The Dr. Hyman Show - Making Your Body An Unwelcome Place For Cancer To Grow
Episode Date: May 30, 2022This episode is brought to you by ButcherBox, Rupa Health, and InsideTracker. Cancer is a topic that scares just as many people as it directly impacts, which is nearly everyone. While the conventional... medicine approach to treating the disease is very important and lifesaving, Functional Medicine takes a slightly different approach. In Functional Medicine, we look below the surface to identify what imbalance is allowing the cancer to grow. By focusing on the terrain, you can learn how to reduce the risk of weeds like cancer. In this episode, I’ll be featuring an in-depth discussion on cancer from my Longevity Roadmap docu-series. In this series, I am joined by my colleagues at The UltraWellness Center: Elizabeth Boham, MD, MS, RD, Medical Director and Physician; Todd LePine, MD, Physician; and George Papanicolaou, DO, Physician. To get all of my longevity tips, sign up for my weekly Longevity newsletter at drhyman.com/longevity. This episode is brought to you by ButcherBox, Rupa Health, and InsideTracker. When you sign up today, ButcherBox will send you 2 lbs of sustainably caught, wild Alaskan salmon in your first box for free. To receive this offer, go to ButcherBox.com/farmacy. Rupa Health is a place where Functional Medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 20 labs like DUTCH, Vibrant America, Genova, and Great Plains. You can check out a free, live demo with a Q&A or create an account at RupaHealth.com. InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. Right now they’re offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Obesity, gut health, and cancer risk (5:33 / 2:50) Making your body an unwelcome environment for cancer to grow (6:33 / 4:00) Diagnostic testing to get to the root cause of cancer and illness (11:23 / 8:49) How sugar drives cancer growth (17:01 / 15:05) Using the ketogenic diet in cancer treatment (20:24 / 16:00) The benefits of fasting (23:55 / 18:44)  Reducing inflammation and cancer risk with diet and supplements (28:12 / 23:25) Lowering your cancer risk through lifestyle and environment (32:30 / 28:10) Addressing toxin exposures (33:49 / 29:24) Getting to the root cause of illness (36:16 / 31:36)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Two people who have the same cancer with the same name like breast cancer can have two
completely different diseases which require different treatments.
Just because you know the name of the disease doesn't mean you know what's wrong with you
or what to do about it.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Mark.
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rupahealth.com. And now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Today on The Doctor's Pharmacy, we're airing another episode of the Longevity docuseries.
In today's episode, Dr. Hyman and his team discuss the functional medicine approach to cancer
and why it's important to focus on the soil or the terrain in which cancer grows.
They discuss how genetics might load the gun, but the soil or the terrain in which cancer grows. They discuss how genetics
might load the gun, but the environment pulls the trigger. You won't want to miss this episode. And
to learn more about Dr. Hyman's longevity tips and secrets, sign up for his newsletter at
drhyman.com slash longevity. Cancer is scary. I can't think of anyone who hasn't been affected by this disease in some
shape or form or way. In my family, my sister and my father both died from cancer. I see so
many patients who are recovering from cancer and they don't want it to recur.
And I see patients who are worried about their genetic risk for cancer.
But there are two parts to cancer, the cancer itself and the host in which the cancer grows.
And that, my friends, you can do a lot to influence.
I don't want you to feel helpless when it comes to this disease, which so, so many people often feel. When it comes to prevention and even how to improve outcomes from treatment,
functional medicine takes a very specific approach to cancer. And don't get me wrong,
conventional medicine is absolutely necessary. And once you have cancer, an integrated approach of chemo, radiation, and
surgery combined with boosting your immune system and making your body an unfriendly place for
cancer to grow or come back is really essential. The problem is that most patients don't get taught
how to do the second part. I remember one patient, she had three different cancers. Her doctors just wanted her to
do what we call active surveillance, which is just doing scans and tests to see if it comes back.
There's nothing active about that. It's passive. Just wait and see and hope it doesn't come back,
and hopefully we catch it early. And it's terrifying for most people who are looking
for some way to prevent it. That is where functional medicine shines. Finding the underlying root causes and optimizing
your biology, making it an unwelcome place for cancer to grow or come back.
