The Dr. Hyman Show - How To Resolve Your Irregular Periods, Mood Swings, And Sleepless Nights

Episode Date: April 8, 2022

This episode is brought to you by Athletic Greens and Paleovalley.   Seventy-five percent of women experience daily symptoms due to hormonal imbalances. Some of these symptoms are irritating, like in...somnia, sugar cravings, fluid retention, moodiness, and headaches, while others can be more devastating, such as infertility. Often, many of these symptoms are written off as “normal” and just a part of a woman’s cycle or transition into menopause, but the truth is that there are many things we can do to reverse them to live each day more comfortably.    In today’s episode, I talk with Dr. Elizabeth Boham and Dr. Sara Gottfried about how many women’s health issues can be resolved using a Functional Medicine approach. We discuss how PCOS, debilitating PMS, and other hormonal imbalances often stem from diet and exposure to environmental toxins.   Dr. Elizabeth Boham is a physician and nutritionist who practices Functional Medicine at The UltraWellness Center in Lenox, MA. Through her practice and lecturing, she has helped thousands of people achieve their goals of optimum health and wellness. She witnesses the power of nutrition every day in her practice and is committed to training other physicians to utilize nutrition in healing.   Dr. Sara Gottfried is a board-certified physician who graduated from Harvard and MIT. She practices evidence-based, integrative, precision, and Functional Medicine. She is a clinical assistant professor in the Department of Integrative Medicine and Nutritional Sciences at Thomas Jefferson University, and Director of Precision Medicine at the Marcus Institute of Integrative Health. Her three New York Times bestselling books are The Hormone Cure, The Hormone Reset Diet, and Younger. Her latest book is called Women, Food, and Hormones.   This episode is brought to you by Athletic Greens and Paleovalley. 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. 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. Full-length episodes of these interviews can be found here: Dr. Elizabeth Boham Dr. Sara Gottfried Dr. Elizabeth Boham

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. It's important that we pay attention to that individual person with PCOS. Typically, there is high levels of insulin. All of those inputs affect your gene expression is what functional medicine is about. Hey everybody, it's Dr. Mark. I'm all about streamlining my daily health routine to be as powerful and yet simple as possible. And that's why I love AG1 from Athletic Greens. Because when it comes to my health, I want it all. I want my gut to function great, my brain to feel sharp,
Starting point is 00:00:30 my immune system to be strong, my body to feel energized and able. And being in my line of work, I know that means I need optimal levels of nutrients, which is one scoop of AG1. I get 75 high quality vitamins, minerals, whole foods, sourced superfoods, probiotics, and adaptogens to support my entire body. Even with a really healthy diet, it's hard to hit the mark for all our nutrient needs. So I feel better knowing that I have some extra help from AG1. Unlike other supplements and powders out there, AG1 is third-party tested and made without GMOs, nasty chemicals, or artificial anything. And it tastes great, kind of like a tropical green drink i like it on its own mixed with water but it also works really well in most smoothies if you're curious
Starting point is 00:01:10 about trying ag1 from athletic greens for yourself right now they're offering my community 10 free travel packs with your first purchase all you have to do is visit athleticgreens.com forward slash hyman again that's athleticgreens.com forward slash hyman. Again, that's athleticgreens.com forward slash hyman to take ownership over your health and pick up the ultimate daily nutritional insurance. Now, so many of my patients ask me how I manage to work multiple jobs, travel frequently, well, not so much anymore, and spend time with my family and still focus on my health. I know it can seem hard to eat well when you got a lot going on, but the trick is to never let yourself get into a food emergency and to stay stocked up with the right things to support your goals.
Starting point is 00:01:51 So recently I discovered Paleo Valley Beef Sticks. I keep these beef sticks at home and at the office so I know that whenever I'm in a food emergency, I have a healthy and delicious option to keep me on track. It's no secret that I have high standards when it comes to what I put in my body, and Paleo Valley Beef Sticks checks all the boxes. They're gluten-free, grain-free, dairy-free, soy-free, and non-GMO. Plus, they use 100% grass-fed and grass-finished beef,
Starting point is 00:02:19 which not only adds to the flavorful taste, but it also means they're free of any harmful antibiotics or hormones that you'll find in most meat. With grass-fed beef, you'll get more nutrients than you would with beef fed with grains. Things like higher levels of omega-3 fats that help reduce inflammation and more B vitamins and other antioxidants to support your body's converting food into energy and also more of the fat-soluble vitamins that are beneficial for a healthy heart. Plus, instead of being processed with chemicals and other questionable ingredients, these beef sticks are naturally fermented so you get gut-friendly probiotics with every bite. How
Starting point is 00:02:57 cool is that? Right now, Paleo Valley is offering my listeners 15% off your entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com forward slash hyman to check out all their clean paleo products and take advantage of this deal. That's paleovalley.com forward slash hyman. I definitely recommend stocking up on the grass-fed beef sticks to keep in your house and your car and in your office. It's one of my favorite tricks to staying healthy while on the go. All right, now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Hi, this is Lauren Fee and one of the producers of The Doctor's Pharmacy podcast.
Starting point is 00:03:34 So many women regularly experience hormonal imbalances leading to symptoms like sleepless nights, irregular periods, mood swings, hair loss, and even issues with fertility. The good news is that the principles of functional medicine can help get to the root cause of your symptoms and bring your body back into balance. In today's episode, we feature three different conversations from the doctor's pharmacy about various root causes of hormonal imbalances. Dr. Hyman speaks with Dr. Elizabeth Boehm about PCOS and later about the role that insulin resistance plays in hormonal imbalance. He also talks to Dr. Sarah Gottfried about how toxins affect hormones.
