The Dr. Hyman Show - Ask Mark Q&A #8: Vitamins, Acid Reflux, Intermittent Fasting, And More
Episode Date: February 9, 2021Ask Mark Q&A #8: Vitamins, Acid Reflux, Intermittent Fasting, And More | This episode is sponsored by Thrive Market In this Q&A series, Dr. Mark Hyman takes live questions from his community. For a ch...ance to speak with Dr. Hyman during a future Ask Mark Q&A, text your question to 413-225-8995 using the hashtag #askmark Topics covered in this episode include: Should you take vitamins, and if so, what kinds? Sugar substitutes Considerations for eating canned foods Treating acid reflux Omega-3’s and fish oil supplementation Helping a friend improve their health Intermittent fasting “Kids food” Treating osteoporosis Supporting gut health during and after antibiotic use This episode is brought to you by Thrive Market. Right now, you will receive an extra 25% off your first purchase and a free gift when you sign up for Thrive Market. Just head over to thrivemarket.com/hymanfb. Mentioned in this episode: Dr. Hyman Store Food: What the Heck Should I Eat? Getting To The Root Of And Getting Rid Of Heartburn And Reflux with Dr. Todd LePine 7 Steps to Reverse Acid Reflux 10 Day Reset Why Most Everything We Were Told About Dairy Is Wrong The Pegan Diet
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
For most, most conditions, you know, with a few exceptions,
for most conditions, for most people in America,
really using food as medicine, exercise as medicine,
you know, sleep as medicine and stress reduction as medicine
are the most powerful drugs by far.
Hey, everybody, it's Dr. Mark Hyman. How are you all doing? Welcome. We have this wonderful new
format we're using called a live Q&A, and we're doing this for my whole community. We're calling
it Ask Mark, and it's where I take questions from my text community and invite those people to come
join me live and ask their questions. Now, we have about 10 to 12 people today that's going to join
us to ask their question, and if you want to ask a question in the future, you can text me at 413-225-8995.
That's 413-225-8995. And use the hashtag Ask Mark. And my team might pick you in the future
to ask your question. Now, I can't give medical advice, right? But I can give big picture advice
about how I would think about
maybe various health challenges or questions.
And today's Ask Mark is sponsored by Thrive Market.
Now Thrive is one of my favorite all time places to go
where I do my shopping to get really high quality
organic ingredients at wholesale prices.
It's sort of like Costco meets Whole Foods meets
Amazon. It's pretty awesome, delivered right to your door, especially in this age of COVID. It's
a really great resource, and it's also important for you to eat healthy because that's how you
prevent really getting sick from COVID. You also get an extra 25% off your first purchase
and a free gift when you join Thrive Market today. So just go to ThriveMarket.com
forward slash Hyman FB. That's ThriveMarket.com forward slash Hyman FB. All right, let's jump in
with our first guest today. Our first guest is Wilmer. Welcome, Wilmer.
How you doing, Dr. Hyman? Thank you for having me.
Good. Of course. What's your question?
What vitamins do you recommend people take and in what dosage? Like a daily vitamin or multiple vitamins or something like that? Yeah. Great question. I get this all the time.
Should I take vitamins? Do they work? Are they just creating expensive urine?
And what should we know about vitamins? And I've written
a lot about this. I've studied about this for decades. And more importantly, I've seen tens
of thousands of patients and have done extensive nutritional testing on these patients. And I can
tell you, it's shocking to me the level of nutritional deficiencies that we see today in
America. We think we're the most overfed country, which we are,
but we're probably one of the most undernourished as well. We have a diet that's very high in
calories and very low in nutrients. In fact, 90 plus percent of Americans are deficient in one
or more nutrients at the minimum level to prevent deficiency. So like how much vitamin C do not get needs to get scurvy? Not very much, like maybe 30 milligrams and 10% of the population is
deficient at that level. How much vitamin D do you need to not get rickets? Well, it's not very much
30 units, but still a lot of people are deficient. And the truth is that, that we need a lot more
vitamin D. Half the population is, is deficient in magnesium. Zinc is a huge deficiency. Iron is a deficiency. Omega-3 fats, which is maybe 90 plus percent of
Americans are deficient in omega-3 fats, which come from fatty fish and wild food, which we don't
eat anymore. So there's widespread deficiencies. In fact, I just had a patient the other day,
she was a vegan and she was massively B12 deficient, massively vitamin D deficient,
protein deficient, omega-3 deficient. She was in bad shape and, and she felt massively B12 deficient, massively vitamin D deficient, protein deficient,
omega-3 deficient. She was in bad shape and she felt like crap. So I think it's really important to understand that we have the technology, one, to understand the prevalence of this and two,
to treat this. So people think, well, what do vitamins do, right? Anyway, so I'm just going to
kind of give you a little background and then I'll answer your question. Vitamins are essentially the grease that lubricates the wheels of your biology and
your metabolism. Essentially what it does is it goes in there and is acting as a helper for every
chemical reaction in your body. So every chemical reaction needs a helper. And that helpers are the
enzymes, and those enzymes need helper factors called cofactors
or coenzymes. Those are vitamins and minerals. And they literally control thousands of chemical
reactions in your body every second. There's 37 billion billion chemical reactions every second
in your body. And a lot of those require nutrients. Most of them require nutrients. And it's not like
a drug where it just does one thing. Like magnesium regulates over 200 different chemical reactions.
Zinc, same thing.
You know, vitamin D controls hundreds of reactions and enzymes and many other immune functions
as well as gene expression.
So really, really important to understand that these have an important role.
And they're not just going to create expensive urine.
Now, with that said, people want to eat a nutrient-dense whole foods diet.
But because of the fact that
we grow food in nutrient poor soils, we transport over long distances, we store it for a long time,
the varieties we pick are low in nutrients, because they all the nutrients and bread bred
out so we can have more starch and sugar in the in the in the plants or make them you know,
fit better in a box or store better, not bread, they're not bread for nutrient density or flavor.
