The Dr. Hyman Show - Microplastics: What They Are, Why They are Dangerous, and How to Protect Yourself
Episode Date: May 31, 2024View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal Microplastics, tiny pollutants that infiltrate our environment, are know...n to have serious implications on our health and ecosystems. In today's episode, we explore how microplastics contribute to conditions like obesity and cancer and we identify the top sources of exposure. Listen now for practical steps to detoxify your body and reduce microplastic exposure in your everyday life. This episode is brought to you by AG1, Neurohacker, and Cymbiotika. Get your daily serving of vitamins, minerals, adaptogens, and more with AG1. Head to DrinkAG1.com/Hyman and get a year's worth of D3 and five Travel Packs for FREE with your first order. Optimize your brain heath with Qualia Mind. Visit QualiaLife.com/DrHyman to get 75% off and use code DRHYMAN for an additional 15% off your order. Upgrade your supplement routine with Cymbiotika. Get 20% off with free shipping on all orders. Head to Cymbiotika.com and use code HYMAN.
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
A new study found that a liter of water
from plastic water bottles contained,
and this is scary, 240,000 detectable plastic fragments.
I'm gonna say that again.
A liter of water from a plastic water bottle
contains 240,000 detectable plastic fragments.
And that's about 10 to 100 times more
than previous estimates.
And about 90% of these fragments were nanoplastics,
not microplastics.
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thoroughly tested products. Welcome to the doctor's pharmacy and another edition of Health Bites. Hi, I'm Dr.
Mark Hyman. On today's special episode, we discuss a topic that's quite literally everywhere,
but mostly invisible, microplastics. Now you might have seen the headlines about the threat
lurking in our oceans, our soil, our air, and yes, even in our own bodies. According to the new estimates, we ingest up to a whole
credit card's worth of plastic every week without realizing it. It's pretty wild. Microplastics are
also linked to hormonal imbalances, to weight gain, cancer. New studies also found microplastic
chunks in the plaque of individuals with coronary artery disease. And now we all know plastic is here to
stay, but the burning question remains, what can we do about it? How can we reduce our exposure and
how can we detoxify our bodies from these insidious particles? That's exactly what we're
going to talk about today. And we'll start with what exactly are microplastics? Well, microplastics
are tiny little plastic particles less than five millimeters
in size. Now, they can be as small as a grain of sand or even smaller, invisible to the naked eye.
Microplastics can be broken down even further into minuscule size plastic particles called
nanoparticles. Now, nanoplastics are less than 100 nanometers in size, and for reference,
a nanometer is a billionth of a meter, so not very big, and are much, much more difficult to detect versus microplastics.
So why are these so bad?
They're pervasive in our environment.
They're ubiquitous and have become a significant environmental concern
due to their widespread pervasiveness in the water, in our soil, and our air.
And it can take anywhere between 20 and 500 years for plastic waste to decompose.
Even then, it never
really fully disappears. It just gets smaller and smaller and smaller. Examples of how microplastics
show up in our environment are everywhere. Now, because of their small size, microplastics
infiltrate ecosystems from the bottom of the ocean to the tops of glaciers. I mean, the Great Pacific
Garbage Patch is a microplastic island the size of Texas. It spans from the west coast of North
America to Japan. 70% of that debris sinks to the bottom of the ocean. 14 million tons of
microplastics exist on the ocean floor. And microplastics have been identified in the core
of ice caps in Iceland, where I just came back from. Pretty frightening because it's very remote.
Microplastics are easily ingested by wildlife and then they bioaccumulate up the food chain, which then of course negatively impacts wildlife and human
health because we're at the top of the food chain. So what impacts do microplastics have on human
health? Well, in the CDC's national report on human exposure to environmental chemicals,
scientists analyzed urine samples from 2,517 individuals, a six and above, for BPA. And they found almost every participant contained BPA.
That's bisphenol A.
Now, exposure from the time we're in utero is also going on.
It's not just what we get when we're alive outside the womb.
It's inside the womb.
A recent study published in Toxological Sciences analyzed 62 placenta samples,
and microplastics were present in all of them,
with polyethylene, what plastic
bags and water bottles and food containers are actually made of. These account for most of the
nano and microplastics. Also, these microplastics affect our immune system. They drive inflammation.