Starting point is 00:04:13 Let's dive in. PCOS or polycystic ovarian syndrome is a syndrome that involves irregular periods or not having any periods and androgen excess or changes in your hormone balance. But it is a syndrome. So that means that there's a continuum where some people have all aspects of PCOS and some people just have some aspects of PCOS. And we can talk more about that. But so there may even be more than this, you know, that we're not even picking up. It's quite common. And it's definitely something we're thinking about all the time when somebody's coming
Starting point is 00:04:51 in and complaining about irregular periods or not having had their period for a bunch of months. You know, a young woman that should be having regular, you know, periods. I think you're really heavy periods. They can miss periods. They get life periods. What are the other symptoms that are pretty common? Yeah. So, um, we see, uh, her tzutism, which is the growth of hair. It sounds terrible. Yeah. The growth of hair where
Starting point is 00:05:14 women don't want to have it. So, um, on their, on their lip, on their chin, on their abdomen, like in their belly, um, area. So the hair is growing where they don't wanna have it and then they may have hair loss where they wanna have hair. So they may have some male pattern hair loss. They get acne and typically- So basically they're losing hair where they don't wanna lose it
Starting point is 00:05:37 and they're getting hair where they don't want it. And it's because of these high levels of male hormones like DHEA and testosterone that end up causing basically this male appearance almost yeah their their their hair their hair growth shifts because their hormones shift and so you see the bearded women in the circus that's what this is right yes well they might they some of them may have had some other things going on too to an extreme right but um but yes in general, this is, you know, you're starting to grow hair where you don't want it and not having good hair on the top of your head where you want it.
Starting point is 00:06:13 And all because there's been a real shift in your hormone balance in your body. And so when you check, when we actually check, we see high levels, like you mentioned, of that DHEA in the blood. We may see high testosterone levels or high free testosterone levels. And so those are some of the biomarkers that will show up when you look. Yeah. And you also get acne, bad acne. Bad acne.
Starting point is 00:06:37 Yeah. And a lot of times, like in the lower jaw area, acne, and sometimes cystic acne. And then they'll often gain weight. Now, not everybody with PCOS is overweight. There's a lot of women, and we can even talk more about that today. There's a lot of women who don't have the obesity part of it, and they're just dealing with irregular periods. But for a good portion of women with PCOS, they gain weight because of the high levels of insulin that are going on. So if they have high levels of insulin floating around. So with PCOS, typically there is high levels of insulin. And we've talked about insulin so many times on this podcast, and you've talked about it many times, you know, but that insulin
Starting point is 00:07:31 is that hormone that helps us balance our blood sugar. So you eat a meal, the body makes insulin, that insulin tells your body to take your food and get it into your muscles so it can be used for energy. And what happens when somebody has insulin resistance is their body's not listening to that insulin as well, and they've got high levels of insulin, and that high level of insulin will cause people to gain weight around the belly. And so we often see with PCOS that weight gain around the belly, that belly weight. Yeah, so this sounds like a miserable condition. You get pimples, you lose hair on your head, you grow a beard, you are infertile, your periods are all over the place. This just
Starting point is 00:08:11 sounds terrible. And traditional medicine has very kind of weird approach to it. Because the way I think about it is that it's called polycystic ovarian syndrome, which makes people think it's a gynecological problem, but it's actually a dietary problem. Right. Right. It's often a dietary problem. And, you know, it's not always dietary,
Starting point is 00:08:37 which is so interesting, right? Because we're learning about how toxins from the environment, like BPA and plastics, and we were learning about the microbiome and how that can be a trigger. So toxins and dysbiosis or imbalance in the microbiome are common things that we see. But toxins can cause insulin resistance. Absolutely. And the microbiome imbalances can cause insulin resistance and prediabetes. So it's all connected.
Starting point is 00:09:08 It's all connected. And you're right. And a huge portion of people, it's dietary as well. You know, where they're, but I think it's important to remember it's not always that, right? But there's a huge portion of people where they're just eating too many carbohydrates, too many refined and processed carbohydrates for their body. So, you know, or for anybody's body. But those high levels of refined
Starting point is 00:09:33 and processed carbohydrates really can be a trigger for this insulin resistance and weight gain. And then that insulin resistance shifts the hormone balance. And then you get this imbalance in hormones and you get the high androgens or testosterone and DHEA and then the periods get irregular. But interestingly, as a syndrome, it's important that we pay attention to that individual person because it's very different. You may have 10 women in a room with PCOS and you may have 10 really different reasons for why they have PCOS. No, that goes to functional medicine. They're really not all the same.
Starting point is 00:10:09 Yes. It's really an interesting aspect for functional medicine doctors to work on. I mean, that just speaks to the whole approach of functional medicine, which is because you know the name of your disease, it doesn't mean it was wrong with you, right? Absolutely. It's just a description of the symptoms, but not the cause. And so functional medicine is about the cause. It's about a description of the symptoms, but not the cause. And so functional medicine is about the cause. It's about why, not what.
Starting point is 00:10:27 Not what disease you have PCOS, but why do you have that, right? And traditional medicine, the symptoms are treated symptomatically. So what are the traditional treatments that you see regular doctors giving for PCOS? Yeah, so often women will be placed on birth control pills because if they're having irregular periods or they're skipping their period, many times the physician will put them on birth control pills because it will regulate their cycle. They'll put them maybe on metformin because metformin improves insulin sensitivity. It's a diabetes drug.
Starting point is 00:10:59 Yeah. And then that can many times help with the weight gain. It sometimes helps with the acne and the hair growth or hair loss. And they'll often put them on spironolactone, which is another medication that helps with balancing the hormones and can help with some of the symptoms. It's a diuretic and it just blocks the conversion of testosterone to the kind that really causes the hair loss called DHT. But it's really fascinating.