The American Society of Clinical Oncology has estimated that obesity is
going to overtake smoking as the number one cause of cancer worldwide. And unfortunately, we are
seeing a way increased risk of obesity, an increased rate of obesity. We know that two-thirds of adults
and a third of our children are obese. This is a driver for many causes of cancer, not all cancer,
but definitely obesity increases inflammation in the body, increases insulin resistance, and is a
driver for many types of cancer in the body.
We are also seeing an increased rate of colon cancer in our younger population, which is very
concerning. And I think that, of course, obesity and toxins and inflammation are triggers for colon
cancer as well. But we also know that a shift in our microbiome has an impact on our risk of cancer.
And unfortunately, there's a high number of antibiotics in our food supply that may be contributing to this shift in our microbiome.
I think that when we're looking at cancer, it's really important that we take a functional medicine approach.
We want to look at all the systems in the body and how they're impacting a person's risk of getting cancer.
So we really focus on the terrain.
It's important to pay attention to the cancer cell, but I think it's also important to pay attention to the terrain in somebody's body.
The terrain is like the soil.
It's everything surrounding that cancer cell.
And it can influence whether a cancer cell is going to grow and proliferate or if a cancer
cell is not going to grow and proliferate.
So we can have an impact on the terrain in our body by working to lower inflammation
in the body.
We know that cancer likes to grow in the face of inflammation.
So whenever we work to lower inflammation in the body, we're creating a terrain where cancer is less likely to grow.
We know that not all precancerous cells go on to become cancerous cells.
In the United Kingdom, they did a study on 40 to 50-year-old women.
And they noted that over 40% of those young women who died of some other reason, they died of another
accident or another disease, over 40% had precancerous cells when they looked in their
breast tissue. That's precancerous cells like called DCIS or LCIS, the stage zero cancer that
we're often treating to prevent it from going into full-blown cancer.
So we know that 40%, that if those women were able to live longer,
that 40% of them would not get an invasive cancer.
So what we realize is that we're always producing these precancerous cells in our body.
And not all of them go on to become invasive cancer. And that's where our lifestyle has a big impact on whether those cells become invasive cancer or not.
We know our diet can have a big impact
on whether those cells become invasive cancer or not.
The first steps that I take
in treating a patient that comes to me
is establishing a relationship,
especially when a person has cancer,
because as you can imagine,
it's a very, very vulnerable place to be. It's a very scary and uncertain place to be and when your doctor or
health care provider can enter into that space in that place with you and show you empathy it makes
all the difference in the world. That empathy and that compassion
actually is part of the healing process. That's where I start. Then the hard work begins. I want
to find out everything I can about that patient. I want to know the mood their mother was in the
night they were conceived, all the way up to the last symptom they had the moment they walked into my office. When I get all that information, I'm able to find the triggers that may possibly have started the cascade of events
that threw their system out of balance that resulted in a cancer forming. That trigger
may be the root cause or maybe one of several causes to their cancer. And that's how we go
looking for it, with a really, really strong history. Now, as I gather that information,
I plot it out on something called the functional medicine matrix. That matrix has, it's like a
wheel with seven spokes. And I take the symptoms and I put them into the physiologic spokes.
So we have one spoke that is the gut and the digestive processes.
We have another spoke, which are the immune processes.
And another spoke, which is energy, mitochondrial function.
We have another one that is toxins.
And we have another spoke that is the
cardiovascular system and the transport system within the body. We have another spoke that's
going to be the hormones and neurotransmitters that communicate throughout the body. And then
we have our last spoke, which is the structures. The structures, everything from the mitochondrial membrane all the way up to a bone.
They're all structures.
The symptoms that they have represent some type of imbalance or malfunction in one of those system pieces.
Now, all those system pieces are interdependent and integrated,
and they're working together to maintain your health,
to regulate your health, and to actually heal you. And once I've put all that information on
that wheel, and it's actually on paper, but it's also in my brain and the gears are turning,
I can begin to find those root causes that we need to work on. By the time I'm done getting that history,
using the matrix, I usually have a really good understanding of where we're going to need to go.
But I often do still have some of the puzzle pieces missing. And that's where I do some
testing. The three most important tests that I do are a complete nutritional analysis, a digestive system microbiome analysis, and a DNA analysis.
