The Dr. Hyman Show - Healing Autoimmune Disease Using A Functional Medicine Approach with Dr. Sunjya Schweig
Episode Date: January 6, 2023This episode is sponsored by Athletic Greens and InsideTracker. The array of frustrating symptoms that come along with autoimmune diseases leave those who are suffering constantly looking for answers.... Simply put, autoimmune diseases—like rheumatoid arthritis, celiac sprue, inflammatory bowel, type 1 diabetes, Hashimoto’s, Graves’, lupus, fibromyalgia, and so many more—are conditions where the body’s immune system attacks its own tissues rather than a foreign molecule like bacteria. This happens when something confuses the immune system. Today, I’m joined by Dr. Sunjya Schweig to discuss why autoimmune issues are on the rise and how we can treat them using a Functional Medicine approach. Sunjya K. Schweig, MD, is deeply committed to building a cutting-edge, data-driven ecosystem for the prevention and reversal of chronic illness. As the founder and president of the California Center for Functional Medicine, Dr. Schweig and his team provide personalized, precision medicine care to help people with chronic illness recover their health. In 2021, Dr. Schweig founded the Functional Medicine Research and Technology Center, which aims to prevent and reverse chronic illness through research, education, and innovation. A graduate of the University of California, Berkeley, Dr. Schweig completed his MD at the University of California, Irvine, and his family medicine residency at the University of California, San Francisco, Family Practice Residency Program in Santa Rosa, CA. He is board certified in family practice (ABFM) integrative and holistic medicine (ABIHM). This episode is sponsored by Athletic Greens and InsideTracker. AG1 contains 75 high-quality vitamins, minerals, whole-food sourced superfoods, probiotics, and adaptogens to support your entire body. Right now when you purchase AG1 from Athletic Greens, you will receive 10 FREE travel packs with your first purchase by visiting athleticgreens.com/hyman. InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. Right now they’re offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman. Here are more details from the episode (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Common root causes of autoimmune disease (6:32 / 4:04)  Diet and gut health (8:49 / 6:23) What is autoimmune disease? (9:39 / 7:12) The most common autoimmune diseases (10:39 / 8:17)  The conventional medicine approach to treating autoimmune disease (12:17 / 9:50) Case study of a patient Dr. Schweig treated (15:31 / 12:57) Healing the gut with diet and foods to avoid when treating autoimmune disease (25:01 / 22:15) My personal experience with autoimmune disease (34:33 / 32:25) Chronic infections and autoimmune disease (35:57 / 33:22) The California Center for Functional Medicine (42:47 / 40:21) Learn more about the California Center for Functional Medicine and the Functional Medicine Research and Technology Center.
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
The food and drink that we take in by our mouth is by far the biggest factor of information
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Hey, everybody. It's Dr. Mark Hyman. Welcome to a special episode of The Doctor's
Pharmacy that I call House Call. And in this series, I sit down with colleagues in the field
of functional medicine talking about topics that I think are going to interest you all,
which is how do you deal with all this chronic stuff we're dealing with as a society that is
not getting better using traditional care approaches.
And today I'm joined by Asuncia Schweig, who's a friend of mine who went to the same residency program I did in family practice in Santa Rosa, California many years ago.
And we're going to talk about how we as functional medicine doctors tackle specific conditions
that we see every day.
Dr. Schweig is a family doctor.
He is a leader in this field of functional medicine.
And he's done really great work in establishing with Chris Kresser,
this California Center for Functional Medicine, which he now heads up.
And the website is ccfmed.com.
You'll learn more about what they're doing there.
He's also developed the Functional Medicine Research and Technology Center,
which is fxmedresearch.org
to help prevent and reverse chronic illness through research and education innovation.
And I'm glad to have you on this House Call podcast.
Mark, it's great to see you again. Yeah, thanks so much for having me. It's a pleasure to be here.
That's great. Well, today we're going to talk about a topic which is probably one of the most
important causes of suffering and disability and dysfunction today. And it's something which we
really are very poor at dealing with. And it's probably the number one condition facing us,
other than probably obesity and metabolic syndrome, which is autoimmune disease.
Collectively, autoimmune disease represents more people than heart disease, cancer, and diabetes combined. And that's all comers, right? Hashimoto's, thyroid, MS, rheumatoid arthritis,
colitis, all the autoimmune diseases, which are all divided up into specialties. And each
specialty takes care of their own autoimmune disease.
And unfortunately, that's really not a very good way of thinking about it, because as we're going to discuss today on the podcast, there are specific causes of autoimmune disease
that if you deal with, you can deal with all these various different autoimmune diseases
rather than having to slice the body up and all these organs and parts of the specialty.
So welcome to the podcast.
Yeah, thanks again.
And it's great to be here. So welcome to the podcast. Yeah, thanks again. And it's great
to be here. I love having this conversation. Autoimmune disease is just such an incredibly
important topic. And as you know, and as many of us functional medicine doctors know,
it's really one of the most rewarding areas that we work in because of the opportunity that we have
to really dig deep and to look at so many different factors that affect the triggering,
the onset, the propagation of inflammation and autoimmune. So it's really a favorite of mine.