Starting point is 00:11:26 But it really doesn't speak to addressing the root causes. So from a functional medicine perspective, what are the root causes for PCOS? And how do we start to deal with these? Yeah. So as you mentioned already, diet is huge. Diet has a huge impact when somebody's eating too many of the refined and processed carbs, too much sugar, too many of those coffee drinks with sugar in it, juices, sodas, refined and processed oatmeal, you know, cereals and, you know, pastas and breads and muffins and, you know, those foods that we've been grabbing too much of for some people with some genetics that can really throw off this whole system in their body. Another big common area are toxins. I see this a lot. I see a lot of, I think is, is toxin related. We know genetics plays a huge role here. We also know that when,
Starting point is 00:12:22 what women are exposed to as a fetus, when what has happening to their mom is really, when their mom's pregnant with them, that really impacts their hormone balance and their metabolism later in life. So what the mom's eating, she's at Dunkin' Donuts all day and- What's fascinating with- Eating the frappa mocha latte all day long with more sugar than three cans of Coke. I mean, yeah, people don't realize that. Yeah. So when they're pregnant with their baby, it's really important that they're paying attention to what they're eating because
Starting point is 00:12:58 if they're gaining too much weight or eating too many refined carbs or not gaining enough weight, it's kind of interesting. So if they're not gaining enough weight or they're gaining way too much weight or they're eating too many refined and processed carbs and sugars, that really throws off the fetus, that baby's metabolism. And so sometimes we tell our patients, you can just blame it on your mom. It's called epigenetics, which in the genes get tagged and messages of, you know, Jeff Bland's called the book of life and where the bookmarks are in the book of life, you've
Starting point is 00:13:34 got this whole genetic code, but not all of it gets read, but you can bookmark different aspects of it depending on what exposures you've had. And we know this from lots of research on epigenetics, that what the mother does, what she eats, what she's exposed to, her thoughts, feelings, all those tag the baby's genes for what happens to them in the future and whether they get diabetes or heart disease
Starting point is 00:13:55 or cancer or obesity. I mean, it's all programmed, but that doesn't mean it's not fixable. You can actually modify your gene expression. And that's what functional medicine is all about, is changing the environment, then the big picture of the environment, meaning your diet, lifestyle, toxins, et cetera, et cetera. How all of those inputs affect your gene expression is what functional medicine is about. It's about modifying your lifestyle and your environment to
Starting point is 00:14:19 influence your genes, to change your health in every aspect. Yeah. So for some people, it's harder for them than others. Like some people come in and they're like, it's just not fair. I have to be so much more careful than my friend Susie, right? And it's true, you know, because there are some people. Yes, there are some people that have to be so much more careful with their diet. I mean, we all should be eating a healthy diet, but some people have to be more careful with the carbohydrates than others.
Starting point is 00:14:46 Yeah, I would say, you know, there are a few people who are better adapted to higher carbohydrate diets, and there are a few. I know a few of them, and those are the ones who stay skinny eating anything. But when you look at the fact that 88% of Americans are metabolic and healthy almost nine out of 10 of us have some degree of insulin resistance, that should get our attention. It's probably the majority of us who don't do well with a lot of starch and sugar. And there's a continuum, right? Some can do more, some can do less. Some look at a bagel and they gain weight, literally, because they think about it and their insulin goes up and they put all the fat on their bodies.
Starting point is 00:15:27 I want to jump back to something you quickly talked about, which is toxins. And I want you to explain how environmental toxins and what toxins influence hormones and influence insulin resistance. Because both of those things are going on with PCOS. And I think it's something people don't understand. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:46 You know, this was impacting men more than women. But we realized in Agent Orange, right? So when men were exposed, there may have been a few women. I don't really know how many women went to Vietnam. Probably not very many, right? Not too many. Not too many. So when they were exposed to Agent Orange in Vietnam, they had a much higher rate.
Starting point is 00:16:08 They have a much higher rate of getting diabetes with less weight gain, right? So that's when we started to say, oh, this is interesting. There's a real interesting connection between toxins in the environment and our metabolism and our weight. And then we get diabetes. And they get diabetes. Agent Orange exposure had lots more diabetes. Lots more diabetes at less weight gain. So I'm just going to make this up here, make up some numbers.
Starting point is 00:16:33 But just so people understand, they may have only had to gain 10 pounds or 20 pounds to get type 2 diabetes, where a typical American maybe was gaining 50 pounds before they got type 2 diabetes, you know, just for an example. So they were getting type 2 diabetes with less weight gain, meaning that there was more to it than just the weight gain, right? And that's when we realized that these toxins were damaging probably the mitochondria, right? So that powerhouse of your cells.
Starting point is 00:17:04 We also know BPA, that plastic, that's been really well- Bicinal A. Yeah, really well studied to show there's a connection with insulin resistance. Yes. You know, we've known for a long time about the connection with breast cancer and BPA, but there's also this connection with insulin resistance and weight gain so that hard plastic they it's they use bpa in the lining of cans or on receipts bottles baby i know right yeah when
Starting point is 00:17:32 you get your credit card receipt your gas station receipt the people say join your sim like no thanks no you take it because i i don't want to constantly expose myself gets absorbed through the skin yeah yeah so you know we realized that this toxin caused weight gain insulin resistance and and i'm sure there's a lot of other toxins that we haven't even you know figured out yet yeah that are really influencing pretty much all the petrochemical toxins all the plastics and all the fossil fuel derived toxins are endocrine disruptors. And I read way back when we were at Canyon Ranch, I read a book called Our Stolen Future by Theo Colburn, which was about the ways in which these environmental toxins were
Starting point is 00:18:15 disrupting reproductive health of animals and humans. And I was like, oh my God. And so what's going on is that these are not just one exposure. So you're not just exposed to BPA. You're exposed to literally hundreds of these in our daily life through our modern living. And there are ways to reduce it. And I think the Environmental Working Group is a great resource for finding out what household products, skincare products, cleaning products, you know, are food products that you can eat that are not going to be full of these chemicals. And you just go to ewg.org.
Starting point is 00:18:45 So that's important. So let's talk now about the gut. Because most people don't really think that your hormones are connected to your gut microbiome. But it's incredibly connected. Fascinating. It's so fascinating. But they've shown that there's certain types of molecules from the gram-negative bacteria in our gut.
