The Dr. Hyman Show - Encore: Mastering Your Metabolism: Expert Advice You Need
Episode Date: December 16, 2024Metabolic health is key to preventing chronic diseases, which means it’s crucial for us to understand how our dietary choices impact our overall well-being. Simple changes in our eating habits can i...mprove our insulin response and balance blood sugar levels, which offers immediate health benefits. In this episode, Jessie Inchauspe, Dr. Casey Means, and Dr. Ben Bikman share their actionable insights on boosting your metabolism through food. We delve into the latest research and provide practical tips for incorporating metabolism-friendly nutrition into your daily routine. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal Full-length episodes of these interviews can be found here: Surprise Hacks To Balance Your Blood Sugar The Secret to Longevity, Reversing Disease, and Optimizing Health: Fixing Metabolism Reversing Chronic Disease And Aging By Fixing Insulin Resistance This episode is brought to you by Seed, Cozy Earth, and Vivobarefoot. Seed is offering my community 25% off to try DS-01® for themselves. Visit seed.com/hyman and use code 25HYMAN for 25% off your first month of Seed's DS-01® Daily Synbiotic. Right now, you can save 40% when you upgrade to Cozy Earth sheets. Just head over to CozyEarth.com. If you're not barefoot, go Vivobarefoot. Head to vivobarefoot.com/drhyman to get 20% off today!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark Hyman. Thank you so much for being a loyal listener to The Doctor's
Pharmacy. For the holidays, I've decided to give my team a little break to rest up and prepare
for more content and the new year ahead. So The Doctor's Pharmacy will be replaying some older
episodes for the next two weeks. But don't worry, we'll be back with more content and brand new
episodes starting Tuesday, December 31st. So for now, here are some of my favorite past episodes of The Doctor's Pharmacy and see you next year. Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
The curve of your breakfast really determines how you're going to feel for the rest of the day
and whether you're going to feel in control and connected to your body or whether walking by that
bakery is going to give you an irresistible urge to buy all the cookies like it used to be for me.
I used to be for me.
I used to have a Nutella crepe for breakfast every morning growing up, Mark.
And by 1030, I was starving.
I mean, it was bad. Nutella crepe.
Yeah, that'll do it.
If you're a regular listener, you know that I often talk about the gut being central to your whole body health and the key to living those 100 healthy years.
And this includes your skin. Thanks to a fascinating connection known as the gut-skin axis,
the state of your gut can influence your skin's health and appearance, reflecting what's happening
inside your body. That is where Seeds DSO1 Daily Symbiotic can be so effective. DSO1 is more than
just a probiotic for digestive health. With 24 clinically and scientifically studied probiotic strains and a plant-based prebiotic,
it's designed for benefits in and beyond the gut, including healthy regularity, gut immune function,
gut barrier integrity, heart health, and yes, even clear, healthy skin.
DSO1 is formulated with specific probiotic strains and a plant-based prebiotic,
clinically validated to
support clear skin and to reinforce the gut-skin axis, supporting healthy aging and nourishing the
skin from the inside out. My belief in Seed Science and their mission to set a new standard
in probiotics is so strong that I've even joined their clinical board. Seed is offering my community 25% off to try DSO1 for themselves.
Visit seed.com forward slash hymen.
That's S-E-E-D dot com slash hymen, H-Y-M-A-N, and use the code 25hymen to redeem 25% off your first month of Seed's DSO1 daily symbiotic.
That's seed.com forward slash hymen and use the code 25hymen.
We all know how crucial good sleep is for our overall health and well-being, but have you ever
stopped to think about the role your bedding plays in that? Well, if you're not getting quality sleep,
your bedding might be part of the problem. I've been using Cozy Earth's Advanced Bedding,
and it's been a real game changer for me. I tend to run hot when I sleep, and Cozy Earth helps
maintain a comfortable temperature throughout the night. The secret lies in their cutting-edge
temperature-regulating technology. It keeps me cool when I need it and cozy when it's cold,
creating the perfect environment for rejuvenating night's sleep. But it's not just about temperature.
Cozy Earth's fabrics and materials are incredibly soft and carefully selected to enhance sleep
quality and comfort. Since switching to Cozy Earth, I've noticed a significant improvement
in how rested and refreshed I feel in the morning. Investing in your sleep health is one of the most
important things you can do for your well-being. With Cozy Earth, you get 100 night sleep trial and a 10-year
warranty so you can feel confident in your investment and lasting comfort. Incorporating
Cozy Earth into your self-care routine can truly transform your sleep and in turn contribute to
your overall wellness and vitality. Head over to CozyEarth.com slash Dr. Hyman to enjoy 40%
off and use the code MARK40. After placing your order,
make sure to select podcast in the survey and then choose the doctor's pharmacy in the drop-down
menu that follows. That's CozyEarth.com slash Dr. Hyman. That's C-O-Z-Y-E-R-A-T-H.com slash
D-R-H-Y-M-A-N and use the code MARK40 at checkout. Take care of your sleep health and ultimately your
well-being. Now, before we jump into today's episode, I'd like to note that while I wish I could help everyone by my personal
practice, there's simply not enough time for me to do this at scale. And that's why I've been
busy building several passion projects to help you better understand, well, you. If you're looking
for data about your biology, check out Function Health for real-time lab insights. And if you're
in need of deepening your knowledge around your health journey, well, check out my membership community,
Dr. Hyman Plus. And if you're looking for curated, trusted supplements and health products for your
health journey, visit my website, drhyman.com, for my website store and a summary of my favorite and
thoroughly tested products. Hey, everyone. It's Dr. Mark here. Dysfunction in our metabolic health paves the road
for chronic disease, and that's why it's so important to pay attention to insulin response.
