The Dr. Hyman Show - Leaky Gut: How To Spot It And How To Fix It
Episode Date: August 4, 2023This episode is brought to you by ButcherBox, Beekeeper’s Naturals, and Super Simple Grassfed Protein. There are a number of insults that attack our guts on a regular basis. Some of them, like our... diet, we have control over, but others, like environmental toxins, will find us whether we want them to or not (although there are ways to limit our exposure). This has led to an onslaught of a condition known as “leaky gut,” which likely affects all of us to some degree. In today’s episode of my series I’m calling Health Bites, I talk about leaky gut—what it is, what causes it, and how to treat it. This episode is brought to you by ButcherBox, Beekeeper’s Naturals, and Super Simple Grassfed Protein. Right now, new ButcherBox members can get New York strip steaks for a year PLUS $20 off their first order. Just go to Butcherbox.com/farmacy and use code FARMACY. Right now, Beekeeper’s Naturals is giving my community an exclusive offer. Just go to beekeepersnaturals.com/HYMAN and enter code “HYMAN” to get 20% off sitewide. Right now, you can get 10% off Super Simple Grassfed Protein with the code protein10 at drhyman.com/protein. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Diseases connected to our gut and microbiome (3:30 / 1:27) What is leaky gut? (5:43 / 3:13) Causes of leaky gut (8:10 / 5:38) How to know if you have a leaky gut (12:02 / 8:49) Healing a leaky gut (13:09 / 9:58) Mentioned in this episode EWG’s Clean Fifteen and Dirty Dozen Leaky Gut Blog Posts
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Anybody with chronic gut issues like irritable bowel, diarrhea, constipation, bloating, inflammatory bowel disease.
If you have skin issues like eczema, acne, psoriasis, for sure you have a leaky gut.
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Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. That's pharmacy with an F,
a place for conversations that matter. And today I'm bringing you a health bite,
little bites of health information to improve your health over time, because taking small steps
every day can make a big difference
in the long run. Now, today, we're going to talk about one of my favorite topics, which is leaky
gut. It's something that doctors used to laugh about when I spoke about it 30 years ago. And
now, it's pretty much mainstream, which is pretty cool cool and it's one of the most important things
to understand about your health and whether you have it or don't and it's because it drives so
many of the diseases we see today in modern civilization so many things uh from diabetes
to obesity to heart disease to cancer to autoimmune disease to asthma to depression to autism to add i
mean you name it basically it's connected to our gut and our microbiome. And most people don't really understand
what that is or what a leaky gut is or what to do about it. And that's what we're going to talk
about today. Now, functional medicine really focuses on leaky gut because it's so central
to treating people. In fact, the first thing I do when I evaluate a patient is I want to make sure their gut's healthy, because if their gut's not healthy,
then the rest of the stuff we're going to do may not work as well. And it's really important to
understand how to assess, diagnose, and treat a leaky gut. Now, you're probably wondering,
what the hell am I talking about? We're going to get into that in a minute. But basically, your gut is the seat of your health.
It's where 70% to 80% of your immune system lives. 90% of the serotonin, you have a whole second brain there. It's called the second brain or the enteric nervous system. It regulates mood,
digestion, sleep. It's pretty impressive. So we have to get our gut healthy. We have to understand
that if we don't, our immune system is going to be activated because our immune system is there to defend us from outside invaders. And the place
where you're exposed to the most stuff is your gut. Every day you're putting pounds of stuff in
there, lots of food, you have bacteria in your gut, and all that's kind of foreign. And your
body's supposed to know what to do with it, which is keep it out. Now, the food is supposed to be
digested, it's supposed to break down into its component parts, amino acids, fatty acids, simple sugars,
carbohydrates that we actually can absorb and that are deconstructed from their original identity.
In other words, when you eat a piece of chicken, you don't become chicken, right? It breaks it
down into its component parts so we can reuse them for ourselves.
Now, when you have a leaky gut, that doesn't happen. You start to get things leaking over the membrane and causing inflammation. The immune system is right there to protect you,
and you get lots of problems when you have a leaky gut, which is a driver of so much disease.
So what is exactly a leaky gut gut and what does it mean? Well,
basically you've got an entire intestinal tract that has only one cell lining. In other words,
only one cell between you and a sewer. So on one side is poop and food and the other side is your
bloodstream and your immune system. And if those interact, it's a problem.
You want the food to go through your cells.
They get filtered through the cell, not between the cells.
And the broken down food components
that are the basic building blocks of what you need to survive
are just filtered through the cells
and get into your bloodstream and everything's hunky-dory.
