, maybe it's food heavy metals? Is it hormonal changes? Is it nutrient deficiencies?
Is it maybe it's food sensitivities or allergies? Maybe it's low thyroid. There's things that
we just don't often think about. And so what's so satisfying with functional medicine is
we're able to actually dig into these things and look and see the why. We say functional
medicine is the medicine of why, not what, not what disease do you have, which is helpful, but it's not the end of the story. We go, well, why do you have that disease?
Like, you know, and that's the challenge with traditional medicine. It's like, you make the
diagnosis and you stop thinking. Okay, you've got depression. Here's antidepressant. You've
got insomnia, you take the sleep pill. Oh, you've got rheumatoid arthritis, take the rheumatoid
arthritis pill. Like, not why do you have insomnia or depression or rheumatoid arthritis or migraines, but like why?
And that's what's so powerful.
So then you sort of, there's some basic sleep practices that are really good.
We've covered some of this, but I think it'd be good to go over it.
And I think, you know, and I think it's important to emphasize that everything matters.
Sleep, exercise, stress, you know, obviously your diet plays a huge role, nutrient
status.
And that's what we do in functional medicine.
So we dig down into it.
So talk about some of the other factors around sleep hygiene that we sort of haven't touched
on in terms of diet and lifestyle and food and exercise.
Sure.
I think first and foremost, we have to recognize that sleep,
you know, you and I trained in an era where sleep deprivation or how little sleep you could
get by on was a badge of honor. Yeah. So we need to shift that internal dialogue that we all have
that, oh, if I'm sleeping, I'm wasting my time and I'm not getting my stuff done. So first,
honor the importance of sleep for your overall health and well-being and even your ability to
stick to your intentions around choosing healthy foods and sticking to your
exercise plan. Then create a sanctuary that's really conducive for rest and relaxation.
Dark, quiet, cool, ideally electronics out of the bedroom or turned off if you can.
Getting rid of all of the light exposures, even your chargers, you know, that
had that little light.
Yeah, like those lights, like those red, green lights on different devices.
I'm like, that drives me crazy.
I used to, I had a patient who told me she traveled around with black electrical tape
whenever she went to a hotel and she would put it over all the little light sources in
the hotel room.
That's a great idea.
I travel with eye shades because you never know where you're going to be.
So those two, quiet, calming.
And I think this idea that you go, go, go, go, go, go, hop in bed and turn it off like a switch, that doesn't work either.
So building in a transition to rest and relaxation.
If you can do an hour, that's great.
And getting off the devices, not watching TV, maybe reading a book or journaling or doing something, taking a bath,
stretching in the tub. I mean, there's all kinds of wonderful ways to ease into rest and relaxation.
I like the hot Epsom salt bath and lavender drops because the lavender lowers your cortisol,
the magnesium relaxes you and the sulfur and the Epsom salt helps you detox.
That's my favorite as well. And then you go to your cool bedroom and you do your legs up the wall yoga, restorative yoga position and bingo, you've got your transition to rest and relaxation.
So powerful. And alcohol obviously is a good practice for people.
Yeah, that's a tough one. That's a tough one. So the rough analogy is this. It's funny,
when they asked partners of people with insomnia, how many of them were suggesting that they have a drink to go to sleep?
It was about a third of them.
So people think alcohol is going to help you sleep and it might make you fall asleep.
But then as it clears out of your system, there's an arousal that can exacerbate hypoglycemia.
It makes you wake up.
It's going to make sleep apnea worse.
If you're a woman in midlife, oh boy, it's a bladder irritant.
It's a hot flash trigger.
So it's really affecting sleep in a lot of ways. The rough equivalent is there's about an hour of
sedation followed by an hour of arousal. Yeah. So if you had a glass of wine at six and you go to
bed at 10, it's probably not going to impact your sleep as much as if you have two glasses at eight
or like your late dinner last night, if you had a glass or two of wine i had a beer yeah that has another impact on your sleep i just noticed it actually i had an aura
ring for a while i was tracking my sleep and i noticed whenever i drank my sleep pattern was so
disrupted quality of sleep the depth of sleep the amount of REM sleep deep sleep uh snoring
you know all that it's really. And then caffeine also is another
big one, right? Yeah, absolutely. And we're all different in terms of our caffeine metabolism
ability. Some people are really fast metabolizers. I happen to be one of those.
But if you're a slow metabolizer, half of your cup of coffee from noon could still be in your
system at nine o'clock at night. And most of the time, we're not thinking back to that your cup of coffee from noon could still be in your system at nine o'clock at night. And
most of the time, we're not thinking back to that new cup of coffee. With food, it's really about
quality, quantity, and timing of food. It's all three. Yet another area that's impacted with
the health of the gut microbiome is sleep. And data is suggesting that people who eat a wide variety of colorful fruits
and vegetables tend to have better sleep quality, whereas a highly processed standard American diet
is associated with more sleep disruptions and less deep sleep. So quality matters. We already
touched a little bit on the timing of eating. So eating your calories earlier in the day also helps re-regulate those circadian
rhythms. So the clocks in the brain and the clocks in the body that are ideally going to be working
in sync with each other, they're influenced by light, by movement, and by food. So when we line
all those things up during the day, it's going to help us get the rest that we need at night.
So important. This is such good information. Let's talk about what are the challenges
that you see in your clinical practice around women and sleep? And what are the main reasons
that you're finding? And some of them aren't expected. And then let's go into how, you know,
there would be traditionally approached by conventional medicine. And then we'll dive
into functional medicine. Sure. So I think the first thing is that some common sleep conditions
like insomnia and restless legs,
they disproportionately affect women,
and they can have a connection to lifestyle.
Sleep apnea, interestingly enough, gets underdiagnosed for women.
And there's a lot of reasons which you can dive into it,
but some of it has to do with stereotypes on the part of clinicians
of thinking about sleep apnea being a man's condition, especially if they're overweight.
A big, heavy old guy, right?
Especially putting weight on him.
300 pounds, right?
But lean women can get sleep apnea too, and it may show up very differently.
Yeah.
There's also the idea that when we look at times of hormonal fluctuation for women,
whether that's before their periods or during pregnancy or the postpartum or the menopause transition, that can also cause an uptick
in disrupted sleep.
So hormone balance and regulating hormones can play a huge role in improving sleep quality.
And finally, disproportionately in the past, caregiving demands have fallen on the shoulders
of women.
And I think that really became manifest or evident during the COVID-19 pandemic when you saw a bigger proportion of
women than men experiencing an uptick in insomnia, anxiety, and depression. So they're all
interconnected. Yeah. So women take on the burden of the families. They often, especially during the
perimenopausal years, become the sandwich generation between raising their kids and taking care of their elder parents. And you're kind of
in the middle of that, a little bit toward the tail end of it, but you kind of went through that.
And it puts a lot of stress on women. Also, I think there's some unusual causes of sleep
that get missed by traditional medicine. And so, like, if you were a woman and you went to the
doctor, like, I'm having insomnia, what are they going to tell you were a woman and you went to the doctor,
like I'm having insomnia,
what are they going to tell you?
They'll probably tell you to take a sleeping pill.
A little Ambien.
A little Ambien, yes.
A little Valium, right?
And or maybe they'll give you an antidepressant, right?
Right, right.
And of course those come with side effects.
They're addictive.
They impair cognition.
They have all kinds of long-term effects i mean
the benzos or things like valium and lorazepam or ativan they they may lead to increased cognitive
problems like dementia when you get older and being you know we heard all the stories about
people wandering around doing stuff they shouldn't do in the middle of the night and uh it's it's
unfortunate that that uh there are other things too that traditional medicine misses that
affect sleep. You talked about the big ones, which are the stress and the sleep apnea and the
hormonal issues, but there's really more that we know about sleep disruption. And the difference
with functional medicine is that we tend to take a detective approach. We don't just stop
at the diagnosis. Insomnia is a symptom.
It's not a disease, right? And so we go, oh, I know it's why you can't sleep. You have insomnia.
No, that's just the name of it, silly. That's not the cause. And so we kind of have a different
approach. And over the years, there are things we've really uncovered in functional medicine
that play a role in sleep that are mostly ignored. And so you shared a little bit about it earlier
when we were chatting. But what are the kinds of other things that we see
underlying the root causes of insomnia? So if we think about insomnia, about 80% of people
who develop chronic insomnia, there's an initial inciting event, but it leads to a stressful event,
for example, and their sleep. Like a death or divorce.
Right. Or a transition with the job. And I think the pandemic has contributed to it as well.
But then what happens is there's this upregulation of the HPA axis and this chronic-
What's that?
Overproduction of cortisol.
HPA is-
Hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis.
So it's the brain's command center that tells the body what to do.
Absolutely.
So it's that connection between what our brain is registering as a threat and how that impacts
our need to respond to that threat by pumping out these hormones that then in turn keep
us ready to deal with a threat that may not be there anymore.
So basically, if you're in fight or flight, your job isn't to go take a nap.
It is not.
It's to stay on alert and wait for the next thing that's going to threaten you.
So that activated sympathetic nervous system is huge.
And our culture just does that.
Absolutely.
The phone is like a dopamine pump.
It's like a dopamine pump that keeps your blood pressure up.
I mean, when people are dying in the intensive care unit,
the drug we give
them to keep their heart going is dopamine.
