The Dr. Hyman Show - Office Hours: Preparing Your Body for Pregnancy — Fertility, Nutrition & Hormones
Episode Date: January 26, 2026What’s Really Driving Infertility—and What You Can Do About It Fertility struggles are far more common than most people realize—and far more complex than we’re often told. Today I answer liste...ner-submitted questions on fertility, hormone balance, and preparing your body for conception. Here’s what I cover: • Why infertility is rising and what’s really driving it • The hidden role of blood sugar, inflammation, and toxins in hormone balance • What to do if labs are “normal” but fertility struggles persist • How lifestyle and nutrition improve egg and sperm quality • Simple, practical steps to support fertility now and long-term Fertility challenges are complex and often influenced by underlying imbalances. Addressing root causes can help support your body’s natural resilience over time. Visit functionhealth.com for 160+ lab tests at just $365 a year. Helpful Resources: Grab Our FREE Fertility Blueprint: 7 Daily Practices That Support Conception https://drhyman.com/products/fertility-blueprint?_pos=1&_psq=fertility&_ss=e&_v=1.0 Join the 10-Day Detox to Reset Your Metabolic Health https://drhyman.com/pages/10-day-detox Register for The Ultra Learning Series: Functional Fertility on Thursday, February 12 at 12PM ET here: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_D-Tzh9z8QmyQdZpBOgohKQ#/registration Have a question you’d love answered on Office Hours? Submit it here 👉https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdNF2y4lFWEOMLlzVNlFDpJ4xl7oOpH9NlImMoHr5mHggL_Ww/viewform?usp=header
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Welcome to office hours.
This is our dedicated one-on-one space to go deeper, get clear, and explore what truly moves the needle for your health.
I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and each week we're going to pull back the curtain and share the insights, the research, the lessons that don't always make it into our conversations with guests.
Because at the end of the day, you are the CEO of your own health.
And for many of you, your family's health too.
And you might not feel it all the time, but you have far more power in agency than you realize.
I'm glad you're here.
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Today we're diving into one of the most personal and the most emotionally charged topics I
get asked about, fertility.
Now, so many of you have written in with questions about unexplained fertility,
irregular or missing menstrual cycles, hormone imbalances, PCOS, endometriosis, miscarriages,
and what you can actually do to prepare your body for conception.
Now, these questions are deeply real,
and they often come with frustration, confusion, and heartbreak,
especially when the answers feel limited or incomplete.
And yet, what I want you to know is this.
You have far more influence over your fertility
than you've likely been led to believe.
So today, we're walking through your listener submitted questions
and breaking down what's really driving in fertility
and what the challenges are today.
for metabolic health issues to inflammation, to nutrient status, to stress, to environmental toxins.
My hope is that this conversation is going to give you clarity and hope and also practical steps
you can start using right now, whether you're actively trying to conceive or whether you're simply
planning to have a baby in the future. Let's start at the beginning here. Having made really
important, and this is where I see the most confusion, the most fear, and sadly the most misinformation.
The question is, what's actually driving infertility?
Why is infertility on the rise?
Is it age?
Is it the environment?
Is our diet?
Is it something deeper?
Infertility rates are rising due to a lot of things.
The primary reason, and there was a book written about this by a Harvard researcher
named Walter Willett called the fertility diet, about metabolic dysfunction.
And I know you think, Dr. Hyman, you must be obsessed with this metabolic nonsense.
I hear about it all the time from you.
I'm sorry.
It's just the thing that causes everything.
It causes heart disease, causes cancer, causes diabetes, cause a dementia, causes infertility,
even causes acne, causes depression, causes mental health issues.
I mean, it is a massive problem.
So I'm sorry if I keep hammering on this, but this is the thing you need to understand.
This is what's driving primarily so much of our chronic disease, including infertility.
Now, there's other things besides metabolic,
and that means metabolic dysfunction, I mean sugar, blood sugar, insulin issues, which we've talked about a lot.
Infertility rates are going up because of that. But also environmental toxins are on the rise.
Plastics and pesticides and metals and so many toxins we're exposed to. And I test these things
in people and I can tell you folks, they're rampant. Even myself, I try to eat a low toxin diet.