Yeah, it is too for me. And it's one of those really satisfying areas of functional medicine
where we see real results and real transformations. I remember a number of
patients have come to me, for example, about to take their colon out for colitis. And then these people get completely better
very quickly. I had one young woman, she was 30 years old, and she was sent by her uncle,
who was, you know, a fairly prominent guy. And she didn't really believe in what I was doing.
She lived in New Orleans, in Louisiana. She really just, she said she'd try it
because they were about to take her colon out.
She was 30 years old and I was on all these medications
and nothing was working.
And she came back and I talked to her six weeks later.
She says, well, I'm completely cured.
I didn't believe this was going to work,
but I'm completely cured and I feel fine
and I'm not taking any medication.
So we see that level of change,
which you just don't think about as possible, particularly in our traditional medical approach, which is focused on just suppressing
inflammation. So tell us about the root causes, because rather than saying, how are we going to
shut off and inhibit and block or tamp down inflammation? The question really should be,
what's causing the inflammation in the first
place. So from a functional medicine perspective, what are the causes of autoimmune disease and why
is it so much on the rise these days? Because it really wasn't as prevalent decades ago. It's now
increasing dramatically over time. Yeah, not as prevalent decades ago and still not as prevalent
in societies that still adhere to more traditional lifestyle, you know, balances and diet, sleep, nutrition, stress, exposure to light, exposure to screens.
You know, all these factors that are throwing our bodies out of balance.
And that's really, I think, the key thing.
You know, why are autoimmune diseases on the rise?
I think it really has to deal a lot with the fact that we're increasingly living out of balance and we're not respecting how our bodies have
evolved over millions and millions of years, right?
And so we think about when we're looking at functional medicine approach to autoimmune,
the key areas to consider are really all of those lifestyle factors, you know, the health
of our gut, what are we eating?
How are we eating? When are we eating? Super important concept that we'll dig into today of
intestinal permeability or leaky gut, the lay term of leaky gut. I prefer the more scientific term of
intestinal permeability. You know, huge, huge key topic. If you go to PubMed where all of our
research articles are and you type in intestinal permeability, more than 14,000 articles show up, right? And if you type in intestinal permeability
and autoimmune, you get also a ton of other articles. So the gut, chronic infections in
our bodies, in the gut, but also systemic persistent chronic infections. We'll talk
about that some today. Exposure to environmental toxins and stressors, you know, stress on our brain,
stress on our body, trauma, these all trigger inflammation and dysregulated hormonal pathways
and propagate autoimmune diseases. Inadequate or poor quality sleep, really, really important.
And so we'll go through, you know, any and all of these in more detail as we dig into our discussion yeah you know you touched upon the gut and permeability but you know the diet is a big
part of that right so our our modern diet has really driven our microbiome into disarray and
that's caused a whole host of downstream consequences to our health not just autoimmune
disease but cardiovascular disease obesity obesity, mental health issues,
and lots more. So this is a big deal. And I think diet plays such a big role. And in fact,
you know, when I had patients, you know, often go to the rheumatologist who were working with me,
they go, oh, diet has nothing to do with your rheumatoid arthritis or your lupus or whatever it is. I'm like, what? Although it's changing. I had a rheumatologist who I talked to at UCLA at
Cedars-Sinai. I was like, oh, thank God you called. I'm really excited about this. I can tell you my
work has gotten so much better with my patients since I started incorporating diet and their
outcomes are so much better. I'm like, yeah, it makes a big difference. So what actually is
autoimmune disease and what are the most prevalent autoimmune problems people are facing? Yeah. So autoimmune disease is really, you know, this idea of, I think of it as like the immune
system gone haywire, right? And you mentioned the word inflammation. Inflammation is really
one of the core concepts, right? And so we think about, you know, several main factors,
you know, genetics, of course, are important, right? But really, that's a minority.
We think, you know, genetics and the contribution that they have to autoimmune disease is maybe
only a third of really what's going on. And the other factors are, again, diet, lifestyle,
environmental triggers, infections. You know, the genetic factors, again, can cause a creative
predisposition, almost like this fuel. But then that spark, and also more fuel can get stacked
on there from the environment, from chronic infection, from these lifestyle factors,
to then activate these processes and make the autoimmune disease more clinically apparent.
There's probably over 100 different autoimmune diseases. Yeah. You know, 10 most common,
or you mentioned some of them, but rheumatoid arthritis,
Hashimoto's, autoimmune thyroiditis, celiac disease, Graves' disease, type 1 diabetes,
you know, the list goes on.
Vitiligo, rheumatic fever, pernicious.
All the colitis is, yeah.
Yeah.
So, you know, and, you know, the cost to us, you know, personally is huge for the individual, but also to society.
The National Institute of Allergy and In know, because estimates around just seven of these
hundred plus known autoimmune diseases, you know, estimates of cost annually ranges from 50 to 70
billion dollars. Whoa. Well, that's a lot of money. And I think I think the costs are so staggering
for the drugs that we're using. They're immunosuppressant drugs, increased risk of cancer
and infection. And they do help a lot of people. I'm not going to say they don't, but, you know, the average cost is about
50 grand for a year per patient. And I know I've seen so many people be able to get off these
compounds when they actually are changing the underlying causes. And you mentioned all the
different things, toxins, allergens, you know, the gut, diet, infection, infection stress and so forth sleep the you know these aren't often
one thing that's causing it in a single person but it may be multiple things and so you have to
kind of deal with all the factors um so so as traditional doctors we what was our sort of a
basic approach and what is it sort of the basic approach we sort of touched on a little bit but
i think it's worth sort of talking about it and then the disconnect between
like that and how we deal with functional medicine.
