The Dr. Hyman Show - Exclusive Dr. Hyman+ Ask Mark Anything: Ketogenic Diet & Diabetes, Exercise Intolerance, And More
Episode Date: April 26, 2022Hey podcast community, Dr. Mark here. My team and I are so excited to offer you a 7 Day Free trial of the Dr. Hyman+ subscription for Apple Podcast. For 7 days, you get access to all this and more ent...irely for free! It's so easy to sign up. Just go click the Try Free button on the Doctor’s Farmacy Podcast page in Apple Podcast. In this teaser episode, you’ll hear a preview of our monthly Ask Mark Anything episode. Want to hear the full episode? Subscribe now. With your 7 day free trial to Apple Podcast, you’ll gain access to audio versions of: - Ad-Free Doctor’s Farmacy Podcast episodes - Exclusive monthly Functional Medicine Deep Dives - Monthly Ask Mark Anything Episodes - Bonus audio content exclusive to Dr. Hyman+ Trying to decide if the Dr. Hyman+ subscription for Apple Podcast is right for you? Email my team at plus@drhyman.com with any questions you have. Please note, Dr. Hyman+ subscription for Apple Podcast does not include access to the Dr. Hyman+ site and only includes Dr. Hyman+ in audio content.
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Hey podcast community, Dr. Mark here. I'm so excited to offer you a seven-day free trial
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the Doctors Pharmacy podcast on Apple podcast and sign up for your free trial. Okay, here we go.
Hi, everyone. Welcome to this month's episode of Ask Mark Anything. My name is Herschel Korth,
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 are here with our expert, Dr. Mark Hyman. Hi, Dr. Hyman.
Hi. So we have gathered all of your questions this month and we are ready to ask Mark anything. So let's
go ahead and get started. So our first question is about the ketogenic diet. We've heard so many
great things about that diet and basically how it can benefit people. But the question that comes
from our community is, is this something that someone that has type one diabetes should try?
And is there anything that they should look out for
if they're going to go ahead and try that keto diet
with type one diabetes?
Yes, yes, yes.
Great question.
So for type two diabetes,
the ketogenic diet hands down is the number one treatment
and it exceeds the power of all the treatments combined.
In fact, it does things that no other treatment available today can do.
And this is the work out of the project that was established with Sarah Halberg and Sammy.
It's Virta Health, which is an online ketogenic diet platform that helps type 2 diabetics cure diabetes,
even advance type 2 diabetes.
With that said, it's generally safe for type 2 diabetics cure diabetes, even advance to type 2 diabetes. With that said,
it's generally safe for type 2 diabetics to do this. Type 1 diabetes is quite different.
Type 2 diabetics have too much insulin. Type 1 diabetics have no insulin. And so it's a very
tricky thing in diabetics where type 1 tend to be more fragile in the blood sugar fluctuations
and the response to insulin. You can often have type one and type two combined. People are jacking up their insulin doses in order to eat more carbs
and sugar. They're going to gain weight and they're going to basically have a type one,
type two diabetes scene, which I've seen quite a lot. In the old days, Dr. Jocelyn, the Jocelyn
Diabetes Center at Harvard, Dr. Jocelyn was a famous endocrinologist back in
the day in the 1920s. And the way they treated type 1 diabetics back then before
Banting discovered insulin was extremely high fat ketogenic diets. So literally they would put them
on 70% fat or more, 70, 75% fat, 20% protein, 5% carbs.
And it literally kept these patients alive, which is a miracle.
The problem is if you're type one diabetic and you go on a ketogenic diet, you're prone
to getting into ketoacidosis, which is a life-threatening condition where your ketones spiral out of
control and it can cause dehydration and all kinds of metabolic kidney metabolic
complications. So it's a, it's a life-threatening condition. So you have to be very, very careful
under medical supervision. You have to really know what you're doing. You have to be very dialed into
your lifestyle. I have a good friend who's a doctor. She's a type one diabetic and she was
on a ketogenic diet and she's, that's how she manages her diabetes.
And, and what's even more remarkable is that she's a vegan, vegan keto, which is really hard to do,
like really hard to do because you need protein and fat and not starch and carbs. And most vegan food is carbs. So she managed to figure it out and she'll only need a couple of units of insulin.
