The Dr. Hyman Show - How This Molecule Prevents Aging And Disease
Episode Date: September 2, 2022This episode is sponsored by InsideTracker and Athletic Greens. Glutathione is the most important molecule you need to stay healthy and prevent disease—yet you’ve probably never heard of it. It’...s the secret to preventing aging, cancer, heart disease, dementia, and more, and it is necessary to treat everything from autism to Alzheimer’s disease. The good news is your body produces its own glutathione. The bad news is poor diet, pollution, toxins, medications, stress, trauma, aging, infections, and radiation all deplete your glutathione levels. In today’s episode of a new series called Health Bites, I discuss what glutathione is, why it’s important, and tips to help you optimize your glutathione levels, improve your detoxification system, and help protect yourself from chronic illness. This episode is sponsored by InsideTracker and Athletic Greens. This Labor Day, InsideTracker will take 26% off their top-selling Ultimate Plan if you’re in the US or Canada. International customers can take $30 off a Blood Results Upload Plan. Just go to insidetracker.com/DrHyman. 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. Here are more details from the episode (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): What is glutathione? (4:26 / 1:31) Diagnostic testing of glutathione levels (6:08 / 3:16) Why many people have a limited ability to detoxify (6:29 / 4:09) The three main ways glutathione protects against chronic illness (8:38/ 5:46) Foods that support glutathione production (10:53 / 8:00) How exercise boosts glutathione (13:23 / 10:30) Reducing toxic exposure (14:19 / 11:35) Supplementing with N-acetyl-cysteine, alpha lipoic acid, methylation nutrients (folate and vitamins B6 and B12), selenium, antioxidants (including vitamins C and E in the form of mixed tocopherols), and milk thistle to boost glutathione (14:45 / 11:50) Mentioned in this episode Environmental Working Group ewg.org
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
If you learn about glutathione and you learn how to upregulate your body's own glutathione
and avoid toxins, it's going to be a huge contributor to your overall health.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Mark.
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Again, that's athleticgreens.com forward slash Hyman. And now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and this is a place for conversations that matter.
And I'm bringing you a new feature on The Doctor's Pharmacy called Health Bites.
Yummy Health Bites.
Little nuggets of information that'll help you live
better, live longer, and feel better, which is what it's all about.
So I'm excited about this part because it's like where I get to talk about all the things
I really love and excited about and the kind of nerdy, geeky stuff that I have been studying
for years and I've been using in my medical practice for decades and that has helped so
many of my patients and I want you to have that information.
So today we're talking about something you may or may not have heard about. It's kind of a goofy medical word. It's
glutathione. Say that three times fast. Glutathione, okay? And glutathione is probably the most
important molecule in your body, and I'm going to tell you why, so stay tuned. It is so important
because it helps address everything from heart disease to cancer to diabetes to kidney disease to Alzheimer's to autism.
I mean, you name it.
I'm going to explain why glutathione is important, what it is, and special tips to help you boost your own glutathione levels and boost your detox system and help protect yourself from chronic illness.
So the first thing I want to tell you is what the heck is glutathione? Now, glutathione is an amazing
molecule. I'm just going to give you a little biochemistry first. It's made up of three
peptides, three little, sorry, it's a little tripeptide. It's made up of three amino acids,
glycine, glutamine, and cysteine. Now, cysteine is an amino acid that has sulfur in it.
Now, if you ever like kind of crushed garlic and you know how it's like sticky, that's
the sulfur.
And garlic is one of the most powerful detoxifying compounds too because it has a sulfur compound.
Now, why is this sticky sulfur thing so important?
Well, think of it like flypaper that all the toxins stick to in your
body. So we unfortunately have been exposed to so many toxins that we need to have a lot of detox
capacity. There's 80,000 new chemicals on the market since the turn of the last century.