Why these three tests? We know that oxidation, inflammation, infection, toxins are all part of
the chronic illness and cancer cascade. These three tests provide the
first really good look under the hood and help me begin to understand physiologically where some of
the problems may be. The first test I do is a nutritional analysis. The nutritional analysis
that I do looks for 125 nutritional markers. It also looks for biomarkers of metabolic
dysregulation, inflammation, oxidation, and toxins. The second test I do is a gut slash
digestion slash microbiome test. Almost every patient that walks into my office has gut issues. The test that I do will
look for markers of inflammation and imbalance of important bacteria, the presence of infection,
and even toxins in the stool. The third test I do is a genetic test.
The way I explain it to patients is that we're looking for not mutations, but small variations
in your gene blueprint that will possibly predispose you to physiologic abnormalities
that lead to chronic disease and cancers. I can explain it like this. You're a contractor, so you're going to be building
bathrooms for all types of people. And so when a person comes to you, you want to be prepared
for whatever their budget is. So you have one blueprint for a cheap bathroom. You get a toilet,
you get a sink, and you get a light bulb. Then you have a more moderate budget. That person
gets a nicer sink, a nicer bathtub, they get a nice fixture, and they get a linen closet.
And then you have the really high budget one with the jacuzzi and the waterfall shower and the
marble. They're all different, but they're all labeled bathrooms.
And you look at the blueprint, and at the top of each blueprint, it's going to say bathroom.
But each one of those is going to function differently. It's the same thing with the
genes that we're looking for. They're called single nucleotide polymorphisms.
They're the gene blueprints that have one mild variance,
like the variances we saw in those bathrooms, that will result in the
protein that they make having a different type of function. It might
function too fast, it might function too slow, it might not function at all. And if
we can identify that, we can then help you change your lifestyle, give you a nutritional plan, and even targeted
supplements that account for that variation so that it doesn't have that long-term impact and
lead possibly to chronic disease or cancer. So it's a really important test. The test that I use looks at five critical physiologic
pathways and the possible variations and blueprints that make those pathways work.
Those pathways include oxidation, inflammation, methylation, and detoxification. Variances in any
one of those can be fairly critical. As an example,
there are genes that make proteins that are responsible for detoxifying and removing
estrogen. One's called the CYP1A1, and one's called the COMT. If you have single variations
in those genes, you're not going to be able to appropriately
remove estrogen out of your system once it's done its job and it needs to be removed.
Once estrogen has done its job, it's going to be metabolized.
And some of those intermediate metabolites are actually inflammatory.
And if you can't move them out of your system appropriately, because you have variations in those two genes, they recycle. And now you have
recycling inflammatory estrogen compounds, which increase your risk for breast cancer.
If we can identify 20, when you're 20 years old, we can identify that you have those genes and they have those variances,
then we can actually give you a lifestyle, a nutrition plan, and targeted supplements
that will upregulate the detoxification and removal of estrogen. And instead of worrying
about whether you need to get a mammogram or thermography, you've taken care of
removing your cancer-causing, you created for yourself a cancer-free zone, and you've created,
you know, instead of a cancer-generating zone. And that's what I really worry about. I want to create
that type of environment. Now, what's fascinating is that scientists have been discovering a whole new pathway
that may be generating cancer and using diet to treat it.
One of the leading cancer doctors in the world, Siddhartha Mukherjee, who wrote the book
Emperor of All Maladies, came up to me once at a conference.
He says, Mark, we've discovered one of the keys to cancer.
He said, you know what it is? I looked at him and I says, Mark, we've discovered one of the keys to cancer. He said,
you know what it is? I looked at him and I said, yeah, sugar. He's like, how did you know? And I
was like, well, yeah, I've been paying attention. He says, we're doing studies on mice and animals
where we're reversing, literally reversing cancers that don't have good treatments,
like pancreatic cancer. That's a death sentence. Melanoma, often a death sentence. We're reversing cancers that don't have good treatments like pancreatic cancer. That's a death sentence.
Melanoma, often a death sentence. We're reversing these cancers in animal models
using a ketogenic diet. That is a diet that's 70% fat and less than 5% carbohydrate. Turns out
that cancer cells love sugar. So insulin promotes the growth of cancer cells. It doesn't just promote
the growth of belly fat, right? It promotes the growth of cancer cells. And cancer cells need
carbohydrates and sugar to grow. If you shut off that supply, they can't grow.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark. Now something I get more and more excited about every year is personalized medicine.
