The Dr. Hyman Show - Exclusive Dr. Hyman+ Ask Mark Anything: Endometriosis, Autoimmune Disease, Irregular Heartbeats, And More
Episode Date: July 20, 2021My team and I are excited to tell you about our revolutionary new platform, Dr. Hyman+, which offers premium content, perks, and information available exclusively for Dr. Hyman+ members. In this tea...ser episode, you’ll hear a preview of our monthly Dr. Hyman+ AMA. To gain access to the full episode, head over to https://drhyman.com/plus/. With your yearly membership to Dr. Hyman+, you’ll gain access to: Ad-Free Doctor’s Farmacy Podcast episodes Access to all my docu-series, including Broken Brain 1, Broken Brain 2, Longevity Roadmap + bonus material Exclusive monthly Functional Medicine Deep Dives Monthly Ask Mark Anything by you and only for you
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Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark Hyman here.
Now my team and I have been working hard on something that I'm so excited to share a little bit about today.
It's a revolutionary new platform called Dr. Hyman Plus, which is a premium membership exclusive for my community.
With Dr. Hyman Plus, you get a ton of private content and special access that no one else gets.
This yearly membership gives you exclusive access to ad-free Doctors Pharmacy
podcast episodes, access to all of my docuseries, including the Longevity Roadmap and Broken Brain
1 and 2, plus all the bonus content. You get monthly functional medicine deep dives where
one of our doctors goes deep into a health topic to tell you everything you need to know to heal.
You'll also get access to a monthly Ask Mark
Anything Q&A where I answer the Dr. Hyman Plus community's biggest health and wellness questions.
This Q&A is only accessible with a membership. Now, because I'm so excited to share this premium
membership content with you, I'm releasing a teaser of the brand new Functional Medicine
Deep Dive episode diving into one of the most important topics in health.
I hope you enjoy it and head over to drhyman.com forward slash plush. That's drhyman.com slash PLUS for more information. Okay, here we go.
Hi, everyone. Welcome to the newest episode of Ask Mark Anything. My name is Herschel Kurth,
and I'm the Dr. Hyman Plus Community Manager, and I'm joined by Darcy Gross,
one of the producers of the Longevity Roadmap docuseries. Hi, Darcy.
Hi.
And we've collected your top questions this month to ask our expert, Dr. Mark Hyman. Hello,
Dr. Mark Hyman.
Hello.
Thanks for being with us here today. And we're so excited to hear your answers on this month's Ask Mark Anything.
So let's get started.
So our first question is about endometriosis.
What is it?
What can cause it?
And if there is a woman that's suffering from this, what can be done to help her?
Well, this is a vexing problem.
It's often undiagnosed for years, sometimes decades for women who suffer from big symptoms
like menstrual cramps, irregular periods, very, very painful, painful, painful, vomiting,
I mean, all kinds of horrible stuff.
And essentially, it's something that has been thought to be a hormonal condition.
But it turns out it's probably more likely an autoimmune condition.
And essentially what happens is that women will have portions of their endometrial lining,
none of those lining of their uterus, move into places that shouldn't be. So it can get through
the fallopian tubes and into the abdominal cavity and deposit on the colon,
on the small intestines, on the bladder, on the kidneys, on the wall of the abdomen.
And so every time you have a period, it's like you're bleeding into your abdomen,
which is the worst and most painful thing you could possibly imagine.
And it makes women really miserable. It also causes infertility.
And it's just not a fun condition. And it's really
a problem for many, many women. So the question is, what is the cause? We'll get to that in a
minute. But from a traditional functional medicine perspective, the approach is quite different than
a conventional medicine approach. In conventional medicine, the approach is essentially to create
a treatment that shuts off your period, which is something that women do sometimes anyway,
given this crazy way that we practice medicine now that someone's, I don't have my periods,
they give them the pill that stops their period. Not a big fan of that, but I do think that in
endometriosis, it can be very helpful. The hormonal programs are often very intense. They might just put you into premature
menopause sometimes. There's really heavy duty drugs that they can use when it gets really bad.
It's often diagnosed through surgical approach. You have to do a laparoscopic exam. So you're
going through the belly button, you look inside with a little microscope and you can see
all the lesions everywhere. This is really
the most effective way to see what's really going on. It's hard to pick it up otherwise.