Right?
And that's what...
That's a great analogy.
You know, and so, like, it's like at the very end of life, like, if you can't, if everything
else, epinephrine fail, everything, you give dopamine because it's so powerful at keeping
you awake and alive.
And so, everything in our life is the sugar, the phones, all the news.
I guess just we're constantly in a dopamine barrage.
You know, it's funny you said that because I've had people tell me, you know, I wake up at 1.30
every night. I say, well, how do you know it's 1.30? Because I look at my phone and I says 1.30.
And that, again, perpetuates the cycle because then you're thinking, oh, it's 1.30. Oh, crap.
I'm awake.
I should be asleep.
And then it just becomes.
Yeah.
You know, the best thing I ever did for my sleep issues, because I struggle with them as well, is putting my phone and my watch off.
Like just taking everything out and like not knowing what time it is.
And just letting my body do its thing.
I think that's brilliant, Mark. When you eat more processed foods, which means simple sugars, trans fats,
and a lot of simple carbs in all those ways.
It's not just sugar, folks.
It's like fructose syrup.
I love corn syrup solids.
Right.
Now they changed the name of high fructose corn syrup.
Right.
It sounds like a corn kind of, like corn syrup.
Corn's healthy.
It's like vegetable syrup like maple syrup yes
and so uh those are you know the things that that certainly we want folks to to avoid and
what does the data say if you eat highly processed foods you have you know 50 to 100
increased risk of clinical depression if you eat high glycemic index foods, there's a great study that
came out of a colleague at Columbia looking at high glycemic index foods. So those are foods
that just spike your blood sugar more. Those have a significant increased risk. Individuals have an
increased risk of depression, the Women's Health Initiative. So big, big study of women ages 45
plus. And so there's that correlational data. And it's just consistent.
When you look at the meta-analyses of it, it's consistent that the food that we've created in
the last 100 years leads to an increased risk or increased risk in that population of depression,
same data for ADHD, not as much data for anxiety disorders, which is interesting,
but certainly feels true to me
clinically then we move on to randomized controlled trials and the reason this is of interest is is on
the molecular side like in the mouse models we know this in the side i mean you know not having
enough nutrients and putting lots and lots of fuel what does it look like yeah i mean what
the response looks i mean it's very clear what depressed mice look like? I mean, it's very clear what depressed mice look like, because you stick them in little cages, and they don't try and...
You put them in to swim.
It's a forced swim test.
And when mice are depressed, they don't fight to get out.
They just stop swimming.
They drown?
We don't let them drown.
But they would drown if you didn't fish them out.
Whereas non-depressed mice, they're fighting to get out.
Yeah.
That's what a depressed mouse looks like.
So the randomized controlled trials that came out recently are exciting
because we can say it makes common sense.
We can say on a molecular level it makes lots and lots of sense.
We can say it makes sense in the correlational data,
but you and I know, Mark, medicine's not going to change
until we have randomized clinical trials.
And that's where folks like Felice Jacka and Michael Burke
and the Food and Mood Center in Australia,
they're really, I would say, the leaders in this,
where they've completed a number of trials.
Natalie Parletta is also not part of that group,
but is a part of the leaders in this.
And now they're putting down numerous randomized trials
and creating resources for patients with mental health concerns like depression
to make sure food's part of the equation.
And their data looks quite strong.
And what I love about this is when the data comes out it's funny one of the big leaders in psychiatry um won't mention him by name but been very critical it gets really critical
it's funny there's a big big post about how and some you know one of these health medicine review
websites about you know how how bad the trial was or how small it was. It's like fighting.
Everybody's always criticizing each other about this study.
And I was like, so when we don't have data, you say there's no data.
And then when people do a really good trial, you want to pick it apart.
And there's some feeling that it's almost like folks have really-
People don't like paradigm shifts.
Well, I mean, is this how bad it's gotten, Mark,
that we're at a paradigm shift
we're suggesting that our our patients our neighbors our families eat well for things like
uh when they're thinking about their brain and their mood and their dementia risk and
depression like we've gotten so far down the rabbit hole of medicine that that's a paradigm
shift yeah like that that's it is absolutely not and, you're right, there's so much data.
Like, you might be aware of Hiblin's work,
which was from the NIH, where he showed the-
Captain Joe, Captain Joe Hiblin is like-
He's a pretty cool guy.
He's the leader of the, what, he calls himself the,
he is the Surgeon General's,
he's a soldier in the Surgeon General's Army.
There you go.
And he did these amazing studies looking at the rise of
omega-3 omega i mean the rise of omega-6 fats refined oils and the decrease in omega-3 fats
lead to violence homicide suicide uh and that changed behavior and i remember once coming back
from you know somewhere and i had a letter on my desk in my office and it was from a prisoner who
wrote me a letter wrote read my book culture metabolism way back when and said you know i was a violent
criminal all my life and i realized you know i that when i changed my diet after reading this
book in prison i don't know how he did that that he realized he was a very different person and
they've done prison studies where the prisoners healthy diets and they reduce violent crime by
56 percent if you'm a multivitamin it reduces crime by 80
well you can in prisons yeah you can just see that the notion that we you know we don't approach
that right what is criminal activity violence so some of it stuff we don't understand some of it
certainly horrible character pathology but some of it when we think that this is a population that
in general does not have good nourishment in general um you know
does not learn a lot of mental health skills uh you know there's there's a way that that some of
what's going on there is certainly just a result of a broken system of mental health care and and
i would say a broken system of our culture i've been really uh i've been inspired this month by
benjamin uh the benjamin rush biography And the reason is that I didn't
know anything about Benjamin Rush. And Benjamin Rush is one of our youngest founding fathers. He
is the second youngest signer of the Declaration of Independence and the only, I think the only
physician signer. And he is our original American physician. They called him the American Hippocrates
back in the day. And he's also our original psychiatrist. And he founded the first mental hospital and he helped us found this
country on a very, very simple principle, which is that when we think about mental illness,
we can't put people in asylums and say that they don't have spirituality or they're sinners or
they're bad people, that we as physicians are going to treat them as patients and we are going to care for them and that is just inspired me to really think about what's happening in our country and
how bad our mental health has gotten and how we all know about it and we're just finally starting
to talk about it but we were we were founded as a place where we should have freedom to talk about
this yeah i'll get you a cup of the ben Rush biography. It's like every doctor should read it.
So Drew, you wrote this paper,
it was published September 2018 in the Psychiatric Journal.
And it was really quite detailed in terms of its analysis
of the types of foods and nutrients.
So help us take this home.
What are the things that you learned from there
that are the most important nutrients we need
and what are the most important foods to help us
get those nutrients and just in general to help us?
For sure.
And so the simple, the paper's called Antidepressants Foods
and folks can check it out and it's an open source article.
And I did this with my colleague, Dr. Laurel Lachance.
And quite simply, it's arithmetic.
It's bean counting and we went through all of the literature,
looking at all of the essential nutrients, vitamins, and minerals, and did a literature search to say, well, which of these have significant evidence that they can help prevent depression and that they can be used to treat depression?
And there are 12 that we found, and I bet you could name all 12, Mark.
They're the 12 we would expect, omega-3 fats and zinc and B12, vitamin E, magnesium.
Iron. Iron. omega-3 fats and zinc and B12, vitamin E, magnesium, iron.
And so then we looked at just a simple,
what a nutrient profiling system is,
is it just tries, it's just a system for looking at
what foods have the most of those nutrients per calorie.
And then what a good nutrient profiling system does,
and Dr. Lachance and I really wanted to create a good one
because oddly there are, I think,
27 nutrient profiling systems in the world that have been created. does and dr lichanson i really wanted to create a good one because oddly there are i think 27
nutrient profiling systems in the world that have been created some people have seen ones like the
andy or nuval you know how many have been about mental health none none and so what we a good
nutrient uh trifling system does looks at food categories so we're not saying kale kale kale
kale people say well i don't like kale you need too much of it exactly oh no it's toxic now now it's toxic work uh but what we say is leafy greens and so what we did is
we scored um we looked at all of the all of the the top foods for these nutrients scored them and
then created a list of the top plant and animal foods and so they're they're you know first of
all they're the foods that top the list which i just think are are interesting like oysters clams and mussels are in the top five on the animal side
and the reason we did animal foods is that no nutrient profiling system usually has any meat
or any animals in it because it's all based on calories usually and plants always have fewer
calories but most people eat meat or seafood so we wanted to give folks a list of which which had
the most nutrients and why why were the shellfish the top ones?
Top ones because think about oysters.
Why do they top the list?
You get 10 to 15 calories per oyster.
So let's just say six oysters, 60 calories.
And for those 60 calories, you're getting 768 milligrams of long-chain omega-3 fats.
You're getting 340% of your vitamin B12.
You're getting, gosh, at 340 percent of your vitamin b12 you're getting uh gosh at least a
third of your iron you're getting 500 of your daily need of zinc you're i mean and on and on
and on you're getting in some vitamin c and oysters okay let's go get some oysters yeah
exactly all that for 60 calories and that's just and on the other side looking at plants like
things like watercress top the list and why just watercress lots of nutrients no calories or very few calories and so that's a great example of nutrient density
those foods and so the food categories that people should be looking for things like leafy greens the
rainbow vegetables more seafood and if you're eating meat and red meat to look more towards
wild red meats or grass-fed red meats. So this is fascinating. So the diet that prevents cancer, heart disease, dementia, depression,
and fixes most chronic illness is the same diet.
