The Dr. Hyman Show - Answering Your Questions About Sugar Cravings, Migraines, Weight Loss, And More

Episode Date: May 9, 2022

This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Paleovalley, and InsideTracker. Today, as part of my Masterclass series, I’m answering questions submitted by my community through the new video app, H...iHo. I am joined by my good friend and podcast host, Dhru Purohit, to discuss a range of topics including sugar cravings, migraines, acupuncture, chronic pain, and much more. Find a link below to follow me on HiHo and we may select your question for a future episode! Dhru Purohit is a podcast host, serial entrepreneur, and investor in the health and wellness industry. His podcast, The Dhru Purohit Podcast, is a top 50 global health podcast with over 30 million unique downloads. His interviews focus on the inner workings of the brain and the body and feature the brightest minds in wellness, medicine, and mindset. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Paleovalley, and InsideTracker.   Rupa Health is a place where Functional Medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 20 labs like DUTCH, Vibrant America, Genova, and Great Plains. You can check out a free, live demo with a Q&A or create an account at RupaHealth.com.   Paleovalley is offering my listeners 15% off their entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com/hyman to check out all their clean Paleo products and take advantage of this deal.   InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. Right now they’re offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman.   In this episode, we discuss (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): How to tackle candida, mold, and sugar addiction (4:11 / 00:51) Treating migraines and the keto diet (11:33 / 8:16)  Which mushrooms to eat and why (18:14 / 14:57)  Pea protein powder (21:26 / 18:08)  Combining acupuncture and Functional Medicine (28:08 / 22:46)   Creating a healthy community (31:16 / 25:54 Why doctors don’t recommend nutritional solutions (34:19 / 28:58) Armour Thyroid and thyroid health (39:59 / 34:38) Losing those last five pounds (44:39 / 39:18) Living with chronic pain (47:57 / 42:35) Follow me on HiHo here! Mentioned in this episode: The Blood Sugar Solution 10-Day Detox Diet The Functional Medicine Approach to Ending Migraines How to End Migraines 5 Steps to Solve Your Migraines Galleri Cancer Test The UltraThyroid Solution

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. If all your friends are eating cheeseburgers and fries and drinking beer and watching TV and you want to drink green juices and go to yoga class and meditate, you're going to have a problem. Hey everyone, it's Dr. Hyman. As a busy doctor with multiple jobs, I'm all about tools that make my life simpler. And since testing is something I rely on to help almost all my patients, I'm really excited because I learned about a new company called Rupa Health. They are doing such great work around making testing simple. Hormones, organic acids, nutrient levels, inflammatory factors, gut bacteria. Those are just some of the many things I like to look at,
Starting point is 00:00:41 find the most effective path for my patients to optimal health. But that means I'm usually placing orders through multiple labs, which is just an overall pain. Plus, it makes me have to keep track of all the results, which is more difficult for me and my patients. Now, Rupa Health has totally changed that. They've made functional medicine testing simpler and more convenient than ever. So practitioners like me can focus on more time helping our patients. With Rupa Health, functional medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 20 labs like Dutch, Vibrant me can focus on more time helping our patients. With Rupa Health, functional medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 20 labs like Dutch, Vibrant America, Genova, Great Plains, and more. It's 90% faster, letting you simplify the process of getting
Starting point is 00:01:15 functional medicine tests you need and providing a noticeably better patient experience. That's awesome. This is really a much needed option in functional medicine space, and I'm so excited about it. You can check out a free live demo with a Q&A or functional medicine space, and I'm so excited about it. You can check out a free live demo with a Q&A or create an account at rupahealth.com. That's R-U-P-A health.com. Now, so many of my patients ask me how I manage to work multiple jobs, travel frequently, well, not so much anymore, and spend time with my family and still focus on my health. I know it can seem hard to eat well when you got a lot going on, but the trick is to never let yourself get into a food emergency and to stay stocked up with the right things to
Starting point is 00:01:50 support your goals. So recently I discovered Paleo Valley Beef Sticks. I keep these beef sticks at home and at the office so I know that whenever I'm in a food emergency, I have a healthy and delicious option to keep me on track. It's no secret that I have high standards when it comes to what I put in my body, and Paleo Valley Beef Sticks checks all the boxes. They're gluten-free, grain-free, dairy-free, soy-free, and non-GMO. Plus, they use 100% grass-fed and grass-finished beef, which not only adds to the flavorful taste, but it also means they're free of any harmful antibiotics or hormones that you'll find in most meat.
Starting point is 00:02:28 With grass-fed beef, you'll get more nutrients than you would with beef fed with grains, things like higher levels of omega-3 fats that help reduce inflammation, and more B vitamins and other antioxidants to support your body's converting food into energy, and also more of the fat-soluble vitamins that are
Starting point is 00:02:45 beneficial for a healthy heart. Plus, instead of being processed with chemicals and other questionable ingredients, these beef sticks are naturally fermented, so you get gut-friendly probiotics with every bite. How cool is that? Right now, Paleo Valley is offering my listeners 15% off your entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com forward slash hymen to check out all their clean paleo products and take advantage of this deal. That's paleovalley.com forward slash hymen. I definitely recommend stocking up on the grass-fed beef sticks to keep in your house
Starting point is 00:03:21 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. Hey, everybody. It's Dr. Mark Hyman again. Welcome to a new series on The Doctor's Pharmacy called Masterclass, where we dive deep into popular health topics, including inflammation, autoimmune disease, brain health, gut health, sleep, and lots more. And today, my friend, my business partner, podcast host, Drew Proa, and I are doing something really fun. We're answering community questions
Starting point is 00:03:54 that you guys have submitted by a new video app called HiHo. You can follow me on HiHo and submit your questions there and you might see them on this podcast. All right, Drew, what are the questions? All right, Mark, let's jump in. This is Cheryl, who has the first question here. Good morning, Dr. Hyman. I'm a long time candida sufferer, and I also lived in a mold filled building for five years. I'm wondering if there's any kind of products that I can take that would help with the sugar cravings that I struggle with on a daily basis. Oh, hi, Cheryl. And thank you for that question about three things.