Now when I began practicing functional medicine over 20 years ago, it was clear to me we have to look at how unique each body is.
Now with technology advancing in amazing ways, we can truly take that concept to the next level.
Like one of the tools that I recently discovered that can help us all do this from home is InsideTracker.
Founded in 2009 by top scientists in aging, genetics, and biometric data from MIT, Tufts, and Harvard,
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My team took InsideTracker for a spin and really loved it.
They discovered some important things about their health that led them to stop procrastinating
when it comes to certain parts of their health, like, for example,
finally taking a vitamin D supplement after seeing they were deficient, or eating more iron-rich foods due to low ferritin and hemoglobin,
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the discount quote in your cart. Now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's
Pharmacy. Humans have
sort of like a hybrid car. We have electric and we have gasoline, right? The gasoline, let's say,
is the sugar pathway and the electric, let's say, is the fat pathway. So we can live just on fat.
We don't need carbohydrates. There's no essential carbohydrates. But we turn our metabolism from
processing carbs to processing fat and all of a sudden it turns on all these anti-aging mechanisms, these anti-inflammatory mechanisms.
They shut down cancer growth.
So they're studying this aggressively now in science, and it's really exciting to see this.
And there are human trials going on with brain cancer and many other cancers. I have a friend who's a doctor who developed a throat cancer and he decided to go on a
ketogenic diet during his treatment for chemo and radiation.
He did better than all the other patients.
He had less side effects, he recovered better, he was more resilient, and he's clear of cancer
and it was a 50-50 chance.
Now, who knows if it was that?
But I bet you a lot of it is.
And so I think we have to understand that our diet plays such a huge role.
I remember being a medical student on the oncology board.
And I said to my professor, I said, so, and I was always interested in nutrition.
I said, so how much cancer do you think is diet related?
And I thought he'd say 10%, 20%.
He said 70%.
Now, if that's true, that means we have incredible opportunity to reduce the burden of suffering
from cancer on our population, that we have control over this.
And I think people feel helpless. They feel so helpless around cancer. They know, oh, okay, I can exercise and I can
eat better and I can eat a low-fat diet, even though it's not the right thing for heart disease.
But people don't know like, okay, what do I do with cancer? I just like go to the doctor,
get my pap test, get my colonoscopy, stick my finger in my butt, check my prostate, do my PSA. Okay, get my mammogram, colonoscopy.
But that's not prevention. That's just early detection. And that's okay. We want to detect
stuff early and we'll prevent cancers doing that. But how about focusing instead of on the tumor
or the cancer, on the host where the cancer grows.
And that is what functional medicine does.
That is what the science of rejuvenation does.
That's what we have the potential to change.
Cancer cells in general, and I'm sort of generalizing
because not every cancer is the same,
but there are some cancer cells
which are dependent upon glucose metabolism.
In glucose metabolism, you can actually metabolize glucose through what's called the anaerobic pathway, which is without oxygen.
Or you can metabolize it through the mitochondria, which is with oxygen.
And cancer cells, for some reason, have this effect called the Warburg effect. And the Warburg effect causes the body to produce
excess amounts of lactate as a byproduct, and they sort of feed on glucose. And what we found
is that when some patients do a fasting for a period of diet and go into a ketosis, which is
producing ketone bodies, when you're burning your fat, it basically starves off cancer cells and
shrinks cancer cells. So that can be a very effective treatment for the immune system in
general and also actually treating various types of cancers. Autophagy means self-eating, and that's
really a process that happens in our body when we're cleaning out old or damaged cells. And
autophagy, we want to be able to do that. So
we want to be able to get rid of abnormal or damaged cells all the time. Fasting has been
shown to be one great way to help support autophagy in our body. We also know on the other side that
excessive eating causes a lot of cancer-producing systems in our body.
So we know that excessive eating can cause a lot of inflammation in our body, can cause
a lot of insulin resistance, and has been associated with a higher rate of cancer.
So fasting is a time when you're not eating.
So there's been a lot of discussion about fasting and how phenomenal it is for our health.
We know that fasting can lower inflammation in the body.
It can lower oxidative stress.
It's one of the main things that has been shown to help improve longevity when we cut
back on the amount of food that we're eating.
