The Dr. Hyman Show - Long-Haul COVID And The Mysteries Of Coronavirus: A Path To Healing with Dr. William Li
Episode Date: May 19, 2021Long-Haul COVID And The Mysteries Of Coronavirus: A Path To Healing | This episode is brought to you by Athletic Greens, BiOptimizers, and TrueDark The symptoms of COVID-19 are scary enough. What I pe...rsonally find even more terrifying, is the long-haulers syndrome so many people struggle with months after “recovering” from acute COVID. In many people, lingering symptoms are occurring 6 to 9 months after COVID infection, hence the term long-haulers syndrome. It comes with a slew of symptoms, from fatigue and body aches to difficulty breathing, racing heart, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, and more. COVID-19 was originally viewed as a respiratory disease but we’ve now gained a new understanding of its impact on our blood vessels and how that affects the entire body. There’s no better person to dig into the vascular nature of COVID with than today’s guest on The Doctor’s Farmacy, Dr. William Li. Dr. William Li is an internationally renowned physician, scientist and author of one of my favorite books, the New York Times bestseller Eat to Beat Disease: The New Science of How Your Body Can Heal Itself. His groundbreaking work has led to the development of more than 30 new medical treatments and impacted care for more than 70 diseases including cancer, diabetes, blindness, heart disease and obesity. His TED Talk, “Can We Eat to Starve Cancer?” has garnered more than 11 million views. Dr. Li has appeared on Good Morning America, CNN, CNBC, Live with Kelly & Ryan and the Dr. Oz Show, and he has been featured in USA Today, Time Magazine, The Atlantic, Parade and O Magazine. He is president and medical director of the Angiogenesis Foundation and is leading research into COVID-19. This episode is brought to you by Athletic Greens, BiOptimizers, and TrueDark. Athletic Greens is offering Doctor’s Farmacy listeners a full year supply of their Vitamin D3/K2 Liquid Formula free with your first purchase, plus 5 free travel packs. Just go to athleticgreens.com/hyman to take advantage of this great offer. Right now, BiOptimizers is offering Doctor’s Farmacy listeners 10% off your Magnesium Breakthrough order. Just go to magbreakthrough.com/hyman and use code HYMAN10 to receive this amazing offer. TrueDark Daylights help prevent eye strain and headaches from overexposure to junk light and TrueDark Twilights collection for nighttime helps you get deeper sleep. TrueDark is offering podcast listeners 15% with code DRHYMAN15. Just go to truedark.com/hyman. Here are more of the details from our interview: Dr. Li’s journey studying long-COVID thus far (8:44) What is long-COVID doing to the body? Do long-haulers still have COVID-19? (15:13) Assessing and healing vascular damage from COVID and long-COVID (20:09) How COVID infection can change the genetics of our bone marrow (23:45) Preventing and healing from long-COVID (24:51) Treating COVID-19 and long-COVID with nitric oxide and with repurposed pharmaceuticals (30:45) Why do COVID-19 vaccines improve symptoms in some long-haulers? (36:00) Using Functional Medicine, regenerative medicine, therapies such as hyperbaric oxygen, and the body’s own intelligence to treat long-COVID (38:20) Dr. Li’s perspective on the COVID-19 vaccines and why we saw complications with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in some patients (52:39) Can you get long-COVID if you become infected with COVID-19 after being vaccinated? (59:45) Learn more about Dr. Li at https://drwilliamli.com/ and follow him on Facebook @drwilliamli and on Instagram @drwilliamli.
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Once you have system-wide damage or inflammation or imbalances,
which is clearly what's actually happening with long haulers,
I mean, we can pinpoint it down to the cellular molecular level.
The reality is that it's very unlikely that a single pill or a single prescription is going to actually do the job.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark.
My main goal with diet is to use
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It covers the basics for all our day-to-day body functions,
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episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I'm Dr. Mark Hyman.
That's pharmacy.
We're going to have a place for conversation as a matter.
And if you or someone you love has been infected with COVID and you're not feeling so great,
even after you're supposed to be recovered, you might want to listen up for this podcast because it's with my good friend, Dr. William Lee, who's a pioneer scientist, an incredible
human being, and is
really paving the way for us to understand what we're now calling long hauler syndrome, which is
basically like the chronic fatigue syndrome you get after COVID. It's not related to the
direct infection with the virus, but it's something. He's an incredible guy. He's an
internationally renowned physician, scientist, author of New York Times bestseller, one of my
most favorite books called Eat to Beat Disease, the new science of how your
body can heal itself.
And if you want to learn more, please listen to our podcast we did when the book came out.
It's great.
Of course, I'm going to say it's great, but it's great because William's great, not because
of me.
He has done incredible work in the field of understanding blood vessel and blood vessel
health.
And his groundbreaking work has led to the development of more than 30 different medical
treatments that were never on the planet has led to the development of more than 30 different medical treatments
that were never on the planet before.
And has impacted care for more than seven diseases.
He should win the Nobel Prize.
I vote for him for that, for sure.
He's impacted our understanding of cancer, diabetes,
blindness, heart disease, obesity.
He's had a great TED Talk.
You should listen to his calls.
Can we eat to starve cancers?
Seen over 11 million times.
He's been on Good Morning America, CNN, CNBC,
live with Kelly and Ryan, The Dr. Oz Show, USA Today, Time Magazine, Atlantic, on and on and on.
And he's the president and medical director of the Angiogenesis Foundation and is the leading
research in the field of COVID-19. And he's also a very good friend and my gelato buddy.
We have a bunch of experts in nutrition who basically break out sometimes
and go eat gelato together, including the Dean of Nutrition and Science and Policy at Tufts
and the former head of Whole Foods. So it's very fun. Welcome, William.
Thanks, Mark. It's always great to be back with you. And let's just say for your viewers and listeners, we eat gelato made with whole,
fresh fruits and vegetables. Yeah, right. Definitely my broccoli gelato. Definitely
go for the broccoli gelato every time. Well, we're going to talk about something that is quite
scary to me. COVID is scary enough, but what's really scary to me is the after effect
of COVID that we're seeing in so many people. With SARS, the original coronavirus infection,
there was a 40% chronic fatigue rate at three years in these patients. And that's terrifying
to me because today in America, we have had over 30 million cases. We probably have about 500,000 something deaths, but there's probably a
lot more who've been infected. And globally, the numbers are staggering in terms of how many people
have actually been infected with COVID. And so if one in three of these people might get something
like chronic fatigue, that's just a massive burden on our system. And we're beginning to just
understand how prevalent this is, how debilitating it is, how scary it is. And honestly, I'm not that scared
of getting COVID. I'm scared of getting long hauler syndrome. So tell us what we've learned
about why our bodies seem to be so vulnerable to this COVID-19 virus and why these vulnerabilities
leave us exposed to getting this long hauler syndrome?