I try to only have healthy cleaning products in my house, use healthy skin care products. I try to do
everything right and it's just impossible. It's just impossible to avoid this. We live in a toxic
stew. Now, the other thing about toxins you should know is that they're highly hormonally active.
Pesticides, petrochemical toxins. I read a book about this when I was starting to learn about
functional medicine 30 years ago called Our Stolen Future by Theo Coleman. In this book, she talks
about basically our stolen future, how our offspring are being affected by,
these environmental toxins.
And you talked about in animal models
and all these hermaphrodites
that were being born in now,
alligators and frogs and, you know,
problems with fertility across the whole animal population.
It's a real issue.
And they are highly effective
in binding to hormonal receptors,
particularly estrogens.
They call them xenoestrogens or foreign estrogens.
They're endocrine disruptors.
They disrupt your hormonal system.
Also, microbiome plays a big role in hormone function.
And we've taken so many antibiotics
who had such a crappy diet,
microbiome is actually a piece of shit, if you, excuse my French, it's bad.
It just needs, we need to really get our microbiomes healthy because that can play a big role
in our health.
And of course, stress.
And there's actually another book I read many years ago about stress and infertility.
And there was a whole program at Harvard where they taught people to meditate who were having
infertility and they were getting pregnant at as high or higher rates than IVF treatment.
So stress plays a big role.
Now, age is another thing.
For some reason, you know, we used to have babies as teenagers.
in our 20s throughout human history.
Now where women are pushing it up
until their 30s, late 30s, often 40s,
and they're wondering why there's so much infertility.
Well, in medical school,
I learned if you're 35 and over,
we call that a geriatric pregnancy.
It's a terrible term, I know,
but it actually speaks to the idea
that if you're 35, it's kind of late.
So you got to be careful.
That doesn't mean you can't have babies after that.
My sister had a baby at 42.
A good friend of mine had another baby.
maybe at 42, naturally, it's possible to do.
So I think if you keep yourself healthy and young, you can do it.
All right.
So what are the real drivers of infertility?
It's a lot of things that we've talked about.
It's metabolic health, it's inflammation, it's environmental toxins.
These are the massive drivers.
Now, what if you have normal labs?
What if you have, quote, unexplained infertility?
You've done proper imaging.
You've done all the labs.
You can't conceive.
Like, what do you do?
This is where functional medicine really helps.
Because you can dig into this real findings of what's going on.
I've had women who have subtle thyroid dysfunction.
We just had a story on our function health email
where the woman had been struggling for 13 years
with all these health issues.
And her doctor never checked her thyroid.
They didn't even check the right thyroid numbers.
They checked maybe TSAH,
but they didn't check T3, T4, thyroid antibodies.
So you have subtle thyroid changes.
You can have inflammation that's causing infertility.
You can have insulin resistance, which we talked about.
You can be nutrient deficient, you know, folate.
I had a movie that I was in called Fed Up,
and it wasn't exactly infertility,
but this woman had recurrent miscarriages.
And she was just having miscarriage after miscarriage.
And one baby, she got almost the term,
and it was born without a brain.
It's called anencephaly.
Terrible.
She was just struggling.
And she was the director of this movie,
fed up that I was in, like 10 years ago.
And in the kind of tour of the movie,
we were going on tour, going on TV and radio, whatever.
We were riding in a cab in New York City,
and she had her baby there.
and breastfeeding this baby in the back of the cab.
And she's telling me that story where she read this article I wrote,
I don't know, 20 years ago or something,
on methylation, which has to do with B vitamins and folate B6.
And we know that if you're deficient in folate,
and it's one of the things you get in a prenatal vitamin,
that actually you will have trouble potentially with birth defects or miscarriages.
And she read this article.
She went to her doctor.
She had her doctor checked homocysteine,
which again, most doctors don't check.
they'll check folate, which usually may not be a problem on the lab test, but the homocysteine is a better
test, and we do that at function help, and that's part of the panel that we create as a baseline.
And that was elevated, and the doctor said, okay, I'll just give you folate. And she says, no, no,
Dr. Hyman says, to check this gene, to see if I need a different kind of folate. And he checked
the gene, she had the gene, and we also checked that of function health, called MTHR.