Starting point is 00:04:36 Yeast, growth in your system, mold in your environment, and sugar cravings. They're all a little different, a little related, but I'll tackle them all. The first is the yeast stuff. And it's an unfortunate situation that many in the alternative medicine space say, oh, you have candida and that's the cause of all your problems. And that's just not true. That's not to say that many people do suffer from yeast overgrowth, and it's a big problem that I treat. In the right patient, a targeted treatment will really help. Yes, if you have yeast overgrowth, it's usually because you're eating a lot of sugar and flour
Starting point is 00:05:16 because you've taken antibiotics, because you're on the pill, because you're taking steroids. Something's gone on that's caused you to have this problem. Usually, getting rid of the cause, whether it's the diet, starch and sugar, alcohol, processed food, whether it's all lots of antibiotics and making sure you kind of don't stop taking those and reset, you can fix this. And it can be cured with both dietary approaches and also supplements, which can be herbal that kill yeast, like oregano, for example, or other combinations of herbs. Probiotics will help a lot. Saccharomyces billiardae, which is a very powerful yeast against yeast, can be very effective as a supplement.
Starting point is 00:05:58 I recommend one called Biome, B-O-H-M, because it also has compounds that help break up the biofilm where the yeast live in the gut. So those all are really helpful. And sometimes you do need an antifungal, like prescription antifungal, like diflucan or nystatin or others. So that's the yeast. The mold stuff, yes, that's a whole big problem where probably half of all the buildings have water damage and many of those have mold and people, a lot of them are
Starting point is 00:06:25 exposed to mold, don't know it, and it can cause very low-grade symptoms, brain fog, fatigue, muscle aches, sleep issues, mood issues, as well as other inflammatory symptoms, congestion, coughing. I had mold in my house and developed a terrible cough, really bad, bad illness for me. But you can address that by removing the source of the mold, by helping your body detoxify from the mold with binders and various things. So that's a treatable thing. Now, sugar cravings are something else. And Cheryl, they can be triggered by yeast overgrowth for sure. But mostly it's the diet causing the cravings. So it's a vicious cycle of cravings beginning more cravings. And I remember teaching a workshop, God, 15 years ago maybe, at Kripalu on ultra-metabolism,
Starting point is 00:07:13 which was my book on nutrition at the time. And this woman came in and I was doing basically a detox. We got a whole sugar, processed foods, elimination diet. It was a five-day workshop. And she's like, look, I've been addicted to sugar my whole life. I crave it all the time. I know this is not going to work. I'm willing to try it, but look, I'm just giving you a warning. I just might not do very well. I'm like, okay, just see what happens. That's fine. And day two, she's like, I don't know what happened. I don't know what you did, but all my cravings are gone. Wow.
Starting point is 00:07:47 And so the cravings are not a moral failing. They're not a lack of willpower. They're a problem of biochemistry and hormones. And you have to use science to fix it. You can't use willpower. Willpower will not work. You can white knuckle it for a little while, but then you're going to fail and you're going to eat more.
Starting point is 00:08:07 So how do you address the cravings? Well, I wrote an entire book about this, about sugar addiction, which is what you're suffering from, Cheryl. And it's called the 10-Day Detox Diet. It's the blood sugar solution 10-Day Detox Diet. And essentially, it eliminates all the foods that spike insulin and blood sugar. And when you do that, you really really shut off the system that's driving the craving. And essentially about 50% fat, lots of fiber, lots of phytochemicals, whole foods,
Starting point is 00:08:35 no processed food, very little fruit, very little or no starchy vegetables. And what happens is very quickly all your biochemistry and hormones reset. So you're not craving and hungry and want it all the time. So you might think it's challenging. But my joke is you have to go cold turkey. You know, if you're addicted to heroin, you say, I'm just going to have one shot today. Or you're addicted to cocaine. So I'll just have one line and I'll be fine. You can't do that.
Starting point is 00:09:02 You got to go cold turkey. And it seems crazy and hard. But if you follow the regimen in the book Which is designed to balance your hormones from right at the beginning of the day So you start with a fat and protein in the morning? Lots of fiber and you start to reset your brain chemistry and hormones from the minute you wake up and you do all the practices in the 10-day detox diet Literally, you'll have no cravings within a day or two. And then you'll start to feel better. You'll start to lose weight. The inflammation
Starting point is 00:09:28 goes down and you get to reclaim your natural taste buds. And so we do these programs. I'm doing one in a little bit in Turkey where we do this program with people. And in 10 days, we see even less, five days, we see a 70% reduction in all symptoms from all diseases. And all their inflammation goes down, their cravings go away, they feel better, they have more energy, they lose weight. I mean, it's incredible. Blood sugar drops 20 points, weight off at about eight pounds in five to 10 days. We see blood pressure come down 20 points. It's really quite amazing how quickly the body responds. So if you're trying to be incremental and say, well, I'm just going to cut down from like a loaf of bread to half a loaf of
Starting point is 00:10:09 bread, or I'm going to cut down from a six pack of Coke to three Cokes a day, it ain't going to work because you're still going to be triggering the same mechanisms. So you have to really, one, go cold turkey. And two, you have to design an eating plan that's going to shift your hormones and your brain chemistry so first of all you're making people in turkey go cold turkey yeah i guess so second of all i've seen you take people through this program before i've done programs like this i've done your program and the one thing i really want to make sure that uh not only cheryl understands but other folks are listening you still have so many foods that you eat that are enjoyable, but you lose that craving.
Starting point is 00:10:49 And you still get a chance to have some low glycemic berries and other things like that and dabble. It's not about deprivation. It's not a deprivation diet. It's really taking you off of refined carbohydrates and starchy things that throw you on that roller coaster of blood sugar. Yeah, you get to even eat more. I mean, it's not a calorie restricted diet. It just takes away the foods that are hijacking your brain chemistry and your hormones
Starting point is 00:11:13 and adds in foods that balance them. That's it. So she should be excited because there's tons of hope. Yes. And just takes a little bit of rolling up the sleeves and figuring out the foods that work right for you within this framework and just jumping into it. Absolutely. All right, Mark, let's go to the next question on our list. And this is from Heidi. Hey, Dr. Hyman.
Starting point is 00:11:34 Would love to hear you talk about migraines and keto. Just started getting migraines after my third kid. Never had them in my life. Fun stuff. Not really. Would love to hear you talk about migraines and keto. Aloha. Oh, so Heidi, thanks for that question. It seems to be one question. It could be two questions.