And then they can cauterize or burn off those lesions, but it's sort of like mopping up the
floor while the sink's overflowing. It'll just happen again. And it can provide temporary relief,
but it's sort of a vicious cycle. And so what we're learning about from a functional medicine
perspective and the traditional science
is telling us now this may be autoimmune in nature then the question is what you know what
do we do for autoimmune disease how do we regulate those things and really when we think about
autoimmune disease from a functional medicine perspective it's really five main causes
combined with your genetics and your predispositions, but it's toxins. And in terms of hormonal issues, toxins can be a huge player, both heavy metal toxins, as well as the petrochemical
toxins, which we call persistent organic pollutants or xenoestrogens. They're very, very
potent hormone stimulators or hormone disruptors that can be found in pretty much everything in
our society, all the plastics and cosmetics and sunblock. I mean, you name it, it's in their
makeup. And that's really why I work with the Environmental Working Group to help educate
people about the sources of these compounds in their food, in their water, in their cosmetics,
in their household cleaning
products, then you can really reduce your exposure. So that's really important.
Second, you know, there may be gut issues as well. Weaky gut, food sensitivities that may
play a role. So imbalances in the gut flora. And so infectious stuff, microbes can be playing a
role. Allergens can play a role, like gluten and other foods. Dairy can be playing a role allergens can tell me if i write gluten and other
foods dairy can be a big player very hormonally active can be a big player so that combined with
stress and poor diet we often can find the root causes of a lot of autoimmune disease so a lot
of the treatments are really designed to help fix those underlying factors get rid of the metals get
rid of the picture persistency and pollutants optimize the gut flora reduce allergies allergies, deal with any chronic infections, help optimize the diet, reduce stress. All those things
will help. In addition, we'll often look at hormonal metabolism because there may be
problems with estrogen metabolism that are pretty common that can lead to abnormal pap tests. It can
lead to heavy periods, PMS. I think one of the things that sort of
strikes me in our society is that women suffer so terribly from menstrual disorders. 75% of women
have PMS or premenstrual syndrome. That's not normal. Many cultures, women don't experience
that. And the question is, why are we experiencing that? Well, it's our poor diet of processed foods,
high intakes of alcohol, sugar, caffeine, stress, lack of exercise, environmental toxins,
all the things that our modern life is so full of.
Those are the things that are driving these hormonal dysfunctions
and imbalances that lead to these symptoms.
Depending on what stage of your life cycle you're in as a woman,
you can really end up suffering a lot.
And I wrote an article called The Life Cycles of Women
about all these different aspects of our hormone metabolism, the change over time and what
influences them. The good news is that you can positively influence your hormone metabolism
through diet and lifestyle, you know, cutting out all the sugar and processed food, caffeine,
alcohol, upregulating your, your fiber content, prebiotic and probiotic fibers, probiotics,
the gut has a huge role, increasing
all kinds of polyphenol-rich substances in the diet that help detoxify and metabolize
estrogens like the broccoli family, garlic, onions, which is so many wonderful foods that
you can use to actually help them optimize your hormone metabolism.
And sometimes we use nutrients as well.
There's incredible nutrients that help to help regulate the function and the effect of
hormones and also the estrogens that cause this one of the problems. So one of the things, for
example, we'll use is, is methylated B vitamins, B12, folate B6 to help estrogen metabolism. We'll
use various phytochemicals like indole-3-carbinol. It comes from broccoli as a supplement. So
fluorophane. So we use flax seeds that help
regulate estrogen metabolism in the gut and have lignans in them. So there's a lot of options for
us to optimize hormone metabolism using approaches that work with the body rather than against it.
So I've seen many patients with endometriosis. They often do very well and often can become
fertile, have babies, and do really remarkably well. I just remember this one case of a young woman who was about 28
and really been miserable her whole life, really bad periods, endometriosis,
infertile, trying to have babies with her husband and just not making it.
And she had all kinds of other inflammatory issues.
And we really did a whole overall functional medicine approach
and autoimmune disease-focused approach.
And she really remarkably transformed.
And her endometriosis went away.