And then she took folate in the right form called methylfolate, and guess what? She was at lab
a normal, healthy baby. So nutrients can play a big role.
toxins. So I've had other women who struggled and we've found lots of heavy metals, we've
detoxified them. They've gotten babies after that. Gut health, again, another important thing,
a lot of women and people in general have gut health issues. Number one reason people go to the doctor.
So there's a lot of things you can identify and treat that you can really focus on subclinical
thyroid issues, autoimmune issues, chronic stress, mitochondrial issues, gut issues, toxin load,
all these things we can measure in functional medicine. And when you look at some both things that
can actually help besides doing all this.
There's simple lifestyle things that make your eggs better.
Getting quality of sleep, balancing your blood sugar, optimize your nutrient status,
lowering your toxin exposure.
All these really help to improve the quality of eggs.
And by the way, folks, sperm too, because it's not just women here that are the problem.
It's guys too.
Guys sperm is a problem.
Men's quality of sperm is going down and down and down.
And stay tuned.
I'm doing a podcast with Stanford urologist, Michael Eisenberg, coming up soon.
that's going to go deep into the problems with sperm and sperm quality in society today
and how that's contributing in fertility.
And we're going to get into that.
But right now we're going to talk about how to help improve your metabolic health
because that's really important factor.
The fertility diet is an example, but I would go even further.
People can go on the blood sugar solution, 10-Detects diet,
and you go to 10-Detects.com.
It's the best way to reset your metabolic health.
And of course, I created it, but it's out of my own practice and experience.
and, you know, what I've learned with patients, I simply write about, I talk about, and I teach about
because I want not just my patients to have the benefit. I want everybody to have the benefit.
So balancing your blood sugar is key, getting rid of the starch and sugar, having more protein,
having more good fats, having more fiber, lots of phytochemicals, getting your insulin stable,
exercising, building muscle, all those things make a profound difference. And even small changes
can make great improvement in ovulation hormone balance. And, you know, PCOS is the most important
an example of this where women have a lot of immortality when they have polycystic ovarian syndrome,
but it's not an ovarian problem. It's a nutritional problem. They call it ovarian syndrome,
but it's actually nutritional syndrome because it's related to the starch and sugar in our diet.
Okay, so, again, not everybody. Some small subset of people at PCOS are thin and healthy,
but still have this problem, but for the majority, it's because of our starch and sugar diet.
So what else can you do to improve your quality of eggs, to improve your likelihood of having
pregnancy that comes to term, it's eating real food. It's getting rid of ultra-processed food.
It's having enough omega-3 fats. It's getting rid of inflammation triggers like gluten and dairy.
Dairy is a big problem for a lot of people, by the way, and it can cause a lot of inflammation in the
body, a lot of gut issues, a lot of autoimmune dysregulation. I like goat and sheep better,
but you just want to be careful. Next, you want to do the best you can. Now, not make yourself
crazy, but the best you can to avoid environmental toxins. So there's a great website.
I'm on the board of this group,
it's the environmental working group,
and they've done incredibly deep research
on how to source all the things
that have low toxin levels.
What foods to eat, what fruits and vegetables
have the lowest pesticides, what have the most to avoid,
what animal products you can eat that they're safe,
how do you choose animal products?
What about fish?
What have to least mercury and toxins?
What household cleaning products you should have?
What facial and skincare products you should have?
You go to skin deep.
It's really a great app.
It's part of their work.
work. I filter my water. At home, I have a reverse husband's filter. I have air filters in the
house. And actually, I think I need more because I just did my indoor air quality. And I had a
device that I used to measure it. And I actually have a fair bit of indoor air pollution. And it's actually
often a very toxic environment for people. And then just be smart. Like, you know, there's,
there's a lot of plastic. So plastic bottles and plastic cookware. And I mean, people microwave in
plastic. Just don't be stupid. No. The other thing people don't know is, it'll be
is a huge endocrine disruptor.
BPA also causes insinence or bisphenol A.
You should line cans, bottles.
They've taken some of that out,
but they replace it with something just as bad
until they, you know, ban that again.
But BPA is also on credit card receipts.
It's on the gas station receipts.
It's on all that stuff.
So you don't want to touch that stuff.
People that you want to receive, I'm like, no, thanks.
You know, so be careful, those.
Let's drop your hormones.
Next thing you knew to improve fertility is help your gut.