Yeah, well, Mark, you know, that is the pressing question I think we're going to be facing
as a nation and as a healthcare system probably for the next decade. Because while I do think
that the light is at the end of the tunnel for the pandemic itself, as more people are vaccinated, as the seasons change,
and hopefully any mutations or variants will become less problematic for us. I mean, that's
the thing crossing the fingers hope. The fact of the matter is that the tail end, the long tail of
this infection is something that is absolutely sobering to actually study. Let me tell you sort of how I
got into this. I'm an internal medicine doc. I'm a vascular biologist. You know, you mentioned all
the things I studied like cancer and diabetes and vision loss and cardiovascular disease.
The last thing on earth I thought I would ever study is infectious disease. It was, you know,
something that I had to deal with in a clinical career, but not something that I would actually thought that I would actually be kind of on the ship's prowl of. But one of the things that
happened in March, 2020, when everybody was locking down, this became like a joined human
experience. There was this new disease that came upon us. And as a physician, I mean, you probably
have a similar situation. What was really stark and puzzling was why the people in the emergency rooms in the ICU were really flailing.
I mean, here we are in a very modern medical system.
And, you know, we were not able to get our arms around the people that were coming in with low oxygen saturations, blood clots, and all these other kinds of problems that we, you know, in a past era, you could explain,
but in today's modern world, you would think that we would actually be more on top of this. And so
for me, I sat and literally stared out the window from my bedroom wondering what distinguished
ourselves from people who were dealing with the plague in the Middle Ages, you know, where they
actually ran indoors in their stone homes waiting for the village crier to say, we said to go back
out into the town square again. And, you know, indeed that's kind of what we're still doing,
waiting for the CDC and other authorities to say, okay, go out and do your thing back to normal.
And the thing that was really, um, to me, uh, uh, the pressing mission I felt was as a scientist, I had an opportunity
to try to throw my weight and contribute to solving this mystery of what this virus was
actually doing to the body. And what I'll do is I'll actually give you a spoiler alert right now
for your listeners and viewers, which is this virus, the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19
has given us an unexpected twist at almost every turn of this pandemic. Just when we thought we
knew something, it would throw another curve ball at us. So first of all, respiratory virus
was causing blood clots, strokes, problems with the heart, kidney kidney failure not what you would normally expect right intestinal
problems too right intestinal problems um covid toe you know um just the most puzzling things
and the things that we would normally do in the icu i used to run an icu okay um you know we would
never think about flipping somebody on their stomach in an icu i mean that's like turning a
turkey in the oven we would never do that we'd have everybody flat on their stomach in an ICU. I mean, that's like turning a turkey in the oven. We would never do that. We'd have everybody flat on their backs. And so the rules were
changing right before our eyes. And so I realized that one of the things that I could contribute,
you know, that I could make at least a modest contribution to is trying to figure out what
was actually happening. What was happening in the body that this virus was causing?
So I actually got autopsy tissue from people who had died of COVID
and I organized an international team
from Belgium, Switzerland, Germany, and the US.
And we dove into the tissue like a pathologist.
We went from lung, heart, brain, I mean, the whole body.
And what we found was absolutely amazing and sobering.
We found that this respiratory virus
was infecting your lungs,
but it was also infecting the blood vessels. It was a vascular infection. And we actually saw,
you know, we had the first pictures of the coronavirus getting inside the cells,
the endothelial cells of vessels. And we all know from cardiovascular disease and, you know,
heart health, how important these vascular endothelial cells are. We don't want them to
clot. They have to,
they have to actually go very smoothly.
That's the lining of the blood vessels. Those are what we call endothelial cells.
So all the lining,
you've got 60,000 miles of blood vessels and the lining of that,
the endothelium is so important to so many functions,
not just like a little skin, it's actually very active.
And you're saying the virus gets into those cells and causes havoc throughout
the body.
Right into the cells.
And it changes the performance of the cells.
And these cells are supposed to, they're like a single layer inside a blood vessel.
And they make the inside of our blood vessels like an ice skating rink.
So, you know, like after a Zamboni cleans an ice skating rink, you can throw a sweater on it and the sweater will go all the way across the rink.
After a hockey game, okay, you know, the ice is all roughed up. If you try to throw even a hockey puck on it,
it'll stay there, right? Like it's really hard to skate on it. And that's what we were seeing.
This coronavirus was actually scuffing up that rink inside our blood vessels by messing up that
single lining. Now that endothelial damage, which was called endothelial itis, just like any other kind of
tissue that winds up getting inflamed and damaged, wound up becoming the lead article of a New
England Journal of Medicine research paper we wrote that really opened the door and changed
the way that we were thinking about COVID. Because now it's not just a respiratory disease,
it's a vascular disease. And because every organ is connected to our blood vessels to get oxygen
and nutrients,
now we began to understand how the organs were damaged.
So this is acute COVID.
And just when we thought that we kind of understood a little bit more about acute COVID and
antibodies are coming up and vaccines are being developed, suddenly the people who bounced
back from COVID, some were in the hospital, some were not. Three, six, nine months later, they were crashing with long haulers, which was this bizarre constellation of
more than a hundred different symptoms ranging from brain fog, chronic fatigue, ringing in the
ears, racing heart, extreme muscle weakness, you name it, GI pain, vomiting or diarrhea or constipation.
That is not explained.
And patients were actually self-organizing to share their experiences.
So they call themselves long haulers, like truckers that were driving across a country.
And doctors didn't understand what was going on.
So then, you know, we had to go figure out what was happening in long haulers.
And it's so prevalent.
And I think, you know, most of us think, oh, well, you know, I'm young, I'm healthy, you
know, I'm fit.
It seems to be affecting mostly the elderly, the obese, the chronically ill.
And those are the ones who are at most risk for hospitalization and dying.
And what's striking to me about long hauler is that even young, healthy people who get
COVID and recover, then go on to become long haulers,
which is kind of terrifying to me because you think, oh, it's just the vulnerable who are
really at risk of severe illness, but it's not. It turns out it's not. So tell us in terms of
your discovery of long hauler syndrome, like who is the most at risk for it? How does, how is it
working? Is the virus still there? Is it just creating like a feed for a cycle of inflammation
that gets stuck on like, you know, like a gas pedal gets stuck to the floor with the inflammation that can't stop?
What's actually going on? Yeah, those questions you're asking are exactly at the tip of the spear of research right now.
I will tell you, there's so many there's over 100 different symptoms and probably two or three dozen diagnoses that physicians are making,
doctors are making to try to categorize what's going on. But the sort of the umbrella is long
hauler. So rather than try to kind of, you know, do what we do so well in medicine, unfortunately,
is to silo everything and try to go, you know, an inch wide and a mile deep for every single disease.