Now, when they're inhaled or ingested in our food, they often will cause what we call dysbiosis or
imbalances in the gut flora. They'll cause oxidative stress and inflammation, which just
drives further inflammation. And chronic systemic inflammation is associated with every known chronic disease.
In fact, a new study in mice found that microplastics have been shown to penetrate
the gut barrier causing a leaky gut, which then creates more issues, right? We get more
inflammation. And the food particles and bacterial particles then migrate into the bloodstream and
the inflammation from there affects every organ, such as our liver, kidneys, brain.
And they also affect our metabolic health,
causing insulin resistance and worse.
So this just screws up your whole liver-gut axis
and increases the risk of prediabetes and diabetes
and insulin resistance.
So they affect every aspect of our biology.
They also disrupt hormones.
These are also called endocrine disruptors.
And many plastics contain chemical additives
like phthalates or bisphenol A or BPA and brominated flame retardants which are just
a few of the main ones. So let's look at BPA. BPA is structurally similar to estrogen and actually
mimics estrogen in the body which is why it's known as a xeno or foreign estrogen. It binds to
the estrogen receptors and then it alters hormone signaling which is not a good thing. BPA causes
epigenetic changes so it literally changes the way your genes are expressed by something called DNA
methylation, and then that causes all kinds of other issues, reproductive issues, cancer,
metabolic issues, weight gain. It also affects reproductive system function, so when you have
exposure to these microplastics and chemicals, it impacts your ability to reproduce, and BPA,
for example, impacts the female reproductive system and fertility by affects the maturation of eggs in the beginning of your menstrual cycle.
And BPA is also associated with PCOS or polycystic ovarian syndrome and endometriosis, which by the
way, is an autoimmune disease. BPA doesn't just affect women, it also affects men and it screws
up spermatogenesis, meaning the making of new sperm. It's also associated with lower testosterone levels and reduced sperm count, reduced sperm motility,
and increased sperm DNA damage. Not what you want to have if you're having a baby. We call
these changes epigenetic changes. They're imprinting on your epigenome, which then has
transgenerational effects. So what happens to, let's say, the grandparent can happen to the
grandchild because of the insult that happened to the grandparent. This affects the fertility
of progeny of many future generations, which is very scary. And we're seeing all kinds of weird
stuff in animals, even in humans, general abnormalities, influence on brain sex development.
And BPA also has bad effects for men, right? They're anti-androgen. Androgens are male hormones
that are responsible for the maintenance of male sex traits traits like, you know, hair on the body and muscle mass and all the
things we like with men. But BPA affects the brain sex development in fetuses and alters gene
expression. So it literally changes the reproductive system of the developing fetus, which is really
terrifying to me. And we're also seeing a lot of linkages to these environmental chemicals and
plastics with obesity. They're called obesogens.
Carcinogens, but obesogens.
And human studies have shown a positive correlation between urinary levels of BPA and your BMI, or your weight.
According to the NHANES data, this is the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data,
which is tens of thousands of Americans over decades and decades.
Those with the highest levels of BPA exposure were more likely to be obese. Now, why? Could it be just because the people who were studied who had a high BPA also didn't pay much
attention to their health for other reasons? That's called the unhealthy user bias. Or maybe
it's because they're eating more processed foods and drinking from more plastic stuff. Maybe
there's a reason there. But the mechanism is that it has estrogenic activity and it promotes fat
cell division and accumulation. So basically, BPA causes insulin resistance.
It causes more fat cell accumulation.
It inhibits the release of an important hormone called adiponectin,
which is an anti-inflammatory insulin-sensitizing hormone.
And it actually also helps regulate blood sugar, burning of fat.
And it's secreted by fat cells.
But when you have high levels of these toxins,
you don't get adiponectin and you don't get all the benefits.
BPA is also linked to abnormal cholesterol and dysbiosis,
which is a mouse in the gut flora.
Endotoxemia, meaning toxins getting in body from the gut
that are caused by damaged gut lining.
They're also linked to oxidative stress, to insulin resistance,
high levels of fasting insulin,
and also inhibits fat breakdown and leads to weight gain.