And so we end up getting a diet,
even if we're trying to eat a whole foods diet, that may not be as optimal. So I really recommend
that everybody get a good multivitamin, vitamin D, fish oil, and probably for most, magnesium.
That should cover it for most people. And if you want to add a probiotic, that's awesome. But
those three things, if you add a vitamin D, fish oil, and a multivitamin, will cover 90 plus percent
of your needs. And I recommend good quality stuff. I don't think that we have really good regulations in this
country. So there's a lot of variety in terms of the standards that are used. And you could buy a
bottle of stuff at CVS or Costco, and it looks like it's fine. But if you take it to a lab and
analyze it, it actually may not have any of the listed ingredients at the doses that they have.
They might have not the right forms of the nutrients.
They might not be the most absorbable forms.
Like a lot of magnesium that's used is magnesium oxide, which is essentially very poorly absorbed as opposed to magnesium citrate or glycinate.
So the form of the nutrient plays a huge role.
And then, of course, there's all the fillers, additives, allergens, dyes.
I mean, you go get your centrum vitamin. It's got all kinds of weird color in it that you're going to take for 50 years
it's got tin in it for some reason uh you know titanium so there's a lot of weird stuff that
they put in in a lot of vitamins so you want to get really high quality stuff because it's
like food you want the best stuff for your body and so there are professional brands that i use
and there's a lot of great brands out there you have to do your homework but they should really
have no additives and fillers. They should be in the
bioavailable forms and nutrients. They should be in the kinds of the, we know that the forms that
we can actually use in our bodies as opposed to something like magnesium oxide. And you should
make sure that they have no contaminants. They're tested by third parties and they're free of all
the allergens and additives and weird crap.
So I think I think it's a bit of homework to figure it out.
You know, I've curated on my website a lot of the best brands and products that I think are are worth looking at and trying.
And often they're professional brands. So there's this little higher quality.
There may be a little more expensive, but, you know, often you can get those basic supplements for a very low, low amount of money.
Perfect. Thank you. Sure. and you can get those basic supplements for a very low low amount of money perfect thank you sure
yo maggie hi how are you hi how you doing good how's it going good good i lost power it's a
little wonky here in philadelphia but we're on. So should I jump in with my question? Yeah. What's your
question? My question is, what's your opinion? How do you feel about the organic sugar substitutes
like Truvia and Stevia? Well, what you're talking about are more natural, not necessarily organic,
right? Because organic, yeah. And I think there's a whole class
of these out there. There's stevia, there's monk fruit, and there's other kinds of sweeteners out
there, sugar, alcohols. They're all quite complicated. And I've written a lot about
them in the books like Food, What the Heck Should I Eat and other books. But the key here is to
understand that if you're going to use
some of these sweeteners, there's usually a reason why, right? Well, the reason for most people is
they're addicted to sugar. The reason most people say, well, I can't have sugar, but can I have
this? Can I have that? What about honey? What about this? What about that? What about, you know,
erythritol? What about stevia? What about, you know, this and that? And I, and, and the first
thing I say to people is it's really important to unhook your biology from the imbalance in hormones that drives cravings because that's
going to make you overeat it's going to make you want more sugar so even if you have something
that's a fake sweetener it's going to trigger a hormonal response in your body it's like pavlov's
dog ring the bell and the drug starts salivating, but there's no food,
right? You just think of the, you think of the bagel and you can start to produce insulin and you can start to actually drive all the systems in your body to gain weight. Same thing, you know,
these sweeteners are often a thousand times sweeter than regular sugar. And so I, I tend to
really avoid most of them. Sometimes I'll use things like monk fruit, which is a very safe and
non-nutritive plant-based sweetener that's good. Most of the things you're talking about, like
Truvia, Stevia, Truvia and Purvia are made by Coke and Pepsi and Cargill, which are huge companies
that have extracted a lot of the natural alkaloids from the plant. And, you know, usually when you eat a whole plant, it's a complex thing
that has a lot of multiple benefits. And we start to sort of take out little ingredients and sort of
make it a science project. We don't really know what happens. And I think we do need more research
on things like stevia to understand what its impact is on biology, metabolism. And it may not
be as bad as regular sugar, but it's definitely not a free food.
You know, I think,
and it's just going to perpetuate the cravings and the hunger of all of them
out there.
I think monk fruit and stevia are probably the best.
I would probably use whole plant stevia.
It's a little bit more bitter.
What they've taken out is the bitterness from the pure via and the,
and the trivia, which are made by Coke and Pepsi and cargo.
So I would, I would say, you know,
be sort of judicious in what you're using.
And if you really want something and you're only having a little bit and you put a half a teaspoon of sugar in your coffee,
that's not going to be a problem.
Like, you know, I'd rather people eat that
than actually weird artificial sweeteners.
Because when you look at the data on artificial sweeteners,
they literally have been shown to increase the risk of diabetes, obesity.
They screw up your microbiome.
You know, so it's a lot.
You start playing with, you know.
You know, the other ones would be better than, like, you know, the nutrients we eat.
Yes, for sure.
For sure it's better.
For sure it's better.
But it's a continuum, right?
So you want to just stick with whole foods as much as you can.
Okay.
Thank you.
I think we have Ashley coming up.
Hi.
Oh, this is not Ashley, but okay.
How do you say your name?
Shresti.
Shresti, nice to meet you.
Where are you?
I am in Seattle, Washington. How are you say your name? Shresti. Shresti, nice to meet you. Where are you? I am in Seattle, Washington.
And how are you, doctor?
I'm good.
I'm fine.
And the first thing I would like to say is thank you so much for raising awareness.
You are an inspiration, and your books have changed my life.
Thank you so much for that.
Oh, thank you.
My question is that a lot of healthy recipes call for canned ingredients
like canned coconut milk, artichokes, beans, and sardines. So are all these safe for consumption?