So lots of more foods that support.
your gut microbiome, lots of fiber, nuts and seeds, fruits and vegetables, some whole grains,
some beans can be very helpful. Fermanent foods, sourcrow, misu, kimchi, Nato, Tempe, all these
fermented foods can be very, very helpful. Prebiotic foods can be helpful. Asparagus and through some
artichokes and onions and you can just kind of go and chat, GPT, and look up what are prebiotic
foods and you'll see what they are. And then you can also use probiotics as a way to support
your gut health. And I think most people in society today should be on a basic probiotic.
It's almost like a foundational supplement, multi-fish oil, vitamin D, and a probiotic.
And I'd probably add magnesium to there. It's a basic foundation for everybody, given the
massive nutritional deficiencies we have. And those can help estrogen metabolism.
They can help your immune system, reduce inflammation. They can improve your ability to absorb nutrients.
So they're all very helpful. Okay, what else can you do? Well, you can learn how to regulate stress
in your nervous system. And when you're chronically stressed, it disrupts ovulation, lower sperm
count. I mean, if you take a bunch of soldiers who are healthy 20-year-old guys and you march
overnight, their sperm count drops dramatically, or testosterone drops dramatically, or thyroid
drops dramatically. So, stress affects every system in your body, including fertility, ovulation,
sperm production. So learn some simple practices because, you know, stress happens to you automatically,
but learning how to activate your relaxation system is an active process. So meditation, breathwork,
And your heurban calls it non-sleep deep rest, which otherwise is known as yoga nidra.
It's been around for thousands of years.
You can go to Spotify and just do yoga nidra or go on YouTube and do a 10-minute or 20-minute
or 30-minute one.
Very important.
Can your sleep optimize also critical?
Because if you don't sleep, your stress response is much higher.
Exercise also really helps reduce the stress, but also improves your reproductive hormones.
These aren't really small tweaks.
These are foundational things.
These are root cause intervention.
that can really shift fertility outcomes,
even when your regular traditional workout looks normal.
Now, I mentioned PCOS earlier, a polycystic ovarian syndrome.
This is a common problem.
It causes a lot of issues.
Causes irregular menstrual cycles, heavy bleeding,
can link to obesity,
facial hair, loss of scalp hair, acne.
It can be kind of bad.
And it's a fundamentally a metabolic problem,
an issue of insulin resistance, inflammation,
and all these things will affect
your hormones. So the key is basically following what I just said, which is get your blood sugar
balance, get rid of starch your sugar, exercise, strength train, vitamin D, omega-3. And there's a particular
compound called the nossetol, particularly dechiroinocetol or myonocetol also can be very helpful
in improving this as published. I read this 30 years ago in the New England Journal of Medicine.
So well-validated natural compound can get online and it's really important. And I think,
you know, getting your blood sugar balance is such a key thing.
And I think we've talked about that a lot already,
so I won't go over it.
But that's really the fundamental issue here.
Now, when you start getting metabolic health,
then is what happens.
You start ovulating normally.
You start having more regular cycles.
You can do well.
So I don't have to be cursed with this problem
that's forever or with PCS.
You can manage it.
And I actually had just a good friend
with PCS and she got really healthy.
And she's, you know, 38,
and she just had a beautiful baby naturally.
So the body can do that if you do the right things.
Listen, every time you lift a forked your mouth,
you're making a choice. Because food isn't just fuel. It works with or against your genes, your hormones,
and your immune system. It can lower inflammation and it can even help reverse chronic disease.
But here's the problem. You can't fix what you can't see. Are you actually low in magnesium,
vitamin D maybe, omega-3s, our toxins building up? Most people have no idea. And that's why we created
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you get access to over 160 of the most critical lab tests for your heart, your hormones,
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Go to functionhealth.com and start now.
What about coming off birth control and getting your body ready to have a baby?
Someone asked, I've been on birth control for years.
How do I transition safely off that?
You want to make sure, you know, people don't realize this, but the birth control pill actually depletes a lot of vitamins like B6, folate, magnesium, B12, zinc.
So you got to get your nutrient levels up.
And I'm talking about just a good multibitamin.
It doesn't be a big deal.
It might take your hormones about three to six months to reset after stopping the pill.
And you want to just track your cycle, see how you're doing, get your nutrient levels up, support your liver detoxification, and help your body get back in its natural rhythm.
control doesn't cause infertility, but can actually mask under lung issues.