Starting point is 00:11:56 What about migraines? What about keto? What about migraines and keto? So maybe it's three questions. I don't know. I'll just tackle them each separately. So we kind of cover it all. Migraines are a huge problem because so much disability, so much stress for people, and they're debilitating. And if you've ever had one, it's the worst. You basically have to be in a dark room. Light bothers you. You get nauseous, vomiting. It can last for days, hours. Thank God there's some migraine drugs you can take to abort it. There's some preventive drugs. But none of those approaches address the root cause of migraines. And I've written a lot about this. We're linking the show notes to And I've written a lot about this. We're linking the show notes to articles I've written that are on drhyman.com.
Starting point is 00:12:29 Cataloging, what are the big triggers of migraines? And I'll just go through them. And it can be 29 different things, but we'll go over the big ones. The big ones are food. So often there are food triggers. Now, the typical neurologist will say, yes, there are certain foods like tyramines or like cheeses and aged foods, certain chemicals like aspartame, glutamate, MSG, we know can be triggered. So those excitotoxins, there's certain tyramines in food and so forth. So they'll tell you to avoid
Starting point is 00:12:54 those wine, cheese, that kind of thing. Those are reasonable recommendations. But then there's a whole other class of foods that are more around food sensitivities or food reactions. And they can be very real. So you can have sulfites, for example, that make you sick that are in dried fruit or they're put on salad bars, but it can be things like gluten and dairy and eggs. I mean, I had a patient who had migraines for 40 years. They were so debilitated and she couldn't plan her life and go out. Turned out she was sensitive to eggs. She quit the eggs and the migraines were gone. Another patient, it may not be what they're eating.
Starting point is 00:13:28 It may be something else. Maybe their gut microbiome. I had somebody with bacterial overgrowth in their gut that was so bad. And we treated her with antibiotics. Her migraine went away. Her migraine is just gone. There are also patients who, for example, have mitochondrial issues where they can't produce energy in the cells.
Starting point is 00:13:44 And they need riboflavin and high dose of vitamin B2, which is riboflavin, like 400 milligrams, which is like thousands of times more than the RDA, or they recommend dietary allowance. And even things like CoQ10, which help mitochondria. Magnesium deficiency is very common. I had a patient once with a magnesium deficiency where she was so debilitated. She was a radiation oncology resident at Mayo Clinic. And she was about to have to quit her residency because she was literally living on narcotics and Zofran, which is a chemo drug for nausea because she was so sick. And I talked to her and I'm like, well, what's going on? She says, well, you know, I have migraines and I get them all the time and it's just debilitating. I said, well, okay, what else is going on? Do you have
Starting point is 00:14:26 other symptoms? Oh, yes. And I have palpitations. I have anxiety. I have insomnia. I have muscle cramps. I have constipation. I said, how often do you go? She said, well, I'm pretty regular. I said, how often do you go? She said, well, I go once a week. I'm like, that's not regular. She's like, well, yeah, I go every week. I'm like, no, you have to go every day. So, all those symptoms, muscle twitches, constipation, anxiety, insomnia, palpitations, they're all magnesium deficiency symptoms. So she had severe magnesium deficiency. They gave her like a thousand milligrams or more magnesium for a bunch of days. All her symptoms went away. Her migraines went away. And that was her problem.
Starting point is 00:14:58 It's different for different people. What about insulin resistance? Does that play a role inside of this as well? I mean, I don't think there's a lot of data on insulin resistance? Does that play a role inside of this as well? I mean, I don't think there's a lot of data on insulin resistance and migraines as far as I know. I'm maybe just unaware of it, but I think it's not so much that. I think it's really foods, it's the gut, it's chemicals, it's a whole host of things, mitochondrial dysfunctions that can really trigger migraines. And the treatment is really getting to the root cause, whatever it is, and figuring out this magnesium deficiency or mitochondrial issues or food sensitivities or bacterial overgrowth or reactions to these various foods like tyramines in food or sulfites that are in wine or other things. So you have to be really careful. And I've written a lot
Starting point is 00:15:43 about it and I almost universally can cure migra careful. And I've written a lot about it, and I almost, you know, universally can cure migraines. I really have had not a patient who hasn't either completely gotten rid of them or reduced them so dramatically they're a trivial event, and if they happen, they're not that severe. So I think it's really a manageable problem using functional medicine. It's one of the home-run treatments. If somebody doesn't have access to a doctor like yourself, again, functional medicine can be expensive and they may not have somebody in their region area. What's the next step for them to do? Yeah. The next step is, you know, there's a lot of this can be done by self care. So it's not that hard. And in my articles and blogs, a lot of it's written with the intent to be a guide for you to do this for yourself.
Starting point is 00:16:23 Try this elimination diet. Take magnesium. Take CoQ10. Take riboflavin. Which all, by the way, are going to make you healthier. Yeah. And maybe you want to try an herb like feverfew. There's other things that are available too. So a lot of this is in my writing and blogs and a lot of it can be done without a doctor. Okay, great, Mark. That was the first part of the question. Let's go to the second part of the question. So the second part of the question is more about migraines and keto. And I just want to sort of back up a little bit and say that we now know that the brain, which we were taught loves sugar and has to run on glucose and requires 25% of our body's glucose, is actually not really accurate.
Starting point is 00:16:59 The brain runs far better on a different fuel, which is fat. And in a lot of neurologic diseases, we know this. In fact, the ketogenic diet in medicine was first used to treat epilepsy when all drugs failed. So when nothing else works, we give them a ketogenic diet. I don't want to just start with that instead of avoiding all those medications, but that works. In kids with brain disorders, it's been very effective. In cancer, for example, of the brain, glioblastomas used, Alzheimer's, autism, Parkinson's, profound impacts of ketogenic diets on these conditions. Now, in migraines, it's also a disease of inflammation of the brain. And ketogenic diets are very anti-inflammatory.
Starting point is 00:17:42 So by trying a ketogenic diet, if you have migraines, if none of these other things that I suggested work, it's worth a try. My guess is most of the time, you don't need to go on a ketogenic diet if you find the root cause or causes, which is the ones that I just listed. But if you need to try it, it can be a very effective treatment. And it's something you can take and use over a couple of months. I would give it a two or three months trial and just see what happens. But you might notice changes right away.