Did you know that you can influence your insulin response just by changing the order in which you
eat your foods? Balancing your blood sugar doesn't have to be difficult or even unpleasant, and you'll
start to notice the benefits right away. In today's episode, we feature three clips from the doctor's
pharmacy about how to eat for optimal metabolic health. Jessie in Shaw's Bay shares her favorite blood sugar hacks and why a
savory breakfast is better than a sweet one. Dr. Casey Means talks about why metabolic health is
important and how everyone reacts differently to foods. And finally, I talk with Ben Bickman
about the three causes of insulin resistance, the importance of fat. So let's jump right in. Number one hack that is incredibly easy that has fantastic evidence
supporting it is eat your food in the right order.
So yes.
So anybody listening, if you're about to have a meal, look in front of you.
Let's say you have some chicken, some broccoli and some potatoes.
Okay. If you eat the elements of this meal in a particular order you can reduce the glucose spike
of the meal by 75% this means less weight gain fewer cravings etc the right
order is vegetables first protein and fats second and starches and sugars last and so when we do this
when we eat our vegetables first during a meal the fiber in the vegetables lands in our stomach
then in our upper intestine coats the walls of our intestine with this viscous mesh and then any
starch or sugars you eat afterwards will be absorbed to a lesser extent in your bloodstream therefore smaller glucose but you're eating the exact same thing and this is so cool
and so many people sending messages like i just simply changed the order in which i ate my food
i didn't change what i ate and things started changing for me yeah that's the number one
really and i often recommend people take something called pg or polyglycoplex, which is a derivative
of cognac root.
Cognac is a Japanese tuber, like a root vegetable that is made into noodles.
It's actually used a lot in Japanese cooking and is very viscous and it absorbs 50 times
its weight in water.
So if you take some of this powder beforehand or even the capsules, it basically acts like
a sponge, absorbs all the water and slows
the absorption of everything so your glucose doesn't spike very cool i mean this is really
super powerful um another one that people love is vinegar i don't know if you know about this mark
it's like it's incredible so the hack is before your meals take a tall glass of water like the
one i'm holding now so this is about you know twice the size of a regular glass and pour into it one
tablespoon of vinegar it can be any type of vinegar my favorite is apple cider
vinegar but you know white wine vinegar rice vinegar also work and drink it up
to 30 minutes before your meal and in the studies the scientists say that the
effect of vinegar is almost the same as the effect of medication given to diabetics to reduce glucose spikes.
Why is it doing this?
Because there's a molecule in vinegar called acetic acid and acetic acid does two really cool things.
One.
Well, that's actually what vinegar is.
It's acetic acid, right?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
There's also water in vinegar, right? So it's that's one of the molecules in vinegar. It's acetic acid right absolutely right absolutely um there's also water in vinegar right
so it's that's one of the molecules in vinegar it's acetic acid so it goes into your stomach
and it talks to this enzyme called alpha amylase and alpha amylase's job is to break down starch
into glucose and it tells that enzyme hey girly please slow down your roll slow your roll and so
that enzyme works slower so the
breakdown of starches into glucose happens slower that's number one so slower delivery of glucose
into your bloodstream later on number two vinegar the vinegar you take it like a spoonful before
you should dilute it in water just to be safe yeah so a spoonful in the studies you can do
one tablespoon um you can do two tablespoons personally one tablespoon
is what i use because it's just two tablespoons starts being a lot of vinegar in your glass of
water so one tablespoon is what i like and the second thing it does which is incredible is that
it goes to your muscles and it says hey muscles as soon as glucose gets into the bloodstream
soak it up store it as glycogen in the muscles. Don't let it float around.
And so by these two mechanisms, glucose is broken down at a slower rate in your stomach.
And as soon as it arrives in the bloodstream, it gets soaked up. As a result, glucose spike
reduced by up to 30%. And this matters because then you don't have the glucose crash. You don't
have the cravings. You don't start that cravings rollercoaster
that so many of us are on,
yet you're eating the exact same food as before.
Amazing.
So I want to help you have me break down.
You mentioned a few things,
but I really like to have you break down
what the symptoms are that most people are unaware of
that are related to swings in blood sugar.
Because it's not just high or low, it's these excursions up and down that often cause the most
havoc. So kind of walk us through, you're the average person, you're kind of walking around
not knowing what the hell is going on in your body, and what kind of things might you experience
if your blood sugar is out of whack? Absolutely.
So the average person walks around and they feel all these symptoms.
So they might feel really hungry even though they just ate 90 minutes ago.
Or it might be four in the afternoon and they walk by a bakery and they're like,
oh my God, I need to eat three cookies right now.
Or they might feel really tired right now.
Or they might feel really tired at 11 a.m.
And these are symptoms that often we tend to attribute to lack of willpower.
And then there are the more long-term symptoms, like acne starts developing on your face. You might get hormonal imbalances that lead to things like polycystic ovarian syndrome,
worsening menopause symptoms, long-term type 2 diabetes.