Yeah. So, I mean, we've been canning as a, you know, human beings for a long time, right? As a
way of preserving food is used often in glass jars or other forms of canning um you know
the cans that that are have been used historically were tin cans they were lined with uh a special
plastic lining that had bpa in it uh and there and there's been a move toward removing a lot of these
uh plastics that can have adverse metabolic and hormonal effects and other toxic effects on the
body from the cans. So you can be
a little bit smarter about looking at which cans you're using and make sure that they have, you
know, BPA free on the label so that you know that it's not full of BPA. I think, you know, canned
sardines, canned mackerel, coconut milk, canned tomatoes, those are okay. I think if you're
getting whole foods, it's okay.
I would say, no, stay away from packaged or processed food. And those clearly are processed
at a certain level, but they're minimally processed. They still resemble their original
form, right? I mean, when you get a can of sardines, it looks like sardines. Coconut milk
looks like coconut milk. Tomatoes look like tomatoes, right? It's not like some weird science
project. So I think it's really important for people to stick with really whole foods and not eat a lot of weird stuff. But you have to be careful. A lot
of canned prepared foods, they're often very high in sodium. They're very high in sugar,
canned fruit and canned soups. And those you have to be really cautious about. But I would not worry
about, you know, using canned foods if they're BPA free in your diet. Okay. And there are
additional things added to the
canned foods as well sometimes. So should I also look out for that? Yeah. I mean, look,
it's the same principle. Like if you read the label, and we should be not just looking at the
nutrition facts, we should be looking at the ingredient list. And if you see an ingredient
on there that you don't recognize or that you wouldn't have in your cupboard, you probably
shouldn't eat it, right? If it says BHT in it, if it says BHT, that's a preservative,
butylated hydroxy toluene, it's banned in Europe. Why would you want to put that in your food? So
pretty much any, my rule is if you wouldn't have it in your cupboard and wouldn't put it in your
salad dressing or sprinkle on your vegetables or whatever, you probably shouldn't eat it.
Okay. Thank you, doctor.
Sure.
Hi, Dr. Mark. Oh, Ashley. Hi, how you doing?
Hi, I'm good. I just want to say it's such an honor to meet you. And I just graduated with
my degree in nutrition and you were a big inspiration for me in school. So I'm really
excited. Oh, thank you, what is the functional medicine approach
to acid reflux? Oh boy. Well, you know, that's a great question. I've written a lot about that.
In fact, I wrote a whole textbook chapter for medical textbook on how to treat acid reflux
years ago. There's many articles I've written that are on our drhyman.com website and the blogs. You
can just go reflux or heartburn and you'll find them. And then I have a number of podcasts that
we've done in the doctor's pharmacy that go through a really detailed approach. Because,
you know, I think if you want to really get a deep dive, you might want to go into some of
those resources. And the doctor's pharmacy podcasts are great because we'll go through cases. And
essentially what functional medicine focuses on is the cause. Now, when I was in medical school, you know, we used to call it
heartburn. And then they developed, you know, drugs like the acid blockers, the PPIs or
Protonix, Prevacid, Prevosec, and so forth, Nexium, Asifex. And these became among the most popular drugs ever. I think
they're the third largest selling drugs after lipid drugs like statins and antidepressants
or psychiatric drugs. And what they do is they shut down stomach acid, which relieves symptoms,
but then you get a whole series of secondary consequences. You get malabsorption of vitamin B12, of zinc, of magnesium.
You get osteoporosis.
You can get bacterial overgrowth in your gut.
You can get irritable bowel syndrome, pneumonia.
It's not great.
And so the question is, rather than just saying, oh, you have this reflux and heartburn, take this drug, what's the cause?
So functional medicine is always about figuring out the cause.
And for reflux, it could be a number of things.
One, it could be your diet. That's usually the biggest thing,
right? So the obvious things, and most gastroenterologists will tell you, avoid spicy
food, tomato foods, citrus foods, avoid fried foods, avoid eating late at night, avoid alcohol,
caffeine. That's awful. But that can help. The other ones that are not often thought about
are gluten and dairy. Those can be really significant for people with reflux. So I would
really try an elimination diet, like the 10-day reset. You can go to getpharmacy.com to learn
more about it. But essentially, it's a 10-day reset where you take out all the bad stuff,
you put in the good stuff. And I would say 9.8 times out of 10, it'll go away.
And then you can start to add stuff back and see what's going on. But there are other reasons. You
could have, for example, magnesium deficiency. Magnesium is required for the relaxation of the
sphincter to let the stomach relax and everything out instead of coming back up. So that's really
important. It could also be a bacteria called H. pylori, which is an infection that happens in your stomach that can tend to cause reflux, heartburn, and is really one of the main causes of ulcers.
It can also be other things that may be problems in your lower gut, like bacterial overgrowth or fungal overgrowth.
So we go through a very systematic approach of dietary change and of looking at your nutritional status, of looking at infections and so forth.
And we can get a pretty good idea of what's going on.
And then we help people by improving their diet.
And we also use a number of different supplements that can help, like licorice is great.
Not the kind of Twizzlers, but the kind of licorice powder called deglycerized licorice, which
actually helps to coat the stomach. Sometimes we use aloe or glutamine. It's used a lot, for
example, in Japan, which is an amino acid that can help calm the stomach down. So we use a lot
of natural substances like that. There may be other things we do as well. So it's a pretty
effective treatment. It's one of the most effective things we do in functional medicine is deal with
gut issues, including reflux and irritable bowel okay well
thank you i didn't realize there could be so many different causes wow yeah yeah yeah so i would
check out my articles in the podcast and you'll see uh this is really a short uh short description
but there's a lot of um approaches in functional medicine that really work for reflux.
Thank you so much.
Of course. I think we have Liana.
Hi.
Hi, how are you?
Good. How are you? It's really exciting to speak with you. I've learned so much from your podcast, especially during this pandemic. And one of the things that I was
looking more into is omega threes. So my questions related to that, I was looking into some
supplementation, both for myself and for my one and a half year old. And we eat omega three fatty
fish probably one or two times a week, but I felt that I probably did a bit more, especially in the future and the future pregnancy.