Yeah. So you mentioned, you know, these very, very expensive drugs, you know, the monoclonal
antibodies of which the pharmaceutical companies have a lot of incentives to develop because they
make a lot of money on drugs, right? And your point is
good, which is they can help people. But really, it's it comes down to this central divide of what
is conventional medicine trying to do. And I don't want to, you know, make it seem like doctors are
bad people. I have incredible respect is just, you know, some incredibly smart people. And most
doctors are so, so dedicated to taking care of their patients
and trying to find them help.
But it's really just from the top down
of how we trained in this idea,
this conventional approach to autoimmune
really is kind of like this codifying
of a lot of how Western medicine works,
which is suppress, which is make it stop,
control the immune response,
turn these inflammatory pathways off. And the problem is, is that it's not asking why. It's not asking why
is the inflammation there in the first place? Why is the immune system being triggered in the first
place, right? So the main things that doctors reach for are steroids, you know, corticosteroids
like prednisone, methylprednisolone, dexamethasone.
These work quickly and they work well.
They turn off the inflammation.
They shut down the immune system.
But huge side effects, really, really staggering side effects.
Increased type 2 diabetes risk, weight gain, infections, osteoporosis, etc.
Other medications, other immune suppressants are used like methotrexate
also shut down the body's immune response but you know a lot of toxicity liver toxicity increased
risk infections cancers leukemia etc and then we've talked about you know these monoclonal
antibodies some of the biological response modifiers, you know, again, they can be helpful in the short
term, but, you know, they're really just targeting one pathway. They're not, you know, taking care of
why that pathway is inflamed in the first place. And so it makes sense that, you know, they might
help in the beginning, but a lot of times there's this escape phenomenon happens where they stop working, right? And so, you know, it's really like a short-term kind of very myopic approach,
which if we stack in all these other lifestyle factors that we know about how to intervene
within functional medicine, you know, the potential for true healing is much, much greater.
Yeah, it's pretty quite amazing. It's one of the most satisfying things for me as a functional medicine doctor to treat because I can just tell you patient after patient
with all kinds of weird autoimmune diseases, some of which I've never even seen before. If you follow
the basic principles, it works. And I always say functional medicine is more about creating health
than it is treating disease. And so when you create the conditions for health and you take
away the impediments for health, it's quite amazing. So let's talk about a case and let's
talk about sort of how we diagnostically approach these patients and what
we do therapeutically that makes the most difference. So maybe share a case if I can
think of one, I'll share one too, but I'd love to hear a case from you about how someone presented,
what you did to them, what you tested for, what you found, how you treated them and what the
outcomes were and what this sort of objective results were
that you got. Yeah. So as I was getting ready for our talk today, you know, look through our work
and cases. And there's one case came to my mind. And so a 43 year old woman who we'll call Sarah.
And, you know, when we first met Sarah, she was experiencing some joint pain,
mild to moderate joint pain,
brain fog, trouble thinking clearly.
She's having some mood swings, intermittent anxiety, and a lot of fatigue.
And she's also having some gut symptoms, some bloating and gas, occasionally some loose stools, disrupted sleep, especially in the week leading up to her period.
So some hormonal fluctuations happening there.
Usually would fall asleep okay,
but you know, would wake up in the middle of the night, some trouble falling back asleep.
And like many of us, she was successful. She was very busy. She was working as a pharmacist with
long shifts, you know, three kids, very involved in their activities. And you know, historically
always able to manage her busy schedule, but she's kind of feeling like she's having more and more difficulty keeping up, more fatigue, decreased resilience, not waking up feeling rested, etc.
You know, and interestingly, when we talked about her family history, there was definitely a strong family history of hypothyroidism.
So that was kind of cluing us in the beginning.
And she was also on track with that.
She was wondering about that so she had been tested a bunch of times but always only with the tsh the thyroid stimulating hormone which is kind of like
the go-to test for um you know a lot of the primary doctors and internal medicine doctors
and it always had been normal it was in the normal range but her tsh had been trending up right so
remembering that tsh is inversely associated with thyroid function. So a lower TSH
is higher thyroid function and a higher TSH means lower thyroid function. Her numbers were, you know,
1.2, then 2.3, then 3.6, you know, but she was always told that this was quote normal, right?
And so, you know, her, you know, backstory, you know, during childhood, you did have some frequent ear infections, needed antibiotics, you know, not infrequently, seven or eight times.
So I was concerned about some early gut disruption there.
She also had a history of some stomachache episodes, but never diagnosed with a problem.
You know, was traveling abroad at one point, got food poisoning um some increased gut symptoms
after that etc you know really was just trying to watch her diet and i said i drink a lot of
kombucha i try to eat a healthy balanced diet um you know but you know there was some some
disruption there too because of how busy she was she would skip breakfast um she would frequently
get home late from work and not have time for for dinner until eight or nine o'clock and maybe just
have a bowl of cereal etc you know so in her, she came in and she was trying to improve her
energy. She wants to be able to exercise without being sore for days afterwards. She wanted to
feel like an athlete again. She wanted to improve her moods and lessen her brain fog so that she
could work more efficiently. You know, so we started off at the start gate with our patients. We tend to do a
pretty deep dive. We cast this really wide net. And I know that you guys do this too.