And all of these things we tend to medicate right we're like symptom medication boom but actually
these symptoms are your body telling you hey hello there's actually glucose
spikes happening in here there's something you can change and heal from
within so in my community the most common symptoms as I mentioned are
fatigue waking up not feeling rested feeling like you need to eat
every 90 minutes you need to snack constantly and feeling this pull towards sweet foods and then
just having very unsteady energy and feeling tired after meals feeling tired throughout the day
needing coffee to keep going yeah i mean those are those are really the common ones. But there's others. I remember a guy who came to see me who was having incredible panic attacks.
And I said, well, tell me about your panic attacks and your anxiety.
And of course, in medicine, we typically attribute these to psychological causes.
And we prescribe anxiety medication like Ativan or Valium.
And I said, well, tell me what's going on when do you get it what happens and you know go into the details the story
and it turned out you know he basically had this big belly and was severely insulin resistant and
he ate a very high start sugar diet and you know he would have tons of carbs for breakfast which
is basically the american breakfast is sugar for sugar for breakfast. I think we should call it dessert, not breakfast for most people eating.
Muffins, bagels, cereal, which is 75% sugar, pancakes, waffles, French toast, muffins.
It's kind of a sugar Lollapalooza.
And he said, every afternoon, I just get overwhelming panic attacks.
I start sweating.
My heart's palpitating.
I feel like I'm going to die.
I can't breathe.
The world's closing in on me.
And I said, what do you do?
He says, well, I drink a can of Coke and I feel better.
So he was on a roller coaster, a glucose roller coaster.
Yeah, his sugars were up and down.
And I'm like, you are hypoglycemic.
So even though your sugars can go high, they can go low.
And I think what happens is there's an overshoot.
Yeah, and for me, it was mental health as well.
Yeah, and it creates all these mental health issues,
depression, anxiety, palpitations, panic attacks.
And then you mentioned a bunch of things
that people aren't even aware of,
like infertility or acne.
I mean, most people don't think about that.
Wrinkles.
Of course, diabetes.
Wrinkles, right? Wrinkles. Yeah, aging. people don't think about that. Wrinkles. Of course, diabetes. Wrinkles, right?
Wrinkles.
Yeah, aging.
Aging, dementia.
Yes.
Heart disease, cancer.
Heart disease, fatty liver disease.
Fatty liver.
Every pretty much age-related disease.
In fact, aging itself is often related to sugar issues and to lack of insulin sensitivity,
which is what happens when you make a diet that is full of
starch and sugar. You get these wild spikes in sugar, but then that causes a spike in insulin,
and then sugar crosses, and then you need more and more insulin just to keep the sugar balanced.
And ultimately, that causes a whole cascade of problems that we now know as the fundamental
drivers of aging. Yes, and on the topic of aging, one thing that
really startled me that I discovered is that every time your glucose levels spike, all the glucose
that's rushing into your system, it's going to bump into other molecules and it's going to do
this thing called glycation to the other molecules. And when a molecule is glycated, it's damaged.
And glycation leads to us literally cooking from the inside like a
piece of toast in the toaster that's what happens and then when we're fully
cooked we die that's why we die and so the more glucose spikes in your diet the
faster you age internally but also externally because it leads to wrinkles
it's mind yes really is yes i remember uh i was at this longevity conference uh the
menla institute which is uh menla center which is by robert thurman who's a buddhist scholar and he
had the dalai lama there and all these tibetan scholars but also nobel prize winners and
scientists about longevity and there was lenny goarty there from mit who discovered sirtuins
and the role of of life extension by by activating sirtuins and the role of life extension by activating
sirtuins with resveratrol and other compounds. And I said, you know, these master regulators,
like of aging, how do they get regulated? What screws them up? How does it work? He says,
it's sugar. Sugar is the biggest problem that we have in terms of not allowing these longevity switches to work properly.
And so we literally turn off the longevity switch. We should have rapidly accelerate aging
when we over consume sugar and I would say starch as well. I mean, that's just the same as sugar
because you can eat a bagel or sugar is the same thing. Yeah. And so we end up in this situation
where we know it's bad for us and we know we need to avoid glucose spikes, but often people can be a bit lost as to where to begin. Does it mean I should never eat starch and sugar again? That feels very draconian for most people. And so what I've developed are these 10 principles, these food principles that allow you to keep your glucose levels steady without giving up all the foods you love. Because personally, Mark, I need a chocolate cake for my birthday.
I'm not going to have a Brussels sprout, low carb, no sugar cake.
Like I need chocolate cake.
This is a non-negotiable part.
You're a better human than I am, but like I love sugar.
And so when I first discovered the world of glucose,
my fasting glucose levels was 95.
I was 23 years old and that was high.
And through my hacks, I've lowered it to 79 without giving up all the stuff I love.
And that's two hacks.
So we've got the timing of what you eat when, right?
Vegetables, protein, and starch.
And then the vinegar before you eat.
What else?
So if anybody is still having a sweet breakfast
this is a very important hack have of course nobody listening this podcast ever eats a sweet
breakfast because they've been listening to this podcast and they know that we should not have
dessert for breakfast but just in case you haven't heard many of the podcasts just in case this is
the first podcast you listen to have a savory breakfast so in the studies what they've done
is they've taken
two groups of people and they give them they've given them two breakfasts, one of two breakfasts,
same number of calories, we know calories don't count. But still, it's important to mention this.