So I was just looking into it and got a bit overwhelmed with the type of fish oil, cod liver oil coming up a lot. But related to that, I came across a study published in 2018 by the University of Granada that linked fish oil long-term use to liver damage,
and it was done in rats. But I came across that, so I was a bit concerned. So I thought
I'd ask you about that. Well, that's a great question. First of all, we're not rats.
And second of all, I'd love to see that study because I wonder about the dosages of it
and how the form of a form of it and
so forth. And I think, you know, you have to be really careful when you look at those studies of
what they mean and put in the context of the overwhelming amount of data, right? So you do
one small rat study done somewhere in the Caribbean and, you know, in a third world medical
school, like, is that a reliable source of information? Probably not. And then when you look at all the other data about the importance of omega-3 fats for neurologic development, for, I mean, even babies.
You know, we found if babies breastfeed, their IQ points are seven points higher because the breast milk contains DHA,
which is an important omega-3 fat for the brain that you cannot get from plant food, although you can get it from algae.
And so it's really important that you have adequate levels. As a mother,
if you're breastfeeding or if you're planning to get pregnant, you want to fill up the tank beforehand. And you want to be careful with fish. You can have small fatty fish like salmon,
mackerel, anchovies, herring, sardines. Those are great sources of omega-3 fats. They're low
in toxins and low in mercury. But I do think that most people would benefit from
taking fish oil. And I think in the context of, you know, an overall healthy diet, I mean,
it's not going to protect you if you're eating crap and you're taking fish oil and so forth.
But I can't tell you how common omega-3 fat deficiency is, especially in people who don't
eat fish or in people who are vegans or vegetarians, they're often extremely low.
And it's really important for not only neurologic development, but for your heart health, for
your brain health, for your skin, for your immune system to regulate inflammation, for your nails,
your hair. I mean, it's really one of the most important components of our biology that we can
only get from food or supplements. And I think,
you know, there's a lot of good stuff out there. The supplements I'd be careful with, you want to
make sure you're identifying the company's practices of where they source it from,
what type of fishes are from, how do they process it? Do they distill it? Is it purified? Do they
test it after they manufacture to make sure there's no contaminants? Because fish are pretty
nasty right now, given the pollution unleashed on the world.
And it's important for us to be really cautious and careful about how we consume fish or fish oil.
Does it matter what kind of fish or other type of fish oil?
Yes. I mean, smaller fish is good.
You know, anchovies, sardines, herring, mackerel, those are good.
Sometimes there's salmon.
You know, there's a number of different companies that source from different places.
You just want to make sure that whatever they do,
they go through a process of
testing for impurities and
toxins. Okay. Thank you.
All right. I think we have Christy.
Hi.
Christy, how are you? I'm wonderful.
I just had my first
vaccine shot this morning. Oh, Christy. How are you? I'm wonderful. I just had my first vaccine shot this morning.
Oh, how do you feel?
For people over 65.
Yeah.
It's time to be part of the solution.
So my question to you, doctor, is for a senior citizen, in particular a woman over the age of 65,
how much potassium do you recommend we take per day?
Well, potassium is, you know, one of the key minerals in our biology.
It's sodium, potassium, chloride.
I mean, these are really important as part of our electrolytes and regulating our cell chemistry.
It's really critical.
Our diet typically has been historically very high in potassium and very low in sodium.
I mean, the word salt, uh, you know, has its roots in salary, right?
And you're not worth your weight in salt, right?
So it was a really rare commodity that was really precious. Um, back in the day before you could just go to the grocery store and buy it.
Our diet was mostly plant foods,
which are extremely high in potassium. So the best way to get adequate amounts of potassium is to eat
a lot of plant foods. And a hack that you can use is to make a vegetable broth to make soup.
So you can put a ton of veggies, especially like root veggies carrots potatoes and and you boil it all up greens boil it all up you
strain it and you drink that extremely high in potassium so magnesium too yeah
they also have magnesium and other minerals and so forth and if you do bone
broth you can add in the vegetables and you can get a sort of both the protein
and the and then and the potassium.
But I don't think that most people should be taking potassium on a regular basis unless you have some issue. If you're on blood pressure medication and you're losing potassium because of the medication,
or if you have kidney issues, there may be some cautions there around potassium.
So I think for most people, it's not a supplement I do recommend. For me personally,
if I'm working out a lot and I'm sweating a lot, I will take electrolytes as a sort of a supplement
through liquid electrolytes. You can take capsules. Those are important to replenish
your hydration, intracellular hydration, because you can drink a lot of water,
but the water will dilute your blood
if you drink too much of it but if you drink with electrolytes you're going to feel much better
you'll have more energy and you'll be much more able to function so just quickly of equal concern
is how much magnesium because i know i bought on your site your the magnesium that you had
recommended but i wasn't sure for older women if I should up the dose or
lower the dose.
Of magnesium?
Yes.
Yeah, magnesium, again, really an important mineral.
I mean, I call it the relaxation mineral.
Half of Americans are deficient in it.
The things that cause magnesium loss are sugar, caffeine, alcohol, stress, all of which are
staples in the American lifestyle.
Yeah, important.
And the sources of magnesium are greens and beans and nuts and seeds,
which, again, are really minimal parts of the American diet.
So we're kind of in a situation where, you know,
we're not eating the things that we need to be eating
to conserve and build magnesium in our systems,
and we're eating too many things or drinking the things
that are causing us to lose magnesium.