What I've been trying to do is to figure out what are the common denominators of all of these different types of symptoms? How do we understand how the
body's responding? Because I mean, just like, you know, the body work you've done, Mark, and the
body work I've done, you know, the human physique, actually the physiology winds up revealing almost
everything about what's actually happening to it. And so rather than just trying to label it with something that's going wrong, you know, what, what is the reason that is what is the underlying cause?
So here's what the three things that the three legs of the stool we found in long haulers,
the microvascular damage from acute COVID seems to continue to be there. Small blood vessels,
damaged endothelium, the lining of the blood vessels feeding 60,000 miles of your, of your,
of your circulation there.
We find it-
Is the virus still there though, or is it gone?
So this is the thing we don't yet know.
When you swab these people who are suffering from lung hollers, the nasal swab, the saliva
test, the fecal test, PCR negative.
They don't actually have the virus.
So they are, by the usual testing test, PCR negative. They don't actually have the virus. So they are by the
usual testing methods, not infected. However, the bizarre thing is about 41% of people who have
long haulers who get a vaccine, they report that some of their symptoms actually get better. So
that's another twist. So how would that be? How could a vaccine would actually heal what's damaged?
Vaccines are really kind of a shield in general.
It boosts your immune system, prevent more of it.
So we're wondering whether or not, like in Lyme disease or in syphilis or in shingles.
Or herpes or whatever.
Or herpes.
Could there be hidden reservoirs of virus that are not detectable with the usual tests that are hanging
out somewhere? Could it be in the crevices of our gums? Could they be, you know, in the testes? Can
they be in, you know, all these little, the crypts of the intestines? We do know that some of the
most important health defenses of our body, our microbiome, for example, are thrown out of whack
when you actually have COVID. And so, you know, one of the things that we really
need to start doing now is to try to figure out how do we fortify the body? And I think diet and
lifestyle is one of them because, you know, biotech and pharmaceuticals, they'll come,
but they take way too long. What can we do for people that are recovering? Now, let me give you
a statistic that I think is really sobering. So, you know, about a little, just
under 150 million people have gotten COVID. Okay. About three-ish million people have died. So if
you were to divide the deaths over the denominator, you know, it's not the most fatal disease that we
ever had. On the other hand, if anywhere from a third to 70% of people develop some manifestation of long haulers, let's be conservative and call it a third.
You're talking about almost 50 million people that actually are at risk for developing long haulers.
That is a healthcare system crushing disease.
If it actually, this would be a second pandemic to come out of the first. So one of the reasons that I'm so
passionate about trying to establish what's going on, who's most vulnerable, what can we do both on
sort of the medical industrial side, which is very important, but also I think on the diet and
lifestyle side, because there's so much we can do to lower inflammation, get better circulation,
and help improve our nerve function. Those are things that we might be able to actually explore.
Yeah, I think that's really key. So one is sort of deepening our understanding of what's going on.
Is there some active virus still there? Is it just the residual effects? How do we begin to help the
body reset and repair from long hauler syndrome? Is it treatable? I mean, I think these are all
the questions that are coming up. And traditional medicine, you know, I believe has very little to offer in the face of something like
long haul. At Cleveland Clinic, we now have a recover clinic, which is a multidisciplinary
team that's working on looking at the biology of this, looking at what kind of interventions we can
use and using, again, lifestyle approaches, functional medicine approaches. You know,
that may be part of the answer for people.
But what I think would be helpful for people to understand is that the blood vessels seem to be part of the key to this.
And you're an expert in blood vessels.
You spent your whole life studying blood vessels.
You created the Angiogenesis Foundation.
You cited 30 new medical discoveries and 70 different diseases.
What can we learn from your work about how to approach the vascular damage from COVID and from long hauler COVID? Yeah. So we've actually been actually capturing
with imaging the damage of the blood vessels from COVID in lungs of people that have long haulers
and they don't have any objective problems by x-ray or CT scan, but they still can't breathe.
So, you know, you got to listen to the patient, right? Like that's the first thing is to listen
to what they're telling us in a medical community so we can pay attention and too many doctors
aren't listening. And so this is a new disease. So we have to like pay super attention. Now,
what we've actually done is take the CT scans. And I think that you and your listeners will find this really cool.
We're able to use artificial intelligence and machine learning to reconstruct the blood
vessels from a CT scan.
So we scan the scan to reconstruct the blood vessels.
And we can actually count the blood vessels.
We can look at the density.
We can compare to 1,000 normal lungs to see where the problems are and how deficient. And we've had, I've had patients who actually are up to 80% deficient in their microcirculation of
their lung nine months after recovering from COVID. And to me, like, you know, you, you talk
about something scary. This, this patient looks completely fine, except that she can't breathe
very well. She's like in her mid forties and it doesn't
happen all the time. It happens intermittently. And that's the scary part. So I think you're
absolutely right. The usual medical system is at a huge disadvantage with new diseases,
because what do we do in the regular medical system? We go back into our toolkit, which is
the medicine chest and look for what prescriptions to write or what tests to do. This being new, if you don't understand the basic
pathophysiology, what's going on underneath the body. So we know that blood doses are missing.
So one of the pieces of good news, sort of the bright light I can tell you about here,
the cup half full, is that blood vessels we know can repair themselves. We can grow new blood
vessels in order to restore our organs. So if you were to cut out part of your liver,
it would grow right back and all the blood vessels would grow right back. We know when
you cut yourself or have surgery, when that wound is there, it will grow blood vessels and it'll
heal up the wound, that it'll restore itself. And so angiogenesis itself is an absolutely critical
thing. The issue though is with angiogenesis doesn is an absolutely critical thing. The issue though,
is with angiogenesis doesn't work very well when there's a ton of chronic inflammation.
So now we need to help the blood vessels grow by lowering inflammation so that the
healing can take place. And then we want to push the healing faster. So what do we actually do?
We know that regular exercise and movement actually can actually help grow blood vessels. We know that stress, norepinephrine, catecholamines can actually slow down blood vessel growth. So again, back to lifestyle medicine, integrative medicine, a lot of these principles that you're not going
to go to any of the famous name brand medical centers, they're not going to be writing a
prescription for sleep. They're not going to be writing a prescription for yoga. Okay. Now,
I'm not saying that there aren't real medical interventions, but we don't have any treatments
for this right now. So clinical trials are just getting started. The other thing I'll tell you is that our blood vessels partly restore themselves,
grow back to repair using stem cells. These stem cells come from our bone marrow.
Something scary and a relatively new finding is that COVID, SARS-CoV- two, the virus can get into the bone marrow and change the genetics of our
bone marrow. That's truly like, uh, stunning. And, and so the, the question is, you know,
do we need to do something to help restore bone marrow health? Right. So we're not going to be
giving ourselves EPO injections, like in the hematology lab to pump out more blood cells.