It's really, well, it's where we got off in medicine.
We kind of separated out mental health and brain health from the rest.
Like you're saying, kind of like somehow the blood-brain barrier was like,
thou shalt not pass like we we didn't think
that sure those same all those same activities that we we think about in terms of our general
health and the foods we want people to eat and the things we want people to do move their bodies
connect be part of their community yeah that that's key to your brain health and your mental
health yeah and and the trouble with you know our food supply is that it's often
depleted even if you're eating the best foods you know you have an organic farm the soil matters
it really what's in the food yeah and if you're growing on depleted soils which most of our soils
are more like dust and dirt well they're just like chemicals in chemicals out i mean it's really
you know if you if you if you really you know if you if you if you
live you know if you if you live by the food you grow you don't you know you don't do it the way
that a lot of food is grown and even you know even organic food it's funny as you as you drive
through the produce belt and i encourage people to do this and you look out you know you'll see
organic stuff out there yeah but it doesn't look like a it doesn't look like a healthy farm somehow
it's got a lot of food on it but doesn't smell right the people working it they they i don't
know they don't seem happy in a certain way the the it's because of their big monocrop organic
farms yeah it's a big monoculture you know you look at a big till the soil which is great soil
they they there's a ton of tillage there's a ton of diesel spent there's a ton of
compaction and and it's a real i think it's a challenge right now industrial organic is what
michael pong calls it is and and in a lot of ways you know that's been a huge victory because we
have a conversation about organic right it's better than and organic we just found to reduce
cancer by 25 people who had it. This French study, right?
So there's something there.
So it's a step in the right direction.
But when you think about where I'm from and you drive around,
our soil is pretty rough in Crawford County. But, boy, I would say that a lot of places, Mark, where we live,
if you take a lot of Americans, they wouldn't know they were in America
because it's
just that whole central notion that central america or middle american notion of a small
farm and what that looks like and how that functions some cows couple pigs not a monoculture
uh a nice garden for all your food and for sharing with your neighbors that has died in a way and and
i i think windowberry calls it the unsettling of america yeah and i think that you know maybe
dead is not that's on life support and and maybe we're seeing a shift now it seems like it's coming
back there's more smallholder farms i hope so i mean it's definitely coming back you see it you
see it on the coasts and You see it around urban centers.
But there's still a lot of places that don't, you know, where it's not happening.
That kind of combo of, you know, I would say agritourism and interest in food, but also just interest in farms.
But I'm hopeful so so so my question was going
down the path of okay if our even organic isn't the best that it could be if the foods have been
bred in a way to create more starch who are a lot of the phytochemicals have been bred out of it
the nutrients aren't there because the soil even if it's the best organic farm uh and by the way
dan barber and um and walter rob a former ceo of whole foods or create a seed company to actually aren't there because of the soil, even if it's the best organic farm. And by the way, Dan Barber and Walter Robb,
former CEO of Whole Foods,
have created a seed company to actually reinvent new seeds to breed them
so they have flavor and they have nutrient density
and they're phytochemical rich.
It's a very different idea than breeding them for yield
or for pest resistance or water or drought.
But they're doing all that too
but they're doing both so the question is if that's true then do we need supplements and do
you use supplement nutritional supplements in your practice to treat mood disorders so i think even
with the food we have today you can still get all the nutrients you need it's actually challenging
if you look at all the recommended daily allowance and you think what you would need to eat to meet that yeah it's a little challenging it requires some thinking
about it i always tell people no just eat nutrient-dense food you'll be fine but if you
start scratching your head and adding up it can be tough yeah i just stopped i had a patient once
who was like i don't want to take supplements so i literally looked every food up and i'm like okay
selenium some brazil so i have two brazilian nuts a day.
I have 17 pumpkin seeds.
I have two cups of broccoli or whatever it is.
And I was like, okay, fine.
If you want to do that, go ahead.
Let's check your nutrient levels.
Well, I have that problem where I don't like the idea of turning a meal into a math equation.
And so I myself, I mean, I'm 44 and I stopped taking all supplements probably
about maybe 10 or 15 years ago. I guess that's not entirely true. I'll take a little omega-3
sometimes and certainly in my practice for non-seafood eaters or for individuals who are
just kind of eating seafood every now and then, especially for individuals who don't want to
try a medicine and they've never, and even for individuals who do do i'll put them on a one to two gram milligram
grams of fish oil i mean the trials that that you know the fish oils is very in the science in the
sort of studies of depression is one of these things that has statistical significance but
it's not able to show clinical significance in the meta-analyses that you get about a point
reduction on a you know hamilton D depression rating scale. That said...
But you can't take fish oil and be eating processed oils.
Yeah, exactly.
Which displace it.
Exactly.
And you can't be eating piles of sugar.
It's like...
And you wonder...
This is the way the studies are designed.
Well, you wonder, one, do they control for that?
And two, we have all these SNPs now in the elongase genes
in terms of how we process omega-3 fats.
Those are genetic variations.
Yeah, I mean, there's that.
There's also if you have somebody who's a seafood eater versus not.
But the bottom line is I think there are certain supplements
that should be tried,
especially when people are struggling with traditional antidepressant response.
Like a lot of people I'll see, they'll have been on a medicine,
it works some, like with cheerfulness or with sleep,
but they're not eating well.
And for whatever reason, they're not going to start eating well.
So that's a really good example of somebody who,
a multivitamin or something with zinc or magnesium,
certainly anybody who's low.
I mean, I always have that feeling, like if you're low,
I definitely like it.
Do you test your patients?
Yeah, yeah.
I don't do as extreme or not even extreme.
Maybe as thorough.
But I certainly test everybody.
I mean, I think what you were saying earlier, I think any mental health clinician who misses,
I mean, this is malpractice.
If you miss a thyroid problem, a B12 deficiency, syphilis, I mean, there's a bunch of biological
causes of depression.
And I think you and I see that
get missed sometimes, where it's like,
this is not even functional medicine,
this is just basic medicine.
It's all good medicine, yeah, it's good medicine.
I mean, in my practice, I see the common deficiencies
you're testing are vitamin D, magnesium, omega-3 fats,
sometimes iron, and the B vitamins,
particularly around homocysteine and methylation issues,
which is this cycle of folate, B12, and B6.
And so I find that giving people a malty and fish oil and vitamin D
and maybe a little magnesium usually has enormous impact.
Well, you think it's that even if you're going to get them to change their food
right away, there's some, you know, that takes a little bit.
But even with changing the food,
I feel like we're so depleted, it's just...
Yeah, well, it's hard.
And it's also, it's really hard when you're depressed.
Yeah.
You know, so I think what...
You just want to eat that donut.
It also gives people something to do.
Yeah, because you do.
I mean, depression causes a lot of carbohydrate craving
and a lot of, you know,
we call it comfort food for a reason
because we eat it when we want to be comforted. Right. I mean, I know when i'm in that bad spot man i'm i'm a mac and cheese guy yeah
it gives you a little serotonin yeah don't give me don't give me any talk about carbs i need like
my comfort food but it's um i think it's something else the other one that's i think exciting is the
l-methylfolate it's just exciting and the idea that it's actually a prescription drug for
depression well it's called deplan but yeah it's a b it's a b vitamin right am i allowed to say it's a b vitamin that got
usurped by big pharma is the way i think about it which is you have l-methylfolate which is folate
that has a methyl group added on to it and instead of that being five bucks it's 200 bucks yeah but
you can get it for five bucks you can you can get it but the idea that we're just now because this
is going to be the next frontier mark as you know which is we're going to start really getting into precision
psychiatry i mean that's my most my favorite new center at columbia is the center for precision
psychiatry there is that there's a center for precision psychiatry there's a center for practice
innovation there's a center for women's mental health i mean we there's there's going to be
there's a new center for media and mental health that's going online and precision psychiatry is just that which is there's no i mean one of the things i think it's interesting is there's a new center for media and mental health that's going online. And precision psychiatry is just that, which is, there's no, I mean, one of the things I think is interesting is there's nobody that's more critical of psychiatry than ourselves.
Because nobody sits with the failure.
And sees the failure.
Well, nobody sits with it. getting an antidepressant prescription wrong and then getting it right and knowing that somebody
suffered because you didn't make the right choice when you sit with that you want to get it right
more than anybody else because that's that's your job and so it's an exciting time between the new
knowledge of the microbiome the psychiatric genetics which it's not there yet but man it's
getting close we're we're i hope going
to see the tide turn on our mental mental health epidemic we are going to see the tide turn on our
mental health epidemic mark yeah we won't rest until it does deal no no we can no it's it's it's
i mean it's the food stupid as you know to paraphrase a former president but it's like
it's it's people don't get how powerful it is and how impactful and how quick it works how do you
get people to see it?
Because I feel like when we tell people, hey, eat right, feel right, they get that.
When we say, you know, food.
You know what I do?
I just, I think, you know, often incrementalism doesn't work because people don't see a change.
So people are eating a crappy diet.
So just stop the soda.
But they're eating like garbage.
Right.
They're not going to feel better.
Right?