So I think most people would benefit from some level of magnesium and the symptoms of low magnesium are really
important to pay attention to for people. And they're so common that people don't even link
them to magnesium. It could be muscle cramps. It could be headaches, insomnia, palpitations,
anxiety, constipation, irritability, panic attacks. all that could be caused by low magnesium. And it's often
just missed by doctors. And it's sort of funny because we use magnesium all the time in medicine
when things are kind of really tight and spasmy and irritable, right? When people come in with
preterm labor or they have high blood pressure in pregnancy or when they have an abnormal heart
rhythm in the emergency room and they're about to die that's the last drug we give
them was the drug right of magnesium intravenously through a shot so i think i think we we are uh
definitely a society that needs a lot more magnesium that we're getting and we're all
drinking coffee and it's just we're so depleted in it and i think taking you know two to four
hundred milligrams a day of magnesium is good for most people.
Two to 400?
Okay.
Yeah.
200 to 400 or two to 400?
200 to 400.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah.
And sometimes more, 600, depends on the person.
You know, if you have a lot of magnesium deficiency symptoms, you might need more.
If you're really constipated, you need more.
And there's different forms.
For example, if you tend to be constipated magnesium citrate is the best form if you tend to have loose
bowels and diarrhea then magnesium glycinate may be better tolerated and
there's other forms of magnesium that have to do with brain and cognitive
function like magnesium threonate so it gets complicated but I do think that
just taking a bit of magnesium um uh you know from from most people is probably a good idea.
Okay.
All right, man.
Thank you.
Horace, I think next we have Jeffrey.
Hi, Dr. Hyman.
How are you doing?
So nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you, too.
I enjoyed the longevity map presentation.
That was great there.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
My team had a lot to do with that. Yeah, a great team and very inspiring there so anyway my question is i've
been helping out a friend and so how do you help people who are stuck in destructive habits
but they're afraid of learning about their health status and they're also fearful of the expenses that
are not covered by traditional medical coverage there.
My advice to you is people have to want to do it.
I think you see people you love, you see them struggling, you see them with challenges,
you see them with health issues, you know they can be helped by by doing this or that. And they don't do it. They
don't believe in it. They don't want to do it. They're nervous about it. And, you know, I think
there's only so much you can do, really. And I think the key is to live by example. You know,
if you focus on your health, and all of a sudden you look 10 years younger, and you've lost 20
pounds, and you're, you know, feeling great, then they're going, what are you doing? I want some of that.
That might be the best way in.
Because if you try to bang people over the head with it,
you really can't.
It reminds me about that joke of how many psychiatrists
need to change a light bulb.
One, but the light bulb has to want to change.
So diet and exercise, I would think would be the first steps. Listen, I would
say that for most, most conditions, you know, with a few exceptions, but most conditions for
most people in America, really using food as medicine, exercise as medicine, you know, sleep
as medicine and stress reduction as medicine are the most powerful
drugs by far. It's so powerful. It works so quickly. And it's so easy to do. I mean, just
using something like the 10-day reset, which we've created for people, which is an easy
10-day experience. So anybody can do anything for 10 days. Then you know, okay, well, you know,
I'm not spending a lot of money for tests or for seeing
the doctor or doing anything. I'm just changing my diet. I'm doing a few lifestyle changes,
and I'm doing it for 10 days, and I'm going to commit to it, and I'm going to see what happens.
It's shocking what happens. It's shocking. Like, I've had patients within three days get off their
insulin. I've had a history of, you know, decades-long migraines go away. All sorts of
problems get better. In fact,
we did a survey of people who did the D.I.E. program and 62% reduction in all symptoms from
all diseases. There's no drug on the planet that can do that. Whether you have rheumatoid arthritis
or migraine headaches or irritable bowel or you have whatever you have, it is the first place to
start. And I think most people don't understand the power of food as medicine and the way in which it can literally transform your health
very quickly. You know, it doesn't take a long time to see the benefits. Two or three days,
you'll start to see by day four or five. And by day 10, you're like a new person. And then you
can decide, oh, do I want to go back to eating what I was eating and feel like crap? Or do I
want to change my life? And then they can decide. Like, I don't judge people for whatever they want. If people want to, you know, have Twizzlers and
eat Skittles all day and have sheet cakes for dinner and drink a bottle of wine,
that's their choice. Like, you know, I can't judge them for that. But I do hope that people
understand that their quality of life is so impaired and their enjoyment of life is so impaired
and that there's an easy way to overcome that uh which which everybody has access to and it's really your fork so well it sounds like maybe
i should partner with them for 10 days and kind of just do it with them that's you know yeah be uh
be you know like you say that's a great idea sample that's a great idea. Rick Warren, who I used to work with, said everybody needs a buddy,
you know, and I always say getting healthy is a team sport, right? So I think that's really
the best advice is that we do better together and that by helping people through example and
by doing it with them, it makes it a lot easier. Sounds good. Thanks for your advice.
Sure. And I think we have Veronica next.
Hi, Dr. Roman. How are you? Nice meeting you. Nice to meet you too. How are you doing?
Good. Great. I'm in Miami, Florida. So I'm enjoying the weather. And I wanted to thank
you because you've been very inspiring. And this year I'm planning to open my healthy cafe here in Miami.
So I'm working towards that.
I'm learning about nutrition.
We're working very hard to be able to open this year.
Fantastic.
And I wanted to know if it's something that I can do,
that I need to do every day,
or if it's something that I can do maybe three, four times a week,
if I have to do it every week,
or if I can be more relaxed in some weeks,
and then try, you know, start again the following week? How does that work?
Yeah, I mean, intermittent fasting, first of all, for those who are listening, I'm not sure what
that is. It means many things. And there's a lot of terms thrown around. I think what you're
talking about is what we call time-restricted eating, which is eating in a short time window,
let's say eight hours in the day or
10 hours. So you basically eat from like noon to eight o'clock or you eat from like 10 to 6 p.m.