We're not going to be giving ourselves blood transfusions,
but it does turn out that there are things that we eat that can stun our stem cells and our bone marrow,
even without before COVID.
High saturated fat foods, ultra processed foods,
processed meats, artificial sweeteners,
all the things that, you know,
you've been talking about, Mark, for years.
I've been talking about for years.
There's another reason for us to actually cut down or cut out those things that would
stun our stem cells and our bone marrow.
So anything we can do to tip the balance in our body in favor of healing is something
we got to do.
So what you're saying basically is despite the advances in modern medicine, the best
ways to prevent and ultimately treat right now are focusing on the
fundamentals of our lifestyle, a whole foods diet, getting rid of crap, exercise, meditation, sleep.
These are the four pillars that help regulate your immune system, regulate inflammation,
regulate all the biological functions. And we might minimize those, just think they're not as
powerful as medication. But I think often it turns out
that they're far more powerful
when you apply them in the right dose, right?
I mean, if you do one minute of walking,
maybe it won't help.
But if you do a half an hour,
or if you're drinking 12 sodas a day
and you have 10,
probably not gonna improve things much.
It's really about how you make those changes.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark. Probably not going to improve things much. It's really about how you make those changes. Hey, everyone.
It's Dr. Mark.
We're living in a time unlike anything before, and that comes with both pros and cons.
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And that's because the body is biologically programmed to follow distinct light-dark cycles, which help regulate vital hormones, energy, and sleep. But all this
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episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. One of the things I really want to get into with you is
what is coming around the corner around understanding the vascular biology of COVID-19 long hauler
syndrome, because it seems to me that that's the missing link that explains all the different
symptoms people are having. That it's almost like a blood vessel disease. You happen to be one of
the world's experts in blood vessels and you sort of inadvertently got thrown into the mix of COVID,
which you weren't planning on, but it became evident that this is such a vascular problem. So you were sort of forced to almost dive into it and do this research. What are you and
your colleagues looking at in terms of other, besides the fundamental lifestyle things,
coming down the pike in terms of new treatments to repair their blood vessels and their health?
Yeah. So I'll break it down into different categories. The first thing we're trying to do
is to get our arms around a better way to diagnose the
problem.
And so one thing that we're doing is actually taking CT scans from people who are continuing
to have breathing problems in their chest, for example, and we're reconstructing the
blood vessels so we can actually see the blood vessels.
Like seeing is believing.
That's important for the patient to understand what's going on.
It's important for their doctors on the team to understand there is a pathophysiology that's not invisible.
It's not in their head.
Not in their head.
We can liberate it.
This is not something that you give an anxiolytic to try to make it go away.
This is real, number one.
Number two is how do we actually, what can we measure in the bloodstream that could give us a sense of the damage?
And it turns out that, you know, the classic inflammatory markers like CRP don't seem to cut it.
So what we're trying to do is go to a deeper level. Over the last 20 years, we've been finding different particles and different growth factors that reflect blood vessel damage and reflect blood vessel healing.
So is it an angiopoietin-2 peptide?
Is it a soluble receptor for blood vessels that are trying to fix themselves?
In other words, can we detect with a blood test the supplies that your repair crew for your body's blood vessels are bringing to all these damaged
organs to try to fix it? And we think the answer is yes. You know, the NIH actually convened a
working group, a workshop to really discuss COVID damage. And it was not your, you know,
just one division infectious diseases, but it was the neurologists, the pediatrics, the kidney
people, the endocrinologists, all these different specialists came by and everybody said, look, you know, the current
common currency that we need to talk about our blood vessels and inflammation, which go hand in
hand. So we're trying to, what my group is trying to help discover new floating particles we can
detect. Another interesting thing. So a way to diagnose it, a way to diagnose. Diagnosis. Yeah.
And then also you want to be able to follow how it changes. Is it getting worse or getting better? And I think that's,
so it's not just a diagnosis. It's also being able to monitor people to see how well they're
actually doing. So imaging is one of the things. So let's talk about what's going on research of
treating long hauler syndrome. Now we don't fully understand it yet. So it's hard to come up with a
definitive treatment or things that you're, we're still figuring out. But as I mentioned, three legs of the stool, vascular damage, microvascular damage,
tiniest blood vessels. Number two, inflammation, chronic inflammation, maybe some autoimmunity.
And the third thing is a neuropathy problem with nerves. So one of the things that we're
actually trying to do is to figure out, is there a simple common pathway to repair blood vessels, repair nerves, and lower inflammation
all at the same time, right?
So sometimes being more complicated isn't the right solution.
Sometimes being as simple as possible can actually at least give you a starting point.
It's always easier to get more complicated.
So one of the things we're looking at is nitric oxide, NO, which is a natural, which is a
gas.
It's a natural signaling molecule.
It's the stuff that our cells make to repair themselves.
It's what our blood vessels use to dilate and to fix themselves.
And it's what Viagra and Cialis actually caused the body to make, you know, with the obvious
effects that they're intended to have. So, you know, we the obvious effects that they're intended to have.
So, you know, we have actually had Louis Ignaro on our podcast. So he was the
guy who discovered, you know, or nitric oxide and has won the Nobel Prize for it.
I saw that. Lou's an old friend of mine and an amazing guy. And, you know, what's amazing
about Lou is that, you know, in his, you know, as a senior statesman of research, he is the most friendly, accessible, passionate, brilliant, articulate guy that I know.
And so I'm glad that he explained that.
But I can tell you when we first made our discovery about the blood vessel damage, you know who's the first person I called?
Lou Ignaro. So Lou and I actually compared the notes on the gene expression, the pictures of the blood
vessels. And we were thinking about this. Now I'm actually, I've continued to move forward
and I'm looking at working with some companies now that actually have nitric oxide stimulators.
So let's, let's look through this. There's some interesting
efforts that can actually, you know, they, they have a nitric oxide delivery systems that are in
inhalers, not ready for prime time in clinical trials for acute COVID. And the reason that that
happened for acute COVID is because it was a really interesting, successful clinical trial
of inhaled nitric oxide in pregnant women who were on the ventilator or heading towards a ventilator.
And it found that you could actually rescue these women and their babies. And so definitely
something that can help blood flow and repair, definitely life-saving. And so one of the,
one of the interesting- Should we all be taking Viagra for our blood vessels?
Well, so one, one, one of the spectrum is actually this,
this stuff in clinical trial, you know, but then, you know, so much of, of,
of what so much of, of COVID has led us to talk about repurposing existing
drugs, right? Cause we can't wait 10 years.
We got to sort of see what's available. And so, you know,
like the hydroxychloroquine and ivermectins and a lot of people have been
coming up with different good ideas to sort of figure out, do they work or not?
But it's really interesting because on the other end of the spectrum of not what is to be invented, but what's already around is Viagra, Cialis, and all kinds of other things.