The most diabetics will need 20 units of insulin a day as a baseline. That's sort of our baseline, you know, right. You know,
production 15 to 20 units. Um, when you start needing more like 30, 40, 50 units, 60 units a
day, it means you're, it means you're insulin resistant or you're eating way too much carbs.
Uh, and she was able to get her insulin needs almost down to zero simply by using a ketogenic
diet. And then she's, you know,
but you have to really manage your fluid intake, your electrolyte intake. You have to follow up
with a doctor. You have to know what you're doing, but it can be an effective way. And you don't even
have to be full keto. You could just be an extremely low carb type one diabetic. For example,
10 day detox diet is about 50% fat, you know, probably 20% protein, 30% carbs. It's a little bit more,
you know, or maybe 25% protein, 25% carbs. It's a little bit better, but I think, you know,
you really want a higher fat diet, like olive oil, avocados, nuts and seeds, you know, depending on
your metabolic profile, even, you know, good saturated fats are fine from grass fed meats and fish fat and even
coconut oil, MC2, all those are fine. So I think, I think it's, it's a, it's a tricky thing, but it
can be very helpful. And I think there's a spectrum of approaches that involves full-blown keto to
sort of a modified keto or just a low carb, higher fat diet. Yeah. That makes a lot of sense. Thank
you. Thank you for that answer. Darcy, over to you for the next question.
Yeah, super interesting. Thank you. So switching gears a little bit, the next question is about exercise intolerance. What exactly could cause something like that? And I guess, what is it? Exercise intolerance? It sounds kind of like an excuse, but I know that there's way more to it than that. And of course, what should we do if somebody is experiencing exercise intolerance? Exercise intolerance is not that uncommon.
And I've had a number of patients with this and I really found a good hack to fix it.
Exercise intolerance can come from a number of reasons, right? It can come from some chronic illness. It can come from being out of shape. It can come from
having really low fitness levels and
so forth. But for the most part, it's a mitochondrial problem. And people who, you know,
who, who exercise and feel crappy after, you know, it's either because they have some acquired or,
or inherited mitochondrial issue, or potentially because their adrenals are not working.
And if people are chronically stressed and have adrenal exhaustion,
they will develop exercise and tolerable exercise
and they'll feel worse afterwards.
So those are the two main reasons.
For the adrenal issues,
it's really about resetting your joints.
You don't wanna do strenuous exercise.
You wanna do light exercise, walking, yoga,
those kinds of things to start,
getting your circadian rhythms in balance,
waking up and sleeping at the same time,
getting off your sugar and starch and processed foods,
making sure you're taking enough vitamin C and zinc
and B-complex vitamins and B5 or pantothenic acid,
using adaptogenic herbs, things like ginseng, rhodiola,
Siberian ginseng, euthyrococus, shwaganda.
All these are really adaptogenic herbs
that help to reset the adrenals, meditation.
All these tools are really helpful.
The mitochondrial stuff is a little more interesting. And these are people who like
exercise and like people get that, you know, runners high, they just don't get it. And they
feel crappy after they just want to take a nap. So the key is to identify what's really the true
source of the problem is, and it can be an acquired mitochondria. It could be heavy metals.
It could be inflammation from something. It could be infection. So there's a lot of causes, mold.
It was important to look at what are the causes of it, but some people just have sluggish
mitochondria. And what I've found is if I give them a cocktail, a mitochondrial cocktail to
boost their energy production, they won't have that post-exercise fatigue. And the mitochondria
essentially are the little energy powerhouses of your cells that take oxygen and calories, they won't have that post-exercise fatigue. And the mitochondria essentially
are the little energy powerhouses of your cells
that take oxygen and calories and they burn them
just like a car engine takes in gasoline and air
and take the engine and combust it in the engine
and produces energy to drive the car.
The energy that we produce is ATP, very important.
And that requires a properly functioning mitochondria.
And there's a lot of steps.
It's like an assembly line that builds the energy
your body uses for every chemical and every other reaction in your body.