So these are really nasty and they're everywhere
and it's allowed in our food supply. What else does BPA do? Well, I mean, you probably don't want any of this in your
system. And it's, by the way, everywhere. You really have to pay attention to cans and packaging
and credit card receipts and ATM receipts. All of these have BPA in them. So you just want to,
you don't want to touch them. I never get the receipts. Also, BPA causes cancer. It binds to
estrogen receptors, the ones we call alpha and beta, and it activates the same
signaling pathways in these estrogen sensitive tissues from estrogen, and that leads to breast
cancer, ovarian cancer, uterus, can even affect prostate health. This increases all kinds of bad
things like cell proliferation, cancer cell formation, cancerous tumors, and depending on
the genetics and your environment and level of exposure, your risk is going to be higher. Now, there are other mechanisms that BPA can cause damage with, and those include
what we call cytotoxicity, which just means it's a poison. So it's just directly poisons the cell.
It creates oxidative stress and it damages our DNA, which has tumor effects. So there's just
many, many pathways that this is bad for you. What else? If there wasn't something else, well,
there's another thing, right? Heart disease. The long-term adult exposure to BPA is associated with all sorts of things like
heart disease, hypertension, atherosclerosis, plaque development, heart attacks. As we saw,
the data is just pretty scary about this. And the research shows, for example, a 10-year study in
the UK done by Meltzer and others found that higher BP exposure correlates with an increased
incidence of
coronary heart disease, more heart attacks. Another observational study, and this is
observational, but it was pretty scary actually in the New England Journal of Medicine. And it
looked at the presence of micro and nanoplastics in the plaque of 304 asymptomatic people who
underwent carotid endarterectomy. That's cleaning out the blockages and then the arteries in the
neck and that can help prevent strokes. And they looked at the microplastics in that plaque, and they tried to track it,
how it correlated with heart attack, strokes, and death from all causes about 34 months later.
And what was really frightening was that polyethylene, one of these microplastics,
was detected in the carotid artery plaque of 58.4% of patients. And PVC from PVC pipes,
polyvinyl chloride from vinyl flooring credit
cards medical devices furniture was detected in 12 percent of patients now when they looked
through a special kind of microscope called an electron microscope looks at very small small
things it showed visible jagged edged micro and nanoplastic particles in the plaque significantly
increasing the risk for for primary endpoint events meaning heart attacks and strokes, by 453%, meaning if you had higher amounts of micro and nanoplastics in your carotid artery,
you had a much, much higher risk of having a major cardiac event or a stroke than those who
didn't have those microplastics in their arteries. Now, other studies have shown that people with
high blood pressure and low heart variability tend to have higher higher total urinary bpa so that's concerning
so it can cause high blood pressure and heart rate variability is a very important measure of
your overall cardiovascular fitness so what are the top sources of microplastic exposure you want
to know now that's causing all these bad things well ultra processed food and packaging just don't
eat crap you're going to feel like crap it's not good for you there's no reason to eat it it's not
actually food you should never never put that past your lips uh and and i've done many uh podcasts you can go back and listen to them on
what ultra processed foods are and what they do but it's it's pretty frightening so where are you
going to find uh also these microplastics well cans bpa lined cans coffee cups lids who drink
in all these coffees i mean bring your own cup right bring your own salt even salt has it uh
table salt which is you know ultra processed food also a lot, but sometimes that has microplastics. Tea bags. You know tea bags are
fine. Coffee filters, but they're not. Polypropylene is a type of plastic that's used to seal tea bags
and keeps them kind of together in hot water, but not good because that plastic can leach into your
tea. A single plastic tea bag at the brewing temperature can release, get this, 11.6 billion
microplastics and 3.1 billion nanoplastics.
That's scary.
This is from Environmental Science and Technology Journal.
Current coffee machines, those plastic tubing and the plastic little things that they do.
I mean, I don't think we should be using that.
Plastic water bottles, soda bottles, any beverage container, which is BPA lined.
Plastic containers, cups, bags, shrink wrap, Tupperware, often cutting boards.
You have to be really careful and just try to use natural products.
Personal care products, also another big source of these microplastics.
Face wash has these microbeads, exfoliants, phthalates, and lotions, creams, toothpaste.
Use Skin Deep, which is a database from the Environmental Working Group that gives you
a guide on what to eat and use and eat on your body and what to clean your house with
that doesn't have all these crappy things in them.
