The Dr. Hyman Show - Exclusive Dr. Hyman+ Ask Mark Anything: Nutritional Testing, Time Restricted Eats, Cholesterol, And More
Episode Date: October 5, 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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. I'm Herschel Kurth. I'm the Dr. Hyman Plus community manager. Welcome. And I'm joined by Darcy Gross, one of the producers of the Longevity Roadmap docuseries. And of course, we're here with Dr. Mark Hyman. Hello, Dr. Hyman.
Hi, everybody. submitting your questions this month. We're so excited to have Dr. Hyman answer them. So let's go ahead and get started. So Dr. Hyman, our first question comes from a community member who actually
happens to be also a practitioner. And she wants to know that for the purposes of nutritional
testing, is it preferable to do a white blood count testing or a red blood count testing or
serum testing? What's the best way to look at the test
and what would you recommend? Oh, it's a very, very broad question because there's so many
different things to analyze when it comes to nutritional testing. And there isn't one answer
specific. And unfortunately in medicine, we sort of operate according to what I call the lamp
principle, which is we sort is this joke of this guy who
lost his keys on the street, and he's looking for them under this lamppost, and his friend comes by
and says, what are you doing? He says, well, I'm looking for my keys. He's like, well, where'd you
lose them? I said, well, I lost them down the street. He said, why are you looking over here?
He says, well, the light's better here. So often in medicine, doctors will check blood levels of certain nutrients, which is pretty
irrelevant because that's not where you find the right answer, right?
So, for example, magnesium is a great example.
We test for a serum magnesium.
And if it's low, under two, two we go you have low magnesium the problem is it has to be
really really really really really low before you hit that too because you're tightly controlled
that's why we look at for example red blood cell magnesium which may be better but there may even
be a better test for magnesium where there is it's the gold standard, which is where you take a big load of magnesium intravenously,
and then you measure the urine output of magnesium over the next 24 hours. And if you
spill a lot of magnesium, then you're pretty good. You don't need it. If your body sucks on
and holds all that magnesium and you don't pee it out, well, then you're low in magnesium.
So that's an example of how, you know, even the regular blood tests don't look at it.
For example, if you want to look at zinc, you know, you can look at plasma zinc.
You can look at white blood cell zinc.
If you want to look at, for example, B12, you can look at urinary methylmalonic acid,
or you can look at, for example, serum B12, but that might not be very accurate to look
at serum B12.
Or maybe folate. You want to have at serum B12. Or maybe folate.
You want to have folate.
You can do serum folate.
Not so helpful.
Red blood cell folate, maybe a little bit better.
Maybe you should look at homocysteine instead of folate.
Maybe you should be looking at urinary 4-aminoglutamic acid levels, which is actually a much better
indicator of certain types of folate deficiency.
And I'm just using these examples.
They're big words and stuff, but it's just to help you understand that there is no one way to test nutrients. You know, vitamin D,
you certainly can test in the serum, but other things you can't. If you want to measure vitamin
C, it's kind of pretty quickly used up. So you can't really tell very easily. So there are
urinary tests, there's red cell, white cell tests, plasma tests, there's even
hair testing, believe it or not.
So there's a lot of ways to figure out what your nutrient status is, but it's very individual.
And then some things you really can't measure, you have to measure the secondary impact of
not having those nutrients.
So there are a lot of tests we use, for example, organic acid testing, which is a urine test
to look at the metabolites. So we can say, oh, you're low in carnitine or B2 or biotin because this pathway is not
working.
We look at the effects.
So it's a complicated answer, unfortunately, and it takes years to figure this out in the
science.
And for practitioners, you can learn it, but you have to really do the homework and learn
about how to
properly test person nutritional status, not just do a regular blood test and say, well, I checked
all their B vitamins in their blood. Everything's fine. Well, that's not meaningful. Yeah. That
makes a lot of sense. Definitely years of practice as you've had and going into individual patients
and what they need. So thanks so much for that answer. Darcy, over to you for the next question. Yeah, for sure. Hi, Dr. Mark. How are you today?
