The Dr. Hyman Show - Exclusive Dr. Hyman+ Ask Mark Anything: Fish Oil Supplements, Leaky Gut, And More
Episode Date: June 29, 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/. Mentioned in this episode: Big Bold Health 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
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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. Thanks so much for tuning into the newest episode of Ask Mark Anything. My name is Herschel Kurath, and I am the community manager for Dr. Hyman Plus. We've collected some of your top questions for Dr. Hyman this month, and we're going to ask Mark anything. So we're excited to hear what he has to say about your top questions. Let's go to the expert himself. Hello, Dr. Mark Hyman.
Hi, how's it going everybody? We're so glad that you're here and we're so glad to be able to ask you these questions.
So let's get started.
The first question that we have is from a community member who wants to know about omega-3
supplementation.
And the question that they have is that there are so many articles that have conflicting
information on whether or not omega-3 supplementation is helpful or is it necessary.
How do we sort through all the articles and studies to find out what's important?
And what are your opinions on it?
Well, the truth is that nutrition science is very confusing.
It's very complicated and it's hard to parse out specifics.
And it's also very reductionist, right?
So the current study that was published,
which is called the STRENGT trial, which is a randomized clinical trial done through Cleveland
Clinic by Steve Nissen, who's a friend of mine and top NOSP researcher, randomized groups of
people to either taking four grams of fish oil or corn oil alternative. And they really found no
difference in the outcomes. And they picked patients who were at high risk for heart disease. But if you look at, you know, the sub-characteristics
of the patients, these were people who were all pretty sick already. And, you know, so the question
is, if you were to take a group of people who are generally healthy and not at high risk, and you
followed them over many decades who had adequate levels and not at high risk, and you follow
them over many decades who had adequate levels of omega-3s, what would be their outcome? We just
don't know. And again, it was relatively short-term study, but there was really no difference in the
outcomes. The challenge is also what are the characteristics of the patients? Are they
smokers? How's their diet? How do they differ? We don't really know. What's the overall context?
And the thing is, if you're using a natural substance like fish oil, it's different
than using a drug. They work in different ways in concert with the body, not like the drug in a
reductionist way. And so they may have more subtle effects and they may have obviously call
pleomorphic effects. In other words, there's many, many different effects from a substance.
When you take a drug like a statin, it has extra effects, but it primarily lowers LDL and it
reduces inflammation a little bit. It's a specific enzyme, a specific pathway. With fish oil, for
example, it works on hundreds of different sites in the body and it's essential for our health.
You cannot survive long-term without omega-3 fatty acids. That's why they call them essential fatty acids. They are
essential for life and you cannot get them other than from your diet and primarily from wild fish
or wild plants, although you can get obviously from fish oil supplements. Now, not all fish oil
is the same. What kind of fish oil were they using? Was it contaminated with toxins? Was it oxidized?
And so forth. What was the underlying health of the patient? So it's challenging to just look at
these studies and draw the conclusion and say, this is definitively shows that fish oil is useless.
And forget about heart disease. You know, when you're looking at one disease, one condition,
one substance, it's not how these natural substances work.
For example, magnesium works on 300 different enzymes.
Omega-3 fats are involved in the formation of your cell membranes, are critical for cell communication, regulate inflammation, are critical for your hair, your skin, your nails.
They're critical for mood, for cognitive function. So they have so many other
benefits in the body. And even if maybe they're not hugely effective for someone who's had a
heart attack or about to have a heart attack to prevent a second one or one that they're about
to get, it doesn't mean that they're not useful as part of your overall health regimen. Clearly,
they're not dangerous, although there was some evidence that there may be some increased risk
of arrhythmias, although it doesn't quite make sense because other studies
have shown, like the trials in Italy, where they actually interviewed with fish oil, they found
dramatically lower levels of arrhythmias or irregular heartbeats and death after getting
fish oil. So I wish nutrition research was simple and straightforward. It just isn't.
And you have to look at the overall context of all the research. What are the biological
mechanisms? How does it work in your body? What other functions does it have in your body besides,
for example, just your cardiovascular health? So it's important to sort of be more critical
and more thinking about it and not just say, oh, I'm not taking fish oil anymore because this one
study showed it doesn't work for this particular condition in this population, which may not
be generalizable to you.
I can tell you clinically from seeing thousands of patients that many, many, many Americans
are very deficient in omega-3 fats.