Starting point is 00:18:08 All right, Mark. Perfect. So that was keto and migraines. Let's go into the next question. This one is from Rebecca. Hi, Dr. Hyman. I'd like to see an episode where you told us, what do you think of the anti-inflammatory properties of mushrooms like lion's mane,
Starting point is 00:18:24 reishi. So Rebecca, this is a great question because now is the era of mushrooms. Everybody's into mushrooms. Magic mushrooms, psilocybin treatments, lion's mane, cordyceps, shiitake mushrooms, maitake mushrooms. I use them all. And I think they have very different kinds of properties that are multidimensional. In medicine- Especially with psilocybin, multidimensional. Yeah, exactly. You know, microdosing, Paul Stamets are using microdosing for, for example, for treating dementia. They're talking about it for migraines
Starting point is 00:19:05 and cluster headaches. So there's a lot of anecdotal and early studies showing that low-dose psilocybin, actually microdosing, can have an impact on headaches too. So it changes the neural pathways, neural inflammation. So there's a lot to be said
Starting point is 00:19:19 for the use of mushrooms. They've been used throughout history in cultures like China, which they're highly prized as therapeutic medicines and are in a lot of the medical products. So they're really important. And I think they're now accessible as products that you can get as powders or you can buy now Lion's Mane. I buy Lion's Mane when I go to the grocery store and make it for dinner. And you can start to incorporate these mushrooms in your diet or as supplements to help improve your overall health. And what do they do? Well, they contain a group of compounds called polysaccharides, which are
Starting point is 00:19:52 these multifunctional sugar compounds that actually regulate immunity. They can be anti-cancer. They can help boost your own immune system to fight infection. They have different properties. For example, lion's mane can be healing to your brain. Cordyceps is great for adrenal stress. You know, shiitake, there's all kinds of other mushrooms that have benefits. Reishi is really good for adrenal adaptogen and it's helping with also chronic stress. So these mushrooms are really a wonderful thing to actually include in your diet. Personally, I use them every day. I have a cocktail of adaptogenic mushrooms that I stick in my smoothie every morning. So, I call it, there's someone called Stamets 7, which is a combination of ones, but I'll
Starting point is 00:20:36 add lion's mane and cordyceps and reishi and shaga into my shake every morning to just keep my system optimized. Now, whether it's true or not, I mean, it does have anti-cancer effects. I just got my cancer test back, which is called Gallery, or the Gallery test by Grail, the Grail test by Gallery, I think it's called, which looks for a liquid biopsy of 50 different cancers, and I don't have any. Thank God. So that's good.
Starting point is 00:21:09 But, you know, who knows if it's the mushrooms or just I'm lucky. But no cancer. Thank you. That's great. You're stuck with me for a little while longer, Drew. I've stuck with you forever, Mark. Another 100 years, maybe. Let's go.
Starting point is 00:21:20 Let's go. All right, Mark. The next question is from Grace from the HiHo app. Hi, Dr. Mark. My name is Grace. My husband and I are big fans of yours. Your books are amazing. It's changed our lives. Your podcasts are awesome. My big question is on pea protein and just what does it do to your body? Is it a starchy vegetable? Grace, thank you. That was a great question because it's a much bigger question than just about pea protein, which is, should we be eating pulverized, processed plant proteins as a health food? And I do have some concerns about this and I'll just kind of give you a high level.
Starting point is 00:21:59 The most common protein that's used, and I'm not going to, I'm going to talk about pea protein in a minute. The most common protein that's used is soy protein. It's isolated, hydrolyzed soy protein. And if you understand what this is and what it's made from and how it's made, you understand that it's a by-product, a waste product of making soybean oil. So when they get soybeans, they take the oil out, which is the high-priced commodity that's used from this. And we consume about 10% of our calories as soybean oil. It's an all-added processed food. And it used to be hydrogenated.
Starting point is 00:22:38 Now it's just in there. And it's highly oxidized and not great for you anyway. That's the oil. But they remove the protein part and the way they do it is through a process that creates a lot of structural damage. So proteins are functional molecules that are working through the shape of the molecule. So the protein has to have a certain shape to bind the receptor to do its job. If you screw up that protein shape by a chemical reaction process, this hydrolyzation process and heat that they use to make the protein,
Starting point is 00:23:14 that actually is a different entity than eating a whole soybean. So if you look at data on people who eat soy, like tofu and tempeh and traditional soy foods, they're fine. They don't cause problems. They don't cause cancer. In animal studies and lab studies, they give the mice the hydrolyzed soybean protein versus eating whole soy. The whole soy animals are great. They're protected against cancer. The animals that eat the processed soy protein, they all get cancer. So same product in a sense, but one's a whole food and one's some extract, which has been changed chemically. It's really important. Now with pea protein, I think it's a little bit better.
Starting point is 00:23:56 Clearly you want to have organic pea protein. You want to hopefully have a regeneratively raised protein. You want it not sprayed full of glyphosate and chemicals. You don't want fertilizer and herbicides and pesticides. That's not good. And then you want to make sure, you know, if you're eating it, it's made from whole soy and it's processed minimally. I mean, from whole pea protein, it's processed minimally.
Starting point is 00:24:18 So it can be okay. But again, you know, the general problem with vegan proteins is that you need them. In other words, you cannot get the volume of protein you need as a vegan unless you supplement with processed protein powders. And so if you see all these guys in these movies like Game Chains, they're all jacked up and super strong. You talk to them, how do they get like that? They have to pound huge amounts of highly processed concentrated proteins, powders in order to get the enough amino acids to build muscle.
Starting point is 00:24:56 Or they have to take extra amino acids such as branched chain amino acids to jack up the leucine levels, which is very, very low in pea protein and other proteins. And leucine is the amino acid you need to generate muscle synthesis. So it's the rate limiting step. You can have all the protein you need. You could have 4,000 pounds of pea protein, but unless there's enough leucine in it, it won't get turned to muscle, which is important because protein can get turned to sugar in your body and just be a calorie that makes you gain weight, or it can be turned into muscle if you have the right amount of leucine. So I really worry about a lot of these plant proteins that are low in the right amino acids unless they're supplemented. So we created something called the Pegan powder. What was it?
