The Dr. Hyman Show - How To Optimize Brain Health For Longevity
Episode Date: June 6, 2022This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Paleovalley, and Vuori. Losing our memories and the things that define us is one of the scariest things someone can face. Preserving, supporting, and eve...n strengthening brain function is crucial to optimal aging. This is why, in today’s episode, we explore the underlying cause of brain dysfunction, the fascinating link between your gut and your brain, and steps you can take to keep your brain in tip-top shape. You’ll learn how to prevent cognitive decline and optimize your brain function. In this episode, I’ll be featuring an in-depth discussion on brain health from my Longevity Roadmap docu-series. In this series, I am joined by my colleagues at The UltraWellness Center: Elizabeth Boham, MD, MS, RD, Medical Director and Physician; Todd LePine, MD, Physician; and George Papanicolaou, DO, Physician. To get all of my longevity tips, sign up for my weekly Longevity newsletter at drhyman.com/longevity. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Paleovalley, and Vuori. Rupa Health is a place where Functional Medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 20 labs like DUTCH, Vibrant America, Genova, and Great Plains. You can check out a free, live demo with a Q&A or create an account at RupaHealth.com. Paleovalley is offering my listeners 15% off their entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com/hyman to check out all their clean Paleo products and take advantage of this deal. It’s the perfect time to upgrade your wardrobe! Vuori is offering my community 20% off your first purchase. Just head over to vuori.com/farmacy to claim this deal. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Why scientists are now referring to Alzheimer’s as type 3 diabetes (5:00 / 2:18)  Fixing your brain starts with fixing your body (6:41 / 4:00) What’s happening in your brain in your 30s and 40s? (8:06 / 5:20) The first place to start to avoid early cognitive decline (9:32 / 6:50) Assessing and addressing genetic risk factors for neurodegenerative conditions (12:19 / 9:33) Supporting memory with lifestyle and diet (16:07 / 11:00) Shifting our thinking on dementia and longevity (21:41 / 17:20) The top things that damage our brains (24:40 / 20:20) Improving brain function with nootropics (29:50 / 25:27) The mind-body connection (35:40 / 31:18)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I see so many people saying, you know,
I don't want to know if I have the Alzheimer's gene
because there's nothing you can do about it.
Nonsense.
Aggressive lifestyle interventions,
personalization and optimization of certain nutrients
can actually slow and even reverse the course of dementia.
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Now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. In today's episode of The Doctor's
Pharmacy, Dr. Hyman and his team dive into brain health and preventing Alzheimer's and dementia.
They also dive into the world of brain optimization and nootropics. Folks in your 20s, 30s, and 40s,
listen up. This stuff is important as studies are showing changes in the brain happen 20 to 30 years before a diagnosis.
For more information on this and other longevity tips, sign up for Dr. Hyman's newsletter at drhyman.com slash longevity.
Today we're going to discuss one of my favorite topics, brain health.
Now, when you ask most people what they fear when it comes to aging, pretty much everyone says the same. They're scared of losing their executive function, their ability to think and remember,
their ability to focus and stay energized. In short, they're afraid of losing their minds.
We can get a new knee, even a new heart or kidney, but we cannot get a new brain. Well, at least not
yet. When we talk about healthy aging, we have to discuss brain health. Currently, one in three
seniors dies with Alzheimer's or dementia. Over 5 million Americans are struggling with Alzheimer's, and changes can
be found in your brain sometimes 20, 30, or 40 years before a diagnosis of dementia occurs.
This means that we have a lot of time to heal our brains before we get into trouble.
Now, most of us know we can prevent heart disease by living a healthier lifestyle, but
are you aware that the same is true of our brains? Not many people are
talking about how to live a brain-healthy life. Now remember that unified theory of aging?
The problem of insulin resistance caused by too much starch and sugar? Well, it applies to the
brain too. In fact, scientists now refer to Alzheimer's as type 3 diabetes or diabetes of the brain.