Yeah. So what would you look for? Like when you think about these patients, what are the
kinds of things that come up for you is I got to find out what the root cause is. How do you start
to think about those? Yeah. So we did a comprehensive blood panel, you know, looking at the thyroid again, but also adding on the free hormones, free T3, free T4.
We looked at reverse T3.
We looked at thyroid antibodies.
You know, we looked at markers of inflammation, markers of blood sugar dysregulation and insulin.
We also tested her for celiac, for celiac genetics and a celiac panel, given the history of abdominal pain and the strong family history of low thyroid.
We did gut testing.
We did a stool test, a comprehensive stool test, as well as a SIBO breath test, a small
intestinal bacterial overgrowth test.
You know, and this was kind of correlated with that history of food poisoning, of the
GI complaints, and also the cognitive, the brain,
right? The gut brain access is so, so critical to consider and to look at. And then we also did
deeper dive on the hormones, looking at her adrenal function, looking at, you know, her sex
hormones, et cetera. You know, we know that a lot of times, you know, high functioning people,
high achievers tend to maybe have higher cortisol. They're pushing that envelope early on in their lives,
but then that can drop and they can then have low cortisol,
which can manifest with increased susceptibility to illnesses,
fatigue, brain fog, trouble getting out of bed in the morning, et cetera.
So you take a good look at the gut, you look at kind of hormones.
I often think about looking at other things that are sleepers, like heavy metals or environmental toxins, food sensitivities,
gluten, obviously you do mention that, but that's a huge one. I check for anybody who's
got any autoimmunities, I check for gluten antibodies, and it doesn't have to be full
celiac, you can have just low level elevations of these antibodies that can cause significant
problems without actually being true
celiac. And I think this is often a problem with traditional medicine. It's this on or off. You
either have it or you don't. You have diabetes or you don't. It's not a gradient. It's not a
continuum. So in truth, the body is just a continuum of function or dysfunction. And that's
the transfunctional medicine. And so it's kind of arbitrary to set a number like diabetes is 126 what about it's 124
you okay no right so the same thing with everything in terms of um all the numbers we look at and i
think um the the the the ability to kind of find these things are quite impressive so what did you
find when you started to dig in and you looked at the gut and you looked at the hormones you looked
at uh what else was going on nutritionally with her and how those play a role
yeah so this is kind of my one of my favorite parts of the work that we do when when you have
these folks who've been struggling they've been to a bunch of doctors and they you know have been
kind of told that everything's normal and maybe they've absorbed that and they've said okay
you know i guess it's just i'm getting old old or, you know, you know, maybe I'm a little bit depressed, you know? And so, but,
you know, we got all the labs back and we dug in with Sarah and there was a lot of things that we
found that were, you know, levers. I think of these as levers, potential levers that we can pull to,
to help her get better. So, you know, her, her TSH was 3.8, which on the lab test shows as normal. But you and I and
most functional medicine doctors know that that is not optimal from our functional range. We like
to see that at around two or less. So I was definitely concerned around low thyroid function.
And in fact, her free T3, the most active thyroid hormone, was in the low normal range.
Her reverse T3 was elevated, signaling inflammation and immune activation.
And then she did have elevated antibodies.
So her TPO antibodies to her thyroid were high.
And the thyroglobulin antibodies were also a little bit high.
And importantly, she had an antibody against gluten. She had a positive anti-DMAD-Aden peptide, mildly elevated, but certainly very, very significant in my opinion.
In the U.S., that's not necessarily diagnostic of celiac, but in Europe it is.
And so there's a little bit of a difference of opinions on sort of how we interpret these.
But for me, that's a highly significant marker. For those of you out there who might want to look at testing this on
yourself, LabCorp can do this. So can Quest, but the LabCorp test code for the comprehensive
celiac panel, I'll just throw it out there for folks, is 165126. So look that up. If you want
to get tested for, you know, just through your insurance, through LabCorp, it's a great test to look at.
She also had low vitamin D, low vitamin B12 and low ferritin, which is the storage form of iron.
So all three of those together are telling us that she's not absorbing very well.
Right. She's having trouble on the level of the gut and that there's inflammation there.
And in addition to just needing to get those levels up,
it's sort of a proxy marker, right, for this bigger problem going on. Her stool tests showed
dysbiosis, imbalanced bacteria. There was some dropout of the good bacteria. We call that an
insufficiency dysbiosis. She had positive H. pylori, helicobacter pylori. Yeah. And so H. pylori is super, super interesting bug.
Um, it's one of the, it's sort of a model for persistence and for chronic inflammation.
Uh, and it has been linked in the research literature to autoimmune thyroid, you know?
So right there, I got really excited.
I was like, okay, cool.
Like here is something which we can treat.
We can eradicate.
It could explain your local gut symptoms, but it could also explain some of the bigger picture autoimmune activation
that we're seeing in your body. Incredible. So, so with her, you know, how would you go about
starting to treat her? Cause there's so many different things. She's got nutritional deficiencies.
She's got gut issues, bacterial overgrowth, gluten issues. I mean, we didn mean, you didn't really check for heavy metals or other things.
No, I didn't do that yet.