Starting point is 00:19:07 So if the microbiome, if all of those trillions of bacteria are out of balance and there's an overgrowth of some unhealthy bacteria in our gut, that they have, these gram-negative bacteria have something on them called LPS or lipopolysaccharides, that these things can then, these components can get into the body. And they've shown that this can trigger this insulin resistance in our body so that people, when they have higher levels of these abnormal bacteria, will have more insulin resistance. That's absolutely right. So there's a name for this, we call it metabolic endotoxemia,
Starting point is 00:19:47 which is a fancy way of saying that the poison crap in your gut leaks into your bloodstream and your immune system goes, ah, and starts creating an inflammatory response, which then affects your insulin sensitivity. So anything that causes inflammation, right? Anything, stress, bad food, toxins, infections, microbiome nastiness, all that can drive inflammation that can cause insulin resistance.
Starting point is 00:20:16 Yes. So you don't even be eating sugar, right? But if your gut's a mess for various reasons, then you have to fix the gut. And also, there's a lot of effect on insulin resistance, but there's also other effects in the gut around the kind of bacteria that are there and how they affect your metabolic processing of estrogens and other hormones. So it's really important to eat the right kinds of fiber and the right kinds of foods and to feed your microbiome and your inner garden. So we've talked about a lot of things. We've talked about diet. We've talked about diet, we've talked about stress,
Starting point is 00:20:46 we've talked about environmental toxins, we've talked about the gut microbiome. All these things play a role. And so the job of a functional medicine doctor is to dig down and figure these things out. So how do we begin to assess these? And I want you to share a little bit about some cases, but how do we assess,
Starting point is 00:21:03 because it seems like a lot of stuff that you go to the endocrinologist or the gynecologist, they're not like looking at your poop. They're not measuring your toxin levels. They're not looking necessarily at insulin resistance very well. What do we look at that's so different here at the Altria Wellness Center and through the lens of functional medicine? I mean, I think that's what's critical about functional medicine. And what we do is we get a really good detailed history. And that gives us a lot of information. So when we take the time to get to know our patient and get all of the history of their life, their timeline of their life, what things have happened to them, what
Starting point is 00:21:37 illnesses they've had, what disruptions they've had, what exposures they've had, what other things are going on in their body body that really impacts where we go and what we choose to look for. So you get a really good history, first and foremost, and then that informs you what you want to test. You know, you could test everything, but you know, this ends up being a lot of tests. So what's important is to get a really good history so you know where to really focus. So for one person, it may be, I really got to look at their gut microbiome. I've got to figure, they've got this sort of history. I think that might be an area that we really have to focus on.
Starting point is 00:22:18 I want to look at what those, the balance of the good and bad bacteria are. I want to see if they have maybe some of these lipopolysaccharide components that may be triggering inflammation and insulin resistance. Or maybe somebody else, you know, you've got a sense based on their history and some of their other symptoms that it's more toxin related. Or somebody else, it may be, you know, more lifestyle related. And you've got to just really focus more on breaking that cycle of craving those carbohydrates. Because what happens for a lot of people is it becomes a vicious cycle, right? They eat the carbohydrates, the real refined processed carbohydrates, their insulin goes up, but then they end up, they gain some weight, then they crave more and more of them, and it becomes this vicious cycle that gets out of hand. And I think that's important. Yeah, it's so important.
Starting point is 00:23:06 We really don't just look at the hormone levels, which a typical endocrinologist or GYN, we look at those too, but because they're very helpful and informative to look at the testosterone levels, DHT, and look at DHEAS and all kinds of things that we look at. But we also do looking at toxin load, we're looking at the microbiome, we're looking at nutrient levels, we're looking at insulin resistance in ways that may not be looked at. I was taught when I went through my training that the symptoms women start to experience after 40, you know, the difficulties sleeping, the night sweats, the hot flashes, that those are these inconveniences that could be medicated with hormone therapy in the right candidates.
Starting point is 00:23:43 But now what we're actually learning is that many of those symptoms are biomarkers of something much more serious, which is dysfunction of blood vessels, endothelial dysfunction. It's a biomarker associated with bone loss. And so it becomes much more important, I believe, to get these hormones back into balance, starting first with diet and lifestyle. Another piece that's really essential is that having large blood sugar excursions, which was my story until I figured this out in the book, that can trigger hot flashes, night sweats, mood swings, many panic attacks, many of the things that women are starting to experience in their 40s. So the more we can dial in that metabolic health piece, along with balancing these sex hormones, the better off women are.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Yeah, it's so huge. And I think we really just come to understand that these are not normal things. They shouldn't be normalized. That's right. Women aren't just sort of relegated to being, quote, hysterical, which is the – I hate that word. It's like it basically comes from hysteria, which is the uterus, right? Hysterectomy and hysteria are not unrelated. I hate it too.
Starting point is 00:25:01 I mean, I love how you – Oh, my God. It's terrible. Why don't we normalize it? It would be okay for women to have all these hormonal dysfunction and not actually get to the root causes of it. So it's really not normal. Like 75% of women have some type of PMS and 85% of women have some type of hormonal issues in their life. Why is this happening? Why has it been so normalized? And what are the root causes
Starting point is 00:25:21 of all this hormonal dysfunction? And what is it? Well, I would say the days of normalizing this need to be over because women are suffering unnecessarily, as you just described. There's a lot of different hormone issues at play here. One is cortisol related to toxic stress. It can be high, low, a combination of the two. Another hormone that gets out of whack is thyroid. So, thyropause especially affects women about sevenfold more than it affects men. And that is a common cause of weight gain and hair loss and many of the things that women face. And then as you described, estrogen and progesterone often get out of whack. That can be related to just the cycling years, the reproductive years.
Starting point is 00:26:09 It can also be related to being postpartum. And then perimenopause is when a lot of this becomes a perfect storm of many of these hormones out of whack. Insulin is another important one because so many women notice, especially after 35 or 40, that insulin is just not on their side the way that it once was. They become insulin resistant, which I think of as insulin. It's not on their side, but it goes to their tummy. That's right.