1% has been tested for safety, heavy metals, pesticides, plastics, all kinds of stuff,
flame retardants. I mean, the average newborn baby has 287 known toxins in their umbilical
cord blood. That means even before they took their first breath, they're already pre-toxified. I
don't know what the word is, but they're already poisoned before they come
out of the womb because of the level of toxins in our environment. Now, what glutathione does is it
basically sticks to all these toxins with the sulfur sticky molecule. So that's really important.
It's like flypaper. It has a lot of other functions too. We're going to get into them in a minute.
Now, it's kind of recycled in the body, but sometimes when we're overloaded with toxins,
our body can't keep up. So we just kind of overload our body's capacity for detoxification.
Now, I also do a lot of diagnostic testing around glutathione.
We can tell if your body's making enough glutathione.
We can tell if your body's overloaded with toxins.
And I use various kinds of tests like organic acids and glutathione tests.
And we can look at reduced and oxidized glutathione.
It's all this kind of fancy stuff you don't have to worry about. tests like organic acids and glutathione tests, and we can look at reduced and oxidized glutathione.
It's all this kind of fancy stuff you don't have to worry about. But the point is that a lot of us don't really have a good ability to detoxify with glutathione. And why is that?
Well, think about it. 500 years ago, 10,000 years ago, all the toxins were kind of underground,
right? Heavy metals come from coal, which we've dug up
and we created energy from it and it's created the industrial revolution, but it's poison dust.
And all that stuff goes in the atmosphere and we get heavy metal rain. So we have all these toxins
that we have to deal with. And so we genetically, a lot of us don't have a good array of these
detox genes. They're called various a good array of these detox genes.
They're called various kinds of glutathione-producing genes.
So there's enzymes in your body that turn one chemical into another, and they make the
glutathione and recycle it.
Glutathione M1 transferase, glutathione SS transferase, which is a P1 transferase.
All these different genes for glutathione, glutathione
proxidase, they're basically coding for enzymes to make more glutathione. But I mean, if you didn't
need a lot of glutathione 500 years ago, so some of us don't have that, but half of us don't have
the right genes. And in fact, I read one study years ago where half the people who were in most
hospitals have this problem. So it's a big contributor to chronic illness
in a lot of ways.
And we don't have really good genes
to help us do this, most of us.
I certainly don't.
And I, in fact, I know this very well personally.
I mean, honestly, I learned most of the stuff
I learned on myself because I don't know why
God gave this gift to me of getting sick
and then having to figure it out,
but that's what he's done or she's done,
whoever's done it.
And essentially I got mercury poisoning from living in China. I had a lot of
tuna fish sandwiches growing up. I had a lot of dental fillings, and my body just couldn't handle
it. And I ended up learning I had impaired glutathione genes, which makes it hard for me
to produce glutathione. So I'm always eating all the things, and I'll tell you what those are
coming up, so don't go away, all the things that helped me boost my own glutathione.
And I got chronic fatigue syndrome. It was really, really bad. My body broke down. I got super ill
because I couldn't get rid of all the heavy metals and toxins. So that's why glutathione
is such an important molecule and why you should pay attention to all the things I'm going to say
about how to boost your glutathione. So the question is, how does glutathione protect against
illness? It does so in three main ways. One is your body's main detoxifier,
your body's main antioxidant, and your body's key regulator of immune function.
Let's just talk about each one of those. The first is the detoxifier, and we talked about that,
how it's like flypaper, and it's sticky, and it gets rid of things. The second one is it's an antioxidant. And how does that work? Well, most antioxidants in your body work by donating one of their electrons to some
damaged molecule. We call those free radicals. And this is oxidative stress, free radicals. You
might have heard these terms, antioxidants. Basically, what it means is that your car rusts,
apple turns brown, fat, you know, and a nut goes rancid, your skin wrinkles from the sun damage and
ultraviolet radiation. This is all free radical damage. So your body has its own system of
antioxidants. You don't have to always get them from food, but you have a system and you need to
get them from food like vitamin C and vitamin E and so forth. Now, glutathione is basically the
last stop on this hot potato chain. So what happens is, let's say the vitamin C finds
a free radical and gives one its electrons. And then the vitamin C is damaged and the vitamin E
has to come on and protect that. And then it goes down this kind of hot potato, handing off these
hot potato free radicals until it gets to glutathione. And that's the final stop. And
then your body gets rid of it. The problem, if you're depleting glutathione, you're going to
have trouble with your antioxidant system and your detox system.