Yeah, because it was sort of like a little bit down the road for me.
I love just kind of jumping with all these things and see if we get the traction.
But yeah, you're right.
It's a very important factor.
Yeah.
And, you know, she had all these different things.
So where do you normally start with these patients?
Yeah, so the place that we
start with everybody is the lifestyle piece, right? We actually try to get the inflammation
in the gut calm down first. You know, that is the gut is really the center of the universe when it
comes to the immune system. And if we can heal that intestinal permeability, you know, the diet
piece is really the first step. And we frequently embark with that
with patients before we're even finished any testing, right? And I think you guys do this
too. Basically, the onboarding sequence to our clinic, you know, there's an intake visit, we do
a bunch of labs, and immediately they see the nutritionist, they see the health coach, they
start on these lifestyle changes. You know, So we had Sarah start an anti-inflammatory
Whole30 Paleo Reset Diet. And in particular, we really focused with her on, you have to get rid
of gluten 100% for at least 30 days. I like to do it for longer, but sometimes I break it up into
bite-sized pieces for folks. We wanted her to minimize sugar. We wanted her to avoid dairy, limit alcohol,
you know, and just with that one change within a couple of weeks, she reported that her energy was
better by about 40 or 50%. Her brain was better by about 40% and her joint pain is better by about
60%. And, you know, so this is one of the things I love about that is just not only like, okay,
she's feeling better, but this is
really, really good reinforcement for her that she has control over her health and that she can
put things in a place that are going to possibly affect her. You know, we're going to stack in
some supplements. We're going to stack in some prescriptions potentially, but she immediately
has this sense that, you know, her, her health is in her own hands and she can be an active
participant, which is what we love. That's so great. And so let's talk about the diets and
autoimmune disease, because I think there's so much controversy on what should eat. Should you
be lectin free? Should you be gluten free? Should you be paleo? Should you be vegan? What are we
learning about in terms of food and autoimmune disease? What are the biggest drivers in our diet of autoimmune disease from the dietary perspective?
What can people do therapeutically?
And like how do we sort of stack up against choosing what to do for which person?
Yeah, so there is no one size fits all approach.
But I think there are some basic tenets that we can really factor in.
And I think this idea of, you know, we talk about the exposome, right?
So there's the genetics, there's the epigenetics.
Genetics are hardwired.
The epigenetics is how are your genetics read out?
And that can be turned on and off based on environmental factors.
And there's this idea of the exposome.
These words sound complicated, but they're not.
You know, the exposome is basically-
I call it the exposome because it sounds better. Yeah, exposome. These words sound complicated, but they're not. The exposome is basically- I call it the exposome because it sounds better.
Yeah, exposome. Everything that you've ever been exposed to from the time you were in your mom's
belly until now. And actually, if you want to go deep, it goes back before you were in your mom's
belly, right? Because it's sort of this methylation and way the epigenetics affect offspring. But
really, for simplicity, everything that you've
ever been exposed to from the time you were in your mom's belly until now, and we can modify that,
right? We can take charge. And so the diet is, you think about the amount of information that
your immune system is being exposed to on a daily, monthly, yearly basis, the food and drink that we take in by our mouth is by far the biggest factor
of information that is hitting that immune system in the gut. You know, the next would be air and
skin. But again, the biggest lever that we have to pull that can affect how our body is receiving
information from the outside world is through the diet. So you want to take out all of the things that are going to be triggering aberrant inflammatory activation.
Right. And so the biggest culprits are the processed foods.
The sugar grains are frequently a trigger for people.
You know, and then eating organic grass fed is really critical because otherwise you're
getting chemicals, you're getting pesticides, you're getting hormones, you're getting antibiotics,
all of these are disruptors, right? And so the, the, the really easiest way to start
with an anti-inflammatory diet or a whole 30 or a paleo reset is just to take out all of the junk
and eat real food, right? You'll
eat real clean nutrient dense food and do that for a period of time. You're downstream from that.
We sometimes have to specialize. We have to go into more like what's called an autoimmune paleo
diet or a low lectin diet or something like the walls protocol. These are all variations. Um,
we don't usually go there first with people, you know, but it's
kind of like based, it's very individualized and, and, and what, you know, based on the response
that somebody has. Amazing. So talk about some of the things that are like controversial,
like lectins. Is that, is that something people should focus on or is that just kind of a sort of
a, sort of a marginal thing? I think it's been helpful for a lot of people. And I don't think
it's everybody. And so what we do is we kind of go step by step down the list. If people are doing
a paleo or a Whole30 and they're just feeling great, I don't necessarily feel the need to go
down into the next steps. If they're not feeling well, we go into an autoimmune paleo. You know, but it's also the case, you know, the foundational intervention of anti-inflammatory
diet in naturopathic medicine, in functional medicine is, you know, get rid of things that
might be triggering you and then add them back in one at a time in a systemic way and
see what your body tells us, right?
The food sensitivity testing that you mentioned,
you know, that's helpful.
I definitely use that and we like it,
but it's not, it's imperfect for a lot of reasons, right?
But what does your body tell you?
What is your body reading out to you
in terms of symptoms and reactions?
You can't argue with that, right?
And so, yeah, some people do need to avoid lectins,
but I really don't find it's the majority of people.
What's your finding with that?