So I put people usually for, I said, 10 days, you can can do anything so i put them on a basically elimination diet i call it the 10
day detox diet for 10 days and they can experience without me telling them the changes that happen in
their body in their brain and their mood their energy their sleep and it's quick so usually you
can get people to do anything for 10 days and then they go oh okay well they have to
i mean i think you any good behavioral change it's like we can't tell you you can't read about it
study is not going to help the soundbite the science like you have to experience it working
and as soon as you experience that that extra energy that that better what i find the better
sleep quality yeah or you know i'm expecting'm expecting to hear, like, more mood, more energy.
People are like, you know, Doc, but I'm really sleeping better.
Yeah.
And all those ways that, you know, that then makes,
nothing affects mood, I would say, like sleep.
I would say the smartest doctor in the room is your own body.
Like, you have to see what affects you,
which foods make you feel good, make you feel bad,
which foods actually make you gain weight or lose weight.
And pay attention because smarter than any lab test or doctor is your own body's
response to the food you're eating. And I think if it's not working, then you have to say, well,
why is it not working? And what do I do? And I think your book really outlines a different way
of thinking that is really at the key to not just solving weight and obesity, Gary, it's the key to solving most of our global issues,
because food and the food we're eating is 60% ultra processed food, mostly refined starchy
carbohydrates. It's driving this pandemic of obesity. It's also driving the pandemic of
chronic disease, heart disease, cancer, diabetes, dementia, and more. It's literally killing 11
million people a year around the world. And we think COVID is bad, but there's far more people that die every
day from eating the wrong food than from COVID or any other disease combined. And it's all related
to this underlying mechanism of high levels of insulin sustained over a lifetime that drives
aging. It's really the fundamental mechanism of aging and reversing it is the
fundamental strategy to longevity, well-being, weight loss, to all the solving of all of our
chronic problems and all their downstream consequences of the economic impact, of
climate change, of social injustice. So many things are connected to this. And I think if
you hit on this key idea that we need to get rid of these starchy, refined calories that are causing high insulin, we literally pull the thread
that's connecting everything that will literally unravel our current metabolic, economic, and
environmental catastrophe.
Yeah.
And that's, I mean, again, it's, I mean, there are huge issues to doing this because, again, what is the food industry produce, which are exactly the foods that we're going after and saying people can't.
I had to go to I dropped my son off the school bus, thank God, this morning at seven in the morning.
And I stopped off at Safeway to pick up some butter.
And I'm walking down this aisle and I want to call it the diabetes aisle,
right? It starts with this, not the sports drink, it starts with the high caffeine,
high sugar drinks on the left and it's got the chips on the right and the chips on the left.
And then I move down to the sodas and then I go to the sports drinks and the chips go to the,
you know, from potato chips. I love it. You can have a cancer aisle, a heart disease aisle, a dementia aisle,
a diabetes aisle.
That would be great.
Seriously.
I love that.
And that's the thing.
The world doesn't have to go keto.
One of the things that runs in that the keto low-carb movement has run into
lately is the idea that livestock is bad for the environment. The livestock, the significant producer of greenhouse gases.
And I don't know enough about this science to comment.
So I'm willing to assume that it's, you know, for sake of argument, that this is true and it's a problem and it's got to be dealt with.
But the underlying assumption is that if we all go plant-based,
we'll all be healthier. The phrase used by this Eat Lancet commission that was headed by Walter
Willett at Harvard and has made such inroads into pushing this plant-based movement for everyone
is it's a win-win situation. We know, we know that if we plant-based diet,
we will be healthier. We know if we eat a plant-based diet, the climate world will be
healthier. And again, the point is we don't know that, you know, the lean people, the world,
they can eat a plant-based diet. They're fine. All of us can improve our diet and be healthier
by getting rid of, you know, the refined sugar and the stuff in the diabetes aisle of the supermarket.
All of us will be healthier, but some of us have to go further.
We just have to cut out carbs, and then plant-based foods come with carbs attached.
That's the name with the exception of olives and avocados. That's, you know. And if anybody wants to dig into the whole meat, no meat, you know, climate change, health, so forth issues.
We've done a lot of podcasts on this.
But the short answer is it's not the cow.
It's the how.
And if you grow factory farmed animals, yes and they're devastating human health, environmental health, animal welfare and destroying our soils and polluting our waters and poisoning us with chemicals.
So that there's no doubt about that or disagreement. that you can actually raise animals in an integrated ecosystem of a farm that builds
soil, that conserves water, that eliminates the need for chemicals, that produces healthier
food, more food, more profitable for the farmers, and actually may be healthy.
In fact, some guys like Fred Provenza, I don't know if you've heard this research, Gary,
but Fred Provenza is a rangeland scientist from University of Utah or Utah State who's now working with folks at Duke and finding that animals that are allowed to forage on a wide
variety of plant foods actually uptake all these phytochemicals and have much different
nutrient profiles, much different metabolic profiles when you eat them. The one favorite
study I always quote is the kangaroo study in Australia because you can get kangaroo meat there
and they fed them gram per gram protein, the same amount of feedlot
for kangaroo meat. And the feedlot group had increased inflammatory biomarkers. And the
kangaroo eaters actually got better. They were healthier. They had lower inflammation as a
result. And this is, you know, taking a chunk of meat, exactly the same amount and feeding them
based on what they ate.
So I think this is a different topic.
And I don't think a ketogenic diet is a high-meat diet either.
It's not necessarily a high-meat diet.
It doesn't have to be.
Yeah.
And I think some people can tolerate some level of whole grains or beans.
Some people can't.
And often the argument is, well, when I switched to vegan, I lost weight.
I got healthy.
And I think if you're eating the standard American diet, the absolute answer is yes,
you will be much better off if you switch to a lot of plants and whole foods and get
off all the crap.
And it may not be the vegan diet.
It may be just getting off the crap.
And then the question is, longterm, what happens to these people? And if you start looking at a lot of these situations, you see this increasing creeping
insulin. Even if you're eating whole grains and beans, some people are just that carbohydrate
and tolerant. So I think there's a continuum we have to understand. And I think that's what
you're saying with your book. It's not just one size fits all. Everybody in the world should be
keto because I don't think that's true. You're talking about the spectrum of eating styles depending on your metabolic type and your response
to the food you're eating. Right. And that's it. So we're cutting carbs and we're adding fat
at some level. And if you prefer animal protein and animal fat and you can make it work. My
favorite part of the book, so the end of the book, I have lessons that I've learned from the physicians I've interviewed. And I think,
you know, I sort of encapsulated the key lessons and how to think about progressing to a low-carb,
high-fat ketogenic diet. And so, Carrie Doulas, I'm sure you know Carrie because she's Cleveland and formerly Cleveland Clinic.
So Carrie's a spine surgeon, formerly at the Cleveland Clinic, now private practice in Ohio.
And she comes from a family history of obesity.
She had a weight problem.
She was 300 pounds.
She was 300 pounds.
Yeah.
She's a good friend of mine.
She also has type 1 diabetes.
And she can't tolerate animal products.
She just can't do it. Her body can't do it. So she has moved to eating a vegan ketogenic diet.
And she said to me, and this is the quote that I lead off the section with, it's not a religion.
It's just about how I feel. Right. And that's a thing we're all doing. It's about how we feel.
And that's, again,
it's part of learning the learning process and learning how to do these experiments. I mean,
you and I probably do it naturally. It's like some issue comes up in your life.
My wife always gets, she's been living with this for far too long. But, you know, I'll make some
comment about how I feel. And I go, I can't understand it. And she says, you always said that. And I go, well, what I can't understand is why I feel like this today.
Yeah.
So I'm trying to understand it in terms of what I ate yesterday or the day before that,
because I think it's related.
And can I change my diet in such a way that I don't feel like I do today in the future?
And what do I have to do?
You know, and over the course of, course of, among the vices we talked
about before we got started, all the vices we've given up, part of the reason we've given up these
vices is because they don't make us feel good. I no longer drink alcohol, not because I have any
moral or ethical issues with alcohol, quite the contrary. It's just the next day i tend to feel like crying all day long
oh barry i'll give you a hug don't worry yeah there we go so you know a hangover you can fix
with aspirin depression you can't yeah so eventually it's slowly over the years it's
become no but because i'm paying attention to how i feel the next day and in my case it's so
it's it doesn't need a lot of
attention to be paid to notice it. But these are the kind of things you can do with all issues of
your diet. Well, you're right, I start adding beans back to my diet, and I gain 10 pounds.
And I find that I'm craving beans. Black beans doesn't matter healthy beans, just like they
might eat in the blue zone. But when I add it back to my diet, I gain matter, healthy beans, just like they might eat in a blue zone.
But when I add it back to my diet, I gain weight and I don't like the weight. And I don't like the
fact that I'm now craving the beans. Maybe it's better than I don't eat them. Yeah. They're bad
for me. They might be fine for David Katz or Mark Bittman. That's right. But they're not fine for
me. That's right. That's right. We're all different. Yeah. Yeah. And I think we have this amazing opportunity now to start to teach people about personalized nutrition and food as medicine. I think one of the things that people don't understand, and you sort of highlight this with what you said, I think it's important for people to really get this. Most people don't connect what they eat with how they feel. And food is the single biggest modifier of your biology every day. There is nothing that influences your biology in terms of hormones, the microbiome, your immune system, your detoxification system, your brain chemistry, your metabolism. I mean, there's nothing besides food that has that impact.