And that requires things like CoQ10, lipoic acid, N-acetylcysteine, B vitamins, riboflavin,
and, and, and, and, you know, niacin, all, all the key B vitamins, magnesium,
creatine, sulfate, a lot of glutathione. All these are really
important in the steps to make energy. And so if you give a cocktail of these things beforehand,
like an hour before, it's going to allow carnitine, amino acids and so forth,
amino acids, you literally can jack up the motor MCT oil, all really dramatically helps. So I put people
on a mitochondrial cocktail before exercise and they just have really dramatically improved
tolerance of exercise and don't have that post-exercise crash. Yeah. Interesting. Is that
mitochondrial cocktail available like as a supplement? Is it something that we can link to
or? Yes, there are, there are. Yes. Yeah. So. So we can kind of put a list of what the products are,
but I think that there are some combination products,
like one called M-Mitochondrial NRG by Designs for Health.
I like that one a lot.
It contains all the various cofactors, the B vitamins,
all the mitochondrial support nutrients,
but sometimes you need like a higher dose.
So sometimes you need like,
you can take five grams of creatine,
you need to take a teaspoon of the amino acid complex. It's called the, it's called amino acid complex
by Thorne. You take a 500 milligrams of acetylcarnitine, 200 milligrams of CoQ10.
And, and, and that will, I'll pass you on your regular B vitamins that will often really help
to prevent any of this post-exercise fatigue. Yeah. Super interesting. Thank you so much,
Dr. Hyman and over to Herschel for our next question. Yes. And thank you also for listing out all those supplements. I know that all our community is always looking for detailed answers
as to exactly how much and what to take. So thanks for that. Our next question is about
regenerative agriculture. So we've heard you talk about that quite a bit on different podcasts.
And one of our community members wants to know is that besides being a dedicated consumer,
what else do you think someone can do to support regenerative agriculture?
Well, I think that regenerative agriculture is a really important advance in our understanding
of how to grow food in an ecological way. Just as the functional medicine is an ecological system of healing,
it's very much like regenerative agriculture. And in functional medicine, we treat the root cause,
we deal with the underlying health of the host. In other words, if we make your body so healthy,
disease can't show up. So regenerative medicine is very much like regenerative agriculture,
which is creating a healthy host by optimizing nutritional levels, optimizing hormone levels, optimizing the
gut microbiome, and making basically an unfriendly place for disease.
Same thing with the regenerative agriculture.
It's about treating the soil and not the plant.
You know, instead of like pouring chemicals, which are like drugs, right?
When you put chemicals like drugs on disease, rather than that, we treat the host.
In the conventional agriculture, they put all kinds of chemicals on the plants, pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, instead of
dealing with the soil, which is what you should be doing. So regenerative agriculture is really
about dealing with the soil. And I think there's a lot of things you can do for wanting to support
regenerative agriculture. There are increasingly brands out there that are producing products. I
would encourage you to buy those products. There's companies that are actually investing in regenerative agriculture solutions on a business
level. So you can invest with those companies. You can encourage your congressmen and senators
to actually vote for policies that support breaking down some of the log jams around
regenerative agriculture. Like for example, if you're a farmer and you want to plant cover crops,
you get penalized by the government for your crop insurance,
which is actually doing the right thing that you get penalized for.
So there's a lot of really antiquated policies that need to get updated.
So you can become an activist.
You can work with certain nonprofits like Kiss the Ground or Carbon Underground.
So there's a lot of opportunities, or even our foundation,
which is our nonprofit,
which is a food fix campaign to help drive food policy changes and leverage education and policy
shift in Washington. So there's a lot of ways to get involved. But, you know, if you read my book,
food fix, I have a whole bunch of things that people can do. There's, if you go to foodfixbook.com,
there's a food fix action guide with all kinds of individual actions that people can do there's if you go to foodfixbook.com there's a food fix action guide with all kinds of
individual actions that people can do so you know you can just start for example with a compost pile
in your backyard you can maybe create a compost in your community you can uh you know focus on
maybe building some community gardens and getting your community involved and i or maybe you can
even do you know more activist stuff for example in your local community, make, make local governments put in
ordinances that mandate composting. So there's all kinds of stuff you can do, but I think it's
important to start where you feel comfortable and where, where you can easily connect to.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. So we'll put the link to your book so that people can
get more ideas from there. But thank you for that detailed answer.
Well, I hope you enjoyed that teaser of exclusive content that you get every single month with Dr.
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