Yeah, I think it's got a lot of sexy play, but I think it really helps so many people not having to focus on just that.
I do recommend initially doing a more strict elimination diet.
I call it the 10-day detox diet, but essentially it's more or less the autoimmune paleo diet or paleo diet.
The more advanced versions where you take out nuts and seeds and eggs and nightshades and other, it's a more sort of aggressive form, which some people might benefit from, but I think
often it's not necessarily needed. If you can fix the gut and get off the bigger triggers of gluten in the dairy,
it's key.
So I actually find that for decades I've been using the 10-day detox diet.
It really works very well.
Yeah, I think we also have to be cautious about overwhelm for people
and these dietary interventions causing more stress
and also the social isolation
and what that can do for people's ability to be out
with friends. And so it's always a balance. And what we always tell people is that these aren't
permanent interventions. We're going to try these for a period of time. It's like a therapeutic
trial and hopefully it's time bounded. Some people have more severe issues and they need to be on
these diets for longer. But we're always working as a care team.
We're working on our nutritionist and our health coach and the provider trying to find what's the right balance and what's the right timing and really individualize these diets.
You know, food is medicine. Right. And so these are medical interventions in our world.
It's so true. And I'm just so interested when rheumatology is going to start to wake up to this.
I think more and more rheumatologists are figuring this out and we have more and more in functional medicine.
But I think, you know, for me, you know, when I look at autoimmune disease, it's sort of emblematic of what's sort of industrialized food system, the food additives, the environmental
toxins, the gut busting ways we live, the added stresses in our lives. These are all things that
are driving this autoimmune epidemic. And yet it's something that people really don't have to
suffer from, which is quite amazing. Yeah. From the provider side, I mean,
I think that it's not even that there's a huge resistance on the provider side to looking at
this. I think there's just a knowledge gap. I think they don't know about the importance.
And I think that there's a huge time crunch factor. They just don't have the time to go
into these histories, to ask the patients these questions. And I think a lot of doctors are like
afraid of talking diet with folks
because it gets into a lot of discussion, a lot of nuance.
And so I think there's actually a really big opportunity there
for the health system to leverage a care team approach
and to bring in mid-level practitioners,
to bring in coaches and nutritionists,
and to offload that work to these folks,
but have it still be part of the entire plan.
I think that the doctor doesn't necessarily need
to be doing that all the time,
and it might not be their passion,
but they could easily leverage that expertise
in their practice.
And really, if the health system woke up
and saw what you and I know,
what all of us know in functional medicine,
they would be jumping at this,
because the opportunity for cost savings is staggering, right? It's true. It's true. It's really true. It's quite, it is quite staggering.
I mean, I think, you know, we have to really sort of reframe what we're doing in autoimmune
disease. I think the concept of this lifelong chronic illness that you have, that you have to
suffer with and you have to manage,
have to take medications for, it's sort of accepted. And I actually, I've had pretty
much everything. That's what I learned functional medicine. I've talked about on the podcast before,
but a number of years ago, five years ago, I developed ulcerative colitis and it was horrible.
I was having, you know, 20 bloody moments a day day i lost 25 pounds from my skinny self i
ended up you know vomiting all the time i was in bed in and out of the hospital and you know
nothing was working and even on my normal functional medicine tricks so sometimes you
have to go out of the box and turned out that i you know i had mold toxicity but my system had
just gotten in a cycle and i ended up using uh um ozone therapy to help reset my whole immune system. And I used exosomes and
other kind of stuff that's kind of on the edge. But I'm just bringing that up because I think
that we're constantly learning more about how to regulate the immune system, how to regulate
our body's own healing mechanisms. So I had to activate my healing mechanisms using some
pretty extraordinary therapies because the normal stuff wasn't working.
And I wonder from your perspective, what are some of the other great cases you've seen that kind of get you excited about functional medicine and autoimmunism?
Yeah, so another big area of interest of mine is this intersection around chronic infections and how those can drive autoimmune disease.
This is actually, I have it here to show you. It's one of my favorite books. this intersection around chronic infections and how those can drive autoimmune disease.
This is actually, I have it here to show you. It's one of my favorite books,
Infections and Autoimmunity. This is a huge textbook. It's like a $250 textbook. But this idea that we could have pathogens inside of our bodies that are persisting and that are driving this sort of ongoing low-level chronic inflammation
because it's so treatable, right?
And so we see this, especially with, you know, I mentioned H. pylori, that's a good one,
but with the tick-borne pathogens, with Lyme disease, we see a lot of folks with Lyme disease,
with co-infections, with chronic viral infections, you know, and so, you know, these are really
gratifying on the one hand, because, you know, if you look at them the right way, if you look at
them deeply, if you really engage in and find ways to treat them, you know, Lyme disease or Borrelia
burgdorferi, pretty controversial. But, you know, we know that there is a persistent pathogen there.
And we know that there is autoimmune activation, there and we know that there is autoimmune activation.
There's both. And so you kind of have the worst of both worlds.
And when we when we diagnose that and we treat it aggressively and effectively, we can turn off that autoimmune signaling.
Right. We've seen that again and again in folks with these chronic tick-borne cases. And, you know, it's really gratifying
on the one hand, because there's a lot of work being done in these areas on, you know, Monica
Embers at Tulane has done some incredible primate research looking at persistence of the Lyme
spirochete and the chronic inflammation that it causes. Organizations like the Bay Area Lyme
Foundation are really pushing the research agenda along with the Stephen and Alexandra Cohen Foundation.