Starting point is 00:26:36 It goes right to their body. Not to the side, but it's in the middle. Exactly. Exactly. And I think there's a few issues at play. One is the way that our world is changing. It's related to stress. It's related to unrealistic expectations. It's related to over-functioning and trauma, which we know affects women more than men. Men are still affected,
Starting point is 00:26:57 but women more so. It's related to the food that we're eating, the way that our food has changed, which you talked to so brilliantly. And it's also related to the fact that physicians are not taught about this, right? Like I wasn't taught at Harvard Medical School about this. I imagine you weren't either. We were taught to hand over a prescription for a birth control pill or maybe hormone replacement therapy once women was pregnant and possible. And that is no solution because it addresses symptoms. It does not address the root cause. That's right. And functional medicine and the perspective around functional medicine hormones is so rich and developed and allows us to understand one root causes, but also all the variables in our life that impact our hormones and how to regulate and change those to create
Starting point is 00:27:44 balance, whether it's adrenal and stress hormones, thyroid hormones, sex hormones, or insulin. And your book, Women, Food, and Hormones, really helps us to map all that out in a way that gives women a toolkit for how to fix all these problems. That's right. I mean, this was born of me struggling myself with almost every hormone imbalance that you can imagine, and also struggling with my weight. So unlike you, Mark, when I was sitting down and writing that first book, I gained about 25 pounds. I've never seen your weight fluctuate very much. I don't know. Is that true? I go up and down. If I go off the reservation, like I was in Italy this summer, and I was just eating like bread and pasta and drinking lots of wine and I gained about five pounds in a week. So I can put it on if I go off the tracks and I actually lost weight from being sick, but no, my weight couldn't go up and
Starting point is 00:28:34 down, but mostly it's pretty stable. Well, it sure seems stable. And, you know, we know that women have this asymmetric response to stressors, to food. So many of us will gain weight. And there's an evolutionary bias for women to gain weight rather than to lose weight, because it helps us with fertility. It helps us with pregnancy. So for those of us who are trying to fit into the clothes in our closet that can present some problems. So my own struggle with weight, my own struggle with hormones became really the basis of the books that I've written. So I'm a case study, as well as someone who's really curious about how do we get these hormones into balance, especially with targeted lifestyle changes,
Starting point is 00:29:22 starting first with food. And then how do we, you know, how do we get out of that place of misery around hormone balance? Because the truth is, it's so much easier to get your hormones back into balance than to live with the discomfort, the misery of them being out of whack. Yeah, it's true. And I think the beautiful thing about it is that the solutions are relatively straightforward, and yet you're not hearing about them. And I think that the suffering around hormones is quite extreme. I mean, it's irregular period, it's heavy periods, it's PMS, which is a whole range of symptoms from breast tenderness and fluid retention to diarrhea, migraines, fatigue, mood changes mood changes sleep issues that can be quite debilitating uh and they treat it now they call it pmdd which
Starting point is 00:30:10 is premenstrual dysphoric disorder they treat with like version of pro prozac essentially they change the name of prozac to some other name and then they use it for pms uh that's not the solution and even with with post-menopausal symptoms and perimenopausal symptoms those are often exacerbated by the things that are driving hormonal imbalance. So I'd love for you to talk about what are the things we know that drive hormonal imbalance? And then we'll get to what we do to fix those hormonal imbalances. Because I think we know a lot about, whether it's food or lifestyle or environmental toxins, talk about the things that really drive women's hormones out of whack.
Starting point is 00:30:43 Well, you got it. I mean, I would say food is one of the primary drivers and that includes not just getting sufficient fat, which is the backbone of the sex hormones that you make. It's also getting the right dose of carbohydrates for you, which is so important when it comes to insulin and leptin and some of these other hormones that are involved in fat storage, as well as satiety. So getting the carb dose right, also getting the protein dose right. So dialing in these macronutrients becomes incredibly important. And a big part of what was behind this book was that I was struggling not just with weight gain, but with a loss of metabolic health.
Starting point is 00:31:26 And that's something that we know affects about 88% of Americans right now. So 88% of us are metabolically unhealthy. Many of us don't know it. So it's not just about the bathroom scale. It's not about diet culture. It's about becoming metabolically healthy. And the hormones are such an essential part of that. So as you described, food, stressors, especially toxic stress, you know,
Starting point is 00:31:51 I think a lot of us going through the pandemic had an experience of toxic stress. Some people had weight gain associated with that. There's the changes, there's environmental toxins that we get exposed to that are endocrine disruptors. You know, the root causes are something that many of us encounter. The solutions are not what mainstream medicine is really taught to manage. You talk about how we don't want to normalize this. And, you know, what it reminds me of is that analogy of the frogs in the pot on the stove, where you very slowly turn up the heat and the frog doesn't jump out because it's so slow
Starting point is 00:32:33 and imperceptible. And so I don't want women to just sit back and say, oh, my doctor checked my labs and said, I'm just getting older. Don't settle for that. Don't be dismissed. There's so much misunderstanding about this. And so it, it takes us taking our health into our own hands and saying, okay, this is not how I want to live my life after 40. I want to change things. Definitely not. And I think the things that we, you know, we, we, we also talk about in terms of, of how to change things in terms of diet. So there's, there's questions that people have about soy foods and I think about flaxseed and,ed. And a lot of people say, oh, soy is bad for you. It's going to cause hormonal dysfunction and it's an estrogen. What's your take on that? Because I think there's
Starting point is 00:33:12 a lot of controversy about that. There is a lot of controversy. I think the problem is with GMO soy. So I think that you can go overboard with even whole foods. My general feeling is that some of the benefits associated with soy, with phytoestrogens like flax outweigh the potential risks of them. I mean, you have to be cautious about getting the dose right. But for the most part, I think having whole soy in your diet once or twice a week, having whole flax in your diet a couple times a week is very healthy for you. It's not really the whole foods that we're having a problem with in the US. It's those processed foods, the ultra processed foods, the foods that are