And so there's been a lot of research about fasting and cancer risk.
And there's been studies that show that if somebody
doesn't eat for 13 hours at night, for example, so that would mean that they wouldn't eat between
6 p.m. and 7 a.m., they have a decreased risk of breast cancer. And if they're going through
breast cancer treatment, they have a decreased risk of recurrence. So giving the body time to
rest, giving the body time to not eat is actually really
important for everything from lowered inflammation to letting our mitochondria heal, to giving the
body time to get rid of those older damaged cells. So that's an important thing to incorporate.
There's been research also on looking at different forms of fasting, such as the fasting mimicking diet, around cancer
treatment. So Walter Longo has done a lot of research and others have done a lot of research
around using methods of fasting while giving chemotherapy. And so what typically is recommended
for some people undergoing chemotherapy is to cut back on calories for a specific amount of time.
And they found that that's helpful for a few different reasons. We know cancer cells like to
grow or they feed off of sugar or glucose in the body. And they're not as, they can't adapt as
easily as our natural cells in our body. So we can, our healthy cells can adapt
when there's not a lot of sugar around.
They can use fat, we can go into ketosis
and use fat for energy,
but the cancer cells can't adapt as well.
So when we cut back on calories,
we make those cancer cells more vulnerable.
So what Walter Longo and others have done
with the fasting mimicking diet is they've said,
okay, if people cut back on calories for three days before chemotherapy and two days afterwards,
will that help the chemotherapy be even more effective?
And some of the research has shown that, yeah, absolutely.
For some people, it may help the chemotherapy be more effective because the cancer cells become more vulnerable. They don't have the
food to survive. And our healthy cells are able to adapt to ketosis and survive during that time.
So they cut down on calories to 700 to 1,100 calories, somewhere in there for those three
days before and two days after chemotherapy. I think it's very important that if you're
thinking about implementing
some of these changes, you're going through chemotherapy and you want to implement some
of these changes in your diet to see if it helps, you really want to work with somebody to be safe.
Because if you cut back on calories so much and you're losing weight, then that's not healthy.
We know that that is not a healthy thing to be doing during chemotherapy for some people. Other people, they cut back on calories, they can still maintain
their weight, and they get the benefit of the fasting mimicking diet. Those are the people that
would benefit from something like this. But it's a lot of work, and it takes some careful planning
to make sure you're getting all the nutrients your body needs.
And so working with a nutritionist, I think, is really important if you're considering the fasting-mimicking diet.
When it comes to treating cancer and chronic disease, the name of the game is stopping inflammation.
And there's no more powerful medicine than what's on your plate.
So I always recommend an anti-inflammatory diet.
The Mediterranean diet with its focus on fish, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, seeds, legumes,
and olive oil with meat maybe once a week, good dairy choices, and most importantly, severe limits on sugar and
carbohydrates is a great choice for a person who wants to stop inflammation when they're treating
their cancer or their chronic disease. Sugar is a potent trigger for inflammation. It also creates
obesity, and obesity itself puts you at risk for 13 different cancers.
Targeted supplements can be an important part of a nutritional regimen when you're trying to prevent or support somebody who has cancer.
Antioxidants can be critical.
I'll include vitamin C, CoQ10, and omega-3 fatty acids.
For detoxification support, I'll include glutathione, which is a master detoxifying
molecule in the body, silmarin, NAC, and for women, to help with estrogen removal,
DIM and calcium deglucorate. Immune support will include mushroom compounds like turkey tail,
and then some minerals like zinc, selenium, and I'll also include vitamin D.
Recently, I've been adding in targeted supplements that can limit tumor growth.
Tumors secrete a chemical called vascular endothelial growth factor. This growth factor
allows the tumor to develop a blood supply of its own that keeps it growing. Wormwood,
also known as artemisia, is a compound that can suppress VEGF and limit tumor growth by
eliminating that angiogenesis or vascular generation or blood supply that the tumor uses to grow. Black raspberries can make precancerous cells in the esophagus and colon
less likely to progress into cancerous and invasive cells, which is amazing.
So add in some berries and raspberries every day.
In addition, green tea has a component called EGCG, epigallocatechin-3-gallate.