Now, so that's an interesting clinical trial to be done. Vasodilates creates nitric oxide, affects repair, and nitric
oxide causes stem cells to come out of our bone marrow to repair and regenerate our vessels as
well. And it can actually help to repair neuropathy, which is another thing, and lower inflammation.
So again, I'm super interested in, I think there's huge amounts of promise that clinical trials
actually need to be done for that.
I think that, you know, there's also something to be said.
Should we be taking arginine that increases nitric oxide in the body?
Right. Well, so that's another interesting thing.
There's dietary supplements that actually introduce arginine precursors and L-arginine, right?
So you can actually have arginine and mix it in water. There's also medical foods like Juvenz that actually are approved for healing
wounds. So I was having a, you know, I'm on the board of the American College of Wound Healing
and Tissue Repair. And we've been talking about long COVID and we are raising this specter that
perhaps the long COVID is like the entire internal part of your body being turned into a chronic wound,
stuck in the inflammatory phase, damaged blood vessels, not completing the cycle of actually
healing itself up. So what do we do there? What kind of pages can we tear from the playbook for
chronic wound healing from the biology to the clinical stuff to the treatments?
So I think that, you know, it's really interesting to think about Arginade,
Juvenz, wound healing substances, phosphodiesterase inhibitors like Viagra and Cialis.
It is a whole spectrum.
Now, I don't, I'm not, again, you know, we can't give medical advice on a podcast, but,
you know, I think what we're sharing, I mean, Mark, you and I are both physicians that think
deeply about mechanisms of disease.
What we're actually sharing this conversation is
really about how medical scientists and physicians that think about the science actually think about
how to solve problems. So I don't think the answer is there yet, but I'm actually really encouraged
that there are these tools that are out there that we might be able to do. I think one thing,
by the way, is really important to actually pursue is this clue why vaccination improves the symptoms in some people.
Yeah, explain that because I think it's sort of counterintuitive.
And people have already had COVID are getting vaccines because you can get COVID again.
And some of those people who've had long hauler syndrome who've had the virus are now getting better, which is kind of surprising.
So explain
this. Totally surprising, totally counterintuitive. As I said, another wrinkle, another twist in the
pandemic story that, you know, defies easy understanding. And this is where I think the needs to really just admit our humility and eat some humble pie, right? Like, it doesn't make
sense. Why would that happen? And then you sort of have to put on your scientist hat to say, well,
a vaccine shouldn't actually cause that kind of an improvement if there's damage in the body vaccine shouldn't cause the body to um uh uh
shouldn't be repairing the body but the vaccine might be able to prompt the immune system to fight
residual virus yeah so is that part's going on the other thing by the way the vaccine might do
um is it might actually essentially uh control alt delete and do a hard reboot of your whole immune system. Okay. And it could be that,
that, you know, like the, the fire that, that COVID causes in many people, not all people
never quite goes out. So it's kind of like a forest fire that when it goes out, you still
have this sort of burning, burning brush underneath even though it looks like it's
mostly out, there's still flame there. And what you need to do to put that thing out,
you know, is you need to actually just completely restart the hard drive and then it'll actually go out and reset and so you know i think you mentioned this earlier another hypothesis
i mean listen for your viewers this is just like medical research thinking in real time
yeah you know we don't we don't have the, but we know at least we can actually try to ask questions.
You know, it's fascinating to me that the, that the, the virus,
you know, sort of may not be obviously detectable when you do the regular test,
but maybe I'm wondering if you're doing biopsies of tissues, if you'd show.
And also I wonder if we're just stuck in a feed forward cycle,
because we see this a lot in functional medicine. People have chronic fatigue syndrome, have sort of weird, crazy symptoms for
years and years, just don't get better. They've had Lyme disease, they've had nipthine bar,
they've had whatever, an infection, and they just get stuck where they have gastroenteritis and
their gut's never the same. So there's this phenomenon in medicine where people get stuck
in a feed forward cycle, which is very much like, you know, your record skipping. Many of you
listening may not have ever had an album, but you and I are old enough to have had record albums
and they skip. I'm like Spotify and I just got to keep going on and on and on. And it gets stuck.
And it's almost like a biological groove that you can't get out of. And so a lot of functional
medicine is about focusing on how to get people out of that feed forward cycle and reset their immune system and reset their biology. And we use a lot of different therapies,
all of the basic foundational lifestyle things we talked about, you know, diet, exercise, sleep,
and stress reduction, meditation. But there's also a host of other therapies we use to enhance
the body's function, whether it's just adequate levels of vitamins and minerals and all their
role or adequate levels of phytochemicals or herbs. And there's also a whole field of sort of
regenerative medicine, which is looking at various therapies that are sort of biologic,
in a sense. They're biologic therapies that use substances that our bodies naturally have,
but sort of give them in higher doses to enhance repair and healing, such as stem cells. It's
obvious when people know about exosomes, which are derived from stem cells and oxidative
therapies, which, you know, we sometimes use, for example, in medicine, but like hyperbaric
oxygen therapy, which can seem to be also helpful for some of these patients.
I just had a patient who had long hauler syndrome and she said the most profound thing
she did was use hyperbaric oxygen therapy to recover, which increases wound healing,
right?
That's what you've studied.
Well, yeah, yeah.
Let me just finish.
So there's a couple of other things
as part of the spectrum of things
that may push the body to reset like ozone therapy,
which is being used in many other countries,
but it's still sort of fringe here.
But there's really good data
on how this sort of pushes the body out of this cycle
by suppressing the inflammation,
activating your anti-inflammatory systems,
antioxidant systems, repairing blood vessels.
So there's a lot of therapies out there that are on the fringe that probably actually
won't even be studied by traditional science, but I think have some among the most promising
benefits. And I've had the chance to treat a lot of long hauler patients. And I've seen that those
people who do these other therapies often are the ones who recover the fastest. No, it makes total sense. I mean, because this is, once you have system-wide damage or inflammation or imbalances,
which is clearly what's actually happening with long haulers,
I mean, we can pinpoint it down to the cellular molecular level.
The reality is that it's very unlikely that a single pill or a single prescription is going to actually do the job.
And while integrative medicine, you know, is almost self-assigned to be, you know, to use tools that are on the fringe, listen, I mean, I think this pandemic pushed the entire human
species to the edge. And so it's now time to actually look at those things that may not have been examined in the same way before and pull them up, pull them to the main stage and kind of say,
is this something that can actually be helpful to us? And this is where it doesn't really matter
what side of the equation you are and what, you know, what whose team you're on is basically like,
let's look at stuff that can actually help. So what's interesting, I really like what you said about hyperbaric.