She felt great. And she ended up having a beautiful baby. So I think there's a real opportunity for
people to understand how to do things differently and to sort of take a root cause approach,
especially with things like endometriosis. Oh, that's so great. I'm sure that she was thrilled
to be in that situation where she wasn't suffering and obviously could, you know,
fulfill her goal of having a baby with her husband. So that's wonderful. Thank you.
Do you have our next question? Yeah. Hi, Dr. Mark. Good to see you again.
So kind of switching gears, but still sticking with the theme of functional medicine, of course.
The next question is about irregular heartbeats and arrhythmias. So basically, can functional medicine play a role or help somebody who has irregular
heartbeats or arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillation?
Yeah, well, not all irregular heartbeats are the same, and they all have different causes.
But they're often related to things that are completely reversible and fixable. And the main, the main kinds are something called PVCs,
which is like where you get skip beats or premature ventricular contractions.
People can feel that it's like their heart jumps in their chest.
That's really common. And it's pretty benign.
There are more serious forms of arrhythmias like supraventricular tachycardia,
which can be an electrical short circuit.
That can be challenging. Atrial fibrillation is something that's very common as people get older
and older athletes. I had it. I think it gives me everything. My mother had it. It's partly genetic.
And, you know, I tend to be tall, skinny and athletic, which is the kind of prototype George
Bush, the first, the senior had it when he
was jogging and he got it once. So I think, I think it's not uncommon. They're all a bit different,
but the question is if your heart is, is irritable, the question, what is causing an irritable heart?
What is causing a twitchy heart? Well, there are well-known causes. Magnesium deficiency is a huge one. And in our society, we're probably 80% insufficient
and probably 50% deficient in magnesium. And it's important because it regulates over 300
different enzymes in the body. It's critical for muscle relaxation, for essentially the relaxation
mineral. So anything that's twitchy or spasmy or irritable, magnesium is the end of it. Whether
you're constipated or have headaches or muscle cramps or muscle twitching in your eyes, all those things can be benefited by taking magnesium.
And it's no different from arrhythmia.
In fact, in the emergency room, when we tried all the drugs, if someone comes in coding, meaning they're code blue, they're not breathing, they're basically dead, and we have to resuscitate them, we use all these fancy drugs.
We use the shocking machine. and we have to resuscitate them. Use all these fancy drugs.
We use the shocking machine.
And then when nothing else works,
we resort to the final last heroic step,
which is giving them intravenous magnesium.
So why not start with that?
In women who are having preterm labor,
whether uterus are contracting and irritable,
we give them IV magnesium.
When women come in with high blood pressure and have twitchy blood vessels, we give them IV magnesium. If women are about to have seizures from preeclampsia, we give them IV magnesium.
So it's something we do traditionally in regular medicine, which is kind of amazing to me that we
sort of ignored that magnesium is so important. And then there are a lot of things we do in our society that causes us to have low magnesium. We drink coffee. We have sugar. We
have sodas. We have processed food. We have a lot of stress. Stress literally causes you to pee out
magnesium. And we don't eat a lot of magnesium-rich foods, which are basically nuts and seeds and
greens and some beans. And those are not typically found in abundance in
most people's diets, except maybe chocolate. Chocolate's a good source of bacteria.
So that can be helpful, but I wouldn't just binge on the chocolate. I think that it's really
important to understand that that is one simple thing people can do to calm down their heart.
The other thing is that there are mitochondrial factors that are important in stabilizing the heart muscle. Things like CoQ10, carnitine,
ribose, creatine, magnesium, potassium, aspartate, lipoic acid. These are all sodium sulfate. These
are all really important compounds that are part of mitochondrial function. And the mitochondria
are the little energy batteries in your cell, and it has to be working well for your heart to pump properly.