One group had a breakfast that spiked their glucose levels. The other group had a breakfast
that kept their glucose levels steady. What happened was, in the group that had the spiky breakfast
they got hungry again after two hours whereas the group that had the steady glucose breakfast
didn't get hungry for five hours so course curve yeah of course the curve of your breakfast really
determines how you're gonna feel for the rest of the day and whether you're gonna feel in control
and connected to your body or whether walking by that bakery is going to give you an irresistible urge to buy all the cookies like it used to be for me
i used to have a nutella crepe for breakfast every morning growing up mark and by 10 30 i was
starving i mean nutella crepe yeah that that'll do it but i'm'm recovered now. I'm recovered. And if I really want an Nutella crepe, what I do is I have it after lunch or dinner as a dessert.
And I have some vinegar before.
So that's another hack.
You know, if you want something sweet.
So put vinegar on your cookies?
Is that the thing?
Yeah, just pour vinegar all over my cookies.
I'm not sure that's going to go over very well.
My friends love me when I come to parties.
No, so it's having, you know, the vinegar in the water before you eat the sweet thing,
having the sweet thing after a meal, and also then using your muscles for 10 minutes.
So your muscles are really your biggest ally in reducing your glucose spikes.
And so what I recommend, it's another hack.
After your meals, use your muscles for 10 minutes.
Top favorites include dancing to your three
favorite songs really loud in your living room, going for a walk with your dog, doing the dishes,
the laundry, whatever. Use your muscles. That way you'll curb the spike and you'll feel better.
That's a really important point. I think people don't realize this, but the data is so compelling
on what you're saying, which is if you just take a walk after dinner for 15, 20 minutes, half an hour, you will see a dramatic
change in your metabolism and your blood sugar. Absolutely. Absolutely. It's really incredible.
And this works particularly well to combat the post-meal sleepiness that a lot of us feel. If
you just use your muscles afterwards, you have all this energy again, because you're not experiencing
such a big crash. And if you can't go outside and you're just home and you're watching, for example,
a TV show after dinner or a movie, people can get really creative. So you could do like, you could
hold a plank in front of your couch while you're watching the movie. You could get some kettlebells
and do some bicep curls, whatever works, whatever floats your boat, but that'll really help your
body deal with the glucose coming through. Amazing.
Let's talk about something we often take for granted, our feet. Did you know that the human
foot is an evolutionary masterpiece that has over a hundred muscles, tendons, and ligaments,
and is packed with thousands of nerve endings? They're built to keep a strong balance and moving naturally, but we're cramming them into stiff, narrow shoes that
mess with this perfect design for far too long. That's where Vivo Barefoot comes in. These shoes
are all about bringing your feet back to life. Wide, thin, flexible, so your feet can move the
way nature intended. Plus, they've got Vivo Health, a platform loaded with corsets to help you
maximize your foot health and overall wellness. And here's the kicker.
Vivo Barefoot is committed to sustainability and regeneration.
Astoundingly, 22 billion pairs of shoes are made every year on complex, mostly toxic supply
chains, and they're all ending up in landfills.
Vivo makes its shoes with either natural or polycircular materials that have the Re-Vivo
platform, where they repair, recycle, and recondition shoes to keep them out of landfills.
It's time to let your feet feel the ground again.
So head to vivobarefoot.com slash Dr. Hyman to get 20% off.
That's V-I-B-O-B-A-R-E-F-O-O-T.com or slash D-R-H-Y-M-A-N and use the code HYMAN20 and
feel the difference today.
I'll give you one more, but then the rest are in my book, Glucose Revolution.
One more is putting clothes
on your carbs so what do i mean do not let your clothes on your carbs don't let your naked carbs
no naked carbs no naked carbs so anytime you're eating aha so a naked carb is sugar or starch
that you're eating on its own naked you just eat it naked and it
lands naked and it creates a big glucose spike so to put clothes on your carbs what you do is
anytime you eat something sweet or something starchy you make sure to put some protein fat
or fiber on it you put some clothes on that so example I'm gonna take the chocolate cake example I put Greek yogurt
on it if I ever want it in the middle of the day if you want a piece of sourdough bread put some
avocado on it put some butter on it if you ever want to eat some rice have some eggs with it some
smoked salmon some greens that you saute as brilliant's brilliant. I think the idea that we need to not be eating
any of this stuff in a way that spikes our blood sugar
is key.
And what we're learning and what you learned
through measuring your blood sugar for years
and tracking everything
is how different foods affect you.
What is the biology of what's happening
when your blood sugar is out of control?
What happens to your microbiome,
to your immune system,
to your brain, to your hormones.
Take us through what actually happens in the body
when you are eating the average American diet.
Yeah, so there's sort of four things
that I think are kind of worth focusing on.
There's the direct effects of high blood sugar.
So you eat something and your blood sugar spikes,
and then there's biological effects of that.
And then there is a fourth thing,
which is the long-term stuff.
So in terms of those short-term things,
like you drink a Coke and your blood sugar goes up
from 75 milligrams per deciliter
to 150 milligrams per deciliter,
that blood sugar spike can cause glycation.
It can cause oxidative stress.
Wait, wait, wait.
What is glycation?
So glycation is the process where sugar just sticks to things in your body.
It's actually just like sugar molecules sticking to things like fats and proteins and DNA,
and that can cause dysfunction.
It can cause those cellular parts to be dysfunctional.
And so that's an issue.
We don't want that.