We know that diabetics have four times the risk of getting dementia.
And that even pre-diabetes can lead to pre-dementia.
Researchers are exploring, and I have seen in my own patients,
the benefits of diet change and dementia, especially very low-carbohydrate ketogenic diets.
That's mostly fat and very
low carbs. Amazing new studies show that aggressive lifestyle treatment and addressing underlying
chronic issues like diabetes, high blood pressure, and nutritional deficiencies can actually slow
and even reverse memory loss in people who already have early dementia. And remember, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
So starting early is really key.
My youngest brain patient is nine years old.
She's fine now, but has a high risk of dementia, which I'm sure we can prevent by starting
early to optimize her health and her brain.
Now, memory loss is just one of the many challenges we see when it comes to declining her health and her brain. Now, memory loss is just one of the many challenges
we see when it comes to declining brain health.
Others include anxiety, depression, personality disorders,
eating disorders, addictions, obsessive compulsive disorder,
attention deficit disorder, and lots more.
Now, I believe that our brain is our most important
and powerful organ.
It's a three pound universe sitting at the top of our
body that dictates our choices, that gives you personality, that allows you to fully engage in
life. In my last docuseries, Broken Brain, I discussed a key insight that most people still
don't seem to understand. And that insight is that your brain is an organ that's connected to everything else happening in your
body. Fixing your brain starts with fixing your body. You have to optimize all the inputs and
take out all the bad influences or bad information going into the system. I truly believe that the
brain is resilient. It can recover and it can heal when given the right conditions.
I've seen it over and over in thousands of my patients, and the brain science backs this up.
Brain health is a really important topic.
It comes up in almost every conversation with my patients.
And dementia seems to be the fear.
Most of all, my patients, somewhere in their list of complaints,
is going to mention something about memory loss or forgetfulness. And they start to worry, is this the beginning
of Alzheimer's dementia? Quite honestly, they should worry, but not because they're having
some lapses in memory or forgetfulness, but because science is showing us that you can begin
the process of developing Alzheimer's dementia 20
to 30 years before you wake up one morning forgetting your wife's name. It's important
when you're young to start thinking about your brain health. You might not want to,
and you might not think you have to, because you're young. But as I said before, you need to
start thinking about brain health before it's too late and changes begin. But what is happening in your brain when you're 30 and 40? You're maturing.
You're probably starting to feel mature and really getting a good grasp of who you are.
Well, that's because the brain is still developing, believe it or not. And there are different parts
of the brain that are now becoming interconnected.
And as those connections occur, you're getting more self-regulation, more self-control, and more awareness of your emotions.
At the same time, your brain is still putting down myelin on your neurons.
Myelin is an insulation that allows those neurons to fire and move information very fast.
And the more myelin you have on your neurons,
the faster you're going to be able to think. And it's still happening at quite a rapid clip.
It starts to level off by the time you're in your 40s or middle age. But in your 30s and 40s,
you're still laying down a lot of myelin. Interestingly enough, in my practice, I do have a lot of 30 and 40-year-olds beginning to complain of slower cognition, some brain fog, and even some memory lapses
they hadn't had before. And I think it has a lot to do with stress. Greater college debt,
waiting to get married in your 30s, maybe even starting a family while
you're trying to get a foothold on your career, are a confluence of events that just didn't exist
a generation ago. The first place to start in building brain power and avoiding early cognitive
decline is building stress resilience. We all have stress. It's everywhere. But it's not meant to be chronic.
It's really meant to last for seconds. The bear or the lion jumps out of the weeds. All of a sudden,
you start to run. Your adrenal glands have pumped out cortisol, followed by norepinephrine. Now,
your vision narrows, your heart's pumping faster, your muscles are stronger than they were seconds
before. Now, you either get eaten or you get an opportunity
to pass your genes on to the next generation, but it happens in seconds. When we're under chronic
stress with marriages and work and kids and illness, and it's constant, our cortisol levels
are going to be elevated. And that elevation in cortisol leads to problems
that will result in early cognitive decline. High levels of cortisol actually have a huge
impact on the hippocampus. It will cause dysfunction and shrinking of the hippocampus.