Starting point is 00:25:37 Pegan shake. And in the Pegan shake, we added leucine to up with pumpkin seed protein and bovine collagen that was grass-fed, regenerative, and also with pea protein that was organic. So we jacked up the leucine in order to make sure that when you take the protein, it's not just burning calories, that it's actually building muscle. All right, Mark, great answer on the pea protein. Hey, everyone. It's Dr. Mark. Now, something I get more and more excited about every year is personalized medicine. Now when I began practicing functional medicine over 20 years ago, it was clear to me we have to look at how unique each body is. Now with technology advancing in amazing ways, we can truly take that concept to the next level. Like one of the tools that I recently discovered that can help us all do this from home is InsideTracker. Founded
Starting point is 00:26:25 in 2009 by top scientists in aging, genetics, and biometric data from MIT, Tufts, and Harvard, InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. It's purpose-built to help you live a longer, more productive life. Their cutting-edge technology analyzes your blood, DNA, your lifestyle, to give you highly personalized recommendations. Then using the app, you can track your progress every day. Inside Tracker tells you what to do and why. So your health goals are clear and actionable and most importantly, based on exactly what your body needs. And now you can connect Inside Tracker with your Apple Watch to unlock deeper, more precise insights into your health. With real-time exercise, resting heart rate, and sleep data synced with your InsideTracker plan, you can truly wear your health on your
Starting point is 00:27:10 sleeve. My team took InsideTracker for a spin and really loved it. They discovered some important things about their health that led them to stop procrastinating when it comes to certain parts of their health, like, for example, finally taking a vitamin D supplement after seeing they were deficient, or eating more iron-rich foods due to low ferritin and hemoglobin, and making an effort to embrace stress reduction techniques after seeing high cortisol levels. Now, health is not black and white. Your wellness plan shouldn't be either.
Starting point is 00:27:41 If you're curious about getting your own health program dialed in to your unique needs, I highly recommend checking out InsideTracker. Right now, they're offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com forward slash Dr. Hyman. That's I-N-S-I-D-E-T-R-A-C-K-E-R dot com slash Dr. Hyman. That's me, Dr. Hyman. And you'll see the discount quote in your cart. Now, let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Let's go to Emma now, who has a question about acupuncture. Hi, Dr. Hyman. I'm wondering if you could speak to the role that acupuncture might play in people's healing journey. I'm an acupuncturist and training to be a functional medicine practitioner
Starting point is 00:28:16 and I'm really interested in the overlap and how they might complement each other. If you could speak to any experience you've seen with this, that would be great. Thanks so much. I actually love this question because I studied Chinese and Asian studies and theoretical foundations of Chinese medicine in college, the Huang Yi Ne Jing, the Yellow Emperor's classic of internal medicine. I've actually lived in China. I've had acupuncture. My sister was in acupuncture. So I have a lot of familiarity with this. You still speak a little Chinese. I still speak a little Chinese.
Starting point is 00:28:47 Come on, show us a little something. That's okay. Zhenzhou, that's how you say acupuncture in Chinese. It means gold needles. And so I actually wrote an article called Systems of Correspondence about the similarities between functional medicine and traditional Chinese medicine, which are based on the idea of a body as a system, not a bunch of different organs. And this whole concept of orbiscanography in Chinese medicine, which essentially means they talk about your spleen and your liver and your kidney. They're not actually talking about the physical organs.
Starting point is 00:29:22 They're talking about the energetic spheres of function of these different systems. And then talk about their interpenetration and how they're dynamically connected and interacting, which is very similar to functional medicine. We have these basic biological systems and they're all interacting all the time, creating health disease. And it's about balance. So if they're out of balance, we get sick. If they're imbalanced, we're healthy. If our gut's out of balance, we get sick. If our immune system's out of balance, we get sick and so on. So basically it's very similar in its framework. The language is different. The words are different, but the frameworks are very similar. It's really about understanding the balance that needs to be created to promote health. And they're both systems of health creation. So I'm super excited that you're
Starting point is 00:30:00 doing this and laying over functional medicine. I think it's really great. My friend Chris Kresser is an acupuncturist, also functional medicine doc. So he'd be an interesting one to talk to about it. And it's a really powerful model for how to really help people. So I encourage you to follow that track. They're both systems that have a lot in common. What do you think each one of those systems could learn from each other? What could functional medicine learn more from acupuncture in its traditional sense? And what could acupuncture and a lot of acupuncturists who don't have any training in functional medicine learn from functional medicine? Yeah. And I think functional acupuncture, it's going to learn a lot from functional medicine around diet and supplements and how to optimize systems to support as an
Starting point is 00:30:35 adjunctive therapy, the acupuncture and the work they're doing underneath it. And from functional medicine, I think that there's a lot to be learned from traditional Chinese medicine about how to optimize health and how to deal with energy systems and how to move energy in the body through acupuncture and cupping, gua sha, and a lot of the modalities that really are adjunctive to what we're doing. So I always recommend acupuncture. If someone's got certain conditions that identify with functional medicine, like certain hormonal disorders, adrenal disorders, I often
Starting point is 00:31:05 will recommend acupuncture if they have structural issues or pain to actually help them recover from those problems. Okay, beautiful. All right, Mark, next question is from Angie. Hey, Dr. Hyman. I feel like my passion for healthy living and healthy eating keeps me from having that community that you and Dan Bittner talk about in your podcast. And I just wondered how you deal with that on your wellness journey.