It's also really important in immune function.
A lot of our immune system is regulated through glutathione and its effect on many, many different
functions in our body.
It also helps with muscle function and helps to reach peak mental physical function.
So we know, for example, that glutathione levels, if they're high, actually lower muscle
damage, reduce recovery time, increase strengthione levels, if they're high, actually lower muscle damage,
reduce recovery time, increase strength and endurance, and make you shift from fat to
production to muscle development, which is all good. And I'm very interested in that as I age.
In fact, one of the most important strategies for healthy aging is using this antioxidant
system of glutathione and boosting it with something I'm going to tell you about soon,
which is a certain kind of whey protein. I'm going to talk about that in a minute.
So these are really important to think about. How do we upregulate and increase our glutathione
levels? So what actually supports glutathione production? Well, it's first food. So eat a lot
of foods that contain sulfur molecules. And there's basically, I would say, three main categories of food.
The allium family, that allium means like onions, garlic, leeks, that kind of stuff.
Those are full of sulfur molecules. So you want to include a lot of that in your diet. And garlic
is a powerful booster of detoxification as well as an antimicrobial and
has many, many other benefits. So make sure you eat plenty of sulfur-containing garlic, onions,
and leeks. Second is the broccoli family. This is called the cruciferous vegetables or the brassicas,
broccoli, collards, kale, cabbage, Brussels sprouts. There's a few other superheroes like
arugula, watercress, cilantro. These are all very good detoxifying molecules and they help to boost glutathione in the body. And they have sulforaphane
and glucinolates and all these phytochemicals that upregulate glutathione, which is super important.
In fact, some of them are really great against cancer. There was one study I saw from China
years ago where they looked at the urine on a bazillion Chinese people. And they've, well, not quite a bazillion,
but you know what I mean. And then they had high levels of broccoli compounds in the urine of some
people. And those people did not get cancer. Whereas the people who didn't have high levels
got cancer. So it's played such a role in all these things. So it's really important to eat
also those vegetables. The next one, and this is one I've started to use more,
and I'm not a huge fan of dairy,
but whey protein is pretty unique.
Now, my preference is, you know,
pasture-raised, grass-fed goat whey.
It doesn't taste weird or anything.
It's just whey protein.
It's way better tolerated than regular grass-fed
or even, you know, regular cow whey,
although grass-fed cow can be fine for some people. And whey protein helps you boost glutathione significantly because
it has a lot of these sulfur-containing amino acids like cysteine. And so it should be made
from bioactive, non-denatured proteins, which is some of the highly processed ones aren't.
But I love grass-fed goat whey. And I use that on a regular basis. And I've
noticed my body change. I've noticed my energy increase. I've noticed my muscle mass increase.
So I think that's a really great way, especially as you age, because it gives you so many benefits.
One, it helps with glutathione, which is important in the aging process. And two,
it really helps build muscle, which is important. Okay, what else boosts glutathione? Well, exercise also is effective in boosting glutathione.
And it helps to boost your immune system.
It helps boost detoxification, your antioxidant system, all that stuff.
So exercise boosts all of those things.
That's why exercise is so critical.
I mean, I just wrote my book on longevity.