It can generate inflammation immediately too. This
huge surge of sugar is unusual for the body. It's like, what is going on? Why is this big change,
this sort of homeostatic shift happening? We don't want that. And then it can cause oxidative stress,
which is sort of this reaction where your body's producing metabolic byproducts that are reactive and can be damaging
to the cells so these unpaired electrons that go around and want to bind with things it's rusting
exactly so big glucose spike you can have immediate effects on oxyostress glycation and inflammation
and then the fourth thing is this this thing that's happening both immediately but also really
has cumulative effects which is the insulin surge So when you have that big glucose spike, your pancreas is
releasing all this insulin to help you soak up the glucose out of the bloodstream into the cells.
So it can be processed and bring the glucose back down. And what can happen there in the
short term is that if you've got a big spike, that big up and down um the insulin can actually sometimes
overshoot it can actually do too good a job in soaking up all that glucose and you can have
what's called reactive hypoglycemia which colloquially is known as the post meal crash so
if you've had lunch and then after lunch feel tired and you want to have that second cup of
coffee at 1pm and maybe you feel a little bit more anxious,
that might just be the fact
that your blood sugar has gone up,
you've released all this insulin,
the insulin's kind of overshot, you've crashed down,
and now you're in this dip
and the body's trying to get back into balance.
And that roller coaster with insulin-
And that creates a secondary cascade
of hunger hormones and cravings.
Exactly.
And so that's happening in the short term.
And then that insulin process, going back to what we were talking about before, can
over time lead to that insulin resistance, where the cells see that huge surge in insulin
so frequently that they actually say, we can't keep doing this.
This is too much insulin, and we get numb to it.
And that's insulin resistance.
And then what happens is your insulin levels levels they start creeping up because your body's trying to overcompensate for that block by
producing more and then that leads to so many of the downstream um conditions that you know we've
been talking about when you've got this high insulin one of the secondary effects of that
let's just we can talk about obesity you know insulin is a signal to the body that glucose
is around for energy and it's also a signal to the body that because there's so much glucose around
we don't need to use fat for energy glucose and fat are the two main ways that we produce energy
in the body and when that insulin's high it blocks us from tapping in to fat burning it says to the
body nope you don't need to tap into fat burning. We've got a bunch of glucose around. And so this is relevant to anyone who is trying to lose weight or who has
the excess belly fat, because that insulin is a real block on helping us achieve those goals.
And so, um, for us to tap into our copious fats stores in our body, we need the insulin to be
lower. So by getting off that glucose roller coaster,
by eating foods that keep us more flat and stable throughout the day, which is what we want for
optimal health, both in the short term and the long term, we give our body a break from producing
that insulin. And that can have a real significant impact on our ability to lose weight, to kind of
get rid of that belly fat, to tap into this alternate metabolic fuel source
and to generate what we call metabolic flexibility,
which is this ability of the body to flip
between using glucose when it's around
and using fat when it's not around.
And that state of being able to do both
is a really healthy state.
It's adaptive, but the average American
with the vast majority
of our calories coming from ultra-processed foods,
and I believe more than 70% of processed foods in the US
have refined sugar in them, and we've been told, of course,
to eat six small meals a day, you
are on, as an American, this up and down glucose roller coaster
all day.
And so you're really never giving your body this time
in a low insulin state so you really do have to be quite aware and um think differently i mean
the reality is as an american adult you're on a treadmill towards being overweight and chronic
disease and unless you are doing something different you will end up sick and that's
that's where having a little more
awareness i think can be helpful 100 and all the things you mentioned earlier people don't relate
to this they don't relate to blood sugar they think that diabetes is related to blood sugar
but what about cancer and alzheimer's right and depression and heart disease and so many other
issues infertility gout you mentioned yeah sexual dysfunction yeah acne i mean just whatever you
know it's it's this unbelievable how much of our modern ailments and how many of those ailments are
driven by this single process right and you don't have to treat all these diseases separately if you
dealt with that then these other things would get better. Dr. There are three primary causes of insulin resistance.
By primary, I mean that literally I can cause insulin resistance in isolated cells, in laboratory
rodent and in humans with all three of these.
That is elevated insulin itself, elevated stress hormones and elevated inflammatory
proteins or cytokines.
All three of those things are considered primary
in my definition, because you can just make insulin resistance happen at the cell, in the
rodents and in humans, all three biomedical models. But as you were kind of alluding to,
if we were to tell someone, all right, here, but there are others, like you said, like noxious
toxins that can accumulate in fat cells and alter fat cell growth. Absolutely, that is relevant. So I'm not suggesting that there aren't others,
there are. But I kind of put these ones as the kind of holy trinity or the unholy trinity
of insulin resistance. But we would tell someone, control your stress. And they would say, well,
great, doc, how am I going to do that? You know, it's a little difficult. Stress is one of those
difficult things to truly wrap your head around. But even still, you'd mentioned like meditation and quiet.
I wholly agree with that. But even still, it's a little difficult to fully manage stress. Same
with inflammation. We would say, lower your inflammation. And say, well, how do I do that?
You know, we'd have to find out what are the stimuli that are inducing that increase in that immune level. But if we say
control your insulin, easy, easy. That is a lever we can grab with both hands and immediately start
to pull down just through time-restricted eating and intermittent fasting and by just managing
macronutrients and altering that ratio, focusing more on the foods that have the lower effect on insulin,
like fat and protein, and controlling the starchiest of the carbohydrates or the most
sugary.
Now, neither you nor I are declaring war on carbohydrates.
And I'd hate for someone to leave this discussion thinking we are.
We're not, you know, neither of us is advocating a carnivore diet.