EGCG has a lot of amazing properties for our health in our body. One of the things it can do is it can cause precancerous cells be less likely to
become invasive or cancerous cells. It also has a lot of anti-angiogenic properties in it as well.
And that means that it prevents the growth of blood vessels to a cancer cell
and prevents them then from growing and metastasizing. So in order for one cancer cell
to grow and to spread, it needs to have a process called angiogenesis to occur. And angiogenesis
is the process where blood vessels grow and feed that cancer cell. One of the amazing
things about green tea is that it has anti-angiogenic properties. That means it prevents
the blood vessels from growing and feeding that cancer cell. In addition, green tea also impacts
us epigenetically, which is phenomenal. Epigenetics means the expression of our genes. So we can influence
the expression of our genes through the foods we choose, which is great. We can make tumor
suppressor genes more active. That means that the body has more tumor suppressor genes being
expressed when we consume sulforaphane, which is rich in our broccoli. Sulforaphane can
impact our epigenetic expression, which means that it can cause more tumor suppressor gene
production, which can lower the risk of cancer. We know also green tea can impact our epigenetic
expression. Green tea can cause more production of genes that produce glutathione.
And glutathione is this master antioxidant and detoxifier for our body.
Our risk of cancer is always influenced by both our genetics and our environment.
We know that over 90% of cancers are influenced or caused by our environment.
So by not smoking, by doing regular exercise,
by maintaining a healthy weight,
by making the right food choices,
we can lower our risk substantially.
We know that at least 30% of cancers
are caused by a poor diet or this sad diet,
that standard American diet.
You know, we know we can influence our risk of cancer
substantially by the lifestyle choices we make.
So your body has DNA repair enzymes.
It has the ability to fix this damaged cells, to clean up the garbage.
And we can do that.
So, for example, if you are looking at your DNA, what causes it to be damaged?
Well, it's the usual stuff, right?
There's no surprises here.
It's your diet.
It's the same old crappy, sad diet, the standard American diet of
processed food, high sugar and starch, and lack of protective nutrients. So it's not only the bad
stuff you're eating, it's the lack of the good stuff, what we call protective foods that activate
these mechanisms, whether they're phytochemicals or whether they're right essential fatty acids or
whether they're right nutrients like vitamin D. these are designed to repair and heal your system
to give you a metabolic tune-up.
And then we identify how to eliminate those things
in addition to your diet that may be causing a problem.
It could be you have a load of heavy metals
or a load of chemicals and pesticides
or maybe using a ton of makeup or sunblock
that has lead in it or phthalates
or maybe you're drinking from plastic
bottles that have BPA in them and other chemicals that continue to erode your health. So getting rid
of all that stuff is really important. The toxins that we are exposed to on a daily basis
are things that we're eating. So if you're eating food and you look on the package and there's
something that you can't pronounce, don't eat it.
There's lots of chemicals that we put in our mouths every day.
So eating a diet that's mostly whole foods, that's not packaged, doesn't have labels on it, is a good way to start.
Also, drinking clean water is really, really important.
Also, choosing where you want to live. If you go onto
the website Environmental Working Group, they have some incredible interactive graphical maps
of different places around the country that are exposed to things like the polyfluorinated
chemicals similar to the Teflon and Teflon-related products. And you can see where these compounds
are in the United States. And
if you actually overlay some of the areas where there's higher levels of cancer, you'll see that
there's an overlapping related to a lot of these toxins. There is an excellent paper called the
Exposome, which is the sum total of all of the things that we are exposed to as people. And the
Exposome is related to things in the water, things in the air,
things that we are exposed to with chemicals that we might breathe in. Old
buildings can potentially have that with mycotoxins, especially moldy buildings,
chemicals from paints or glues. That new car smell, which everybody likes, is
really probably a... I always, I would tell people I wouldues. That new car smell, which everybody likes, is really probably a...
I always, I would tell people I would never buy a new car because that new car smell is a toxic
chemical, and you're going to be smelling that for a good year or two. So not only will you save
money buying a used car, but you'll be less toxic. So just being aware of these chemicals that we're
exposed to in the air that we breathe, the water that we drink, and the food that we eat. Also,
you know, a lot of people do body creams and lotions.
You can just make sure that you're
having these personal products, which are least toxic things
that don't contain things like parabens and BPA and such.