Starting point is 00:33:57 genetically modified. Those are the ones that are causing problems with hormones, not really the whole foods. Same thing with goitrogens. I always get asked about, well, what about the brassica family? Is that going to slow down my thyroid? So you lightly cook them. That reduces the goitrogenic effect. I've looked at the data. I've been underwhelmed by the data really showing a significant impact on thyroid function. You get so many benefits from eating these foods that I think, once again, the benefits outweigh the risks. It's so true. I think people can – and what attracts me is a lot of doctors who treat cancer patients, breast cancer patients, will say essentially that they shouldn't eat soy food because they're worried about cancer,
Starting point is 00:34:41 and yet they say that it's okay to drink alcohol and to eat sugar and to have some sugar. If you're losing weight, have some sugar. Oh my God. Yeah. It's crazy. It's really crazy. So I think, I think what you're saying is important. I want to come back to the glucose thing, because you mentioned the changes in blood sugar and glucose that also affect hormones. And we know, for example, in men who eat a lot of sugar and starch, they tend to get more estrogens. They tend to get breast enlargement or, you know, man boobs. They lose the hair on their body. They get big bellies. They get soft skin. And it's because the fat produces estrogen. And the fat is laid down because of high insulin. And so you discovered a lot by using the continuous glucose monitor, which is really a kind of a new advance in
Starting point is 00:35:21 actually personalizing medicine, what you call precision medicine. And you are an advisor level, so am I, in terms of this company that is really driving the space around looking at our own blood sugars in real time and how different foods affect it, how we can modify our diet to actually keep our sugars in balance. So what did you learn from doing it yourself? And why is it so important for estrogen and hormone balance in general? I'm a huge fan of continuous glucose monitoring. The great thing is that you don't have to have a continuous glucose monitor to benefit from monitoring your glucose. You could also use just a $25 glucose meter to get some of the same data. It's not quite as dense or comprehensive. But I had a lot of surprises. I started wearing a continuous glucose monitor about four years ago. And at the time I had prediabetes.
Starting point is 00:36:10 My fasting glucose was about 105 to 110. And what I discovered was that many of the foods that I thought were healthy were giving me these massive excursions with glucose. Things like beans, chickpeas, legumes, sweet potatoes, apples, a lot of fruits were just making me spike so high, grapes, peaches. So what I had to do to reclaim metabolic health was to really dial in my food plan and to avoid some of those foods that were spiking me to the diabetic range. And I found that that really helped. So a big part of what I learned as I dove into the literature for this book was that you've got a few choices for metabolic health. One is to go 100%
Starting point is 00:36:59 plant-based and there's a lot of evidence behind that. And what I discovered myself was that being 100% plant based was not the best fit for me. I started to lose muscle mass. I'm Jewish. I'm hungry all the time. And so 100% plant based just didn't work very well for me. Wait a minute. When you're eating the way you're now, you're still Jewish and you're not hungry all the time. So I'm not sure that logic flows, Dr. Godfrey. Well, I have to say keto saved me. So going on a ketogenic diet made my blood sugar go from severely spiky, which you don't want, to a lovely flat line where my mood is more stable. I don't have anxiety anymore.
Starting point is 00:37:43 I've got this feeling of like, oh, like the angels are singing because I can focus. I don't have this jacked up glucose every day. Perimenopause is the timeframe between when your cycles are normal and you can easily get pregnant and menopause. So perimenopause are those years, you know, it can be like 10, 13 years of perimenopause, and it can occur any time.
Starting point is 00:38:12 You can go into menopause any time between 45 and 55. That's typical. And that perimenopause can be 10, 6 to 10 to 13 years beforehand, before you actually go into menopause, is considered perimenopause. What is that? Do people feel bad? Yeah. I mean, there's just the hormones are not as regular and consistent, right? So what happens a lot in perimenopause is during those years, women will have what are called anovulatory cycles. So they don't ovulate every time they have a monthly cycle.
Starting point is 00:38:47 And so those anovulatory cycles, meaning no ovulation that month, results in less progesterone being produced in the body. Because when you ovulate, that's when you make progesterone. And if you're sort of weaning down your years of reproductive life, you don't necessarily make progesterone. You don't ovulate every time. you don't ovulate every time. You don't ovulate every cycle. And then you get these high levels of estrogen, and that causes a lot of these symptoms of
Starting point is 00:39:10 clots and heavy bleeding and bad PMS and mood issues and sleep issues and migraines and all this stuff that women suffer from that is so unnecessary. Right. You think of it as, you know, when you're having regular cycles with ovulation, you have estrogen and progesterone and they sort of balance each other out. And then when you're in those perimenopausal years, you're going to have so many women will have cycles where they don't have that progesterone spike. So it feels like their body feels like it's higher in estrogen because they don't have that progesterone to balance it off and so you
Starting point is 00:39:45 feel like you have high estrogen um and and like you mentioned you get more breast tenderness or more clotting or heavier bleeding um and and the low progesterone makes us often feel crummy so you can be more irritable you can just you cranky, harder time sleeping because progesterone really is a calming hormone and it helps us, helps women, helps people sleep better. So when it's low, many times you don't sleep as well. You'll have irregular sleep patterns where you've never had that before. And, um, and, and, uh, you just feel more irritable and cranky, and it's no fun. Out of balance, yeah. Yeah, out of balance.
Starting point is 00:40:29 And it's important to understand that we know a lot about what causes these imbalances, and we know a lot about how to fix them, except your traditional doctor is just not doing it. Yeah, yeah. So what are the things that we know create hormone imbalance that make things worse for women? And, and by the way, you know, just to sort of a little aside, you know, it's not just sex hormones that get out of balance. And when you, when you see this sort of period of life around perimenopause, there's like four different hormones that are all interacting. It all kind of gets screwed up. One is insulin and blood sugar. Cause you're,
Starting point is 00:41:05 you know, you're often the sandwich generation. You're, you have kids and your parents are getting older and you're trying to have a career. And it's like, it's a lot going on at that time for women often. And then they have, uh, estrogen imbalances and progesterone. They have adrenal imbalances because their adrenal glands are their stress response and they're highly stressed in that time of life. So their adrenals interact with the sex hormones and screw that up. And then of course you've got thyroid thrown in there in a lot of cases. So you've got thyroid, adrenal, sex hormones, insulin, and so it's like a big mishmash of hormone chaos. And actually you can fix it. Absolutely. And I'm so glad. These are like so easy to fix with functional medicine. Yeah. Yeah. And I'm so glad you brought that up because all of our hormones are interrelated.