And that's where you retain and form memories. Elevated levels of cortisol also impact
the prefrontal cortex and that's where you do your executive function,
organization, and critical thinking. When the cortisol is too high you're gonna
see difficulties in those areas of your brain function. High levels of cortisol
will decrease a hormone called clotho. Clotho regulates the aging process. It also
provides your brain with resilience against toxins, many of which can lead to Alzheimer's
dementia. A really important study done at UCLA in 2015 looked at long-term meditators,
comparing them to those that didn't meditate at all. And they found that long-term meditators, people that
had been meditating at least 20 years, had far greater volume of gray matter in their brain.
Other studies have shown with just three months of meditation, you see structural changes in the
brain that impact function. The corpus callosum, which is the band of neurons that connect the right to left brain,
actually gets thicker. That allows for the right and left brain to communicate and enhance your
creativity. You also see an increase in the size of the hippocampus, that part of the brain that's
responsible for retaining memory, consolidating it, and maintaining it. And you also will see a shrinking in the size of the amygdala.
The amygdala is responsible for regulating fear, anger, and anxiety. So meditation
has these great benefits that you can see in a very short period of time.
We do tests at the Ultra Wellness Center that look at the risk factors for people with neurodegenerative conditions
like Alzheimer's, people with mood conditions, and people with addiction
issues. And what you see in this particular genetic analysis which we
use called DNAMIND, it looks at these markers related to oxidative
stress, inflammation, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor, or BDNF,
when you have imbalances there and you've inherited these tendencies, it pushes your risk level up for
developing neurodegenerative conditions. So it helps you to sort of preempt it. Again, just because
you have the genes does not mean you're going to get it, but you may find that you are at much higher risk than your brother or your sister or your friend,
and that's really where you get preemptive medicine.
The earlier you catch neurodegenerative conditions, the better.
It's a little bit sad because sometimes I will see patients here who have been having
their either Parkinson's symptoms or their Alzheimer's symptoms for 10 plus years.
And then finally, they find us here. And it's a lot harder to treat those conditions once they're
more advanced because you have more destruction. It's sort of like if a building's on fire and
it's been on fire for five hours versus five minutes, you can put out the fire a lot earlier.
So I have seen a lot of patients who
have come to me and they're having problems with cognition. You can call it brain fog or forgetting.
And when you clean up their diet, get them off of inflammatory foods, sugar, gluten, dairy are the
big ones. Any of the artificial foods, specifically one of the things I always like to emphasize to my
patients is
artificial sweeteners. Artificial sweeteners are ubiquitous. They're everywhere. And the
artificial sweeteners are supposed to help you lose weight. And I've always told my patients that
I've never seen a person lose weight with diet soda, but I've seen a lot of patients gain weight
with diet soda. And these also disrupt the gut microbiome.
And then also food additives like food emulsifiers can lead to leaky gut, which in turn can affect the brain.
So there's definite things that you can do just, you know, nutritional-wise and dietary-wise that can improve a person's cognitive function.
And I've had some patients who have come into me,
one in particular comes to mind. It was a woman who I saw, she came in with her husband,
and she was told by her doctor that, you know, you've got Alzheimer's and get your affairs in
order. And when we did a full workup on the patient, you know, she had a whole host of
things. It's like Dr. Bredesen was talking, it's like a, you know, Alzheimer's is like a roof with 32 holes in it. And there's all
different, you know, things where the water can leak in. So you want to look at all of those
things. So we look at, you know, heavy metals, we look at the oral microbiome, we look at the oral,
the gut microbiome, we look at the genes that the person has, we look at their oxidative stress
levels, we look at their glucose levels, we look at their insulin levels, we look at the whole big
picture. And when she came in, she was having problems with conversation, she
was having sort of a flat mood, and when we addressed all of those conditions and
it took some time, it was like she awoke, you know the movie Awakenings with Robin
Williams, it was like she awakened, It was like her brain woke up.