So a lot of people in the wound healing world misunderstood what hyperbaric oxygen does,
because the idea was to pump high oxygen pressure into a wound that's not healing,
because the wound needs more oxygen, because the blood vessels aren't quite as good. And indeed,
you would actually see blood vessels going pretty profoundly after doing these hyperbaric dives, they call them dive chambers. And it turns out there's a really
interesting mechanism that is at play in hyperbaric therapy that might help to explain your experience
with long haulers. So when you're actually in the chamber, whether it's 40 minutes or an hour or
whatever it is, you're training the body, you're resetting the barometer of the body to get used to high oxygen.
And now the patient steps out of the hyperbaric tank or the chamber.
And now suddenly their body that was used to very high oxygen suddenly is at
C level. Okay. Like again, sort of like not low, low level oxygen again. Okay.
Or, or not, not actually having uh the
same amount of hyperox hyperoxygen now you actually trigger genes that are caused by hypoxia not enough
oxygen and it turns on angiogenesis and that's really what the blood vessels are growing in
response to the change between chamber or not chamber chamber or not chamber it's that delta
between that that pulls the trigger the other thing that happens with hyperbaric is that one of the things when the
trigger gets pulled is a domino effect and stem cells come out during in hyperbaric chambers,
regenerative. And that to me, if it's happening in your wound, it could probably happen in your
lungs and your heart and your brain. And that is really, really worthwhile studying. I know
that there's some hyperbaric studies, again, looking at the microcirculation.
Yeah. And it's called an oxidative therapy, which is sort of the opposite of what we typically think
of we'd want to do in medicine is we want to take antioxidants, right? And oxidative stress is a bad
thing, but it's not necessarily, it's just part of our normal regulatory system. So when you have
too much, it's bad. When you have not enough, it's also bad. And I think
that the effects of hyperbaric or ozone, these are what we call oxidative therapies, using oxygen,
which is in a sense, potentially harmful to the body, pushing it to respond by giving it this
little insult. And then the body responds by hitting a repair, hitting the repair setting. Your body has its own innate repair systems. And if you know how to activate those systems,
then we can begin the healing process. And I think that's what's happening with long hauler
syndrome. These people are getting stuck in a rut, a biological rut of inflammation.
And there needs to be things that push them off of that. And you can't just take,
you know, ibuprofen or steroids or any of that. You've got to figure out how to get the, because the body is way smarter and more
powerful than any medication. And if we can activate those endogenous or internal innate
healing mechanisms, I think we're going to see a lot of benefit. And that's where I get the most
benefit for my patients with chronic fatigue or Lyme or other chronic illnesses that are
resistant to traditional treatments.
Yeah, no doubt.
I mean, and, you know, and I think that this is where we need to look not at the solution
as single solutions, but we need to look at the body as in need of multiple solutions
and allow its own reset processes to be able to heal.
So it's sort of, let the body complete its cycle of healing because the body wants to heal itself. I mean, we've got, we're hardwired with health defense systems. I mean,
our circulation is designed to operate at its optimal. And if you don't have enough, it'll
grow more. If you have too many, it'll actually prune it back. And same thing as regeneration.
I mean, you know, like our organs are continuously regenerating. We're regenerating from the inside
out invisibly and silently. And so when we actually need more repair, we need to be able to kick out some more stem
cells.
And a great example I give you sort of clinically is in the burn clinic.
So people who suffer bad body burns, like thermal injury, whether it's a kitchen fire
or they're in industrial fire, when they've got bad body burns, that is like this prompt that we
need to super repair ourselves, super regenerate. And that's when the stem cells come flying out.
You can measure this in the bloodstream. And so, you know, another thing that could be done
is actually to measure stem cells in the bloodstream for long haulers at diagnosis and
follow them over time to see if they've got, if they need to push more stem cells out,
because we can actually measure those
now. So in the spectrum of what we're learning around COVID-19 and long hauler syndrome,
are you hopeful that we're going to be able to take care of this? Because to me, the prospect
of 50 million people globally with long hauler chronic fatigue syndrome, it's just seems like a
healthcare catastrophe. And in America, you're talking about, you know, let's say 30 million people have had COVID. It's probably
twice that easily because those are the ones who've been tested positive. And maybe three
times that's maybe it's a hundred million. That means, you know, 30 million people in America
will walking around with some type of debilitating symptoms. And I don't know how prevalent it is.
It depends perhaps on your infection or your hospitalizations or not.
I saw one review that looked at cases out of the hospital where people had been in the
hospital with COVID-19 at 60 days, 87% had severe symptoms.
That's almost 90% of people at two months were still sick.
Now, maybe it's less if you're not in the hospital, but what is your thinking about
that?
Well, you know, I mean, I think that there's been two recent studies that actually paint an even
more dire picture. It was a study published in Nature, looking from the Veterans Administration,
looking at 70,000 patients. I don't know if you saw this study, but basically people had recovered
from COVID, they had a 59% increase in mortality six months or later afterwards. And so this is,
you know, this is not just something you put up with and get by with, but this actually can
trigger even greater illnesses. And by the way, don't forget about all these other non-communicable
diseases like diabetes and obesity and cardiovascular disease that we were struggling
with before the pandemic.
This is now a thick layer on top of that, that might actually make the other ones a lot worse. And so I think that, you know, we're looking at a, you know, a new human disease, that we have
the science, which is what makes me optimistic, we have the ability to think and peer through the veil
of this condition to try to figure out what's going on. And what I'm really optimistic about,
well, let me first, before I say that, let me say what I'm not optimistic about. I'm not optimistic
that the pharmaceutical industry is going to come up with that race to find that single targeted
therapy that's going to cure long haulers. That I don't think is going to happen. And I've got a
lot of experience over 25 years working with biotech. I just don't think that model is going
to succeed. I do think that they will contribute something modestly. And it won't work for
everybody. But I do think that there is a bright bulb that has now been turned to, you know, white
the hot, sort of the sort of white hot heat, to really be able to look
more at a systems biology approach, a whole person approach, the very things that you talked about,
Mark, and you have been talking about, which, you know, if anybody has had any doubt that the body
needs to heal itself, that we need to actually give the body a chance to heal itself, we need
to actually prompt the body and give it every shot to be able to actually affect
and complete the cycle of healing.
And those things are usually not found in a prescription pad.
Those things are usually not found in a medical clinic.
Those things, you know, they exist in people's own homes.
So now we actually have to stitch together this continuum between what happens in a doctor's
office or, you know, the Cleveland clinic or another great medical center with what actually
happens at home. And so now this is not alternative. This is mainstream.
And what I would tell you is that people who are only throwing drugs at
patients with long haulers,
they're the ones that's going to be practicing alternative medicine.
Well, that's a very interesting perspective.
I'm not sure how that would go over in major academic centers,
but I tend to agree with you. And I think that, you know, it's forcing us to rethink medicine because
what we see with COVID-19 is it's not a respiratory disease. It's a systemic disease.