And when you, when you, the underlying subtext of what you're saying, and that we talked about
in functional medicine is that food isn't just calories, it's information. It's instructions
that regulates your biology with every bite and can, it can turn on or off hormones, genes,
and, and immune function literally in minutes. And I think most people, if they
started to pay attention, like you did, when I drink alcohol, I cry the next day. Or when I eat
a bagel, I don't feel good or I take a nap. I mean, I went to visit some friends over on Maui
and I went to visit some friends on the other side of the island who are pretty much vegetarian,
vegan, and they had lunch and I'll eat anything. Like I'm not religious. And I normally to visit some friends on the other side of the island who were pretty much vegetarian, vegan. And they had lunch. And I'll eat anything.
Like, I'm not religious.
And I normally don't eat a lot of beans or grains.
I don't have a thing against them.
I just feel better without them.
And she had a big bowl of grains and beans for lunch.
And then I literally, that afternoon, we went down to the ocean.
There was this place where the river comes to the ocean.
There's, like, really, like, rocky, rocky beach.
And I literally was in a food coma.
I laid down on my stomach.
It was like on a bed of nails, on this really uncomfortable, rocky thing with rocks sticking
everywhere in my body.
And I literally fell asleep with these rocks sticking in me because I was in this coma
from what I had for lunch.
Now, that's not true for everybody.
But for me, that was true.
And I think it just, I just... Well, this is part of my conversion experience, right? As I used to say
back, you know, prior to 2000, I didn't take naps. Naps took me. So, I'm a science journalist. I
would be interviewing some Nobel Prize winner over the phone at two in the afternoon at lunch,
and I would have to get off the phone before I fell asleep. I would
have to think up some excuse. I used to have notebooks back in the days when we would take
notes on the notebooks. And then I'd go back to look at them and my pen would just fall off the
page because I'd have fallen asleep while I was taking notes. Yeah, I gave up carbs, that stopped.
Actually, one of the things that triggered this is I was doing the first
piece I ever did on dietary fat for science. I was interviewing
a guy at Yale was an authority on carbohydrate metabolism. And
I said to him, Why is it I fall asleep every afternoon? You
know, religiously, and, and he said, But we don't know. It's
like, how could you not know that i mean it's
such a profound phenomenon there's whole cultures that have siestas in the afternoons because they
have carb rich lunches and then they then then they go to sleep anyway and then you give up the
carbs it just stops happening i often wonder you, we get a message nowadays, we should all sleep eight hours a night. It's vitally important. We'll control our weight
better if we do it. We'll control our blood sugar better if we do it. But one of the things that
happened when I cut out sugar, starches, and grains, I stopped needing to sleep as much.
I can get by on five, six hours of sleep. And I constantly have the struggle that I should be sleeping more.
And yet if I sleep more, I'm actually less alert. So it's sort of, again, individual variation and
being aware of your body because we don't need a clinical trial. And this is the point I make
in the book. We're taught, well, you don't know if these, and again, people, we don't have enough
clinical trials to know if this is good for you. Well, you don't have if these, and again, people, we don't have enough clinical trials to know if this is good for you.
Well, you don't have, we do have the 100 plus completed clinical trials of ketogenic diets, and it's undeniably, you know, beneficial over the course of at least a couple years.
And then it's hard to imagine that somehow it all goes bad the longer you do.
But people who don't like this message can imagine anything. So I'm not
going to, but you don't need a clinical trial to tell you if this will change your ability to
control your weight and blood sugar. Particularly your weight. It's just, just do it, but do it
right. Well, that's the thing. I mean, I think how, I'd love you to sort of share some of the
clinical trials that have been recently done around diabetes, because I think the data is so striking that it's really worth talking about, because we are now facing a pandemic of obesity and diabetes.
In fact, one out of two Americans is pre-diabetic or type two diabetic.
It's the number one driver of our economic costs within Medicare, which is, you know,
if Medicare was a company, it would be the biggest corporation in the world with a budget
of over $1.3 trillion a year.
And it's a good third of that and probably more if you include prediabetes.
So talk about what we've learned from these rigorous clinical trials using ketogenic diets
on type 2 diabetics who are actually on
insulin, on medications, severely overweight, and how it compares to sort of other trials and
treatments for diabetes. Well, the story with diabetes has always been the same. Is it the
carbs or is it the calories? Okay, this is the recurring theme going back to 1913. So today you do a clinical trial.
So the conventional wisdom, the ADA tells their doctors, just tell the patients to keep eating
however many carbohydrates they're eating. We don't want to disturb them. We don't want to
give them any advice they can't follow. And then we can cover that with insulin.
And the insulins we have are so
fancy and so exotic these days, so high tech that this won't be a problem, except then when they
look at, you know, population-wide insulin control, you find out that it's actually worse
than it's ever been. So both type 1 and type 2 diabetics are doing bad jobs at controlling their
insulin, at controlling their blood sugar.
So now you put them on a ketogenic diet, and the best study we have is Virta, and it's criticized
because it's not a randomized controlled trial, but you don't actually need a randomized controlled
trial for a chronic degenerative condition that never gets better, because people serve as their own controls. So they have smartphones and
telemedicine and they prescribe the well-formulated nutritional ketosis, ketogenic diets.
And over the course of five years, they have, I think their five-year data is now available in abstract form. They have
tremendous maintenance of the diet. And virtually all of the people who are on insulin get off
insulin. And most of the people get off their oral medications. And they lose weight even when
they're not trying to lose weight. This isn't prescribed as a weight loss diet. And they get
healthier. And they sustain
it because they're sustaining their health. On the flip side, you've got a trial in England that
got a lot of attention where you put people on, I think it was 600 calorie a day,
semi-starvation diets. They're all, it's even more than semi starvation that also will lower insulin
levels and will put the diabetes into permission. But now you have a problem with what do you do
when the people go back to eating the way they used to? Yeah, because you can't eat 600 calories
your whole life. You can't stay on 600 calories your whole life. So and one of my issues with the
nutrition, diabetes and obesity research community to begin with is they just keep reiterating the
same thing, like a sign that a science is pathological is they keep saying the same thing over and over
again, doing the same experiments over and over again, and they never make progress. And so what
we know from these trials is you, you know, you advocate abstinence from sugars, grains, and starches and, you know, beans, and people get
healthy. They'll get off. The type 2 diabetes will go into remission, and they knew that pre-insulin,
as you said. Pre-insulin was known as the animal diet. And type 2 diabetics, we didn't use that
terminology back then, but the physicians in the 19th century knew that older people got their
diabetes older and heavier, had a more less acute chronic form of the disease, and they could put
it into remission and basically live perfectly healthy lives so long as they didn't eat
carbohydrates. Don't eat the foods that you can't tolerate.
How difficult is that? And what struck me was the Virta trials, which essentially is an online,
digital, disruptive healthcare delivery system using coaches and high touch points with pretty
advanced diabetics. And our friend Sarah Halberg and others, and this is some of the data you're talking about, were able to see within a year or two years, a 60% reversal, not just improvement, but
reversal of diabetes with normalization of glucose, lipids, A1C without medication, a
90 plus percent reduction in insulin, 100% elimination of some of the key diabetes medications
and a 12% weight loss,
which may not sound like a lot to people, but if we see a 5% weight loss in a weight loss trial,
that's dramatic. The results seem to be sustained at two and even longer now years. And they did a
follow-up study looking at all the biomarkers around heart disease, which was fascinating.
So the concern that people have is, oh my God, if I eat fat, what about my cholesterol? You know,
cholesterol is causing heart disease. It's going to get bad. Can you talk about,
you know, how you would address these concerns about eating a high-fat diet and lipids and
heart disease and what this trial showed that was the impact on lipid profiles?
Well, and this is, you know, the issue with LDL cholesterol has always been
a problem with these low-carb, high-fat diets. Even when I was doing my first piece for science,
one of the researchers I interviewed was a guy named Pete Ahrens at the Rockefeller Institute
in New York. And Ahrens was probably the best scientist in the field in the 1950s, 1960s. And
he told me the story of a young woman a broadway actress who came to see him
she had gone on atkins to keep her weight under control and you know her cholesterol went up to
600 right you have to get her off the diet because the diet's going to kill her that's the idea so
there are a lot of people who eat this high fat high saturated fat diet they're the phrase now
thrown around the communities that they're hyper-responders
and their LDL cholesterol goes up or their LDL particle number goes up. The good news is it used
to be that would happen. The doctor would say, you're going to kill yourself. You can't eat this
way anymore. Now, an improvement, they'll say, well, look, since you've dropped 50 pounds and
your A1C has come down from like 10 to 6
and we've gotten you off your medications, maybe you should continue to eat this way,
but let's monitor the cholesterol or let's put you on some low-dose statin
to try and control the cholesterol.
And everyone feels differently about statins.
I don't know what to think because I have friends I respect on all sides of this.
For the most part, the VERDA study showed us, and these are in people who really are metabolically disturbed and that they have type 2 diabetes.
They looked at 26 risk factors for heart disease.
26 of them, 22 of them improved on the nutritional glucose.
22 got better.
Three stayed the same.
And LDL cholesterol occasionally got worse.
And of course, you know.