But we see those patients who have these chronic persistent infections and you identify it
and you treat it and they get better and those autoimmune markers go away.
I mean, it's kind of like with this patient, Sarah, with cases like that, it's just so
incredibly gratifying because you know, and we know that if
that person, you know, didn't get onto that treatment course, they basically would be set
up for a life descending into worse and worse chronic illness. And the, you know, the mainstream
doctors, the, you know, immunologists and the rheumatologists would just be kind of, you know,
scratching their head and tossing the next drug, the next drug, the next drug.
And basically saying, gosh, you know, there's not a lot of options left, you know.
And so we have the opportunity to turn that around and to help these people recover their health, which is really just amazing in my world.
Yeah, the chronic infections are a real phenomenon.
I think, you know, it's something we really have marginalized in traditional medicine.
You know, you either have Lyme disease or you don't. You get three weeks of doxycycline and that's it. I mean, it's sort of not accepted that there's even this sort of long-term chronic
Lyme. And we know we talk about post-COVID syndrome, which is this post-viral syndrome,
which can cause all kinds of symptoms, including, I think, potentially inflammatory autoimmune stuff.
And I know personally, I've had Lyme, I've had Babesia, I've pretty much had everything, mercury poisoning,
the works. And I've seen so many patients with these chronic infections that do show up as
autoimmune disease. Um, and, and often are neglected by traditional rheumatologists and
they can be viral, they can be tick-borne infections, but there are ways to treat them.
And often our
conventional approaches aren't that great. And, you know, we've used different combinations of
herbs and antibiotics, but I, you know, I found some of the more kind of wacky, what may sound
like wacky or marginal therapies like ozone or hyperthermia tend to work really well for these
really treatment-resistant conditions. Some people do respond to sort of a normal approach,
but a lot of people don't.
And that's really where the sort of failure of our system
is to try to look at some of these novel therapies,
whether it's hyperbaric oxygen or ozone therapy
or transfer plasma exchange or hyperthermia,
which they're using in Europe and in Mexico,
to treat some of these kind of chronic persistent infections. Yeah, I think it's, I think it's everything combined, right? You know,
we do end up kind of throwing the kitchen sink at folks with, with these complex chronic illnesses,
you know, but the treatments, any treatment I believe works better when you've really dialed
in all the lifestyle pieces. You know, you have somebody sleeping better, you've really dialed in all the lifestyle pieces. You have somebody sleeping
better, you have them doing stress management, you have their gut cleaned up and traditionally,
and you've dealt with intestinal permeability, you know, because what you're doing in all of
those pathways is really lowering this inflammatory load. And a lot of the pathogens,
you know, they thrive in an environment of inflammation you know it's you know they
crank up all the cytokines they crank up all the chemokines and they create this incredible
dysregulation and confusion in the body and as you start to turn all that down now the pathogens
have a harder time thriving and then any other treatments that we end up doing tend to work a
little bit better and you know so I agree with, there's a lot of amazing options out there. It's still very end of one, right? Like what works
from one person doesn't work for the rest necessarily, which is actually a big area of
interest of mine in the work that we're doing with our 501c3, the Functional Medicine Research
and Technology Center, is like, how can we get better at figuring out what works for who? And how can we use data to show that, right? Because the COVID era, there was some incredible
studies that came out showing that if you look at the marriage, the combination of patient-reported
symptoms, along with wearable data, that you can actually have a much more robust physiological
signal, right? And so in fact, in this case that we talked about today with Sarah, she had an aura ring on, which is one of my favorite wearable devices because the
fidelity of the signal that we get. And we were able to show as she got better, that key parameters
for her heart rate variability, her resting heart rate improved significantly, right? And so now
what we're seeing, not only is she saying, I feel better, but we're seeing this, this signal, this physiological signal from
her body's set point of her nervous system of her, you know, autonomics and, um, and ability to,
to, uh, reset down, um, is much improved. Right. And so we're really trying to find ways of how
do we get smart about this data? How do we create almost like this real-time data dashboard that the care team, the provider, the patient, the family can all be viewing in order
to really, you know, predict and respond to either worsenings or improvements or temporary flares,
you know, how do we figure out how all that data marries together? It's a really fun area to be in.
That's so exciting. So tell more about your center, the California Center for Functional Medicine, because it's not just California, it's all over, right? It's telemedicine,
you can access it from anywhere. It's a pretty unique novel kind of practice. I'd love to hear
more about it because people want to try to access functional medicine, often find it difficult.
They can't find a provider in their area. It can be very expensive. So you've kind of figured out
a different model that I think is very interesting in terms of the kind of things you can do,
given the limitations of a lot of our practice styles.
Yeah, thanks. Yeah. So we are completely telemedicine at this point.
We were a hybrid clinic prior to COVID and then flipped the switch and moved into the cloud, basically.
But we basically are able to provide care anywhere in the U.S.
And we have providers in a lot of different states.
I myself have licenses in a bunch of different states.
And as we add new patients, we expand our access to that licensure.
And so we have a really amazing team of providers, doctors, nurse practitioners, health coach, nutritionists.
And we all work really in close collaboration with folks.