That inflammation, that oxidative stress that was happening in her got turned off, like the gene processes got turned off.
And she was back to being her normal self.
She was then able to have conversation.
She was able to drive her car.
She was able to be independent.
It was really quite remarkable.
And that was all without medication.
We always focus first on those lifestyle factors because they have a huge impact on your memory.
We make sure they're getting good, restful sleep and getting enough sleep, making sure they're getting those seven to nine hours a day.
We make sure they're moving every day.
We know exercise is critical for brain health.
We know exercise is a great way to build BDNF, the brain-derived neurotrophic factor.
So we make sure they're getting some exercise every day and getting some good strength training
too to improve insulin levels.
We focus on diet, of course, because food is medicine.
We make sure that they're not getting high levels of sugar. We make sure we're balancing
blood sugar. We make sure that they have insulin, good insulin sensitivity, and we make sure that
their diet is rich in phytonutrients. We work to manage stress. We know that when we're under
stress, our memory doesn't work as well. When our cortisol levels are high, we're not going to
remember the answer to that question or that person's name.
So having some really good stress management techniques is critical for a well-working
memory.
And then we make sure they've got good relationships and networks.
Make sure that they have good family and friends and interactions in their day.
That can have a huge impact on how well somebody's memory works.
We then go up into the matrix and look at how all
the systems in the body are interrelated. We focus on any sources of inflammation. Sources of
inflammation could be anything from your belly fat, too much visceral adiposity that's creating
inflammation in the body and hampering memory. And we know that insulin resistance is tied to dementia and increased risk of Alzheimer's
disease. And it's one of the major things we can do to reverse memory loss. We can lower and improve
insulin sensitivity, and that can help improve everybody's memory. So we look for sources of
inflammation, like coming from the belly fat. We look for sources of inflammation, which could come
from underlying infections, like chronic infections in the body. Does somebody have chronic Lyme or a chronic viral
infection? Or do they have a chronic infection, which is an imbalance in the good and bad bacteria
in their digestive system? Or are they getting inflammation because of a chronic infection in
their mouth? Really important to pay attention to.
We always look at the mitochondria and say,
what can we do to support the mitochondria?
Is somebody taking a statin medication that is damaging their mitochondria's ability
to turn their food into energy?
So sometimes we look for medications
that may be causing damage to the mitochondria
or damage to some of the cells in the body.
And we also work to support the mitochondria, sometimes with things like CoQ10 or other B vitamins.
We, of course, focus on toxins.
Toxins are, unfortunately, a major driver of memory problems.
Anything from mercury to lead to plastics and other environmental toxins.
And so we work to see,
are there toxins in somebody's body? And what can we do to lower them or help the body's detoxification system? We make sure that their transport system's working well, that they've
got good circulation in the body, that they're able to oxygenate their cells. And then we make
sure that their hormones are in good balance. We screen for
insulin resistance, and if there is, we work to reverse it. We make sure that their stress
hormones are in good balance and their female and male hormones are in good balance. All of those
things are important when you're looking to see what somebody's individual risk for dementia is.
I can't forget to mention also the B vitamins and B12. We see lots of B12 deficiency, and so that's important to look for.
So I will often do markers like a methylmalonic acid or homocysteine, markers to see if somebody
needs more B12 than the average person.
And we do see some improvements when we supplement with higher doses of B12 in that situation
for somebody's memory.
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Now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
So there's a great article that I read years ago in the Journal of the American Medical Association
called Shifting Thinking in Dementia.
And it's kind of had an interesting line in there
which says, you know, we have categorical misclassification
with etiologic imprecision.