Sometimes it can get better too.
Sometimes it can get better.
And the cosmic joke, right, is that LDL is the only thing that conventional medical establishment
cardiology community has paid attention to.
But then when they look at overall risk factor, you could do an overall risk factor
assessment from these numbers, and it clearly got better. And that's with these people getting off
drugs. So the comparison are, you know, diabetics who are getting standard of care diabetic therapy
at Indiana. And so, you know, I talk about in the
book, I just talk about my own experience. My LDL was fine for about a decade on this diet. And then
the last time it was measured, well, it got higher the one time it got measured, not just LDL
cholesterol, but LDL particle number, which is a much better predictor of risk. Still not as good as HDL over triglycerides,
which always improves on this diet, or total cholesterol over HDL, which always improves
when you eat this way. But they're almost always nothing's universal.
Well, it's powerful. It's powerful. you and again it's really like i i just recall
a patient who i had who was a woman struggling with weight loss for years her total cholesterol
was over 300 her triglycerides were well over 300 her hdl was terrible like 30 something
uh her blood sugar was high her insulin was high she had small particle i mean she had the worst
metabolic profile and i said listen, listen, eat coconut,
oil, and butter, and get off of all the starch. And let's see what happens. Just, I don't know,
let's try it. Six weeks, two months. There's no harm in a short-term trial. And then I, you know,
then I measure, right? Trust but verify, right? As Reagan said. And then I checked her lab tests.
Her cholesterol dropped 100 points. Her LDL dropped almost that. Her HDL went up 25 points.
Her triglycerides dropped 200 points. And she lost 20 pounds. Another guy was a skinny little biker who wanted to try keto for performance and athleticism. And he was in his 50s. And he just
was biking four hours a day.
And his numbers just went through the roof.
Just LDL, though, I assume.
No, his whole particle number, his small particles.
I mean, everything went haywire.
And I noticed the same thing for me.
I'm one of those lean mass hyper-responders.
I probably shouldn't announce that because people will send me all kinds of hate mail or hate messages on social media.
But, you know, if I if I, you know, don't eat a little bit of carbohydrate like a sweet potato or winter squash, I will tend to lose too much weight.
But also my lipids will go crazy if I'm if I'm eating just too much saturated fat.
So I can modify it.
I can eat more avocados and more olive oil and more nuts and seeds and other different fats.
You know, even then, the assumption is always that what you're doing is going to make a significant difference in your long-term health.
And this is the issue that, again, I discuss in the book.
We've been taught to, whenever you're doing preventive medicine, right, it's
hypothesis-based medicine. If I get you to do this, or I add the little bit of sweet potato
winter squash back, and I get my LDL down, I'm going to minimize my risk of heart disease,
and I'm going to live longer. And this is a probabilistic assessment. It doesn't mean you're
not going to have a heart attack. You're just going to lower the chance of having a heart attack. And the flip side is if I get you to
eat the coconut oil and the butter and get rid of the carbs, I can watch you get healthier.
So not only will your lipid profiles get better, but I could literally watch you get healthier.
I could watch your weight come down and your sleep disturbances improve and your
mood will improve and your energy will improve. And, you know, you'll walk in the office three
months from now. This is why people like us can sound a little quackish and you'll be a different
person. Yeah, absolutely. You know, your book, your book is such a brilliant analysis of the
science, but it's also got a lot of practical aspects that you call the plan,
where you go through a number of principles of how to think about doing this, how to work with the doctor, and how to get started. So it's not just an abstract theoretical historical analysis,
it's actually very practical. And I really encourage people to get a copy of The Case
for Keto, Rethinking Weight Control, and The Science and Practice of Low-Carb, High-Fat Eating,
because if you are one of those people who are metabolically
unhealthy, the 88% of us, it's now more important than ever to really get this right and get your
insulin down, because COVID-19 disproportionately affects those who have poor metabolic health,
including obesity, overweight, prediabetes, diabetes, and chronic disease, which is all
connected to insulin. And Gary, what's exciting is in your book, focus on weight, but keto is
being researched for cancer, for improving, for example, responses to chemo and radiation,
for obviously reversing diabetes, for heart disease, for dementia. It's now becoming a
standard recommendation. I had a patient who was at Stanford and they were like, yeah, I've got
Alzheimer's and they told me to be on a keto diet or epilepsy or other conditions.
This is what's so amazing because the conflict we're up against, you know, we've got U.S. News and World Report.
Every year they give their diet ratings, and every year they tell us the Mediterranean diet is the healthiest and then the DASH diet, which is supposed to lower your blood pressure. And they'll look at 35, 40 diets,
and the worst are always low-carb, high-fat ketogenic diets. Always the least healthy around.
And yet, if you go to clinicaltrials.gov, which is the website that the government has to register
clinical trials, and just stick in ketogenic as a keyword. You'll pull up, as of last week, about 250
different trials. A hundred of them have been completed. The others are still in the works.
And it's basically, you name a medical condition, somebody is testing a ketogenic diet somewhere in
the world to see if that will make it better. Yeah, and I use it for heart failure patients,
and the results are amazing because it improves mitochondrial function. And we didn't really talk about it, but you know,
your body has two, it's like ACDC. It's like an electric hybrid Prius, right? It can run on carbs
or run on fat or run on both. But if you, if you actually switch to just running on fat,
it seems to burn cleaner. It seems to have all these downstream metabolic effects.
And something that we really didn't talk about was aging and insulin aging.
And when you look at the, whether it's a ketogenic diet or a high fat, low carb diet, or whether
it's a diet that's intermittent fasting or time restricted eating or any of these kind
of approaches, they all do the same thing.
They all reduce inflammation.
They reduce belly fat.
They increase muscle mass.
They increase bone density.
They improve cognitive function. They improve stem cell production. I
mean, they have all these downstream effects that are promoting aging and healthy aging. So this is
really the key to everything. Yeah. Or another way to put it is they're removing the thing
that increase, that accelerates aging. Because remember, even diabetes is a kind of accelerated aging. All
these symptoms of aging are basically driven by glucose oxidation in the cells. You raise blood
sugar, your body kicks into overdrive the attempt to like burn it off. And you do that, you generate reactive oxygen species, you generate, I mean, it's just all the
major manifestations of health, of aging, are accelerated by the same foods we're telling
people not to eat on these diets. Nitric oxide prevents inflammation of the arterial wall.
That will prevent certain blood cells from coming in
to deposit cholesterol plaques and develop atherosclerosis. And that is why our arteries
make nitric oxide. We make nitric oxide in order to protect us against hypertension and protect
our arteries against inflammation and prevent unwanted blood
clotting, nitric oxide, very potent that way. So if you prevent unwanted blood clotting,
you can prevent a stroke. If you prevent inflammation of the arteries, that certainly
will go a long way to preventing the development of coronary artery disease, right? Which causes myocardial
infarction or heart attack. Yeah, absolutely. And I think what's
striking is, you know, statins have what we call pleiotropic effects. They have multiple effects.
They lower cholesterol, they increase nitric oxide, they decrease inflammation through other
mechanisms, and lower C-reactive protein. That may be the real way they work. But what's really
fascinating to me is this link between nitric oxide and inflammation. Because anybody who's and lower C-reactive protein. That may be the real way they work. But what's really fascinating
to me is this link between nitric oxide and inflammation. Because anybody who's listened
to my podcast or understands my work around the role of food as medicine is that inflammation
is the driver of almost all the major chronic diseases we see today. Heart disease, cancer,
diabetes, Alzheimer's, autoimmune disease, all these diseases are driven by inflammation.
So it seems like nitric oxide could play a big role in modulating these diseases or influencing
diseases.
That's exactly correct.
Nitric oxide has pretty powerful anti-inflammatory effects.
And the reason is that nitric oxide is a free radical, believe it or not.
It is a free radical, but it's a fairly safe free radical.
And what free radicals like to do is to interact and find other free radicals so that they can
react covalently and take them out. And that's what nitric oxide does. It is an anti-inflammatory
because it goes after other radicals, whether it's oxygen radicals, like superoxide, or
fatty acid radicals, for example, that hang around in membranes.
And by rancid fat in your arteries, right?
Exactly.
And by neutralizing those three radicals, then by definition, nitric oxide is anti-inflammatory.
Actually, we can say that NO is antioxidant. You know, in many cases,
believe me, after all the years of research I've been involved with, antioxidant and
anti-inflammatory are very similar phrases. It's almost the same thing.
Absolutely. It's incredible. So, let's talk about some of the mechanisms because, you know,
what was going on with Viagra was fascinating because it was designed to be a blood pressure drug and it didn't
really work that great but it had this side effect that people complained about or maybe
they were celebrating, I don't know.
And that's what happened.
And then there's this blockbuster category of drugs which are these drugs that actually
increase nitric oxide.
And tell us about this sort of relationship between blood vessel health,
blood pressure, blood organ flow,
because really where blood goes is where health goes, right?
Of course, of course.
Well, I can tell you a little bit more about Viagra and the development,
if you like.
I mean, as you said, so when Viagra was first being developed,
it was actually tested to see if it could lower the blood pressure in humans. And they found that
if they raise the concentration high enough, it was still very safe and could lower the blood
pressure. But unfortunately, or fortunately, depending upon how you look at it,
a side effect was produced. And that is all the male volunteers who were in this study
developed an erection, whether they wanted to or not. And appropriately, this was noticed by
the nurses who were running the study.