Starting point is 00:31:34 So Angie, this is a big problem. You know, sometimes you need new friends. You know, it's much easier to do the right thing when all your friends are doing the same thing. If all your friends are eating cheeseburgers and fries and drinking beer and watching TV and you want to drink green juices and go to yoga class and meditate, you're going to have a problem. So sometimes we need to cultivate new communities, new friendships, and go to places where there are people who have similar values. Hang out at Whole Foods. Go to yoga class. Join a club of people who exercise or a cooking club. Just get connected with other people who care about the same things and share the same values. We know from Chris Dox's work at Harvard, and he wrote a book called Connected, that you're more likely to be overweight
Starting point is 00:32:16 if your friends are overweight than your family's overweight. In other words, if your friends are overweight, you're 171% more likely to be overweight than if your siblings are overweight, which only gives you a 40% increase. And get this, if your friend's friend is overweight, you're 171% more likely to be overweight than if your sibling is overweight, which only gives you a 40% increase. And get this, if your friend's friend is overweight and you never even met them through the power of the social connections, you're 20% more likely to be overweight. Crazy. Yeah. So, it's really important to build a community around you that supports and encourage you with the right behaviors. And then I feel like I've created the best life because I work with a lot of people and
Starting point is 00:32:49 I've inspired a lot of people. And so I go to their homes and they all are eating food that I would like to make. And so I don't have to like worry that I'm going to have to eat junky food or they're going to serve me bad food because they already had them brainwashed and converted. So it's the best. Yeah. I think the other thing about it for Angie is that also when you start to shift in your life and you have new goals and you're trying to make yourself a better person and step into maybe even, it's not even diet related. It could be less complaining. It could be being a more kind person, giving back to the world a little bit more. One of the challenges is the people that are closest to you, they're afraid they're going
Starting point is 00:33:24 to lose you because you used to bond over a lot of the old behaviors. So if that was drinking, well, that was a bonding exercise. If that was complaining and watching reality TV, no shade on reality TV. Sometimes there's some interesting shows that are out there. Now you're not watching that anymore because you're into more positive stuff. There's a feeling and a sense that that person is going to lose you. So have some compassion for your friends, right? Still do you. At the end of the day, you have to do the right thing behind you, but have some compassion because sometimes people will poo-poo your new lifestyle because they're afraid that they're going to lose you
Starting point is 00:33:58 and that you're not going to have anything to bond over. And if you slowly, without judgment, start to introduce them to some of the things and activities that you're doing in a fun way, there could be a way to bring them along for the journey and not have to leave them behind and only have a whole group of new friends. All right, Mark, let's go to the next one. This question is from Coach JP. Why do family doctors, general practitioners, and specialists not prescribe more cell nutrition programs as part of their treatment plans and overall healthcare? And why do they still rely on outdated measures like BMI? So your question, it makes me smile because it's why do doctors not recommend nutrition as part of their treatment plans? And why do they rely on outdated metrics for health like body mass index or BMI? They are kind of unrelated, but similar questions.
Starting point is 00:34:46 The reason the doctors don't recommend nutrition as part of their treatment plan is very, very simple. We don't get taught anything about it. In fact, we get taught the opposite, that food has nothing to do with health. If you eat too much and exercise not enough, you're going to get fat, but otherwise there's not much to it. And if you eat too much and exercise not enough you're going to get fat but otherwise there's not much to it and if you eat too much saturated fat you might get you know high cholesterol and that's it but basically we're nutritionally illiterate as physicians doctors have no curriculum in medical school for the most part i think less than 25 percent of medical schools have the minimum required hours and And of those hours, most of those hours are about outdated science that has to do with, uh, nutritional deficiency diseases or malnutrition like
Starting point is 00:35:31 question or core merasmus, rickets, or ophthalmia, you know, pellagra, berry, berry. I learned all this stuff in medical school, which I've never seen in my entire life. You know, it's like, I mean, I, uh, I actually saw a little bit of it when I was in Haiti, actually, with the malnutrition. So I did see a little bit of that, but it's such a rare thing. And yet doctors don't get taught about how food plays a role in chronic disease to cause it, or conversely, how food is the most powerful tool we have to cure chronic disease. So doctors know nothing about it. And that's the problem. And we have a system that doesn't train doctors. And then the problem with the training is, since it's not in the curriculum, it's not on the test. And if it's
Starting point is 00:36:14 not on the test, it's not on the curriculum. So the best way to change nutrition education overnight would be for the government to require 10% of the questions on medical licensing exams to be about nutrition around chronic disease. That would change everything. And the other part is that doctors aren't paid to give nutrition advice. No reimbursement. No reimbursement. Or very little. I mean, there was a program started in New York City about education for diabetes. They had 800,000 diabetics and they create a program where they gave them free nutrition consults and did all this support. And it was extremely successful. Diabetes was going down, complications, surgeries,
Starting point is 00:36:56 admissions to the hospital, medication use was saving huge amounts of money to the healthcare system. But the hospital had to shut it down because they were losing money because they weren't doing amputations and all kinds of stuff. So they'd make like a hundred bucks on a nutrition consult, but they'd make 6,000 if they had to take off somebody's toe. So the whole economic incentives were so corrupt that it led to the closing of this program that was actually very successful. We know that in the Geisinger study we've talked about in this podcast that in the Geisinger health system, they gave food insecure diabetics
Starting point is 00:37:31 $2,400 worth of food a year and some social support and they saved 80% healthcare costs from basically 248,000 a person a year. You said 248,000. I did say 248,000. That's how much they saved. That's how much they spent. Oh, they spent on each person. On each person. And they saved 192,000 per patient. Wow. And so that's an 80% reduction in costs. And yet, even though they would save $192,000,
Starting point is 00:38:00 they wouldn't spend $2,400 because the drugs and the hospitalizations are covered. The food is not covered. The education is not covered. So we have a very corrupt system with perverse financial incentives. As far as the BMI issue, BMI means body mass index, and it's basically a way to equalize height and weight. So basically, if you have a high BMI, it means you're overweight. But it doesn't really accurately describe if you're over fat or under lean.
Starting point is 00:38:33 So you could be a 65-year-old woman who's 30% or 40% body fat, but they look skinny. They're what we call skinny fat because they've lost muscle and accumulated fat, and their metabolic health is the same as someone who's obese. On the other hand, you can have someone like Shaquille O'Neal who has extremely high body mass index that would be considered obese, but he's got huge amounts of muscle mass, right? And he's a big dude. So he's got the extra weight, but it's not fat. And so we need to look at body composition and waist to hip ratio as a much better predictor of your cardiovascular and metabolic risks, which is basically a super cheap test. You just take a tape measure and you put around your belly button and you put around the widest part of
Starting point is 00:39:20 your hips and you just divide your waist and under your hips. And if your number is less than 0.8 as a woman or less than 0.9 as a man, you're okay. If it's more than that, you're in trouble. And then if you want to do body composition, there are scales you can get and there's cheaper versions. There's also a true DEXA body composition, which looks at the distribution of fat. That's my favorite because you can tell where it is and people have skinny arms and legs. So if you do a caliper test, it might be fine. But then you do their DEXA scan, you see huge amounts of visceral fat or belly fat, which is the organ fat that's so dangerous it kills us all. Awesome.