But we are certainly, my view is is don't get your carbohydrates from bags and
boxes with barcodes yeah I love alliteration so I'm glad you appreciate it bags and boxes
and barcodes all right good yeah but that's where people get it wrong right there they're
they're thinking I need to have a back a box of crackers or a bag of chips or a box of cereal no
go eat fruits and vegetables. Eat
them. I'm an advocate of fruits and vegetables. Eat them, but don't drink them and don't get them
in processed foods, bags, boxes, and barcodes. My joke is I always say carbohydrates are the
single most important food for health and longevity, right? And what I mean by that is that
plants are carbohydrates. Broccoli is a carbohydrate.
Asparagus is a carbohydrate.
Those are the ones you want to eat, not the ones that come from a factory or from some processed ingredients that you mentioned.
Bags and boxes and barcodes.
What I'd like to sort of go into now is an understanding of some of the challenges and controversies around fat.
I wrote a book called Eat Fat, Get Thin, where we talked about this, but, you know, there's still
a sense that your cholesterol is a big problem, that saturated fat is the devil, and that we
should not be eating it. Butter, cream, coconut oil, uh animal food saturated fat um talk to us about
the biology of what happens when we increase fat and why why it doesn't work in the same way we
think and also if you can speak to the heterogeneity in the population because there's
subsets of people who do great with high saturated fat diets and those who don't and i'm just going
to give you a quick scenario of that.
And then you can kind of riff
on how we start to think about it.
I had a woman who was about late 40s,
woman who was struggling with her weight,
inflamed, trying to do good.
She exercised, she ate pretty healthy.
She wasn't off the rails with her eating.
Her triglycerides were 3,400 or cholesterol was 300 or HDL was like
30. I mean, which is terrible numbers, you know, which is classic of prediabetes, insulin resistance.
And I said, look, you know, you've tried a lot of things. Let's just try a ketogenic diet and see
what happens. You know, no harm, no foul. She did it and it was remarkable. Not only did she lose
20 pounds like that, but her levels of inflammation came down
her triglycerides dropped two three hundred points her hdl went up 30 points which you never see her
total cholesterol dropped 100 points by eating butter and coconut oil and yet another another
guy was a very thin fit mid-50s guy who was a really aggressive bicycle rider. He rode 30, 50 miles a day.
And he decided he wanted to try it for performance reasons, not to lose weight.
And his numbers went completely opposite. He got very high levels of cholesterol,
very high levels of small particles. It was just remarkable to see the difference. And it sort of woke me up to
the fact that there isn't a one-size-fits-all in regards to this. So with that framework,
take us down an understanding of, you know, if we are going to be reducing our carbohydrates,
starchy, sugary carbohydrates, and we're going to be increasing our fats, how do we do that? And
what's the role of saturated fat? And should we be worried? And how does it work? Yeah, yeah, the great question. So my postdoctoral work really was seminal in that it scrutinized the
degree to which fatty acids themselves can contribute to insulin resistance. And this is
a conversation that I'm passionate about, because so many people start beating this drum of saturated
fats and use it as evidence against animal products because
animal products do contain saturated fats invariably. Now they're never completely
saturated fat and that's important. There's a mix of saturated mono and polyunsaturated fats.
And now what these- And by the way, all saturated fats aren't the same. There's like 10 or 12
different saturated fats. So they're not like –
Oh, my gosh.
Yeah.
Oh, there's dozens of them.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, so I'm a huge advocate of a full spectrum of fats, namely of saturated fats, even long chain, which we get a lot of medium chain and then short chain.
But putting that to the side, when you incubate a cell, if you have a cell culture whether it is muscle cells liver
cells neurons um fat cells and if you incubate those fat cells with palmitic acid which is the
prevalent saturated fat in the human body certainly in circulation palmitate or the 16 carbon saturated
fat when you incubate cells with palmitate um they stearate acid even, 18 carbons, they will become
insulin resistant. And so you treat them with the fats, then you put on some insulin a little later,
and then measure, then you take all the cells and measure what insulin did, and it is compromised.
That doesn't happen when you incubate the cells with monounsaturated or polyunsaturated fats.
It will not cause direct cellular insulin resistance.
So I've done these studies myself.
Maybe the most cited study of mine I've ever done was this exact series of studies.
And the same thing happens in rodents.
When you infuse the rodent with fat, when you're infusing it directly IV, the saturated
fat will cause insulin resistance,
but the monounsaturated like olive oil, for example, doesn't. So there is a direct effect
of saturated fats at the cell to cause insulin resistance. And this is all once you actually get
into the cell itself. It's because of how these fats will induce the accumulation of another
molecule called ceramides. And if anyone has ever heard
ceramides in the audience, they might be thinking of it as like in lotions or shampoos and stuff.
But but it is a slightly different version of it. But saturated fats will induce the accumulation
of these molecules called ceramides within a cell, then ceramides will directly prevent insulin,
the insulin biochemical pathway from doing its job. It
directly antagonizes what insulin is trying to do. So that's the actual where the rubber meets the
road molecular mediator. So now to zoom back out to the level of the whole body, some people look
at those studies, even possibly my own, and we'll use that as evidence against saturated fat. And
they will say, see, saturated fat causes insulin
resistance, but it doesn't work. When you actually go to the whole body and look at the consumption
of fat, this is the paradox is the vast majority, overwhelming majority of saturated fat in our
blood is palmitate, but it's not from the diet. It comes from the liver. The liver is the primary source
of saturated fats that are circulating in the blood. When we eat saturated fats, they're
packaged into the chylomicron, and there can be some depositing of that throughout the body,
but it goes to the liver, and then the liver will repackage all that fat. Almost always,
the saturated fats will have two things happen to them.