Instead of dividing everything into diseases and labels,
the emerging science points to a different way
of thinking about diseases.
Rather than divide the body into organs, functional medicine approaches disease as a systemic problem.
We have to treat the system, not the symptoms.
The cause, not the disease.
This completely redefines the entire notion of disease.
How we label cancer is no longer in alignment with what we know about the origins
of cancer. Two people who have the same cancer with the same name, like breast cancer, can have
two completely different diseases which require different treatments. Just because you know the
name of the disease doesn't mean you know what's wrong with you or what classifying tumors by body site or organ
misses the underlying causes and mechanisms and the pathways involved in that particular cancer.
It gives us no information about how it manifested in that given patient.
Now, two people with cancers in different parts of the body may have developed the disease for
the same reasons. And two people with the same cancer in the same parts of the body may have developed the disease for the same reasons.
And two people with the same cancer in the same part of the body may have developed it
for also different reasons.
A patient with prostate cancer and one with colon cancer may in fact have more in common
with each other than two patients who have colon cancer.
So we need to look under the hood and find out what caused the illness to begin with.
Many things can contribute to cancer.
Studies show that diet, exercise, our thoughts and feelings, environmental toxins all influence
the initiation, the growth, and the progression of cancer.
If a nutrient-poor diet that's also full of sugar and lack of exercise and chronic stress and petrochemical
pollutants and heavy metals can cause cancer. Could it be that a nutrient-dense, plant-rich
diet full of phytochemicals and physical activity and changing our thoughts and mindset and our
reactions to stress and upregulating our detoxification might treat the garden where the cancer grows.
In other words, treat the soil, not the plant.
It's a foundational principle of regenerative agriculture and of regenerating your health.
The good news is we can enhance our immune function and our immune surveillance
through dietary and lifestyle changes, as well as specific nutrient and phytonutrient therapies.
We can facilitate our body's own detoxification system to promote the elimination of carcinogenic
compounds.
We can improve our hormone metabolism and reduce the carcinogenic effects of too much
insulin from our high sugar and refined carb diet.
So here's what I really want you to get. One of the main underlying causes of all age-related diseases is this, insulin resistance, including
heart disease, cancer, dementia, which is being called type 3 diabetes now, and of course
diabetes, and even something called sarcopenia or muscle loss, which we will dive into in
a later episode.
This is really a unifying theory of aging.
But of course, it's not the only thing. Toxins, infections, and even your microbiome are really
important factors in cancer and overall aging. In functional medicine, we don't just address
one thing. We address everything. Think of it like a 100,000-mile checkup on your car.
Here's a cool example of how this works.
There's a powerful new cancer treatment called immunotherapy
that activates your own immune system to fight the cancer.
And when it works, it's a miracle.
But it doesn't work in everyone for various reasons.
Now, one reason seems to have to do with your gut health and your microbiome.
Turns out there is a very important beneficial bacteria in your gut that regulates your immune
function called Ackermansia.
It's a fancy name, but it's basically one of the microbes that lives in your gut.
If your gut is unhealthy and you have low level of this good bug, the immunotherapy
doesn't work. But if you feed it
with polyphenols, which are compounds in plants, like from cranberry, pomegranate, and green tea,
things it likes to eat, it's going to grow. And the immunotherapy, miraculously, will work.
So you treat the host, not just the disease. That's the key. Now, even if we have cancerous genes,
we can change how those genes are expressed.
Our genes are regulated by things in our control.
Our diet, nutrients, phytonutrients, toxins, stress,
infections, and other sources of inflammation.
This is all good fertilizer for soil
in the garden of our body.
The key is learning how to cultivate that garden.
The important thing is to figure out what works for you, develop a plan, and to stick with it.
So thanks for tuning in and see you next time for episode four.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope you're loving
this podcast. It's one of my favorite things to do
and introducing you to all the experts that I know
and I love and that I've learned so much from.
And I want to tell you about something else I'm doing,
which is called Mark's Picks.
It's my weekly newsletter.
And in it, I share my favorite stuff
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to tools to enhance your health.
It's all the cool stuff that I use
and that my team uses to optimize and enhance our health.
And I'd love you to sign up for the weekly newsletter.
I'll only send it to you once a week on Fridays.
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And all you do is go to drhyman.com forward slash pics
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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 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.
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.