When those cells, that single cell lining, which
basically is spread out as the size of a tennis court, when it's damaged, like Legos stuck
together, the Legos come apart. And then food and bacteria and other toxins leak in and get exposed
to your immune system, which triggers an immune response. So we've talked a lot about
on the podcast, inflammation, its role in aging, its role in chronic disease, pretty much in
everything. If you have inflammation, it's really driving everything that's going wrong with you
today in society. Every chronic disease, heart disease, cancer, diabetes, dementia, obesity,
autoimmune disease, allergies, autism, depression, you name it, it's inflammatory. And aging itself is inflammatory. We call it inflammation. And a lot of that is because of
problems in the gut. In fact, one of the hallmarks of aging now is problems with the microbiome. I
added that in my book and it wasn't in the hallmarks when I wrote the book, but it was
just so obvious to me that it was. Then they finally added it when the scientists got back
together. But basically you you want you
have a you know think about your your gut lining as a coffee filter it lets in the right stuff and
keeps out the bad stuff it's like imagine if your coffee filter had holes it'd be coffee grounds
in your coffee not a good thing when these kind of connections these tight junctions we call them
loosen up then you get into trouble and that and that is what causes all the problems, what we call
increased intestinal permeability. That's the medical term for it, or leaky gut, which is the
easier way to think about it. And then you get bacterial toxins, viruses, food proteins leaking
through the immune system, goes crazy, and that creates all these downstream problems. It may show
up as food sensitivities. It may show up as inflammation that leads to obesity or diabetes, but essentially it's all driving inflammation.
And why do we get a leaky gut? What causes a leaky gut? Well, there's no single cause,
but a lot of things cause problems. First, our diet. Our diet just sucks. We have
highly processed diet. We have a diet that's low in fiber, high in inflammatory foods,
high in food components that actually damage the gut. In fact, they add in something called microbial transglutaminase,
which is like glue that sticks the food together that's processed food. Transglutaminase is one of
the components of gluten. And so that's what causes celiac disease. So they're basically putting it in
the food. You can't even tell because it's not on the label, but it actually is there and it
damages the gut. Emulsifiers, all the thickeners, additives, that all damages our gut and cause a leaky gut.
There's other things too besides our highly processed, low fiber, high sugar, chemical
laden diet. Antibiotics, lots of antibiotics, certain medications like Advil, steroids,
certain hormones, acid blocking drugs like
Pepsid, all these things disrupt the gut microbiome and lead to changes that can lead to leaky
gut.
Also environmental toxins, whether they're petrochemical toxins, pesticides, plastics,
heavy metals, all disrupt the gut lining.
And glyphosate particularly is bad.
Glyphosate is a microbiome destroyer. That's on 70% of food crops.
It's in everybody's urine.
A recent study from the EPA found that most people have glyphosate in the urine.
I checked mine.
I'm really careful of what I eat and I travel, but I can't always control where the food's
coming from.
And since most crops have glyphosate, I'm going to get it.
Also, gluten is a big one.
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It's Dr. Mark.
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protein and use the code protein10. That's drhyman.com forward slash protein and use the
code protein10. That's one and a zero. Gluten is probably, from a food perspective,
the biggest driver of leaky gut. It basically produces something called zonulin, which
interrupts the tight junctions and ends up causing problems with this leaky gut. And that's really
why we see so many autoimmune inflammatory diseases with gluten. Also, if you have imbalanced
gut flora, bad bacteria, if you have imbalanced gut flora, bad bacteria,
if you have yeast overgrowth, bad bacterial overgrowth, just imbalance in the microbiome
and dysbiosis, that can also really cause a problem. So there's a lot of things, even stress,
chronic stress, like just itself, if they take healthy young recruits and they march them
overnight in the military, they'll have a leaky gut in the morning. It's just because stress also causes that.
And the other thing that's really bad is high fructose corn syrup. So why is high fructose
corn syrup bad? Well, basically, it takes a lot of energy to absorb fructose. And high fructose
corn syrup, it's free fructose. It's not embedded in a matrix of fruit where you normally find it.
And the fructose doesn't get absorbed easily like glucose. It requires energy. And it basically
depletes ATP or the energy source in our gut. And when you deplete ATP, those tight junctions
that are keeping like Legos, your gut cells together, they get weak. And so then the energy can't hold the
tight junctions together because you're not making enough ATP to deal with all the glucose being
absorbed and the demand for ATP from fructose absorption, and you end up getting a leaky gut.
So literally fructose can punch holes in the gut if you're having a lot of high fructose corn syrup.
So kind of bad news. So how do you know if you have a leaky gut? Well, sometimes it's
obvious because you have all sorts of symptoms, but anybody with chronic gut issues like irritable
bowel, diarrhea, constipation, bloating, obviously inflammatory bowel disease, skin issues. If you
have skin issues like eczema, acne, psoriasis, for sure you have a leaky gut. If you have arthritis, joint pain, autoimmune disease, headaches, fatigue, trouble concentrating,
brain fog.