And so, you know, we're really trying to find a way, again, to bring this care to more people because I know that functional medicine is expensive and is a little bit harder to access because of the intricacies and the nuances of what insurance does or doesn't cover.
But we really believe both in geographical distribution and access and also trying to find ways to make it more affordable. And,
you know, I love listening to tech podcasts. There's a guy named Balaji Srinivasan who talks about this concept of bundling and unbundling, right? And I think of our clinics right now,
your clinic, my clinic, we're still in this bundled phenomenon. We have this sort of path
that we want everyone to go down. It's kind of like the equivalent of the university degree,
right? But I'm really curious about how do we break that up and how do we give people more bite-sized
segments of this information and let them start to access that. So we're actually currently
developing a new offering. We're calling it the Functional Medicine Checkup. And so we're hoping
to launch that by the beginning of the year, which will give people the opportunity to kind of do
part at least of what Sarah did, right?
Get in with a provider, get some basic blood testing, lab tests done, and get a much deeper
snapshot of their body, which we think is really going to set them up for better health.
And, you know, they can then decide, okay, that's enough.
I've got what I need.
I'm going to go with this, or they're going to go deeper and, you know, join the clinic
in a more robust manner. But the idea really, again, is to, to get that care to more people,
um, and to get that knowledge base out there and have them at least understand, wow, there,
there is another option. And, you know, I have the choice of, of what I do with my healthcare.
Yeah, that's really powerful. And, and, you know, sort of created something called the functional Medicine Checkup, which is a very sort of easy on we're looking at. It's going to include
two visits with our team. And we'll then run a really comprehensive set of labs,
probably 75 to 100 different markers that could be run through LabCorp or Quest. So basically,
this should be able to be paid for. The lab side of it should be able to be paid for by their
insurance.
And then when they follow up with us, we'll dive in similar to how we did with Sarah and
really start to isolate a lot of different factors that could be contributing to their
health issues or areas that they can optimize in order to improve their health.
And so we're working to find new ways to do this as a care team.
My schedule is quite busy.
Not everyone ends up seeing me,
but as people come in and they see
our really incredible team of practitioners,
we all work together and I help supervise the cases.
We all have case discussions, clinician meetings, et cetera,
which is also just a really fun
opportunity for us to collaborate and learn together as a team.
So great.
And I think it's really allowing us to sort of begin to have more accessibility and more
spread.
I think it's coming.
We're not quite covered by insurance.
I'm working on that through my work with Policy Stuff in Washington.
But I think we really have a moment to start to sort of reimagine healthcare and for ourselves and take more opportunity to
actually, you know, engage in discovering how our bodies work through the lens of functional
medicine, through the idea of how we create health rather than just treat symptoms and diseases,
and how we can get to the root of some of these really kind of gnarly conditions like autoimmune disease, chronic fatigue, post-COVID, all the things that traditional
medicine doesn't do great with. I mean, listen, if you need a new hip, it's great, right? If you
get a car accident, it's great. But if you're dealing with these long, chronic, debilitating
diseases that we in traditional medicine have very little to offer, functional medicine provides
a great doorway for people to start to think about their health differently.
Yeah, no, I think you've done some really amazing, amazing work over the years.
You've been such a pioneer.
You know, the work that you did, that you and Patrick Hannaway did at the Cleveland Clinic,
getting so many people access to functional medicine,
the work that you're doing on the policy side with the White House and the Food
Fix campaign.
You know, there's so much, you know, it goes so deep, right?
Because if you, we're talking a lot about autoimmune today, but, you know, if you just
clean out people's diet, like you're talking about with the Food Fix campaign, and I love
that Cory Booker's out there talking about being sugar free.
It's just so incredible to see.
But if you do those
basic things, like not only do people feel better, but their tendency to then go on and have
autoimmune disease, to have cardiovascular disease, to have diabetes, to have cancer.
I mean, we're basically like just turning that down. Right. And and that's just, you know,
that education and that personal experience to get that into the hands and the mouths and the forks and the homes of all these people across the world is really just such an incredible gift.
So I just thank you for that, Mark.
Yeah, well, thank you.
You know, we all kind of are doing our part and trying to make this, you know, basically the standard of care.
It takes a minute.
It does take a minute you know i was just talking to uh rick doblan who sort of was a pioneer in maps which is psychedelic assisted therapy and studies and um you know i've been working this for 40 years
you know i feel like i'm not quite 40 years yet but i'm definitely 30 years in and it's
you know you know it just it was there was you know, you know, it just, it was, there was a
moment where, you know, these, it was kind of invisible and now it's becoming visible. And I
think people are understanding that there is a different way of thinking about health. So it's
great that you're doing this. It's great that you've got the California Center for Functional
Medicine that makes us more accessible and hopefully people can find you and hook up with
your team and get some help and just optimization help or treating these gnarly
conditions that really there's very little else to do for. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Thank you so much.
Okay. Thank you, Sunja. And it's great to see you again. And for all of you listening,
if you like this podcast, please share with your friends and family on social media. I'm sure
many of you know people with autoimmune disease. Leave a comment. Have you used these kinds of
approaches to help you? What are your success stories? We'd love to hear comments from you. And
subscribe to every podcast and we'll see you next week on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope you're loving
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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
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It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained, who's a licensed healthcare
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