Starting point is 00:39:55 All right, Mark. Next question from Patty on the HiHo app. Good morning, Dr. Hyman. I'm curious as to what your thoughts are about Armour Thyroid and do you ever use it to treat any of your patients? Yeah. Hi, Patty. Well, Armour Thyroid, let's talk about thyroid. If you're interested in my thoughts about thyroid, I wrote years ago, which I think is still very up to date, a little ebook called The Ultra Thyroid Report. And I talk about how to pick thyroid hormones and so forth. But when your thyroid is off, you need to find out why, right? So not everybody who has
Starting point is 00:40:32 an off thyroid needs to take thyroid medication. It could be reading gluten. It could be heavy metals. It could be other toxins. It could be nutritional deficiencies like vitamin D, selenium, zinc, really important nutrients that the body needs to iodine to run thyroid function. So you got to make sure all that's right. But if you do need thyroid hormones, it's important to look at the right tests and do the right treatment. Most doctors will only look at the test called TSH.
Starting point is 00:40:59 If that's normal, they don't look any further. However, that can be normal and you can still be low functioning in your thyroid. And the normal range is not the optimal range. So the normal range is 0.5 to 5. But the American College of Endocrinology said, well, if it's over three, it's a problem. And the higher the TSH, it means the lower your thyroid function. Because the TSH is from your brain, basically your pituitary, telling your thyroid to make more thyroid. So if it's high, it means your body thinks you need more thyroid. But that, again, isn't enough. You need to check the thyroid hormone levels, T4 and T3, and the free levels, which most
Starting point is 00:41:37 doctors don't do. And you need to check the thyroid antibodies to see if you have an autoimmune condition. So all that needs to get done up front. And then you need to make sure your vitamin D level's okay, selenium's okay, iodine's okay, zinc's okay, right? Take your amount of fish oil, make sure you're not taking things that scrub thyroid, toxins, environmental toxins, gluten, pesticides,
Starting point is 00:41:57 all that stuff is in my ultra thyroid report. Then if you're deciding on thyroid replacement, most commonly doctors will give Synthroid or T4 or Levoxel. These are helpful, but they're limited in their effect because most people have trouble converting T4 to T3. And so you're giving a preformed hormone, I mean a precursor hormone that isn't the active hormone. So if you're taking Synthroid or you're taking Levoxyl or Levothyroxine, which are all the same, that's T4. That has to get converted
Starting point is 00:42:32 by an enzyme called 5-prime-diadenase, which takes off an iodine molecule. That's why it's T3. And then that has to work on the cells to create the effects of thyroid. That works on the nucleus of your cells and your metabolism and everything else. If you don't have enough selenium, for example, or you have something that interferes with the conversion, or you don't have enough zinc, or you don't have omega-3s, or you have environmental toxins, or you have yeast, that will all interfere with that conversion. And so you think you're taking a good amount of thyroid and you might still be symptomatic. And then if you don't check your free T3, you don't know what's happening. So your T4 could look okay, your TSH could look okay,
Starting point is 00:43:12 but if your free T3 is low, that's a problem. So armor thyroid is basically bovine, I'm sorry, is porcine thyroid. Now, historically, when we started to make hormones, we would grind up the gland and then we'd give it to people. So we'd grind up adrenal glands as steroids. We'd grind up the thyroid gland and give it as a thyroid replacement. And that's essentially what armor thyroid is. It's ground up pig thyroid, which is exactly the same as our thyroid. And the beautiful thing about it is it contains T4 and T3 and T2 and a whole complex of other things that seems to work better for most people. So I do recommend it for most people. Some people say, oh, you can take Synthroid plus Cytomel, which is T3.
Starting point is 00:43:55 Yes, but the Cytomel is very quick-acting and cause a lot of side effects. Not that great in older people because it gets too stimulating and cause more bone loss. So I like Armorthyroid or Naturethyroid or what we call the desiccated porcine thyroids. And those are much better. And I think for most people, they do better on them and their symptoms get better. And often doctors will say, well, your tests are fine. You're okay.
Starting point is 00:44:16 Your levels are good. So you must be fine. And you say, well, I still have blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. They go, oh, it's fine. It must be something else. No, it means you're not adequately treated. So it's important to get adequately treated and be on the right thyroid. That was a great answer, Mark. Very thorough on the thyroid. All right. A couple more questions
Starting point is 00:44:31 here to wrap up today's episode. This one is from Lisa, who is a fan and a follower of your work and has had some tremendous success so far. Hi, Dr. Hyman. I read your book, Food, What the Heck Should I Eat? at the beginning of the pandemic, and since then I've lost 25 pounds, but I still need to lose those last five pounds for optimal health. Help. Well, Lisa, thank God you followed the program and you lost 25 pounds. Good for you. That's amazing. That's not easy. And often those last five to 10 pounds can be super stubborn. And I often say you can't exercise your way out of a bad diet, but if you're stuck, you need to shift your metabolism because what happens as you lose weight is you lose muscle and fat. And so the more weight you lose, you actually end up slowing your metabolism unless you build muscle at the same time and you increase your aerobic fitness.
Starting point is 00:45:27 And lastly, when you start to lose weight, your metabolism can get interfered with because in our fat tissue is stored a lot of environmental toxins and we're all toxic waste dumps. And those toxins interfere with our metabolism. They're called obesogens. And they screw up our biochemistry and make us hold on to weight. So a couple of things. One, take another look at your diet. If you're struggling, go back to a more extreme approach, which would I would say the 10D detox diet, which essentially is getting rid of grains, beans, sugar, alcohol, flour, starchy veggies, and just protein, veggies, nuts, seeds, a few berries. That's it.
Starting point is 00:46:06 That can often take you over to where you want to be. Second, start a strength training program because that will help. I like TB12 because you can do it at home. It's with bands. It's inexpensive. You can buy the app. It's super easy. Third is cardio. And that can be bursts of short intensity exercise. So do sprints for 20, 30 minutes. You do sprint for 30, 45 seconds a minute, slow down, walk for three seconds, three minutes, and then do the same thing until you're done for a half an hour. That will speed up your metabolism. That'll help you lose your extra weight. And if you watch out for those things that you're doing that may be on the edge, like you're kind of cheating a little bit and go back to like the
Starting point is 00:46:42 10-day detox diet, I think you'll drop the weight. That's great. I'll add in one more other thing is that often when you hear people talk about those last five to 10 pounds, they have a number in their head that they're trying to get to. And that number could be, this is what I used to weigh before. This is what I used to weigh in college and not saying anything arbitrary. If people want to lose weight, they want to lose weight. There could be a lot of different motivations and reasons behind it and do all those things, do all those recommendations. And sometimes step into the fact of like, you've made so much progress. You've done so well. And do not wait. And I'm not saying that I got this from her message or not, but I often see this. Do not wait for those
Starting point is 00:47:18 last five to 10 pounds before you say, now I'm going to enjoy life. Enjoy your life, live it, have fun, do all the things that you thought that you're going to do. Once you hit your ideal weight, just do them now and start to bring more joy and less stress into your life around whatever those pounds are. Then they get lost. Great. They don't get lost. You still are enjoying life and can still make progress. So it's both. It's not either or. It's the mindset piece with all the recommendations that are being brought in. For sure.