And in the book, I talk about the power of exercise to work on almost every single
one of the longevity pathways. And glutathione levels is one of the key pathways. So glutathione
is so important. So I encourage you to do something. If you're doing nothing, doing something
is a huge benefit. So from doing nothing to doing something that you get a huge benefit, even if
you're just walking 20 minutes a day. And then you can keep increasing benefit by longer periods of
exercise,
by interval training, by strength training. Just do what's fun, right? I like to ride my bike. I
like to play tennis. I like to swim. Strength training is super important also for muscle
building. And with the GOAT way, you'll get a double whammy of boosting glutathione and building
muscle. Now, what else can you do to boost glutathione? And I have to do this every day because I have those crappy genes
and I don't want to get full of toxins. So I reduce my toxic exposures. I use the Environmental
Working Group, EWG's website to reduce my toxins in skincare, household products and food,
sunblock, all that stuff. So you kind of want to reduce your exposures, but there's a lot of
things you can do to boost your glutathione levels. The first is a really important product,
which I honestly thought was a drug because I, in medical school and residency, and when I was an
ER doctor, I learned about it and I used it all the time. It's called N-acetylcysteine. We call
it the mucrimist and we would use it for inhalation, for example, with asthma, but we'd
also use it if I had Tylenol overdose. So Tylenol, why Tylenol damages your liver and why if you take Tylenol, it's a big cause of
liver damage for many people, is because it depletes glutathione. And when you deplete
glutathione, your liver can't do its job and it gets overloaded with toxins and that causes your liver to fail.
So what do we do to save the liver? If someone comes in, let's say it does an overdose of
Tylenol, what do we do? We give them N-acetylcysteine. Now, this is actually a supplement
you can buy in the health food store. It's really cheap and it's something I take every single day
because it's the building block of glutathione.
N-acetylcysteine, that cysteine molecule, the sulfur we talked about, super important.
It also has been shown in peer-reviewed journals like JAMA that if you give it before, for example,
an injection with dye, which we use for different kinds of x-ray procedures, that it will protect
the kidneys from damage. A lot of dye can cause kidney damage, but it'll actually protect the
kidneys from kidney failure, which is kind of cool. The next thing that I use is called alpha
lipoic acid, another really important thing that your body makes to some degree you get from some
food, but it's really important. Alpha lipoastin also boosts glutathione, energy productions, helps in blood sugar control,
helps your brain function better,
and it's really awesome.
I take that every day as well.
And then the next is,
there's this important cycle in your body called methylation.
I've written a lot of articles about it.
We'll talk about it on the Health Bytes soon.
But it's a chemical process
that's at the center of your biology.
And if it's not working, so many things go wrong. Heart disease, cancer, diabetes, dementia,
autism. I mean, you name it, it's a problem. And it's run by these vitamins, B6, B12, and folate.
And a lot of us have genetic variations that are problematic. And you want the right forms of the
nutrients. And methylation and sulfation are like two cogwheels
that go together.
So sulfur, the glutathione production, the methylation,
all of this one kind of system.
And it's the center hub of your biochemistry.
So I always make sure I take N-acetylcysteine,
lipoic acid, I take the right B vitamins.
Selenium is another important one.
Selenium is a cofactor for an enzyme called
glutathione peroxidase. That enzyme, again, one of your main antioxidant systems. Because you have,
you know, antioxidants from food, but you also have your own antioxidant systems, which are way
more powerful. So taking the selenium helps boost that. And then there's also obviously various
other antioxidants that you can use to support it, like C and E. But milk thistle is another herb.
Milk thistle is an incredible herb that also helps with liver disease and boosting glutathione.
So that's really what you can do like N-acetyl-15, lipoic acid, the B vitamins, B6, B12, folate, selenium, and milk thistle.
Those are really my go-tos for boosting glutathione.
And so I hope this was helpful because if you learn about glutathione
and you learn how to upregulate your body's own glutathione
and avoid toxins,
it's going to be a huge contributor to your overall health.
So I hope you like this health bite.
That's it for today.
If you enjoyed this episode,
be sure to share it with your friends and family on social
media.
They probably need to boost their glutathione too.
And leave a comment.
Maybe what have you done with boosting your own glutathione and detoxifying?
We'd love to hear from you.
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.
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