And it's so critical for brain development.
If you're giving a baby formula, their IQ points are average seven points lower because there's no omega-3
fats. Although now they realize this and they're putting omega-3 DHA into the, you know, they're
putting it into the formula. In fact, in this study, if I'm not wrong, I'm going to double
check, but I think what they did was they gave them EPA, which is just one component of Omega.
Oh, no, they gave both EPA and DHA.
So they did both.
And they were basically giving four grams.
So I think that, you know, again, I wouldn't dismiss it.
I think, do I take it?
Absolutely.
Do I think that it's necessary for, you know, our health and vitality?
Absolutely.
Uh, I think it's important which one you get.
So they're not all the same.
Uh, you can get fish oil.
It's, you know, from companies that don't necessarily test for purity, for potency.
They may have contaminants.
They can have a lot of petrochemicals in them, heavy metals, because the fish themselves are contaminated.
So it's important to get the right fish and the right process for extracting the oil.
For example, Dutch Harbor Omegas is a fish oil from cod liver oil that comes from Alaska, developed by my friend and colleague and mentor, Jeffrey Bland, which is for sale at Big Bold Health.
And it's processed in a very different way
uh and what it does aside from taking out all the toxins it's at very low temperature and pressure
so preserve within that fish oil and this may for example not have been in other fish oil
are these things called pro-resolving meteors so we know people for example who eat fish
have less heart attacks right right, and longer life.
But they're getting the whole fish oil without any of these sort of weird extraction methods that may alter the characteristics of the fish oil.
For example, it might cause it to oxidize.
Or maybe it heats up in a way that it destroys these compounds called pro-resolvents or pro-resolving mediators.
Or CERMs are selective pro-resolvents or pro-resolving mediators or CERMs are selective pro-resolving mediators.
And these are the effective anti-inflammatory compounds in fish oil. They're like the brake on your immune system. So they're designed to resolve inflammation. That's why it's called
pro-resolvents, but they're very diminished in most fish oil. So maybe the fish oil they were
given in the study didn't have any of these pro-resolving mediators.
You need the right fish oil.
So you might've been given the wrong quote drug.
And of course, they're not going to see an outcome
because the benefits come from these pro-resolvings
in fish oil that you get from eating fish naturally,
but you wouldn't necessarily get
if you have the average fish oil.
So it's important to be more discerning
and discriminating about where you're getting your fish oil,
what the company's process is for manufacturing and harvesting it. So my favorite new fish oil is the Dutch Harbor
Omega from cod liver oil, which also contains vitamin A and vitamin D. And it doesn't have
that smell, doesn't have that taste. You can get the liquid, you can get the capsules. And the
funny thing is that, you know,
that when you have a fish oil that's properly extracted,
it doesn't smell.
It doesn't smell bad.
If you get the ones that are smelling and bad, you know,
you may not be giving the right one.
So, again, these are just some of the nuances and thinking behind why
you don't just go, oh, this one study showed this.
That's it.
It means the fish oil doesn't work.
Well, what fish oil and what patient under what
circumstance like this is more detail so i hope that answers your question i know it's a lot
there's no easy answer but bottom line is yes i still use fish oil yes i recommend fish oil yes
it's good for many many other functions of the body besides the heart even if that didn't work
so like your brain and your skin your hair your nails so and regulating information so i think
it's really important to use no that's very helpful. And obviously what we're hearing is that quality
matters. So you had mentioned just one fish oil that you like, and of course we'll put the link
to that in the notes so that anyone who's interested will be able to get that and find
that product. So thank you so much for that. The next question is about alkaline and acidic foods.
What's your theory about, you know, foods having acidity or alkalinity?
And, you know, does that impact bone health or overall health in general?
Yeah, so I think there's a lot of confusion about acid-base balance in the body.
And there's whole approaches of eating an alkaline diet and so forth.
And I just sort of like to sort of break that down a little for people because it can get
kind of complicated.
Your body has got a tightly controlled pH, which is the acid-base balance, right?
Acid-alkaline.
And if you eat a highly processed industrial diet, you'll be eating a very acidic diet.
Sugar, starch, you know, processed foods, refined oils.
These are industrial animal products.
These are highly acidic.
And they will slightly change your pH toward an acid state.
The key is every chemical reaction in your body requires a certain pH in order to function
and to optimize their metabolic processes.