I didn't want to hear about that.
I was on the advisory,
scientific advisory board for Pfizer
for a long time before, a while back.
And so what happened was that Pfizer
did not want to deal with this.
They had no concept then that this could be a useful drug
to treat
erectile dysfunction. But because of the side effect, they said, listen, we're not going to
mess with this. So they stopped developing the drug. They put the drug on the shelf.
Then I published my work in 1992 in the New England Journal of Medicine that nitric oxide,
because we had shown for the first time, the neurotransmitter
released from the nerves that causes penile erection was not known. That's why no drugs
could be developed to treat ED. You didn't know what the neurotransmitter was. How can you develop
a drug? So we discovered that the neurotransmitter was our good friend, nitric oxide, which makes good sense, right? It's a
vasodilator. And so they read my work and they realized, oh my goodness, our drug works by
increasing nitric oxide. So they filed a new drug application. They took the drug off the shelf.
They developed it. The FDA fast-tracked it. And in six years, it was marketed as Sildenafil or the trade name Viagra.
And what's interesting is that Pfizer invited me six months later because it was just after the Nobel Prize, invited me to their to their pharmaceutical company in England where the work was done and showed me the laboratory
where this was done. And you could see all my reprints pasted on a wall and in the laboratory
notebooks. It was really great to see this. And from that point on, I'm not sure if you're aware
of this, but from that point on, I was given the acronym of the father of Viagra.
Yeah.
Which is an acronym I don't mind at all, but my mother was alive at the time and she used to get very upset whenever she read that.
And she would tell me, why don't you tell them to stop that already?
Well, I imagine they probably didn't have trouble getting volunteers for that study.
So that's incredible.
So you call it a neurotransmitter as well as an antioxidant,
anti-inflammatory. So it has all these different effects, right?
It's really amazing. When it's released from the nerves, it functions as a neurotransmitter
in the erectile tissue of men and women, by the way, but it's also a neurotransmitter in the brain where it's released in certain areas
of the brain that promote memory, learning, and information recall. Many scientists believe that
dementia, especially Alzheimer's disease, may be attributed to a deficiency of nitric oxide
neurotransmitter in the brain. And what I tell all my young scientists when I was teaching, I would tell my graduate students
that remember this, the brain has 10 times more nitric oxide than does any other organ
in the body.
And we don't know why.
So go after that problem.
I mean, that's a good problem to go after.
That's amazing.
So let's just kind of review. And then I want to get into the question everybody's thinking
about which is, how do I get more of this stuff in my system?
So let's see, it dilates your blood vessels and lowers your blood pressure and improves
blood flow in your organs.
It prevents clotting, you mentioned, and it prevents blockage in the arteries.
It's an anti-inflammatory so it helps keep the healthy arteries.
It promotes learning, memory, and information recall.
It helps regulate erectile function in men and rousal and women,
and other things, including affecting, protecting your skin from the sun
and skin cancer.
And you also mentioned in your work that it promotes digestion
by helping the movement of digested foods
and regulating digestive enzymes and hormones.
So it's an incredible molecule that is doing all these things that no one even knew about until you came on the planet.
Isn't that something?
I mean, it took somebody to discover that nitric oxide, which had long been known to be a pollutant in the Earth's atmosphere,
it took someone to show that our bodies could actually produce it.
And once that was identified, everyone jumped on the bandwagon,
and so many different people discovered so many different effects of NO.
Effects.
But what's miraculous is that one single molecule can exist ubiquitously throughout the body and produce all of these effects. And,
you know, we've mentioned only half of them. So to me, as a scientist, I find that remarkable.
But if you have a chemistry background, which I do, and you look at NO, it's perfectly suited
for its job. Why have 25 different chemical molecules in the body each doing something
when you can have one nitric oxide but it has to be regulated because you know you don't want to
increase blood flow to your legs uh at the same time that you're creating a penile erection you
know i mean in one place it works another place it doesn't so it's highly regulated
so that it's not working everywhere at the same time it's incredible so how do you know if you're
low in nitric oxide as a person walking around the street well let me tell you something sir if i did
not retire and i still had my laboratory i would invite you to my laboratory to try to work out
that problem because no it's such a difficult problem it's impossible to measure nitric oxide
real time because it's an unstable gas it has a half-life of about two or three seconds that's it
it as soon as it's made in the body, it works within a second or two,
and then it's gone. And that's what you want from a signaling molecule. You know, you don't want the
molecule to hang around forever. You just want it to hang around just for a little bit. But luckily,
we're continuously making nitric oxide. If we have healthy arteries, they are continuously making nitric oxide. Unfortunately,
we can't measure it. We can measure byproducts. In other words, we can measure nitrite, NO2 minus,
and nitrate, NO3 minus, because NO is oxidized. That's how it's broken up it's oxidized to nitrite and nitrate so you can measure that
it's good in laboratory animals but not in humans not great not great for going to your doctor and
having it checked out well because nitrites and nitrates are present in all the foods we
if you like beets and spinach and and and brussel sprouts and you like to eat bacon, and so on. All those foods are loaded with nitrite nitrate.
So you'll have a very, very high background level.
And although it's been attempted,
you cannot measure changes in nitric oxide production that way.
But symptomatically, there's ways people can know, right?
I mean...
Sure.
Oh, absolutely.
So what would be the kind of symptoms people might have?
What we have tied, we meaning the scientific community, not I,
but anyone with hypertension that's been examined clinically using invasive methods to measure NO,
it's been shown that NO production by the arterial endothelial cells is diminished. Okay. People
who are obese have absolutely low levels of nitric oxide produced by endothelial cells.
People who lead a sedentary lifestyle, the same. People have been subjected to physical activity,
even minor physical activity, walking fast, riding a stationary bike,
and there's ways to measure indirectly nitric oxide production. I can tell you about that in
a second. And that NO goes up. And the way you measure NO indirectly is you put something like
a blood pressure cuff on your finger, and it's made tight, and then the blood flow in your arm is stopped
just for a few seconds, and then the tourniquet is released. That will cause blood flow to go
through the finger, and there's something called blood flow-dependent vasodilation. In other words, when you release that cuff and
you allow the blood to flow through the hand, the blood flow, because it creates a force against
the arteries, that's called shear stress, that stimulates the arteries to make enormous amounts
of nitric oxide. That's good because you want to dilate all the blood vessels there that have
just been constricted. So NO is released to dilate the blood vessels and allow blood flow. That's
what happens during exercise in all of your skeletal muscle, by the way. But you can measure
that flow-dependent vasodilation, and that's a pretty darn good measure of your capacity to make
nitric oxide. So if you run that test, which is expensive, of your capacity to make nitric oxide.
So if you run that test, which is expensive, you usually have to go to a clinic, whatever,
for now anyway, you can determine how much NO you can make.
And what we know is that people who lead an unhealthy lifestyle, if I just leave it at that, make substantially less nitric oxide.
That's been borne out every time. That's amazing. Hey,
everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope you're loving this
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and I'll share with you my favorite stuff that I use to enhance my health and get healthier and
better and live younger longer. Now back to this week's episode. So everybody's listening and probably wondering,
how do I boost my nitric oxide levels?
And you talk and you work about a lot of things,
nutraceuticals, diet, protein, exercise, breathing,
the microbiome, all these things.
So I wanna get into all this.
So let's start with the conversation about diet and nutraceuticals or supplements and how they can affect
your nitric oxide production. Okay. So I'll make this as brief as I can. It's clear from the work
so many people have done that a healthy balanced diet is the best way to maintain your adequate
production and action of nitric oxide. And what do I mean by healthy diet?
Yeah. But, you know, and you know all about that. My goodness, that's been your career
and your pharmacy and everything else. I mean, we have to eat healthy. What does healthy mean?
Stay away from saturated fats. Look, I like a hamburger once in a while. Once every two months, I have a juicy,
fatty hamburger. It's not going to kill me. It tastes good. I get it out of my system.
But then I eat fish. Fish is my healthy protein. There are plant proteins, of course,
that are healthy, but I stay away from meats most of the time, even chicken. I mean, chicken's okay. But as soon
as you start eating the skin of the chicken, forget it. That's loaded with saturated fat.
So I like eating fish for my healthy protein. And you do have to have, you know, healthy protein.
But like many diets out there, which I don't want to talk about unless you do, I do not lower my carbs. I'm a firm believer that
30% of your diet should be carbs, but healthy carbs, not potato chips, not packaged food.
What do you mean by healthy carbs?
Oh, I mean the most colorful fruits and vegetables you can eat.
Yes.
The most powerful antioxidants. Remember, antioxidants can
increase nitric oxide. Why? Because the antioxidants destroy the free radicals that
go after nitric oxide to destroy the nitric oxide. So antioxidants will boost nitric oxide
simply by stabilizing the molecule. We've done a lot of work on that,
but most of it's been done by everybody else. But the darker the fruit, for example, the better the
antioxidant. Pomegranate juice. Everybody knows pomegranate. If you ever get it on a white shirt,
you can never get the stain off. That is a dark fruit. Same thing with blueberries, strawberries,
any kind of berry. Let's go to the plant family.
Spinach.
Popeye knew all about nitric oxide before anybody else did.