And what that means is we say someone has memory loss,
and the reason for the memory loss is they have dementia. That's categorical misclassification.
Saying they have dementia doesn't mean anything. It's just the name that we give to people who
have memory loss, which is kind of stupid because it doesn't tell you anything about why. And the
second part of that sentence is etiologic imprecision. Etiology means cause. We're
imprecise about the cause. We don't look at the cause. So there's no such thing as dementia.
There are dementias, and everybody's different. And we have to treat each person differently.
That is going to be the future of medicine. And we're hearing about it,
precision medicine, precision health, right? But most of that sadly has to do with what we call
pharmacogenomics, which is matching the drug to your genes. Great. The genes that you have make
this drug work better with less side effects. It's good to know. But it ain't the answer, and it's not
what we should be doing, which is true precision health and precision medicine and precision
nutrition and personalized nutrition, which is functional medicine. And that is the future.
We're not going to call it functional medicine in the future. It's just going to be medicine,
right? There are new terms like network medicine, systems medicine. They're all just placeholders because the future is being revealed in the science.
And we're seeing it for the first time.
It's a massive paradigm shift.
It's like Einstein's theory of relativity or Newton saying there's gravity.
These were big ideas that have just blown people's minds. And they took decades
and centuries sometimes to be accepted. Even evolution as a theory is still challenged 150
years later, right? We're still people saying, nope, didn't happen. So I think this is where
we are in medicine today. And if we are humble, if we are willing to look at the facts, if we're willing to change
our paradigm, which is hard to do, we're going to see an acceleration in medicine that is
going to lead to increased health, increased well-being, and longevity like we've never
seen before.
And I'm just so excited to be alive in this moment.
And I'm glad it happened before I got too old
so I can take advantage of it.
And that's what this whole docuseries is about.
It's giving you the knowledge and the tools
to see the future today
and make the future of medicine available to you right now.
Dementogens are things that cause dementia.
And we know so much about what damages our brain.
They're brain damaging things.
And there are some things that are obvious and some things not so obvious.
Diet, our inflammatory diet is the number one cause of dementogens.
Processed food, sugar, starch, lack of protective nutrients.
That is number one.
Lack of certain things like exercise are also dementogens.
Exercise is one of the best ways to activate BDNF, which is this miracle growth for your brain.
Lack of sleep is a dementogen.
At night, your brain has to clean up the garbage.
And it's got something that's been recently discovered
called the glymphatic system. It's like the lymph system of your brain. And unless you sleep and
have good quality sleep, you can't get rid of all the metabolic waste. It's one of the most
metabolically active, if not the most metabolically active organ in your body. And it has a lot of
waste that's produced as a result of that metabolic
activity. Well, the way your body cleans it up is this glymphatic system, and it's active at night,
which is how you clean up your brain. So sleep is so critical. Stress is a dementogen. We know
that when your cortisol level is high, your stress hormone, that it literally shrinks your brain.
They've seen tumors in animals that produce cortisol causing shrinkage of the memory center
in the brain called the hippocampus. That's what shrinks in dementia. And when they take out the
tumor, which lowers the cortisol, the brain grows back. So stress is a
dementigen. Toxins are dementigen. Environmental toxins, heavy metals,
mercury, lead. Mercury is one of the most undiagnosed health risks that we have
today in America that is almost never tested and almost never treated because
we never learn about it in medical school. So if
we didn't learn about it, it doesn't exist. And I personally had mercury toxicity, which caused my
brain to not work very well and made me feel like I was demented. And that's how I learned so much
about it. But it's all the environmental toxins, but lead and mercury are among the worst. And it's also lack of relationships. That's a dementogen. If you
don't have social connections, social interactions, that affects your brain and makes it decline.
Lack of meaning and purpose also. These are biologically active factors. They're not just
emotional or psychological. They literally have biological impact on the structure and the function of your brain and every other part of your body.