And watch out for your makeup. As I said, you know, skincare products are full
of these microplastics. What about your clothes? Well, clothes also are an issue. Polyester and
synthetic fibers also are a big issue because when you wash them, those microplastics drain
into our water supply. And a friend of mine has an appliance company, he's a CEO of in Europe
called Archilek and has developed a microplastic filter and he's open sourced it to all manufacturers of appliances. I don't know if they're using them, but they should. Now,
what about kids? Well, toys, plastic toys, especially those made from polyethylene,
which can lead to direct exposure to these chemicals when they're chewed or sucked down
by kids. Kids stick everything in their mouth. So all these plastic toys for babies and kids
are terrible. Also, there's a bunch of other places I mentioned. Receipts, you know, credit card receipts, ATM receipts, gas station receipts, medical equipment like
tubing, IV bags, disposable gloves, and all that gets to us over time. They enter the body through
food and water, through inhalation, through skin exposure. That's kind of bad news, a little
depressing, right? We are all inundated with these microplastics and these environmental toxins,
but there is good news. You can detoxify from these things.
You can actually get rid of them from your body.
You have to do a little work, but you can.
BPA has a rapid clearance rate, so it doesn't really last that long in the body, only about five or six hours.
It takes five or six hours for your body to kind of metabolize and get rid of half of the BPA in your body.
The bad news, we're exposed all the time, so it's hard for the body to get to net zero.
And we're going to actually measure this in Function Health panels soon, we're going to the time so it's hard for the body to get to net zero and we're gonna actually
measure this in function health panels soon we're gonna measure bpa levels so you can even test them
you go to functionhealth.com forward slash mark we're not quite up there yet with that test but
we'll get there soon we'll also look at pfas fiber chemicals so we'll be able to start testing these
things and you can see your exposures so the first step is really to reduce your exposure how do you
do that air filters and water filters so water filters are great. You can use AquaTrue, LinkedIn show notes. Also just a reverse osmosis filter. Other
types are fine. Swap out plastic food containers with glass ones. Don't eat ultra processed food,
right? You're going to reduce your exposure to microplastics and phthalates and PFAS from
processing and packaging. Swap out your plastic cups for glass cups. Use rock salt like Redmond's
Real Salt. That's my favorite. Never heat food or drinks and plastic ever in the microwave or anywhere else stay away from the
instant meals that you cook in plastic like a cup of noodles soup rice just don't do that avoid
drinking from plastic water bottles which is hard to do but we should definitely be doing that both
to not pollute the planet with plastic but also to not pollute ourselves a new study found that a
liter of water from plastic water bottles contained, and this is scary, 240,000 detectable plastic fragments. I'm going to say that again. A liter
of water from a plastic water bottle contains 240,000 detectable plastic fragments. And that's
about 10 to 100 times more than previous estimates. And about 90% of these fragments were nanoplastics,
not microplastics. Also, you can use a steel water
bottle, a stainless steel water bottle. I would encourage you to do that. I have one. Avoid
commercial to-go coffee cups, like from a coffee shop. They're usually lined with BPA. Ask to fill
a stainless steel travel mug or transfer the hot contents to a safe container, especially right
after you get it, because I don't want to leave it in there. Avoid cans, especially acidic food
and drinks like soda, tomatoes. Leach out, unless it's a BPA-free can. There's companies that do make those. BPA
concentrations up to 40 times higher in canned food from sterilization, pasteurization. Don't
try to have canned foods unless you know they're BPA-free cans. Don't take the receipt. You know,
you can, these, most of these have a BPA coding. You can email it or text it or something, but
don't, don't, don't touch it. Don't use plastic
tea bags. Use tea bags that are organic, unbleached, 100% plastic-free, toxic-free. Cotton coffee
filters are fine. Don't use Keurig or plastic tubing for coffee. You can use a stainless steel
French press, pour over coffee. And again, as I said, say no to receipts. Bad idea. Get an air
filter. HEPA filter is great. I like Air Doctor. I'll put a link in the show notes.
Watch out for also something called BPS because as soon as they find a chemical is bad
and go, oh, BPA is bad,
they come up with something else,
which may not be better, right?
And BPS is used as a replacement for BPA,
but it can actually be more toxic.
That's how you reduce your exposure.
That's the first step is get rid of the source.
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How do you actually detoxify your body from the microplastics? Well, your body has a built-in
detoxification system, so you have to support those pathways and it works better than any
crash diet or juice cleanse. So you have to support it by eating the right food. Foods actually have components in them that help your body detoxify. So what are
they? Well, antioxidants in general help scavenger free radicals. They protect against DNA damage,
oxidative stress. Vitamin C is great because it's a great antioxidant and you can get that from
citrus fruit, oranges, kiwis, veggies. Vitamin E, another great antioxidant from wheat germ oil,
nuts, some veggies. Vitamin A, which is fromant from wheat germ oil, nuts, some veggies.