I mean, spinach is very healthy.
Kale, my goodness, kale.
Brussels sprouts.
Dark green, you know, leafy vegetables.
My wife and I have that every single day.
I just think that those carbs are so important because they're loaded with antioxidants.
Fats are also important.
You need fats for energy, but unsaturated fat.
I'm lucky I'm Italian because my parents never used anything but olive oil.
Olive oil.
That's what I use.
Olive oil.
I use olive oil for, I put it in everything except my coffee. Okay. And we use olive oil. That's what I use. Olive oil. I use olive oil for, I put it in everything except my coffee, okay?
And we use olive oil.
And if you want to eat, you know, unsaturated fats from food, avocado is one of many good
examples.
You just have to watch the calories.
You know, whenever you're consuming any kind of fat, whether it's saturated or unsaturated,
if your goal is to watch your weight, then,
you know, just practice a little caloric restriction and you'll be fine.
There's my secrets right there.
I think you're eating lots of good fish and fruits and vegetables, and that's definitely
a healthy diet, and you're cutting out the starch and sugars and the junk 100% agree.
I think, you know, there is some
question about, you know, the variations in the population, how some people can tolerate saturated
fat better than others. And, you know, Dr. Ronald Krauss, I actually should have him on the podcast,
is one of the leading lipidologists. You might have heard of him or know him. And, you know,
he's challenged some of the orthodoxy about saturated fat. So I think there's still a debate
about this, but I think you're right. I there aren't like for example for me you know I I
I'm someone who genetically I don't think I can tolerate a lot of saturated fat whereas I've seen
other patients do really well so it's really like the end of one or personalized medicine on that
100% agree right so so let's talk about the supplements you develop because I'm really
curious about what can we do because the other thing you talk about is protein, and we haven't really discussed it,
but the precursor or the building block of nitric oxide is an amino acid called arginine,
which is found in a lot of foods, including almonds.
It's very high in arginine.
So tell me about what we can do in terms of the protein we should be eating, like the
nitric oxide that's needed, the arginine that's needed to get nitric oxide produced.
What are the best sources of that?
And then what are the supplements that you've been using to actually help boost nitric oxide
levels?
Sure.
I think that after we discovered that our arteries can produce nitric oxide, another group actually discovered the enzyme.
A group from Johns Hopkins discovered the enzyme that makes nitric oxide and that you refer to as nitric oxide synthase or no synthase.
And what they showed was that. Like any other enzyme, a substrate is required, right, to be converted to product.
So the substrate for N-O synthase is arginine, one of the 20 or so basic amino acids that are found in all proteins.
And so arginine is converted to nitric oxide by this enzyme.
And, you know, if you have an arginine deficiency, you're going to make less NO. If you have excess arginine, you'll be safe and you'll be able to make, you know, the normal amount of nitric oxide.
Unless, of course, there are other underlying problems.
You can make a lot of NO, but if you're not taking in sufficient antioxidants, if you
are obese, especially morbidly obese, then, you know, you can take in all the arginine you want,
and you just, your NO levels are not going to be very high. So anyway, arginine is a great
amino acid. And, you know, this has come under some criticism. Some people, some scientists say
that we have so much arginine in our body, it saturates all the sites. So adding more is not
going to increase NO. And I can tell you from our experiments and the experiments of hundreds of
others that nothing could be further from the truth. You know, sometimes we don't understand
something in science. That doesn't mean it's wrong. It just means we don't understand it. So we will make more nitric oxide
if you take in more arginine. That's been shown in mice and rabbits with atherosclerosis. It's
been shown in humans. A lot of great studies conducted in Germany. So it's good to consume
arginine. Various ways you can do it. The richest source of arginine on a weight basis is, as you said, almonds.
Actually, walnuts are good too.
All nuts have arginine.
Almonds the most.
There's a problem there.
Because if you eat a cup of almonds you're making huge amounts of no and you'll wind up with
a 50 inch waistline in no time i mean it's extremely caloric but if you eat fish all
protein has arginine there's a lot of protein so you can can. That's why I always say, Mark, healthy, balanced diet.
You know, don't don't overdo this and overdo that and and eliminate this.
You know, we're not human beings. We're not designed for that.
You know, but the diet we're eating is very different than your grandparents ate in Italy a hundred years ago, right? For sure. Well, what they ate was good because, uh, you know, my father, my father smoked camel
cigarettes unfiltered for 70 years. He died at 96 years old without a cough. Wow. Well, you know,
that's good genetics right there. My mom, same thing. My mom was overweight. She didn't smoke,
but she was overweight. She
loved her cooking. You know, she died at 91. So I'm blessed. I probably don't even have to take
care of myself and I'll live well. I'll be 80 years old in a few months. So, and I feel good.
That's good. That's good. Yubi Blake said, you know, I wish I'd known I was going to live so
long. He lived to be over a hundred. He he says i would have taken better care of myself i love that he smoked and drank yeah i think you have to have the apoe
double two gene to get that they might have the apoe double chew and a bunch of other
uh longevity genes which is pretty awesome so good good for you um yes okay so what about just taking
arginine what if i just go to the oh yeah and take arginine? Is that a good idea?
You can do that.
When the work was published by us and other groups,
oh, I guess in the early 90s, or late 90s, I should say,
it was clear that arginine was important.
So many of the companies developed arginine supplements. At the time, they were very expensive. They put arginine, for example, in capsules and so on. You have to be careful that way because arginine mixed with, you know, flavors and other substance to
make it more palatable so that you could, you know, take a couple of teaspoonfuls and, you know,
make a solution and drink it. And those products have been extremely popular. I think
there was a fellow, his name was Dr. John Cook. He was at Stanford in 1998, and he developed something called the Heart Bar, which was a chocolate bar loaded with 6,000 milligrams of arginine.
Wow. The only problem was that the chocolate bars tasted God awful.
I mean, you literally had to close your nose when you ate them,
and eventually nobody would buy them.
And so, you know, that was the end of the whole thing.
That's very funny.
And then we came up with, I worked with the company,
we came up with, or they did, with a formulation that was really great
and is very good tasting.
And I've been taking that since July of 2003. My wife and I-
Now, is it a powder? Is it a powder?
It's a powder. It's a powder that consists of five grams. That's 5,000 milligrams of arginine.
It also has some citrulline, which I'll tell you about in a moment. And then it has, of course, vitamin C in it.
And newer formulations will probably contain pomegranate instead because it's a much more powerful antioxidant.
And that's the way that works.
When we marketed that product, it's really funny.
About a year later.
What's it called?
It's called Nightworks.
N-I-T-E-W-O-R-K-S.
It's called Nightworks because at the time, we thought, scientists thought that most heart attacks and strokes occurred in the evening hours.
And so even though we can't put claims on the bottle that it cures any disease
or treats it or whatever, you can't say anything like that, of course, because of the FDA and
the Shaya rules. We just thought that, you know, we said, good for your heart health,
that you're allowed to say, and it is. And we just thought, why not take it at night before you go to bed?
But now we know that it doesn't make any difference when you take it.
As long as you take it, it doesn't make any difference.
The levels of NO go up.
They stay up.
You could take it in the morning.
I take it in the morning, every single morning.
Even once a day is enough to keep it all day long?
Yes, more or less, yes.
I mean, clinical studies have not been done those
are very very expensive to do and company you know i mean you didn't feel that you've done animal
studies looking if you give arginine to these animals their levels of nitric oxide yes and it's
interesting we still don't understand it completely if you give the arginine every day, the, the NO synthase enzyme for some
reason gets upregulated. So there's actually more enzyme. Maybe it's because the enzyme sees
more substrate. It thinks we got to have more enzyme. I don't know. But anyway, that means you
get more NO production and it stays up. Now, if you stop giving the arginine to the animals, it takes
three to five days and it gradually goes down. So, it's very interesting.
Amazing. Does it help lower blood pressure or would it help sexual function for people who take
it? Okay. Well, now, number one- I know you can't say anything-
I have to be careful what I say because- But just in theory.
You're very famous. Everybody listens to you, including the FDA. know. I have to be careful what I say. But just in theory. You're very famous.
Everybody listens to you, including the FDA. So we got to be careful what we say. And I'm still
working for this particular company, and I have to be very careful what I say. And also, you know,
unless it's tested clinically in a double control, placebo controlled trial, which it's not,
most supplements have not you know what
supplement company has 50 million dollars to do a correct study for god's sakes you know nobody does
but yes i can tell you because i gave this i let people you know i gave this product to my mother
uh to many people my neighbors in the gym and so on. If you have hypertension, in many cases, this seemed to,
you know, lower the blood pressure. But I can't say that it was due to the product,
could be a placebo effect. You know, we have no evidence that this product in humans, you know,
will lower the blood pressure. But the way I look at it is this, I look at the science,
I'm a scientist, okay? I look at the science. This is
a perfectly safe product. It makes all the sense in the world that if you give arginine, you're
going to make more nitric oxide. Everyone knows that nitric oxide lowers the blood pressure. But
I don't want to say that because that means everybody who buys the product is going to be
telling everybody else to buy the product because it lowers the blood pressure. And we can't say that. I understand.
It's very heart healthy. That I can say. I hope you enjoyed today's episode. One of the best ways
you can support this podcast is by leaving us a rating and review below. Until next time,
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