Starting point is 00:41:48 They're all playing off each other. They're all influencing each other. And so that's important to really understand because that's how we can really help women feel better. So when you really focus on the adrenal glands, for example, so you have two adrenal glands, typically, they sit up on top of your kidneys, and those glands produce cortisol, and they produce DHEA, and a bunch of other things. That's your stress hormones. Yeah. So cortisol is one of your stress hormones. So when you're under a lot of stress, if you're under chronic stress, for example, I mean, you know, your body's going to be producing a lot of cortisol all the time. And so what can happen, what can happen is then
Starting point is 00:42:31 the body is spending all this time making cortisol to handle that chronic stress you're under. You're dealing with your kids and then your parents, as you talked about, you know, you're working all the time, your job, you're not giving your body enough time to rest. You're not getting enough sleep. You might not be eating right. You might be just running from one thing to the other. You may not be taking the time to do your meditation or your exercise. You're just not doing that self-care, which is so important for your adrenal glands.
Starting point is 00:43:05 And when that's happening, then your body's spending all this time producing cortisol that it can't do as good a job at producing progesterone. Yeah. Right? Right. And so then you have- It's like a chicken wire thing. It's all connected. It's not like they're all separate.
Starting point is 00:43:15 Right. And so then you have more of those signs of low progesterone, which we talked about before, which is irregular sleep, irritability, more crankiness, more PMS, right? So, so it's really important that we step back and say, okay, how can we support your adrenal glands? And, and that's really a lot of, of self-care, you know, by saying, okay, I need to give my time, myself time to rest. I need to give myself enough time to sleep. Meditate maybe. Exactly. I got to get my meditation in, right? And I think that makes a big difference. It can really help with balancing the hormones.
Starting point is 00:43:54 We know, right, that even simple meditation, 15 minutes twice a day can cut back on, can significantly cut in half the amount of hot flashes a woman has. Yeah. During those perimenopause, we haven't even talked about hot flashes yet, right? Well, I mean, let's talk about the things that screw up your hormones, right? Yeah. So sugar. Yes.
Starting point is 00:44:15 That causes insulin resistance. That causes more estrogen to be made and all the imbalances, right? Right. We were talking about how when you get more insulin resistance, you gain more weight around the belly, right? And we know that when we gain more weight around the belly, that we have more of that aromatase enzyme, which makes more estrogen and, again, throws us out of balance. And what about alcohol? Yeah, alcohol really is a concern because the way alcohol,
Starting point is 00:44:43 and there's multiple ways that alcohol can impact risk of breast cancer, for example, but it also seems to result in a higher level of free estrogen in the body. And so, you know, we know it disrupts sleep. It's a liver toxin. And it literally impedes the body's ability to metabolize estrogen. And I've seen studies, it was shocking to me, where people were on hormone replacement and drinking and their liver just can't handle it. And the estrogen level spike and their risk goes up. So we have an enormous link there. I remember a study I read years ago, which was if a woman had a glass of wine a day, it increases her risk of breast cancer by 40%. Yeah. you know, unfortunately, there's a linear
Starting point is 00:45:25 relationship between alcohol and breast cancer risk. So for every drink a woman drinks per day, like every time she increases the amount of she drinks per day, her risk of breast cancer goes up even further. So, you know, what's considered moderation for women is five or less drinks a week with a drink being, you know, five ounces of wine or, you know, an ounce of hard liquor. It's not very much. No, it's not very much. And that's for a whole week. But what's interesting is you're right. There has been even studies showing that even one drink a day is linked with an increased risk of breast cancer. And it may be because it is impairing, well, partly because it's impairing our liver and our ability to detoxify, and it's shifting estrogen levels, and it also depletes the body of B vitamins. So
Starting point is 00:46:10 there's so many impacts that alcohol has there. Yeah. And even the microbiome plays a role in your hormone balance, right? Right. Absolutely. Right. That's something we're always measuring, right? We're looking at how the body is metabolizing hormones and we're looking at the microbiome. And I think that that's important when we're dealing with a woman in perimenopause. Like sometimes they just don't even understand, why am I feeling this way? You know, why am I all of a sudden more irritable? Why am I having a harder time with my periods? You know, why are they heavier? Why can't I sleep? Why am I getting hot flashes now, right? And so sometimes just educating them is a great first place to start. And a lot of times women just feel better when they start to understand, okay, this
Starting point is 00:46:55 is going to, you know, my hormones are shifting. And then what can I do to support them? And we were talking about how great meditation is, right? So powerful. Because it's, oh, yeah. Yeah. And the things, you know, we see typically the women who have the worst problems have the worst diet, the most stress, they drink too much, they don't exercise, they have lots of stress, they don't meditate. It's not rocket science why hormones get screwed up. And we know how to
Starting point is 00:47:21 intervene using very specific diagnostic tests that we do at the Ultrawana Center to actually help map out what's happening with the hormones. We can look at estrogen metabolism. We can see how to really be sophisticated in manipulating those hormones so that actually they're better. We can fix the gut and the microbiome. We can look for environmental toxins which act like estrogens in the body and get rid of those or heavy metals. And we can actually have an impact through using various foods to help, whether it's flax seeds or other broccoli family, help estrogen metabolism, certain soy products that are whole foods. Soy products are good.
Starting point is 00:47:53 And then we can kind of get people's hormones to kind of work better. We may want to even use nutrients. And you were talking about sulforaphane, which is a powerful broccoli chemical that you can take. And there's a whole cocktail of things we use to help estrogen metabolism. We should probably talk about soy a little bit because, honestly, this is probably the most common question I get. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because people are so confused about soy.