If you tend to have hormonal issues, it may be a factor.
Autoimmune diseases, for sure, it's number one on my list if you have an autoimmune disease.
If you're overweight, if you have diabetes, there's a whole phenomenon called metabolic endotoxemia, which essentially shows that
you have bacterial toxins crossing this leaky gut, being absorbed, activating your immune
system.
The immune system makes you insulin resistant, and you get more weight gain and diabetes.
Also, it's been linked to heart disease, to Alzheimer's, obviously depression, ADD,
autism, all these symptoms. And there's lots more that
are clues that you might have a leaky gut. So what do you do? What if you have a leaky gut?
How do you heal it? Well, the only way to heal it is to follow the functional medicine framework,
which we call the 5R program to heal the gut. And we've talked a little bit about this,
but I'm going to review it. But you probably will need to work with a functional medicine doctor, but you can reset your microbiome. You can repair
your leaky gut and you can do it by basically the few steps. The first is remove the bad stuff,
right? Get rid of bad bugs in there. Get rid of overgrowth of yeast, overgrowth of bacteria,
parasites, whatever's in there that shouldn't be in there, get rid of it. Also, you want to get
rid of foods that are irritating to the gut and potential food sensitivities, gluten, parasites, whatever's in there that shouldn't be in there, get rid of it. Also, you want to get rid of foods that are irritating to the gut, potential food sensitivities,
gluten, dairy, soy, eggs. Also, sugar is really bad. It just causes things that are a problem.
Alcohol is really bad. So make sure you get rid of those things and see, you know, if that reduces
the inflammation. Also, watch out for the gut-busting drugs, right? Antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs like Advil, steroids, acid blockers, really bad.
So reduce or eliminate those drugs.
And most of the time, we don't need those.
Finally, environmental toxins can be a factor.
So I, for example, had a leaky gut from having really high levels of mercury.
And so you want to make sure you you reduce your exposures ewg.org has a whole great
website for identifying how to reduce exposure from food from household cleaning products from
skincare products you might want to make sure you filter your water get a hepa filter for your air
just reduce your overall toxic exposure and also sort of mitigate the stress in your life we'll
talk about that in a minute then once you've kind of done that, you want to help rebuild and repair your gut. And so you want to kind of focus on biome builders
and how do you build your healthy gut back. First is make sure you have enough fiber,
25 to 50 grams of fiber, ideally from veggies, not obviously processed grains, nuts and seeds,
lots of veggies. The gut loves polyphenols.
They love the colorful fruits and vegetables.
So make sure you have plenty of those with polyphenols, berries.
Try to eat organic when possible.
Use EWG's guide for the Clean 15 for the least contaminated fruits and veggies
or the Dirty Dozen.
Avoid those which are the most incontaminated.
Have prebiotic foods, right?
Things like
Jerusalem artichokes, garlic, onions, leeks, dandelion greens, jicama, chicory, asparagus,
plantains, all are great sources of prebiotics. Probiotic foods also important. Sauerkraut,
kimchi, pickles, fermented soy like natto, tempeh, unsweetened yogurt, kefir, miso. These are all great, great sources of
probiotics. Bone broth is great. Bone broth has a lot of gut healing components in it, collagen,
and very anti-inflammatory. You might need certain supplements as well, things like zinc,
glutamine, curcumin, evening primrose oil, vitamin A, the list goes on but basically the idea is you can really rebuild
your gut through managing a better diet a better lifestyle and figuring out what the root causes
are now sometimes you might need a functional medicine doctor but a lot of times you can do
this on your own now 1500 years ago or maybe a while ago uh hippocrates said all diseases begin
in the gut ay Ayurveda also
talks about if your gut's not healthy, you're not healthy. And he was right. The data is really
clear today that our guts are a mess, that we need to optimize our gut function, that we need to
basically fix the problems that we have with our microbiome. And that, you know, fixing and treating a leaky gut is a critical part of
staying healthy. So I encourage you to do a gut check, see where you're at, see what's going on
with your digestion, and follow the guidelines we just talked about. I've written also a lot
about it. There's lots of blogs I'll link to in the show notes. And I think if you do that,
you're going to be better in every way. And I can't tell you how many patients I've seen get rid of so many issues, whether it's skin issues, mood issues,
digestive issues, autoimmune diseases, ADD, autism, it's just by fixing the gut. And that's it for
today's Health Byte. If you liked it, please share with your friends and family. Leave a comment,
how have you dealt with your leaky gut? What's worked for you? What hasn't? What have you learned? We'd love to know. And we'll see you next week on The Doctor's
Pharmacy. Hey, everybody. It's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope
you're loving this podcast. It's one of my favorite things to do and introducing 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, which is called Mark's
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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.
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 Thank you.