And that's called time-restricted eating. And then there's true intermittent fasting,
which is where you literally might fast for 24 hours or 36 hour, 48 hour fast. You might do that
once a week. And there's other approaches as well. But those are the two
main things people think about. I think you're talking about time-restricted eating. And the
answer is, anytime you give your body a break, it does help to reset things. So it's fine to do it
three times a week. You don't have to do it every day. And depending on your metabolism, your biology,
you know, what your needs are. Like if you're very thin and underweight, for example,
if you're a woman, you probably don't want to do that. Or if you're a guy, you don't want to do
that. But if you're very overweight and you're trying to reset your metabolism, it might be
really helpful. So I think it doesn't have to be every single day. It doesn't have to be all the
time, but you can cycle in and out of it. And you can do it three days a week. You can fast 24 hours
a week if you want. There's a lot of options for people in terms of resetting them. But the reason this
works and the reason people are talking about it is that intermittent fasting or time-restricted
eating essentially reset your biology in a number of ways. One, they improve your metabolism
by fixing insulin resistance. So they help you burn fat and they
increase muscle building. They increase your mental acuity and cognitive function.
They reduce inflammation. They increase antioxidant systems. They increase your
stem cell production. They help you build bone density. So there's a lot of benefits
to giving your body a break from being constantly you know
constantly being fueled with food we we you know we used to call it breakfast
well that means breaking the fast right you don't eat I said for at least a
12-hour period I mean everybody should be giving themselves 12 hours between
dinner and breakfast it shouldn't be too hard if you dinner at 7 as eating
breakfast at 7 in the morning right it's It's not hard. But most people can eat all night. They have snacks.
They don't give themselves breaks. They eat during the day all day.
I mean, we've invented snacking in this country, which is insane.
It's just a big way to sell junk food.
I mean, there's no really need for snacks if you eat good meals every day.
So I think people really should dial back on the frequency of eating and the amount of eating throughout the day and
at night. So the best thing you could do is just to simplify for people is do a 12 hour overnight
fast. Don't eat anything three hours before bed. Don't snack and eat three good meals a day.
That will take care of like 80% of the problem. And if you want to get more aggressive, you can
certainly do a 10 hour fast or I mean a or, I mean, a 10 hour eating window
or an eight hour eating window, which means you fast for 14 to 16 hours a day. But it's not as
hard as you think. I mean, if you eat dinner at six o'clock at night, you can eat at eight o'clock
next morning. That's a 14 hour fast, right? It's, it's, people think it's all so difficult and so
forth, but it's really, you know, it's not that hard. And it has so many benefits for our health.
And I think we should get off the train of like, I need to eat all the time.
You know, that's just crazy.
And one question related to this, if you have cravings in between meals, it means that you have to rethink what your meal was, right?
That there's something missing there?
Right.
Okay.
Right. So here's a great study that was done by a friend of mine,
David Ludwig at Harvard, where he took overweight
young boys and he fed them three
different breakfasts, which had identical calories.
Remember, it's identical calories.
One was oatmeal, sort of instant oats.
The other was steel-cut oats. And the other was eggs,
an omelet. And then he
put him in a room and said,
whenever you're hungry, push this button.
And then he had them hooked up to BloodDraw and they were able to check their blood every hour or so.
What they found was fascinating.
The kids who ate the oatmeal in the morning, which is carbohydrate starch, which is what we eat in America for breakfast, cereal, oatmeal, muffins, bagels, French toast, pancakes.
I mean, this is the worst possible way to start your day.
And it's the beginning of the end of health for most people and especially obesity. And he found
these kids ate 81% more food that day. They were hungrier. Not only were they hungrier,
and they remember they were eating the same amount of calories, right? They were hungrier. Not only
that, but their blood sugar was higher. their insulin was higher, their stress hormones were higher. So literally when you eat oatmeal
and people eat oatmeal so healthy, if you still could, it was like 50% more food. It was still
not as bad as the oatmeal, but it was not that great. The, the carbohydrate load just causes
them to be hungry and it creates literally a stress response in the body. So just like if you
were scared by a tiger chasing you, you produce adrenaline and cortisol. The same thing happens
when you eat carbohydrate and sugar, which is kind of shocking. And then the stress slows your
metabolism down because you don't want to be, you don't want to be digesting your food or anything
when you're, when you're scared from a tiger. So it's creates a vicious cycle. So that alone
should make you avoid the starchy foods
in your diet and sugary foods. And if you eat protein and fat, you'll almost never be hungry.
I have a protein shake in the morning. I just had mine earlier. I'm in Hawaii, so it's early here.
And I put protein and fat in there, and I don't even want to eat till the afternoon.
And it's incredible how if you choose the right breakfast. Now, if I had,
you know, muffin or if I had pancakes or French toast or a bagel, I'd be hungry by 11 or 10 o'clock.
Okay. Makes sense. Thank you so much. Of course. Good luck with your cafe. I think next we have
Rebecca. Hi, Dr. Mark. It's so nice to chat with you.
Yeah.
Good.
How are you?
Great.
Well, I'm the mom of an 18-month-old child, and I just want to know what your favorite quick toddler snacks or foods are.
Well, you know, I always have a pet peeve about children's food in America because,
you know, what do kids in Japan eat? They eat raw
fish and seaweed, right? What do kids in Indonesia eat? They eat Indonesian food. There's no kids
menus. There's no Lunchables. There's no Go-Gurts. There's no, you know, Happy Meals, right? This is stuff that has been invented by our food industry to
sell product and is literally driving an obesity epidemic in children. 40% of kids
are overweight. One in four teenage boys has diabetes or pre-diabetes. I mean, this wasn't
even a thing when I was in medical school 30 years ago. There was no such thing as type two
or type one diabetes. It was juvenile and adult onset, but then the kids started getting diabetes at
three years old. We had to change it to, to type two. And, and so I, I'm, I'm not a big snack kind
of guy. I think kids should eat real food, whole food with their meals and whatever their parents
are eating and not have special kids food or kids menus or kids' menus or a special meal for the kids that eats macaroni and cheese and pizza and chicken nuggets.
That's just French fry.
You wouldn't feed this stuff to your dog.
Why do you feed it to your kid?
This is when they're growing, developing, and they're getting healthy.