Vitamin A, which is from grass-fed beef liver,
chicken liver, grass-fed meats often have vitamin A.
Animal food is the main source.
Plant foods don't have actually preformed vitamin A.
Melatonin, which you can get even in your diet,
actually from meat, fish, eggs, pistachios.
Lots of antioxidants you can take in terms of herbs
like quercetin, curcumin, quercetin in onions,
garlic and apples. Carotenoids are like,ercetin, curcumin, quercetin is in onions, garlic, and apples.
Carotenoids are like, you know, they sound like where they're from, like carrots and
yellow vegetables.
Flavonoids like berries, ellagic acid, and pomegranate.
EG, CG, which is in green tea, astaxanthin from algae and salmon, krill, curcumin, milk
thistle.
All these are great to use to help your body detoxify.
These herbs have been well studied and they have been shown to actually upregulate many
of your body's own built-in detox pathways.
One of the powerhouses here, and I have these almost every day, are what we call cruciferous veggies.
Now these are things like broccoli, collards, kale, brussel sprouts, and so forth, bok choy.
But a lot of other things are great too, like dandelion leaves, rosemary, and so forth.
So all these can really help your body to upregulate these detox pathways.
Your body also has a lot of its own antioxidant
enzymes. So you can upregulate those enzymes by having the right cofactors like copper and zinc
for something called SOD. Catalase, another important antioxidant enzyme your body makes.
It needs iron and manganese. Glutathione, really, really important. It needs selenium and cysteine
and a number of other amino acids. A grass-fed whey is a great way to boost glutathione, which is high in cysteine.
I use regeneratively raised goat whey like Mount Capra.
Sulfur-rich foods, also great for boosting detox pathways.
So what are those?
All the broccoli family, right?
The broccoli, cauliflower, kale, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, watercress.
Protein also.
Amino acids are critical for upregulating your detox pathway.
So you want to make sure you have at least a gram per pound of ideal body weight.
And you have to really need that.
Otherwise, if you're detoxing
and you don't have the amino acids
to support your liver detox pathways,
you're gonna be in trouble.
Also, you need to have the right B vitamins,
particularly the B vitamins, B6, B12,
and folate to support methylation.
Really important.
And you can get those from grass-fed meat,
from pest-raised eggs, poultry.
Certain enzymes are really important.
Hydration, also really important hydration also really
important you know the solution to pollution is dilution that's what we learned in medical school
make sure you drink half your weight in ounces of water per day use a water filter as i mentioned
reverse osmosis make sure you hydrate to get rid of the toxins so you want to have plenty of urine
clear urine if it's yellow you probably don't have enough water fiber really important it's like a
sponge that binds the toxins and prevents you from reabsorbing them.
So try to eat 25 to 30 grams, even up to 50 a day.
You can actually take fiber supplements
like soluble or insoluble fibers.
And insoluble fibers, for example,
are non-digestible ones that pass through the GI tract.
They add bulk to the school,
but you want soluble fiber, fruits and veggies,
which has kind of like a gel-like substance
in the intestines and really helps all areas of health.
That reduces inflammation, it feeds your gut bugs,
it aids your blood sugar control,
also binds to the cholesterol and bile acids,
helps the excretion.
And many of these microplastics are fat-soluble,
so they're bound to cholesterol.
For example, we saw in the study on heart disease
that the microplastics were detected
in the plaque of arteries, right?
Remember that?
So you want to eat more fiber,
especially the soluble fiber that helps BPA exit the bile through your poop.
Now there are different types and sources of soluble fiber.
One of the best types is beta-glucans,
which are found in oats,
but you want glyphosate, gluten-free,
whole steel-cut oats.
Pectins, which are in apples, oranges, pears, and nuts.
Certain mucilages, which are like kind of,
if you put it in water, it'll gum it up pretty quick,
but that's great.
Like flax seeds, chia seeds, psyllium seeds,
inulin, chicory root.
These are all prebiotic foods.
Drew some artichokes, onions, garlic, asparagus,
and sweat.
Also, you don't want to forget about sweating.
Sweating is really important.
It's how your body gets rid of a lot of toxins.
So in 2012,
there was a study of human excretion of BPA
in blood, urine, and sweat.