Hi, Darcy.
So the next question is kind of changing gears and switching over to time-restricted eating.
So I think the first question is to really define time-restricted eating because it's kind of a type
of intermittent fasting, but it's not what we necessarily think of when it comes to intermittent
fasting. But specifically regarding taking supplements while you're doing time-restricted eating.
So the question is, if we have these supplements that basically need to be taken, let's say with
food, but you're restricting your eating window, do you like, how would you space those vitamins?
Is it something that you can take too many at once and then your body isn't really absorbing them?
Or can you just talk to the timing of supplements when it comes to time-restricted eating? Sure.
Sure. And maybe touch on, do they break a fast? That kind of thing. Yeah. So, so time-restricted
eating is essentially a way of eating that you're limiting the window in which you eat. So whether
it's six hours, eight hours, 10 hours. And the idea of
that is to give your body a rest. We used to call it breakfast. That's the original time-restricted
eating. It's a 12-hour fast, at least from six at night till six in the morning. If you eat dinner
at six and you don't eat till eight the next morning, that's a 14-hour fast. Okay. It's not
that hard to do. And the more extended versions is 16 hours.
Now, when you eat food, you are not just eating one thing. You are literally eating thousands of
different informational molecules, reading protein and all these amino acids and all these fatty
acids and different starches and carbohydrates. You're eating vitamins and minerals and phytochemicals and fibers.
And I mean, you're flooding your body with literally a myriad of molecules
all at the same time.
And guess what?
Your body is super smart.
It knows exactly what to do.
You don't have to go, gee, I'm only going to eat this carrot
because I can't have it with the celery because the celery has this in it.
And it might like it's like you could eat, you could eat.
And so my view, and I think, you know, whether there's good science on this, I don't think
it's true.
My view is that I think that you can take supplements whenever you're, whenever you
want.
Some are better absorbed with food, like the fat soluble vitamins, vitamin D, E, A, and K.
But most things you can take iron better on empty stomach. Some things are better with food. So
there's some rules about what you can eat what with, but in general, your body will figure it
out. And if you take a handful of supplements, you can do it with the beginning of the meal,
the middle of the meal, end of the meal. What I find is I like to mix, make a supplement sandwich.
So basically I'll eat a little food, throw some in, you know, for throw some in.
It's like a club sandwich of vitamins.
The reason is, you know, because often, you know, if you eat them at the end of a meal,
you might feel them.
You might like notice they have burps or the capsules dissolve and you'll taste it.
So that's just to avoid that. But that doesn't really matter. It's just more of a preference
thing. All right. Got it. That makes sense. And over to Herschel for our next question.
So our next question is something that we hear a lot about, and it's basically,
if you've had the testing done to determine what kind of particles you have,
how do you change your LDL particles from the
small dense ones, which we know are not great to the fluffy ones, basically to reverse atrial
calcification? How would you go about doing something like that?
Well, first of all, let's just talk about cholesterol. And, you know, there's a saying in medicine, if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
So if you're a cardiologist and you see a high LDL, all you think of is statin.
And, well, that's not fair.
They think of other things.
But basically, it's like super focused.
And the reason is that we have a drug that lowers LDL.
Now, if we had a drug that raised HDL at worked at SaveWise, we'd be prescribing that.
So we're basically so hyper-focused on cholesterol as the problem that we miss a lot of the real
story, which is that heart disease is a complex condition caused by inflammation, which can
be caused by many things, including the cholesterol in our blood, which is oxidized, has to be damaged
cholesterol in order for you to be having a problem. It can't just be your regular cholesterol
because that usually doesn't go to heart disease. It's when it's inflamed and damaged.
Second, what is going on with the inflammation in your body? What's going on with your microbiome?
What's going on with the other labs that you have, for example, like homocysteine or fibrinogen or LPA or
as the LDL oxidized. And then more importantly, we look at not just the cholesterol numbers that
your typical doctor looks at, but we look at what we call the lipid particle number and size.
So when you get your cholesterol test, it's simply the weight of your cholesterol.