With that said, I would say if you're looking for healthy snacks, I would focus on ones that have more
protein and fat or ones that are from Whole Foods. And I would use Thrive Market. Go to
thrivemarket.com. And there's an offer for, I think, a 25% off your order as part of this
Ask Dr. Mark. And they have all sorts of great products on there and great discounts that you can trust that are safe and that are made from whole food ingredients.
Now, there still is sugar and stuff, so you want to be careful about sugar in some of the products.
There's ones that are made from whole fruit.
But you can get really yummy stuff by going to ThriveMarket.com and picking out some of the more healthy snacks.
Like there's dried fruit and there's nuts and there's all kinds of things there.
So I would check that out.
I think we lost Rebecca, but we have Sue B. Oh no, there she is. She's back. I had a good, I don't know. Did you have any more questions
about the snacks? Did you hear what I said? I'll have to listen to it back later, but thank you.
I basically said, yeah, I basically said, go to thrive market.com and look at the healthy.
Yeah.
Thank you so much.
Sure.
All right.
Now we have Sue B.
Hi, thanks for taking my question today.
Yeah, sure.
How are you doing, Sue?
I'm doing well.
And you?
Good.
Great.
Great.
What's your question? I've asked it a number of times? I'm doing well. And you? Good. Great. Great. What's your question?
I've asked it a number of times. I'm real happy that it got picked today.
I'm wondering, aside from all of the lifestyle recommendations,
are there any safe and effective meds that you suggest to your clients,
your patients who have osteoporosis? Yes. Okay. So at a high level, it's important
to understand what the cause of osteoporosis is, right? So medications tend to be stopgap measures,
last resort. And I'll get to the medications in a minute. But we do know a lot about bone
metabolism. And we know there are things that cause you to lose bone and there's things that cause you to build bone.
And before you start taking drugs, you have to focus on those.
For people, it's essential.
First is understand the things that cause you to lose bone.
And you're not going to like this list, but I'm just going to give it to you.
I didn't make it up.
I didn't design the body.
I'm just the interpreter, so don't get mad at me. It's caffeine, alcohol, sugar, particularly sodas, particularly dark
sodas with phosphoric acid in them, like colas. It's stress. It's lack of activity. It's anything
that drives inflammation, because we're understanding that osteoporosis is also
partly an inflammatory problem. So you have all these, you have unfortunately all these
different things that are going on in your biology that you have control over. And then
the things that build bone are the right nutrients, right? And you need to have, make sure you have
adequate vitamin D, that's like one, two, and three. And most of us are low in vitamin D,
and you need at least a level in your blood of 45 to 60 or 70, at least to be adequately
replete with vitamin D. And you can't guess by just knowing what you're taking because most
people need it between two to four to 5,000 units to get that level. And then of course,
there's vitamin K2 and there's boron, silica, zinc, magnesium. There's a lot of nutrients that
are really important for bone health that you can take as supplements, but also in food. And I think people should be really focused on,
you know, people are focused on calcium. You notice I didn't mention calcium. There's not
a lot of great evidence that calcium is, in and of itself, that great for preventing fractures.
In fact, dairy doesn't actually prevent fractures. That's a whole nother topic. You can
kind of listen to my podcast on that with Dr. David Ludwig at the doctor's pharmacy,
where he kind of reviewed a lot of the research on this. Actually, the more milk you drink,
the higher your fracture risk is. It's not necessarily lower, despite all the propaganda
and the got milk ads, which were just propaganda. They weren't based on science. So I think it's
important to understand that you need to take the right nutrients and the right foods. I think
greens, nuts and seeds with lots of minerals. seeds are great tahini is great with calcium chia seeds
have more calcium per serving than a glass of milk dark green leafy vegetables a great source
tahini which is from sesame seeds a great source of calcium as well so you can include those in
your diet and then exercise is critical and strength training, weight training.
I personally have switched over to bands, to loop bands and handle bands.
And it's just incredible how much strength and muscle and bone strength you can build by doing this.
And I think most people don't really recognize how powerful that is.
And now the way I explain is if you eat right, you do all these things, it's like putting all the ingredients for the soup in the pot.
But unless you exercise, it's like not turning the flame on.
If you don't exercise, the soup doesn't cook, right?
And so we need to really focus on that, particularly as we get older.
Muscle mass goes down.
Bone mass goes down.
Risk of fracture goes up.
We have something called not only osteoporosis or osteopenia but we have sarcopenia which is
muscle loss and that creates a whole cascade of inflammation and poor metabolic health
so the best way to fix that is through the exercise and then uh and then if all those
still are a problem and your bone density is still going down by the way i've had people
increase their bone density by 10 by doing all the things i just said which is more than any
medication will do, right?
And then there's the next tier.
So then there's hormonal therapy,
whether it's estrogen or testosterone
can be very effective even in women
for building bone health.
And then there's various classes of drugs.
There's the biphosphonates,
like there's Fosamax and others.
So there's other drugs that we can use
that have been
used, but they often may not create the best quality bone. There's also injectables that are
used once a year. There's Tamoxifen, a version of that called, oh geez, I'm forgetting the name,
but it's, it's a estrogen receptor, selective estrogen receptor drug that actually helps to
build bone, but it may cause uterine
cancer. There are also, yeah, so there's also, there's a lot of downsides with these drugs.
So I mean, I think they can be used as a stopgap, but the quality bone may not be as good. They do
help. But again, all these other things work better and I would really focus on those.
So you do eventually, if a person does all the lifestyle things that you described and eats
well and sleeps enough and meditates and exercises and all of those things and has osteoporosis
still, you do eventually then recommend those biophosphonate drugs? Are they safe?
I think, yeah, for the most part,
they're pretty safe, but I don't think they're super effective. If you look at the data,
there's just marginal benefits and there's questions about side effects, quality of bone.