And they found that BPA concentrations
were higher in sweat than in urine.
And out of 20 participants, 16 had found that BPA concentrations were higher in sweat than in urine. And out of 20 participants,
16 had detectable BPA concentrations in the sweat,
but only two had detectable levels in their blood.
So basically they're fat soluble.
So when you sweat,
you actually have one of the main mechanisms
to get rid of these environmental toxins.
That's why I love saunas.
The results of the study suggest that sweat testing
can be a cool tool for checking BPA monitoring
and inducing sweating is a clinically useful tool
to facilitate the release of BPA through the skin.
It's not routine for doctors to test BPA,
but it can be tested in urine or blood,
even in sweat, as I mentioned.
Function Health is going to be offering that test.
Go to functionhealth.com forward slash mark to learn more.
But yeah, I really want to sweat, right?
You really want to sweat to get it out.
Certain supplements can be very helpful.
CoQ10 has been studied by researchers at harvard and it shows that it
reduced free radicals caused by bpa in worms which is i guess good chlorella also can help
support detoxification probiotics also helpful they bind to bpa phthalates polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons so it's like lactobacillus bifidobacterium saccharomyces bilyardi all
help your gut health,
help improve liver function, prevent all kinds of stuff from going wrong in your body. They have
great effects on your endocrine system. Also, you can take other supplements like N-acetylcysteine.
I take that every day to boost glutathione. I also take lipoic acid, which is an antioxidant
that helps boost glutathione. And you can take some fiber supplements like psyllium or just
take flax seeds or even chia seeds every day.
All right, so that was a lot, right?
That was a lot.
BPA, microplastics, nanoplastics, they're everywhere.
The best we can do is to reduce our exposure.
We can stop using this stuff in the environment
and industrial production,
which is probably not gonna happen anytime soon,
but we should protect ourselves
in all the ways we talked about.
And we should help our bodies to detoxify.
We know actually how to upregulate that
through food, through fiber, through even exercise, sweating, the right supplements, all of that can
help us detoxify. We'll put links to all this in the show notes. Don't worry, so you don't have to
remember everything. Even though our world is riddled with plastics, it doesn't mean we have
to subject ourselves to their harm. There are many things we can do to protect our health and the
health of future generations by basically reducing our exposures and getting rid of the plastics in our bodies.
In the meantime, you can do your best to detox your home from the plastics, your skincare
products, and replace them with plastic-free alternatives and just basically get rid of
that stuff from your life.
So don't fret.
We can actually detoxify.
We can get ourselves to a healthier place.
We can reduce our exposures.
And it's one of the fundamental principles of functional medicine, which is how do we
understand the role of toxins in our health and how do we help our bodies detoxify? So
I hope you learned a lot from today's health bite and we'll see you next time.
Thanks for listening today. If you love this podcast, please share it with your friends and
family. Leave a comment on your own best practices on how you upgrade your health and subscribe
wherever you get your podcasts.
And follow me on all social media channels at DrMarkHyman.
And we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I'm always getting questions about my favorite books, podcasts, gadgets, supplements, recipes,
and lots more.
And now you can have access to all of this information by signing up for my free Mark's
Picks newsletter at drhyman.com forward slash Mark's Picks.
I promise
I'll only email you once a week on Fridays and I'll never share your email address or send you
anything else besides my recommendations. These are the things that have helped me on my health
journey and I hope they'll help you too. Again, that's drhyman.com forward slash MarksPix. Thank
you again and we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy. This podcast is separate from
my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center and my work at Cleveland Clinic and Function Health,
where I'm the chief medical officer.
This podcast represents my opinions and my guests' opinions,
and neither myself nor the podcast
endorses the views or statements of my guests.
This podcast is for educational purposes only.
This podcast is not a substitute for professional care
by a doctor or other qualified medical professional.
This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other
professional advice or services.
If you're looking for your help in your journey, seek out a qualified medical practitioner.
You can come see us at the Ultra Wellness Center in Lenox, Massachusetts.
Just go to ultrawellnesscenter.com.
If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner near you, you can visit ifm.org
and search find a practitioner database.
It's important that you have someone in your corner who is trained, who's a licensed healthcare practitioner,
and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health. Keeping this podcast free
is part of my mission to bring practical ways of improving health to the general public. In
keeping with that theme, I'd like to express gratitude to the sponsors that made today's
podcast possible.