If your cholesterol is 200, that means it's 200 milligrams of cholesterol per deciliter.
So it's basically a weight of the cholesterol.
But it doesn't tell you whether it's made up of big, light, fluffy cholesterol particles or small, dense, little dangerous particles. Because you could have the same number, let's say 200, but you could have 2,000 small particles
or you could have zero small particles, same number.
So what's really important is to understand the particle number and the size and the quality
of your cholesterol.
It turns out that it's actually sugar and starch that drive the bad kind of cholesterol
we call atherogenic, which
means it creates atheromas or atherosclerotic heart disease or plaque and heart disease,
right?
So this is the stuff that actually causes the damage.
And so you really want to make sure that you check when you go to the doctor, not just
your regular cholesterol profile, but you check the lipid particle number and size.
That is the most important type of cholesterol to check.
So with that said, if it's bad,
if you have what we call atherogenic cholesterol profile,
which is essentially a small, dense LDL particles,
usually high numbers, small, dense HDL, you want large, light, fluffy ones or low LDL particles, usually high numbers, small, dense HDL.
You want large, light, fluffy ones or low LDL, high triglycerides.
If you have this pattern of high triglycerides, low HDL and high LDL, but a lot of particles
and a lot of small particles, that's the worst kind.
And what's causing that is not fat, it's sugar.
It's starch and sugar.
So processed food, starch and sugar drive what we call insulin resistance, which means
your body becomes resistant to the effects of insulin.
You end up eating more and more insulin.
And what the insulin does, it drives belly fat deposition.
It causes inflammation in the liver and the body.
It causes the different kinds of triglycerides to be produced that are large, dangerous triglyceride
particles. It lowers HDL. It raises triglycerides. It raises the number of total particles,
and it also makes them smaller. So it's really the prediabetes. And guess what? 88% of Americans
have this problem at some degree or another, it's called poor metabolic health.
And so the idea is, is to do the right kind of test,
which is an NMR lipid test, or they have cardio IQ from quest.
NMR is now through lab core. When I started doing it,
they had a company called liposcience. It wasn't even,
it wasn't even part of the regular lab profiles,
but the regular labs now have actually implemented this as part of their
lab testing so if you want to change from the dense dangerous ones the light fluffy ones it's
it's about cutting out sugar and starch you're needing good fats actually fat saturated fat
raises the total number a little bit but actually will make you have more large particles and more HDL. So the net benefit is really there. Now it's also personal and individual. So I had a patient once,
for example, who was terrible with their cholesterol, she had a really bad cholesterol
profile, small particles, high triglycerides, low HDL, and ended up having resistance to weight
loss and insulin resistance. And I and i said look why don't you
just try a ketogenic diet for a little while let's get off get off uh let's get off uh all the starch
and sugar and let's add coconut oil and butter stuff that you know isn't something maybe probably
most of us should be having all the time, but everything dropped her cholesterol dropped a hundred points from 300,
200 or triglycerides dropped. I mean, went up, uh,
dropped 300 points or H Joe went up 20 points or LDL came way down or
particles got big, light and fluffy. And she lost 20 pounds. Uh,
another guy was in an athlete and he wanted to try ketogenic diet. I'm like,
okay, you can try it. Let's track what happens. And it was the opposite.
He ate all that food and his fats and everything went bad. So really individualized. But the key is exercise,
eating low starch and sugar, more good fats, avocados, olive oil, nuts and seeds.
Some saturated fats are okay as well. And that will really dramatically change the quality of
your cholesterol. And you can see this. You can see this happen with people. It's pretty impressive
when they change their diets and they cut up all that stuff, their bodies just
respond tremendously. Yeah, definitely. And actually you had a great podcast episode with
Dr. Bohem about this very issue about cholesterol and sort of it. So we'll make sure that we link
to that in the show notes. I'm also going to encourage the Dr. Hyman Plus community to check
out our functional medicine deep dive from May all about heart health as well and that kind of goes into a little bit
of the testing that Dr. Hyman was just talking about so thank you for that 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. 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 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.