So they can be very helpful as well in arrhythmias. Fish oil is anti-arrhythmogenic. So a lot of
people are low in fish oil. 93 or 99% of Americans apparently are low in omega-3 fatty acids. And I
see this a lot in my practice when we test for it using a thing called Omega Check. And we can get a really good idea of what people's fatty acid intake is. And honestly,
it's striking to me how many people are deficient in omega-3 fats, which really dramatically improves
their rhythm. And it was a large trial in Italy called the GC study many, many years ago, where
they looked at people who had heart attacks. And a lot of people have heart attacks. After the heart
attacks, their hearts get really irregular and irritable because they've killed the part of the
muscle. And so the heart, all the electrical signals are not going right. And so they gave
them fish oil compared to placebo in a randomized controlled trial. And they found that there are
dramatic reductions in the risk of death and arrhythmias after heart attacks if they gave
them fish oil. So getting your magnesium up, your fish oil levels high, reducing those things that cause
magnesium loss, and also dealing with stress and sleep. Those are huge things. Sleep is a big issue
because often people are having higher cortisol levels, stress hormones, adrenaline, epinephrine.
And when you think about, you know, stress, what happens is you get a flood of hormones
and neurotransmitters, particularly
adrenaline and noradrenaline. And those are highly irritating to the heart and they'll speed up the
heart. They're just like, they're like gas. And like, you want those when you're running from a
tiger to you can, the heart can be faster and you can do better, but not honestly, when you're just
sitting around. So dealing with stress through yoga, meditation, those kinds of techniques are
really helpful. Getting off sleep all is really critical.
So arrhythmias can be dealt with.
Sometimes you do just have the short circuit.
And unfortunately, for example, I had a short circuit with atrial fibrillation.
And I had to have an ablation where they go into your heart through the catheters in your
groin and they zap the areas that are basically a short circuit.
And they just, they buzz them like a cautery.
And that stops the transmission.
And I had that and I was really struggling and I took it and I'm fine.
I just, you know, raced on my bike this morning for as hard as I could for an hour with a
friend and, you know, I'm fine.
I also, that's where my heart's going to explode, but I feel good and I'm doing well and
I had the surgery. So it's not bad to have surgery for this, but for most of the kinds of common
arrhythmias that people have, the jumping in a chest, the skip heartbeats, all this stuff,
that can be really managed through functional medicine approach of root causes and diet
and lifestyle. I'll just give an example of a patient I had yesterday.
She should have known better.
She's a doctor and she's an ER doctor
and she was having to go into her shift
and she actually has some kind of weird cardiac issue.
She has arrhythmia, she had VTAC,
which is like really a life-threatening kind of arrhythmia.
And she had to have a defibrillator put in her chest uh and it's
really rare it's not that common especially in someone as young as her but um what was so
fascinating was that she said i literally no she was fine because she was following everything but
then she's like i had to go to work and it was a really stressful shift and i drank a lot of coffee
and i took an adderall so i could stay awake on my shift and i'm like okay so you took speed and coffee and stress and then she
went into b-tac while she was driving and was able to pull off the road and had to wait until her
machine kicked in and literally gave her a shock she had to get like a you know like when they do
the paddles but they have internal paddles, essentially, which is less voltage, but still pretty intense.
And, you know, it fixed her, but she's like, I'm like, yeah, well, you caused that by putting all these things in your system, stress, caffeine, and speed, basically Adderall that triggered the arrhythmia.
So I think for most people with arrhythmias, they're usually pretty benign.
Sometimes you need surgery, but often dealing with these lifestyle factors and diet can take huge role. Yeah. Dr. Mark, thank you so much for all those tips. I
think that's super helpful. It's really, really important information. I'm never going to give
up my coffee, but thank you. Well, I hope you enjoyed that teaser of exclusive content that
you get every single month with Dr. Hyman Plus. If you want to listen to the full
episode and get access to ad-free podcast episodes, plus all the content from my docuseries,
and of course, any future ones we're going to release, plus monthly Ask Mark Anything episodes,
plus monthly functional medicine deep dive episodes, I guess, right? That's why we call it Dr. Hyman Plus. Head over to
drhyman.com forward slash plus that's drhyman.com slash PLUS to learn more. I'll see you there.
Hi, everyone. I hope you enjoyed this week's episode. Just a reminder that this podcast is
for educational purposes only.
This podcast is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical
professional. This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not constitute medical
or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey,
seek out a qualified medical practitioner. If you're looking for a functional medicine
practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and search their find a practitioner database. It's important that you have someone in your corner
who's trained, who's a licensed healthcare practitioner, and can help you make changes,
especially when it comes to your health.