Starting point is 00:48:17 Tell us, Dr. Baum. What is the deal with soy? Oh, my goodness. Should we eat soy or not eat soy? So soy, right? Soy foods, they have these things called phytoestrogens in them. And this is what got everybody nervous, right? So they have these components, these phytonutrients, these components in them that can actually impact the estrogen receptor. And so for, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:42 a bunch of years ago, oncologists used to say, oh no, it can impact the estrogen receptor. And so for, you know, a bunch of years ago, oncologists used to say, oh, no, it can impact the estrogen receptor. I don't want you to eat soy. But what we know, actually, is that they bind to the estrogen receptor, preventing your own estrogen from binding to the estrogen receptor. And as a result, you have a lower estrogen-like impact in the body. And so multiple studies have shown that soy is actually associated with a lower rate of breast cancer. But if it's traditional soy. Yeah, that's a good point. Like tofu, tempeh, natto, miso, soy sauce.
Starting point is 00:49:18 Edamame, right? Right. Those are whole soy products that are not industrial food. And most soy we're eating today is industrial soy. Yes. Turned in all kinds of weird ingredients like soy burgers and soy hot dogs and texturized vegetable protein that gets inserted in all kinds of protein bars. And isolated soy protein, which is very different than regular whole soy. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:49:42 And it may be linked to cancer in animal studies. So I think it's important for people to realize that, you know, it's, you know, food is a modulator and it usually helps the body do what it does rather than interfere with it. And so sometimes it's true with like you eat too much broccoli or whatever, raw broccoli, you're going to get vector thyroid. But the phytoestrogens in soy actually help to act more like a thermos. They keep things balanced, right? And I think recommending those whole soy foods is great. And I think that's a really easy thing to do. Flax seeds also really help ground flax seeds in the
Starting point is 00:50:16 gut. The broccoli family vegetables, simple dietary things and getting more fiber to help the prebiotics in the gut, getting rid of all the starch, the sugar, the processed food, all those ingredients, alcohol. There's really simple things you can do. Yeah. Like balancing your blood sugar, balancing your blood sugar by making sure that every meal has a good source of healthy fat, has a good source of fiber and has a good source of protein, right? So that prevents the spikes in blood sugar and the spikes in insulin, right? So you make sure your meals are balanced like that, then you won't get those ups and downs in your energy. And so you just feel better. And that helps with preventing that high insulin, which then- And then you're going to be binging on carbs and sugar to get your energy up and all that.
Starting point is 00:50:58 Right, right, right. So then that helps with the balance of all the hormones, as you were mentioning earlier. And so when a woman is going through perimenopause, you know, the first place we look at is, okay, what are these personalized lifestyle factors? What can we really focus on with them? I mean, there might be times where we at the Ultra Wellness Center may use some hormones to help with their sleep if necessary. But many times just a woman understanding what's going on and then making some shifts in their lifestyle can make a huge impact and make them feel better.
Starting point is 00:51:32 Yeah. And so you had this patient who had struggled with sleep and she was 45 and she had never had a problem before and woke up all the time and had night sweats and she was terribly not well. And what did you find with her? Right. So, you know, we found, so she was 45. So she was in perimenopause. We checked her hormones at day 20 in her cycle. So what we ended up finding was her progesterone was low, right? So she had, she was in those anovulatory cycles like we had mentioned earlier, and her progesterone was low. So what we really worked on was supporting her progesterone production with supporting her adrenal gland, taking good self-care, getting good rest, doing her meditation. We also worked on metabolizing her estrogen.
Starting point is 00:52:22 So she had some variations in her genetics and she ended up having some, we worked to really lower her estrogen levels with, you know, the cruciferous vegetables, folate rich foods. We added in some supplements that actually on top of that were helpful. And, you know, she did much better. She really started to feel better and we also you know we got her off of we got her off of caffeine because we know that caffeine can impact sleep more and it might not have bothered her in the past but during this transition in her life it was really impacting her sleep and her irritability so we got her off of the caffeine and we also saw when we did that her hot flashes significantly decreased and her sleep started to improve. Yeah. And you just see so many of these patients who suffer with
Starting point is 00:53:09 things like PMS or perimenopause or sleep issues or mood issues or depression or migraines, which are common when your hormones out of balance or abnormal pap tests, or we call it dysfunctional uterine bleeding, which they have clots and painful periods. And I, you know, it makes me really angry when I see these patients because they're not getting the advice they need. They're not actually given a doorway into a way of thinking and diagnosis and treatment that actually fixes their problems. Yep. And they're either told they're, you know, you know, emotional or they're anxious or they give them an antidepressant or they give them a hormone treatment, which sometimes is okay. But a lot of times it's not the right hormones. It's giving them a birth control pill or giving them Premarin. using the thyroid approach and the adrenal treatments and the insulin approach, fixing the insulin resistance
Starting point is 00:54:08 and fixing the estrogen metabolism and the gut and the toxins. It's different for every woman, but you sort of look at what's for them the issue and you then personalize it. And you can create an incredible roadmap for women to feel good and get rid of PMS and get rid of heavy bleeding and get rid of cramps and get rid of migraines and get rid of theMS and get rid of heavy bleeding and get rid of the cramps and get rid of migraines and get rid of the sleep and hot flash issues and so forth. Right. So it's
Starting point is 00:54:30 a pretty exciting model that I think is, you know, it's one of the best applications of functional medicine is helping women with all these hormone imbalances that are actually relatively easy to fix. Yeah, I would agree. I would agree. It's really fun. It's a fun place to be. I hope you enjoyed today's episode. One of the best ways you can support this podcast is by leaving us a rating and review below. Until next time, thanks for tuning in. 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 introduce to you 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,
Starting point is 00:55:09 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
Starting point is 00:55:29 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. 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.
Starting point is 00:56:10 If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and search their find a practitioner database. It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained, who's a licensed healthcare practitioner, and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.