So yes, as a part of an overall regimen, I might add that if someone's got severe osteoporosis,
no doubt, but it's sort of the last step at the end of a long road okay all right all right we
have we have another another person coming up next Peggy hello Peggy how are you I'm fine what's up
thank you I just spent ten days on two antibiotics because I had a gum infection,
and I want to know how to get my gut microbiome back to be healthy.
Well, I think it's very important people realize we really are destroying our microbiome through
the overuse of antibiotics in this culture. There's about 240 million prescriptions written every year, about eight or nine
million pounds of antibiotics that are prescribed. And I think we really should
be careful about when we use them. And sometimes you do need them for sure. So
I'm not against antibiotics, but they should be used cautiously. With that said,
you really should be focused on making your gut healthy while you're taking
them by having probiotics during the time of antibiotics and even after. And I've created a whole protocol
for my patients, which is a gut rebuilding protocol. And we've actually turned into a
product which will be out soon called Gut Food, which you'll be able to find on getpharmacy.com.
That's G-E-T-F-A-R-M-A-C-Y.com. And essentially, it's a combination of three,
four main ingredients that I found over the years
have really been key to feeding your gut bacteria
and rebuilding your gut.
One is a classic compound.
It's called polyphenols.
And you can just include these in your diet.
Things like pomegranate, cranberry, green tea,
any kind of dark, colorful, pigmented plant foods are super helpful, but particularly
the pomegranate, green tea, and cranberry, which you can add to a smoothie. You can get pomegranate
powder, green tea powder, cranberry powder, and put that in your smoothies. The next is prebiotics,
and prebiotics are really important to feed the good guys, and they can be eaten in foods like
asparagus, artichokes, juice from artichokes, jicama, seaweed, and so forth. There's a lot of those I write about in my book as well. So making
sure you take prebiotics. A third is probiotics. So making sure you take high quality probiotics,
usually probably 25 to 50 billion. You might also need something called Saccharomyces, which is
another type of probiotic to help rebuild the gut after antibiotics. And that also is effective in
preventing antibiotic associated diarrhea. And the last thing effective in preventing antibiotic-associated diarrhea.
And the last thing that's in our little cocktail,
which you may not need for antibiotics, is immunoglobulin.
So it's like colostrum.
It's made from either bovine sources.
There's other ways to get it.
But essentially, that helps to regulate immunity in the gut.
So this is our super-
How do you spell that, Lita?
Immunoglobulins.
Oh, immunoglobulins. It's like antibody.
It's like colostrum.
It's like colostrum for breast milk.
So we call it passive immunity.
And so we produce all these together in a product called Gut Food, which will hopefully
be out soon, and sort of make it easier for people.
But you can still do it without that.
But those are the principles that I would say really should be focusing on to rebuild your gut.
Okay.
Can I ask you one quick other question?
Sure.
If my vitamin D level is around 80, is that too high?
No.
The reference range goes usually up to 100.
But if you're a lifeguard
and you're sitting outside all summer, your level can get up to 200 and it's not toxic
levels that are much much higher can be but there are miss studies where they've
given people 10,000 units a day for three months and there's just very little
toxicity so so unless you're getting into a product that's mislabeled that
has super high doses or you're taking it inappropriately vitamin D toxicity is
extremely rare okay thank you very much right. And last question is from Sue as well. So
hello, Sue. We'll catch your question. Hello. Nice to meet you. I'm thrilled to meet you.
Thank you for all your books and your commitment to so many people to make them better. So thank you.
I have a question.
I'm going to open up just a little bit about myself very briefly,
but I was diagnosed with multiple myeloma just recently.
So anyway, I'm in an MGUS stage of multiple myeloma cancer.
So my question is for people out there who have cancer,
is it not good to have dairy and meats in your diet? That's a great question.
There's a lot of information out there about this that's making people confused. For example,
the China study, which was a large population-based study
that has a lot of flaws, that basically stated that dairy and then meat extrapolated that to be
carcinogenic. And I would say that there is potentially with dairy an increased risk of
cancer. And this has been shown in other studies as well. I'm not sure it relates to MGUS or
myeloma, but it actually can increase something called IGF-1, which is an insulin-like
growth factor that feeds cancer cells. So I would definitely eliminate dairy. As far as meat goes,
I don't think the evidence is there to shy away from meat, but I would definitely say make sure
you eat the right meat, particularly grass-fed, if you can, to avoid the challenge
with regular meat. But I think that's the short answer to your question. Great. Thank you so much.
Oh, my pleasure. Thank you so much for joining us today, Sue. And thank you, everybody today who
joined Ask Dr. Mark, our live Q&A. That's our show for today. If you want to ask me a question in the future just text me at 413-225-8995
with the hashtag ask mark and my team might pick your question for one of our future calls
also i want to give a special shout out to our sponsor and thank you so much thrive market for
sponsoring ask dr mark today thrive always provides the best quality highest quality
products at the lowest cost.
They've been so supportive of my new book, The Pegan Diet.
They've created a special Pegan Diet's favorites list with a ton of favorite foods from Thrive.
And by the way, my Pegan Diet book, The Pegan Diet, is coming out February 23rd.
Make sure you grab your copy.
It's for sale now online wherever you get your books or however you get your books.
It's not in the bookstores yet, but you can get a preorder online. And it's The Pegan Diet. You can go to PeganDiet.com, learn more about it, and get your books. It's not in the bookstores yet, but you can get a pre-order online and it's the Pegan Diet.
You can go to pegandiet.com,
learn more about it and get your bonuses.
But Thrive Market is pretty awesome
and they've created a whole Pegan Diet favorites list
so you can make it really easy.
Plus they're offering my community an exclusive offer
to get an extra 25% off your first purchase
and a free gift when you join Thrive Market today.
And to get your 25% off and your free gift,
go to thrivemarket.com forward slash hymanfb.
That's thrivemarket.com forward slash hymanfb.
And if you missed the live stream, don't worry.
We'll be airing it on the Doctors Pharmacy podcast soon.
Thanks for joining us. Thank you.