And your work around the effect of COVID on blood vessels helps explain why. But by working in our
silos, we're not going to be
able to figure this out. And I think that, you know, in a sense, you know, like autoimmune
disease, you know, we can give these powerful drugs to suppress the inflammation, but as soon
as you stop those drugs, the disease is still there. So the question is, how do you, how do
you organize a system of thinking to treat the whole system to create health and activate, as I said,
these bodies, the body's own internal intelligence for healing, which is profound.
I mean, when you begin to understand, like you said, you're just, just saying like you
cut yourself and all of a sudden your blood vessels start growing.
I mean, I feel like I get a boo-boo and I'm like, wow, that's amazing.
Like I just, like I burnt myself here in the stove and I'm like, wow, look at that.
It's like, perfect. And it's like, how does it do that? And I think, I think that's
not just happening on the outside. That's happening on the inside. So, and we understand a lot and a
lot from your work about how do we enhance the health and the function of our internal systems
and internal blood vessels. And your book eat to beat disease is such a great example of how we can
use, for example, foods as medicine to, to repair and regulate these systems. And the way food and
lifestyle works is not by a single pathway. It's by working on your whole system. And I think that's
what's so different. Well, you know, it's interesting that you bring this up because
while we were all locked down, you know, with all this downtime to try to think through what it is that we can do.
I was, as we've been talking about, I was sort of busy trying to do the research and trying to
figure out what was going on. But along the way, one of the things that I realized is that
this situation of our lives being compromised by the pandemic is really just a, um, a super concentrated example of how in,
in before the pandemic, our lives are also being compromised by all these other things that actually,
um, uh, that hamper our own ability to be as healthy as possible. So, you know, one of the
things that I started doing was to say, you know, we can't just wait for this kind of stuff to turn
into a medical book, to educate a medical doctor. We need to get the word out to people right away. So one thing I did do is I created an online
course. I kind of figured out how do we get information to people right away? How can we
make it immediate? And so that's one of the things that I think is really important is that as more
and more people start to spend time online learning, keeping up and researching, there's just a completely new way of actually communicating information to people as well.
And that's basically what I do with my online course.
So great.
I mean, that's great.
You're empowering people with the tools they need to really take this on themselves.
So, William, you know, you're deep into this field and understanding COVID. And recently, J&J's vaccine caused a set of complications, which is right up your alleyway,
which has to do with unexpected blood clots, which is a blood vessel problem.
Can you talk about why that's different with, for example, the J&J or AstraZeneca vaccines,
which are viral vector vaccines versus the mRNA vaccines?
And in general,
what's your perspective on vaccines? Are they the panacea? Are they just one tool? Are they
going to save us or not? And let's sort of go into a little, we have a little few minutes left. So
I really want to sort of get your perspective on vaccines. Yeah. Well, first of all, I mean,
you know, I believe in vaccines. I was vaccinated for smallpox and measles and, you know, hepatitis
to be a doctor and, you know, um, uh, and a bunch of other things as well, which I haven't suffered
those diseases. So I'm a big believer in vaccines and I've gotten my complete set of the first set
of for, for COVID vaccine as well. I got an mRNA vaccine, uh, with Moderna. Um, and, and I'm really
proud of it because I think it's really quite a miracle
that within a year we were able to go from, you know, sequencing the virus's genome to figuring
out what the parts that we can develop a vaccine against and actually doing it and making it
available. So there's no question in my mind that a vaccine is an important step to moving to the
end of this pandemic to get to the light of the end of the tunnel.
But it is definitely not the only one, because, you know, I mean, we know that there's vaccines to flus and things like that.
And it's not completely curative. It's still around. I think that that COVID is going to be kind of endemic.
It's going to be a little bit of it around all the time and we're just going to adapt to it.
But the vaccines are really, really important.
I think the politicization of the pandemic and the politicization of the vaccines didn't help our understanding, but it really is
quite a miracle that we actually pulled off these whole series of vaccines so quickly.
Let's talk about J&J and AstraZeneca for a second, because honestly, another twist,
the surprise that I had was that the simple vaccines based on old school delivery, which
is an adenoviral vector, that's basically how most flu vaccines are designed, would actually cause the biggest problem, which are these blood clots that scared a lot of people.
Now, in truth, Mark, is that so few people develop this complication compared to being dead from COVID that that, fact, it's a minuscule-
Out of 7 million, there were six people, right, who got the vaccine.
Exactly, exactly. And, you know, the fact of the matter is that the consequences of COVID and
long COVID, which we've talked about, are so much greater. But we are in a world where we have
choices of different vaccines now. And so that's why this matters to be able to understand what's actually going on.
So here's my best guess from research on what we think is going on with these blood clots with a
vaccine. There is something about that spike protein that the vaccine is developed to challenge
the immune system on. So, you know, the coronavirus is like a little ball. It's got these little
spikes, like a warhead on it. And these spikes stick into the receptor, the ACE2 receptor in our cell. And if we can actually get the spike,
it's kind of like a sea urchin, and we can get the immune system to target the spike,
we can actually knock out the infection. So that's basically how these vaccines work.
But you know, something about this spike seems to infect blood vessels and screw up those blood
vessels and cause that blood clotting that I showed you, you know, we talked about earlier. And so that, you know, like that I've been I've
been looking at. And so I think there is something unique about the armor of the spike protein of
this vaccine that if you actually trigger the body too aggressively, it'll actually potentially cause some of those vaccines,
sorry, the virus side effects. So here's the thing, the mRNA vaccine, which is the Pfizer
Moderna, once you inject it, like pretty much the mRNA is gone, you know, within 24 hours,
once you inject it, it pretty much gets destroyed afterwards. It's already triggered the effect it needs to trigger. The adenoviral, the other vaccines stick around for days. Okay. And so one of the, the thinkings
is that perhaps by having that spike protein signature stick around for days, it's just
pissing off the immune system enough that in some people we're getting this overage overreaction.
So, you know, there, there's this sort of a side of,
sort of like it's mimicked some of what COVID is actually doing. Now, obviously it's not happening
to a lot of people. I tell people get a vaccine, get the first vaccine you can get, whatever it is,
don't be too precious about it because we're going to be winding up beginning boosters.
If you get a J&J now, you're going to switch over to a different one later. If you get a Pfizer now,
you might go get a single shot later on with another one.
So not to worry.
But the key is if you want to step over the line to be protected, to be able to be maskless,
to be able to not hurt yourself or other people who haven't been able to get the vaccine yet,
just get the vaccine.
It's a simple thing.
I always tell people I timed it.
90 seconds sitting in a chair, it felt like a mosquito bite or less.
And then I went on. I timed it 90 seconds sitting in a chair. It felt like a mosquito bite or less. And, you know,
and then I went on and literally I felt emotionally like I stepped over a line. The first shot I got second shot, it was like, I could breathe again in an odd sort of way. Like I realized that
I kind of felt like I had a future to actually look forward to.