So if your pH is off even a little bit,
it does have a negative impact on your health.
So we all want to be more a little out there.
Our human pH is 7.4.
7.0 is the middle point between acid and base, right?
So 7.4 is a little more towards the alkaline side.
So how do you achieve that?
Well, not that hard.
You eat a whole foods, plant-rich diet and get rid of the junk and processed food, and you'll be eating an alkaline diet. I mean, if you want a
lot of alkaline foods, just make a big pot of root vegetables and greens and boil them down and drink
the broth. It's super alkaline. That's sort of an easy tip. People who drink alkaline water,
I think it is really important.
Now, in terms of acid-base balance and bone health,
for sure, for sure that if you are on the acidic side,
it does increase bone turnover and bone loss.
So it's important to make sure that your diet
is overall balanced,
that you're eating more of a whole foods, plant-rich diet.
The vegan diet is sort of common sense. And and obviously if you eat a bunch of crap it's not going to be good
for you and it's not good for your bones um certain things are particularly bad for your bones
caffeine alcohol sugar stress phosphoric acid which is in all the colas processed ingredients
um excess amounts of animal protein may be a problem for some people.
So it really depends on your overall health. But I think people should focus on eating a
alkaline diet, but not go crazy with a lot of the virginity around it, I think. And it's just
achieved by eating a whole foods unprocessed, a plant-rich diet. Okay, that's great. That's
good information. So something that we're going to talk about next
is a question that we often get. And that question is what is leaky gut? We hear a lot about that
from different people. Obviously we've heard it from you, but you know, some of our community
members are like, what exactly is leaky gut? How do you deal with it? How do you know that you even have it? Like what to do with it?
Yeah, this could take an entire hour.
Okay.
I'm going to try to summarize it.
Thank you.
So basically your intestinal lining is a giant surface area,
the small intestine and the large intestine.
It's basically the size of a tennis court,
maybe two tennis courts. It's kind of folded in and out of itself, and it's got all these villi,
lots of surface area. And that is where you interact with the outside world. It's where you absorb nutrients. It's where you keep out bad stuff like bacteria and food allergens and toxins. And the barrier is very delicate.
It's just one cell between you, essentially, and a sewer, right?
From your mouth to your anus is a tube.
It's essentially outside your body.
It's external.
And it has to filter what you put in there, literally pounds of foreign stuff every day.
And so when that barrier breaks down, you get sick.
The breakdown of that barrier is what we call leaky gut.
And essentially, the cells are one cell, but they're stuck together like Legos like this.
And those cells can come apart but normally the food is supposed to go through
the cell called trans cellular transmission that then goes into your bloodstream and gets absorbed
and goes the rest of your body to do what it's supposed to do but you know you've got 60 of your
immune system that's right underneath the lining of your gut and so if foreign proteins from food or bacteria leak into between the cells,
we call it intercellular absorption, that actually drives exposure directly to your immune system,
and it leads to inflammation throughout the body. And so leaky gut as a phenomenon has been linked
to not just allergic or autoimmune diseases that are obviously inflammatory and asthma and allergies and so forth, but also to cardiovascular disease, to obesity, to Alzheimer's, to cancer, to diabetes, to autism, to ADHD.
I mean, the list goes on and on and on. I mean, it is probably the single most important phenomenon driving so much of chronic disease today is damage to our microbiome because of poor diet, because of stress, because of environmental toxins, because of the overuse of antibiotics and acid blocking drugs and anti-inflammatories and all the things we do to bust our gut.
And so the key to longevity and the key to optimal health is really fixing your
gut. And we've been working on a project really about fixing the gut called Gut Food, which is
coming out soon. And essentially it's a program and a number of ingredients that really helped
repair a leaky gut. Polyphenols, prebiotics, probiotics, fibers, uh immunoglobulins things that really help to
restore the integrity of the gut line because when that integrity is damaged you're screwed
and sometimes it's worse for some people than others and and there's ways to test for it so
from a functional medicine perspective we talked about the 5r program to repair the gut the first
is to remove the things that are abnormal. So, and we'll get into
the five R's. I just want to sort of give you the overview. It's removing things that are abnormal
to replace what's missing, to re-inoculate with healthy bacteria, to repair the gut lining,
and to restore the body through managing the stress response. Well, I hope you enjoyed that
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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
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especially when it comes to your health.