Certain foods can be dementogens that are allergens, like gluten can be a dementogen.
Dairy can be a dementogen, depending on your personal reactivity. Your gut microbiome,
if it's not healthy in there and you've got bad
bugs growing, which a lot of people do, and you have a leaky gut, that's a dementigen because that
inflammation goes throughout your body and causes dementia or loss of brain function.
So there are all these various factors that are identifiable, measurable, testable, treatable, that literally can take away all the insults
that are causing your brain to decline and causing all sorts of problems. It may just be brain fog,
it may be depression, it may be ADD, and it may be true dementia or early memory loss. These are all
things that we can do something about. I mean,
I see so many people saying, you know, I don't want to know if I have the Alzheimer's gene
because there's nothing you can do about it. Nonsense. We know now from rigorous research
that aggressive lifestyle interventions, personalization and optimization of certain
nutrients can actually slow and even reverse the course of dementia. So we're in a whole new era of thinking
about this. It's so exciting. And that allows us through the use of the lens of functional medicine
to diagnose and to treat these dementogens. And there's sometimes other things that are
not necessarily our lifestyle, like infections. If you get Lyme disease or if you have mold exposure,
these can also cause brain damage and they're treatable.
Now, Chris Christopherson had dementia, quote unquote,
turned out he had Lyme disease.
He was given intravenous antibiotics
and his dementia went away.
And I've seen many patients like this.
So we have to really look deep and dig deep
and be medical detectives and figure out
what are the dementogens for each person
and how do we get rid of them?
And then we need the other part of it,
which is how do we restore the brain function?
How do we create neurogenesis and neuroplasticity?
How do we bring in the things that are reparative,
regenerative and healing that actually can help
the brain function better?
I spent a lot of time talking about lifestyle factors
improving brain function, but there's also a very keen interest in nootropics. Nootropics are
compounds that increase brain power and function. Nootropics can also be very
beneficial in decreasing inflammation and repairing neurons after trauma, but
the main focus for most people using nootropics is they want to
enhance their brain function. They want more cognitive ability. They want more memory. They
want to be able to organize and be more creative because they see that declining. Again, a lot of
that may have to do with stress, but people are looking for that benefit. So nootropics can be
very helpful for people
who are trying to enhance their cognitive abilities. They're also very helpful in the
area of dealing with cognitive decline and dementia. Many nootropics can actually show
improvements in memory and cognitive function in those disease states. Now, most of us,
surprisingly, or not so surprisingly,
very commonly use nootropics. One of the most common nootropic is caffeine. You find it in tea
and you find it in coffee. Caffeine can be bad for you if you overdo it, but it is a stimulant
that has been shown to improve cognitive function and mental endurance. So the good thing about caffeine is that it gives
you access to other neurotransmitters in your brain like acetylcholine. Acetylcholine is really
important in memory and learning. So we want to have a lot of acetylcholine. L-theanine is another
compound that I use that will enhance the effects of caffeine and limit the caffeine-induced jitteriness.
Studies have shown that the combination of caffeine
and L-theanine actually can help you improve
your ability to multitask.
And a safe way to get both caffeine and L-theanine together
is to simply drink green tea.
A really interesting herbal compound that I use
is called herpesine A.
Herpesine A increases the amount of acetylcholine in your brain, which is a neurostimulator and
improves cognitive ability. The way herpesine A works is that it blocks the action of something
called acetylcholinesterase. Acetylcholinesterase breaks down acetylcholine. So by blocking that enzyme,
you allow levels of acetylcholine to rise. This is actually a target for pharmaceutical companies
who are trying to treat Alzheimer's because there are lower levels of acetylcholine in the brain of
Alzheimer's patients. But for an average person, using herpazine can improve cognitive function
and speed of task performance. My favorite nootropics are peptide nootropics. So peptides
are synthetic proteins that are 50 amino acids or shorter. Peptides are designed to enhance
naturally occurring physiologic
processes in the body. Specifically in the brain, neuropeptides or zootropic
peptides can increase BDNF and we know that BDNF increases the number of
connections between neurons and speeds up transfer of information. These
peptides can also increase nerve growth
factor in the brain and the periphery and therefore have a role to be played post-trauma
or other injuries to the brain. The reason why I like peptides a lot is because they have lasting
effects and they can change the neurologic structure of your brain, which differs from
the temporary effects that you
get by just raising chemicals for a short period of time with herprozine, caffeine,
or L-theanine.