But let me challenge on that. Is that, is that really true? Because we're seeing that the vaccine
is not 100% effective.
We're seeing that you can still get COVID
even if you've had the vaccine.
We think you might be still able to transmit it
even if you've been vaccinated, if you get it,
and it can be transmitted asymptomatically.
And we've seen all the variants against
which it may not work as well.
And so kind of just about the time
we get everybody vaccinated, now there's a whole slew of new about the time we get everybody vaccinated.
Now there's a whole slew of new variants from Brazil and from South Africa,
you know, UK.
And all of a sudden like maybe the vaccine is not going to be as effective
against those. We have to come up with new vaccines,
booster shots, as you said, I mean,
this just seems like a never ending story. And I worry about, you know,
people getting a false sense of security from being vaccinated and going out
and like partying. And I think that could be a mistake that of security from being vaccinated and going out and partying.
And I think that could be a mistake that could lead to increased cases and increased deaths.
Absolutely. Absolutely. So let's pull back for a second and say all the vaccines,
like the flu vaccine, you get it every year, supposed to get it every year,
and it's not 100% effective. And you can still get the flu, even though you get the flu vaccine,
because it could be a variant of the flu
that takes you down,
but you're not going to get as sick.
You're not going to get so sick you might die.
Now, even some people who get flu vaccines
still die from the flu.
And so I think what we're aiming to do
is to kind of turn this COVID-19 pandemic
into something that's much more manageable.
I will tell you what the data has shown so far.
And we've seen this in Israel,
which has done the best job hands down worldwide in getting everybody, as many people as they
can, vaccinated so far, is that people tend not to die.
It really lowers, you can still get it.
You might even get sick, but you're not going to get sick enough where you're paralyzed
that you might go into a ventilator and die.
That's a big deal to me.
The unknown question, Mark, is whether or not if you get the vaccine and you get infected,
you still develop long haulers.
We think that having a lower number of virus particles in your body might be helpful.
And yeah, you can still spread it just like you can spread the flu.
If you get a flu shot, you can still spread it to somebody else as well.
I think that the other underlying message, though, that you're trying to communicate
that I so think is so important is that getting the vaccine is only one part of it.
Getting precautions and thinking not only about yourself, but other people and society
at large is absolutely critical.
The vaccine does not give us permission to go out to party, to go out like willy nilly, to start coughing and breathing and going to have concerts again.
You know, like nothing has changed that dramatically with the vaccines that we can suddenly unleash society. listening to a conversation with a consultant, a business consultant, but who's really a brilliant
guy named Simon Sinek, talk about being asked, so now that we see the light at the end of the tunnel,
you know, what are we going to tell people who want to get to about going back to normal? What
advice can we give people about getting back to normal? And the answer was really brilliant,
which is that's the wrong question, because we are not going back to normal.
After World War II, we didn't say, hey, let's go back to 1939.
How do we do that?
After the 1918 flu, we didn't say, how do we actually go back to 1914?
We said, how do we get into the roaring 20s?
The question is, how do we move forward?
Humans are really smart.
Americans are really, have real ingenuity, you know, like in the country we live in,
but also worldwide. I think that, you know, we live in a global community and we have to not
forget that even though people are now starting to try to, you know, reacclimate back to going
to restaurants and gathering again, there are parts of the world that are suffering dramatically. I mean, Latin America, Brazil, India, these are disasters, human disasters that
are happening. And it's happening there. It's so easy that that could actually come over to hit us
as well. So I think we are one world, one species, you know, one community. And we really, when we
think about our health, it's not a selfish thing.
I mean, I think that we are, we also have this sort of one health concept as well when it comes
to public health. So we have a responsibility to make sure not just ourselves and our families,
but the rest of the world is also protected. So take us down the road two, three years,
where are we going to be? And are we hopeful or are we still going to be in this cycle?
No, I think I'm actually quite hopeful.
I mean, if you look at the Institute for Health metrics and evaluation,
their forecast is that COVID is going to be endemic,
which means that it's just going to be around.
We're going to accept it.
And it's going to flare in certain points, like in the fall and winter.
And then when it gets warmer with higher temperatures and humidity,
it'll actually go down. So it'll become a seasonal kind of infection. Hopefully with more variants,
what we want it to do, we want it to mutate like crazy until it mutates itself out of disease mode.
That's what we hope. In fact, people are like, well, we don't want more variants. I would say
just the opposite. We want this thing to mutate the heck out of itself. We want the right variants until it actually checks itself
out. But in the meantime, I mean, I think that we, we all have shell shock. I mean, this is
post-traumatic stress disorder for humans. Like our, our, the entire civilization, this is the
cough that brought in civilization to its knees. And now we are kind of getting back on our feet.
I'm optimistic, you know, that we are going to be able to actually find a way to manage control this
thing.
But we are not out of the woods at this point yet.
So people need to pony up, get vaccinated, continue to wear precautions, listen to the
science, and listen to the people who are talking about policies, good policies
based on science. And then let's figure out how we're going to move to 2022, 2023, 2024.
So when you're asking me, what do I think is going to happen in the next two or three years?
I think that this is going to be in our background. I think vaccination is just going to happen.
We hope that, I hope that as many people as we can get to get behind it we'll
get vaccinated i think that um you know we'll actually find cooler and better ways to live
to be honest with you maybe we'll be cleaner you know maybe maybe we'll actually have less flu uh
and i and i also think that we'll we'll i bet the number of colds and flu has gone way down
because everybody's hiding in their houses. Yeah, exactly.
And I think that we're going to have a lot more respect for the power of the body to heal itself.
And that's the most optimistic thing, I think, for folks that have been in business.
You and I have.
It feels like sometimes that we've been shouting against like a hurricane on the outside.
But I think people are starting to listen because there wasn't an easy solution
you could pull off the pharmacy shelf.
Now we're actually paying attention to the body
and the body tells us it can heal itself.
That's a great, hopeful message.
I think that's what everyone should focus on
is the fact that the body's own intelligence can repair
given the right conditions.
And it's the fundamentals of functional medicine.
It's sort of innovative therapies that you're developing. It's things like the sort of
regenerative or oxidative therapies that might be helpful. We're still discovering it all,
but I have seen many patients with long hauler syndrome and I have seen them get better by using
a very strategic approach and we're still learning. So I think if you've been listening
to this podcast and you loved it, please share with your friends and family. If you know someone
long hauler, please send this to them. We'd love to
hear your experiences. Leave a comment. What's your experience with COVID? Is it a long hauler or
recovering or not? And subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. We'll see you next time
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
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Hi, everyone.
I hope you enjoyed this week's episode.
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This podcast is not a
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It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained, who's a licensed healthcare
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