Starting point is 00:47:48 So Mark, our last question here is from Victoria and she's been struggling with chronic pain and is confused about where to go next. Hi, I'm 28 years old and I've been struggling with chronic pain for the past 10 years. I've done all the possible tests. I have no inflammatory markers in my body
Starting point is 00:48:04 and I've been diagnosed with chronic pain syndrome, which doesn't leave me with any solution. I would love your insights on chronic pain. Well, Victoria, chronic pain is a real thing and it's a huge burden on our society. It causes so much suffering, disability, and there really aren't great solutions. A lot of the drugs are addictive or they have side effects.
Starting point is 00:48:28 And unfortunately, our current medical approach is pretty backwards about it. However, it's important to think about a broader approach. And I'll just share a couple of thoughts with you. You know, a lot of pain has to do with our minds. So there's pain and there's suffering. Pain is a physical sensation. The suffering is the meaning we give to that sensation. So if you're in a cold plunge, you could be thinking, this is the best thing for me. It's rejuvenating my health and making me great. Or you could think, this is cold as F and I'm like going to die and want to get the heck out of here, right? So it's all about your approach and meaning that you give to the experience. That said, I've been in chronic pain. I've had chronic pain for
Starting point is 00:49:10 30 years. I get it. And I don't know where your pain is or what it is, but if it's a structural problem, if it's a structural back problem or neck problem, there are all kinds of modalities that can help. Obviously, things like chiropractic or osteopathic medicine, massage, acupuncture, and so forth, all are helpful. But there's a whole new field of regenerative medicine, which is really what saved me, plus exercise. And regenerative medicine uses different modalities to help deal with the source of the pain, whether it's using exosomes, placental matrix, ozone, peptides, all these things that are kind of outside the normal practice of medicine, they can be very, very helpful.
Starting point is 00:49:51 In fact, ozone is relatively inexpensive and can be great depending on where the pain is, if it's a knee or arthritis or something. On the other hand, you know, there's a colleague of mine named Ari Rocha who works at the VA in Little Rock, Arkansas. And the Veterans Administration, there's a lot of people who are soldiers, veterans who suffer from severe pain and chronic pain. And he's had remarkable success by changing the environment and the inputs to the patient. So the first thing they do is put people through a coaching program to really become more aware of how they can become more actualized humans, how they can essentially deal with becoming the center of their own lives
Starting point is 00:50:34 and have agency over themselves, which a lot of people don't feel in that situation. So it's really coaching and helping them understand what their choices are, their patterns, their behaviors, their habits, so they can start to shift those. The second is an immersion program of a lifestyle change program. So it's changing the foods they're eating to be anti-inflammatory. It's general exercise, meditation, mindfulness, yoga, very simple practices that are profound and effective. And what he found was that most of the people who go through this that have been chronic pain patients for years and years and years get better. So at the end of the program, they're pain-free or their life isn't impaired by the pain. That's huge when you think about it.
Starting point is 00:51:15 So it's both dealing with whatever structural physical things there are, as well as dealing with the mindset and the approach. And third is creating a different biological environment in which inflammation doesn't have a place to kind of flourish. So that's why, you know, the dietary part is so important, anti-inflammatory diet, the right nutrients can be really important, whether it's fish oil or magnesium or other things can be helpful with pain. And then of course, movement and meditation and mindfulness all work. And Jon Kabat-Zinn has done a lot of research on this, on the mindfulness-based stress reduction program. And that is a very well-researched program
Starting point is 00:51:53 that, again, shows dramatic reductions in pain just through simply meditating. So there's a lot of ways through. You don't have to suffer. And I think our current approach has been pretty backward, but using some of these modalities and approaches can make a big difference. All right, Mark, that was it for today's questions on the HiHo app.
Starting point is 00:52:11 And thank you everybody who submitted. I'm going to pass over to you to conclude us out. Thanks, Drew. I love these questions because it lets me look into the mind of people and what they're worried about, concerned about, thinking about. And it also makes me sad because people aren't getting answers to the questions they have about their health. And especially when we know in functional medicine, there's so many easy solutions to
Starting point is 00:52:33 typical problems that people are not connecting the dots on. So I'm really happy and glad we're doing this kind of a hi-ho Q&A with our community. It's great. So, and that's it for today's masterclass. If you're wanting to ask me a question, please submit the questions on a hi-ho and maybe I'm going to ask them. So be sure to submit your questions on a hi-ho and maybe I'll answer them in an upcoming masterclass. And if you love this episode, make sure you share with your friends and family,
Starting point is 00:53:00 subscribe to our every day podcast, and we'll see you next week on The Doctor's Pharmacy. Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope you're loving this podcast. It's one of my favorite things to do and introducing you all the experts that I know and I love and that I've learned so much from. And I want to tell you about something else I'm doing, which is called Mark's Picks. It's my weekly newsletter. And in it, I share my favorite stuff from foods to supplements, to gadgets, to tools to enhance your health. It's all the cool stuff that I use and that my team uses to optimize and enhance our health. And I'd love you to sign up for the weekly newsletter. I'll only send it to you once a week on Fridays, nothing else, I promise. And all you do is go to drhyman.com forward slash pics to sign
Starting point is 00:53:47 up. That's drhyman.com forward slash pics, P-I-C-K-S, and sign up for the newsletter 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. Hi, everyone. I hope you enjoyed this week's episode. Just a reminder that this podcast is for educational purposes only. This podcast is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey, seek out a qualified medical practitioner. If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and search
Starting point is 00:54:27 their Find a Practitioner database. It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained, who's a licensed healthcare practitioner, and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health.

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