My favorite of all of the peptide nootropics is dihexa.
Dihexa was developed at the University of Washington.
The key thing about dihexa, it can enhance neurogenesis and synaptogenesis at multiple
connecting of neurons a thousand times more than brain-derived neurotropic factor, or BDNF,
which is the natural compound that your brain uses to do that. Dihexa has been shown to improve
cognitive function, is shown to improve memory
and learning. There's a lot of hope and promise in using it for patients who are having cognitive
decline and early stages of dementia. Those research studies are being done now. Cerebral
lysin is another nootropic peptide that is much more known about than dihexa. Cerebral lysin has been shown
to have really great benefits post-stroke and post-trauma like concussion in the brain. It has
a neuroprotective effect that is enhanced by its ability to also raise BDNF and nerve growth factor.
It can also, because of the enhancement of nerve growth factor, help with peripheral neuropathies.
So these are all the nootropics.
We have natural compounds and then we have synthetic peptides.
They're all really effective in helping to protect the brain, keep it from aging, and enhancing brain performance.
I do recommend to all my patients, before we start using nootropics, that we really dial in
the lifestyle measures. We work on sleep, we work on stress reduction and resilience,
and we get them exercising. In fact, the first prescription I write for most of my patients
who are having anxiety, depression, or memory lapses is one for exercise. I want them exercising at least 20 minutes every day.
So remember, if you are gonna do nootropics,
they are supplements that you can buy.
Start them slow, titrate them slowly
so that you can make sure that you tolerate them,
and you don't have any side effects.
Your entire body and all the core systems in it
interact as a single, sophisticated symphony.
Your one whole person and all the pieces of your biology and your unique genetic code
interact with your environment to determine how sick or well you are in this moment.
This means your body and your mind are connected as well.
The body and the mind are a single,
dynamic, bi-directional system.
What you do to one has an enormous impact on the other.
I've said it before and I'll say it again.
What you do to your body,
you do to your brain and vice versa.
We know our mind can dramatically influence our health.
Your thoughts, your beliefs, your attitudes,
traumas, life experiences directly influence
your biology.
Your cells are literally listening to your thoughts.
And the body directly and powerfully influences the brain.
Things like nutritional status, hormone imbalances, food allergies, toxins, digestive, immune,
or metabolic imbalances, all these influence our mood,
behavior, attention, attitude, and memory. We need to honor this bi-directional relationship
in order to reclaim our brains and live a life of vitality.
Thanks for tuning in and see you next time for episode six.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I hope you're loving this podcast.
It's one of my favorite things to do
and introducing you to all the experts that I know
and I love and that I've learned so much from.
And I want to tell you about something else I'm doing,
which is called Mark's Picks.
It's my weekly newsletter.
And in it, I share my favorite stuff
from foods to supplements to gadgets
to tools to enhance your health.
It's all the cool stuff that I use and that my team uses to optimize and enhance our health.
And I'd love you to sign up for the weekly newsletter. I'll only send it to you once a
week on Fridays. Nothing else, I promise. And all you do is go to drhyman.com forward slash
pics to sign up. That's drhyman.com forward slash pics, P-I-C-K-S, and sign up for the newsletter.
And I'll share with you my favorite stuff that I use to enhance my health and get healthier
and better and live younger, longer.
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. Thank you. 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.