They get elongated by two carbons. So you'll take that 16 carbon palmitate, which is the most
prevalent saturated fat. We take that 16 carbon, we make it into an 18 carbon, and then we
desaturate it. There are these two steps. And so we end up taking the palmitate in the diet and
turning it into oleic acid or the primary fat of olive oil.
And that is the primary fat that is stored in every single person's fat cells.
So basically your liver makes olive oil.
No, no, no.
So the fat cells turn it into olive oil, but the liver makes palmitate.
Yeah, yeah.
So when we eat saturated fats, the body will turn it into olive oil, basically.
But when the liver is making fat, it makes saturated fats. And so that this is why you
can take someone and put them on a ketogenic diet, low carb, high fat, and they could be eating three
times more saturated fat than they were before than the other group, than the than the low fat,
high carb group, three times more saturated fat. And yet the actual composition
of fatty acids in their lipoproteins in their blood is much less saturated. So the actual
amount of saturated fat circulating in their blood is much lower than it is if someone is
eating a diet that is spiking their insulin. Because most of the saturated fat in the blood,
which is what's coming to the cells throughout the body, the phenomenon that I mentioned a moment ago,
most of that saturated fat is coming from the liver and the liver makes saturated fat when
insulin is up. This is a process called lipogenesis and palmitate.
Lipogenesis.
Yep. Lipogenesis. Yep. And insulin is what turns that on and that's the paradox here
really to put a kind of what turns on insulin starchy refined carbs yeah yes sugar and starch
right okay well let me just recap for a sec so what you're saying is that if you eat saturated fat
in your diet from animal protein or dairy or coconut oil. It gets turned into olive oil in your fat cell.
That's right.
If you actually eat sugar and starch,
it turns on the fat production factory in your liver
to make saturated fat.
That's right.
So you make saturated fat that's coming from eating sugar.
People don't get this connection.
They think, oh, sugar is sugar. How does it turn to fat? But there's a mechanism by which these sugars
cause the production of saturated fat in your blood, which is what's causing a lot of the
problem. Is that fair to say? Yeah, and it's a one-two punch. Absolutely. It ends up being a
one-two punch where these starchy, sugary carbs will both act as the skeleton.
The liver will take those carbons and rearrange them to create a saturated fat.
And at the same time, the starchy, sugary carbs are increasing insulin, which is what's driving the signal.
That's the signal to tell the liver to do that in the first place.
Because the liver will not make fat out of carbs
unless insulin is elevated. It is antithetical. It is impossible for the liver to do because like
every cell in the body, insulin tells the liver what to do with the energy that it has available.
And when insulin is up, one of the things it wants the liver to do is turn the carbs into,
turn the glucose, those carbons into fat. And the only fat the liver
is making and packaging and releasing is palmitate, that saturated fat.
That's incredible. So I want to drill down a little bit into the take-homes. And I just,
I sort of want to recap a little bit. And then I want to ask you what we can do to fix this,
because it seems to me that what you're saying is that this whole host of chronic diseases is driven by or affected by
this phenomena of insulin resistance. And it's the biggest scourge causing
88% of Americans to have poor metabolic health. Second is-
And 90% of people with covid to have it so bad
they have to go to the hospital that's right that's right and the second thing is that we
we understand that the way in which insulin resistance is controlled is through
primarily diet and and i want to go through a few of the other factors too but primarily diet
and it's primarily the starch in our sugar which which is enormous in this country. It's 60,
70% of our diet. It's usually in the form of flour and hidden sugars in our diet or added sugars,
about 152 pounds of sugar and 133 pounds of flour. Recently, according to the USDA data,
that's almost a pound a day of sugar and flour
per person per day it's staggered it's staggering which our human biology never never was exposed to
right we see 22 teaspoons a year if we found some berries or honey now it's 22 teaspoons per day for
the average adult and about 35 for a kid and and three um that that by changing the quality of our diet, in other words, reducing starchy, refined carbs and increasing good fats, or maybe even saturated fat, we can actually stop this process, which is underlying everything that goes wrong with us, at least to aging.
And that there's some heterogeneity in the population, but we need to figure out, one, how to diagnose it.
I want to talk about that.
Two, then, how to treat it.
Because if we understand this is the problem, one, what do people listening need to do to find out if they have this problem?
Let's start there.
Yeah, yeah.
Aside from the mirror jiggle test, the jiggle test.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, I will try not to be too redundant to what you said, but I would say anyone who has any potential, get your insulin measured. And you'd mentioned some wonderful metrics. I've always said below six, I think you said below five. hormone, has a bit of a rhythm to it.
There's a diurnal or circadian rhythm.
So it's possible someone would go get their insulin checked, and maybe it's 12 or 13 or so.
And you and I both would say, oh, that's a little high.
We need to be a little worried.
But it's possible the person has measured it at a peak.
And that in reality, give it an hour or two later, and it would have gone down to five.
It's possible. So I think
it is important to note that there are other things like challenging it in a dynamic glucose
test like you'd mentioned. That is absolute gold standard. Alternatively, and another metric you'd
mention is looking at lipids because insulin controls the production of fats and the regulation
of lipoproteins in the body because lipoproteins are energetic molecules. And so look at the
triglyceride to HDL ratio. And if a person has a triglyceride to HDL ratio and it's above 1.5,
that's strong evidence that they're insulin resistant. Now that ratio doesn't hold across
all ethnicities. It starts to get a little loose, you know, from Caucasians to Asians to African
Americans or so, but nevertheless, that ratio of 1.5 is generally going to be a pretty good indicator that if you're lower than
that, if your triglyceride HDL ratio is lower, that's a good sign that you're insulin sensitive.
The good old fashioned waist to hip ratio or the waist to height ratio. If you measure your waist,
like the biggest part around your belly, and if you multiply that by two, if that number is higher than your height, that's a very, very good indicator that you have metabolic syndrome or insulin resistance, to be more precise.
If your waist circumference times two is less than your height, that's a good sign that you're generally doing okay.
And then one other metric among many is what's on the skin. And there are two things
people can look for on their skin, which are it's almost proof positive of insulin resistance.
The first one is skin tags. Those are these little kind of mushroom like or columns,
little stalks of skin. They're not like a flat kind of round mold, they're just sort of jut
right up and they're small. I bet everyone already knows what I'm talking about.
People can get them in their armpits or around their neck if they have a fat fold around their neck.
So those are skin tags.
And in the same place, especially around the neck or the armpits, anywhere where skin is rubbing,
they can start to develop something called acanthosis nigricans
or these patches of skin that are a little darker pigment,
and they have a kind of altered texture, kind of this velvety kind of texture to it.
But that's another one. So the skin, I kind of joke, the skin is the window to the metabolic soul,
just because like every part of the body, it responds to insulin. And so we start to see
these little hints of it. That's really helpful. You know, I wrote a little description of how to look at this
in great detail called How to Work with Your Doctor to Get What You Need. It's available
on my website, drhyman.com. It's also available, I think, online. You can just Google it.
And I go through all the diagnostic tests to help you identify the ways in which either you have
insulin resistance or the consequences of it. And the
things that I tend to recommend people do is like you said, a fasting insulin, super important.
The best test is, is because the fasting insulin elevation is really the second stage of the
problem. The first stage is elevations of insulin after you consume a sugar drink. So that that's a
little bit of a more of a pain in the ass test where you have to drink a sugar drink it's a couple of two coca-colas and then get your blood tested either 30 minutes after and or or one in two
hours after as well as fasting uh that's really important the lipid tests you mentioned are super
important i'm going to just drill down a little bit on that because there's something called an
nmr or a cardio iq test from lab core quest which look at not just the total numbers of like the weight of
cholesterol, which is your milligrams per deciliter. It looks at the particle number
and the particle size, which is really important. And so when you have insulin resistance, you have
a perfectly normal cholesterol of 200 or 150, but your triglycerides may be 300 or HDL is 30.
You're like, oh, your cholesterol is fine. Your LDL is fine. It may not be because you may actually
have really dangerous small particles.
Also, we look at, you know, like the triglyceride HDL ratio is very important.
It's something not really paid attention to much by doctors, but it's more predictive
than an LDL elevation, more predictive.
The most predictive tests are, you know, triglyceride HDL ratio and total to HDL ratio.
And the HDL ratio reflects the insulin resistance.
So we've always been
looking at it, but not in the right way. We also look at inflammation, which can happen through a
CRP. We look at uric acid, which can be elevated, which David Pomerter's book, Drop Acid, was all
about. We look at liver function tests, which can be abnormal. We look at male hormones, sex
hormones. We look at DHEA and sulfate in women to look at the effect of
androgens being produced from the insulin resistance. So we look at a whole host of things,
and we can get a pretty good picture of where people are in that spectrum. But the most important,
like you said, is looking at the insulin fasting or after a glucose tolerance test.
And you mentioned the waist to hip ratio. That's important. But when you look at the data on the
88% of Americans who are metabolically
unhealthy, only 75% only, right? 75% of us are overweight, three quarters. But like, what about
that other, you know, like, you know, eight, whatever, 8%, like, probably about a quarter
of people who are thin, also have prediabetes. They're what we call skinny fat or thin on the outside, fat on the inside.
They're metabolically obese, but normal weight.
And that's just because they may not gain weight,
but they actually,
the metabolic consequences are all the same.
So we start to look at all these factors
and we get a pretty good sense of the problem.
Thanks for listening today.
If you love this podcast,
please share it with your friends and family.
Leave a comment on your own best practices on how you upgrade your health and subscribe wherever you get your
podcasts. And follow me on all social media channels at Dr. Mark Hyman. And we'll see you
next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm always getting questions about my favorite books,
podcasts, gadgets, supplements, recipes, and lots more. And now you can have access to all of this
information by signing up for my free Mark's Pix newsletter at drhyman.com forward slash MarksPix.
I promise I'll only email you once a week on Fridays and I'll never share your email address or send you anything else besides my recommendations.
These are the things that have helped me on my health journey and I hope they'll help you too.
Again, that's drhyman.com forward slash MarksPix.
Thank you again and we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy. endorse the views or statements of my guests. 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. Now, if you're looking for your help in your journey,
seek out a qualified medical practitioner. You can come see us at the Ultra Wellness Center
in Lenox, Massachusetts. Just go to ultrawellnesscenter.com. If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner near you, you can visit ifm.org
and search find a practitioner database.
It's important that you have someone in your corner who is trained, who's a licensed
healthcare practitioner and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to
your health.
Keeping this podcast free is part of my mission to bring practical ways of improving health
to the general public.
In keeping with that theme, I'd like to express gratitude to the sponsors that made today's
podcast possible.