So you want to make sure you check all that.
Next thing we want to look at is something called AMH.
Now, this is a basic test we do for women as part of the Function Help Panel.
The company I co-founded, you can get a whole comprehensive view of your body for a dollar a day,
365 a year, and really look at everything that's going on, including all your hormones,
all your metabolic health, all your nutrients, toxin levels, lots more.
and there's a test we do called AMH.
That means anti-malarion hormone.
And that's a test that measures your ovarian reserve.
Now, if it's low, does that mean you're infertile?
And how do I kind of check about the fertile years, right, that I have left?
So AMH is about the quantity of your eggs, not necessarily the quality.
Now, quality is influenced more by things you have control of, like inflammation, your mitochondria lifestyle.
Your egg reserve is what you get.
You're new when you're born, you have meat.
millions and do windows to maybe 100,000 when you're in your puberty and then it dwindles even
further and by the time you're in your 30s 40s it's it's much lower but the quality can be influenced
by things that you have control over that manage inflammation your mitochondrial health lifestyle
if you have low mh doesn't mean you're hopeless you can still conceive with low numbers
and it's possible to improve the quality of your eggs and actually have conception so don't
Don't lose hope.
Men also, as I mentioned, you know, sperm is a big factor here and having a baby,
and that affects the quality of the embryo, the epigenetics, the way in which the sperm is
developed is actually controlled by diet, lifestyle toxins, all these things we're going to
talk about with Dr. Michael Eisenberg from Stanford in the coming podcast.
So speaking of sperm and male fertility, male fertility matters more than people think.
People always think about the woman and doctors focus on the women, but you've got to focus on
the guys too. And diet plays a big role in sperm quality and sperm health is affected by a lot of
things. Sugar, of course, alcohol, really bad. Plastics and chemicals, toxins are causing low sperm count.
They're endocrine disruptors. Heat, so like saunas, there's ice packs that guys use on their
private parts for saunas so you can do that if you want. Nutrient deficiencies also play a role.
So you've got to get the nutrient levels up in men too.
And the men's health has a lot of impact on many things that relate to pregnancy,
like placental formation, your risk of having a miscarriage,
and even your long-term child's health is determined a lot by the health of the men.
So what do men need?
They need antioxidants.
They need zinc.
They need omega-3s.
They need good quality multivitamin.
All of that's really important.
And, of course, exercise also helps.
So, as I mentioned, we're going to have a deep dive on male fertility.
Don't miss my upcoming episode with Dr. Michael Eisenberg.
He's one of the leading experts in the field.
and we're going to go deep into that.
All right, so the next question is about in vitro fertilization or IVF
and how to deal with the risks of the meds
and how do they detox after?
A lot of people are asking about this.
So let's sort of get into what they do.
What do IVF meds do, they stimulate your ovaries to make eggs
and then to help you stabilize the pregnancy
in the early parts of the pregnancy.
So a lot of hormones involved,
a lot of short-term side effects,
but there are long-term side effects.
The risk is generally low, but they're still being studied.
Now, after you've kind of done this IVF treatment,
how do you actually recover?
How do you help?
Because the amount of energy required to stimulate ovaries
to make eggs is a lot.
And what drives the energy production, your mitochondria?
So the mitochondria are the energy factors in your cell.
They help power hormone production,
egg development, detoxification,
they help your overall recovery.
And there's lots of ways to support
mitochondrial health. So you can eat rich foods in antioxidants, in lots of berries, leafy greens,
colorful fruits and veggies, lots omega-3s, salmon, sardines, walnuts, GSCs, all great.
Cook U-10 also very important. Really important. Oregon meats, okay, people don't like them, but I love liver.
They really help. They're the most nutrient-dense food in the planet. If you don't believe me,
just go to Google and ask for a chart comparing the most nutrient-dense vegetable on the planet with liver.
and you will see it's not even a contest.
It's like this on the graph.
Can't see my hands,
but if you're listening,
but it's a big delta.
Oily fish really help,
broccoli helps, all that's great.
Also, string training, exercise,
walking, cardio,
all improved mitochondrial function.
Deep restorative sleep,
also critical for healthy mitochondria.
If you're working with a doctor
or you want to try stuff on your own,
you can try things like coenzyme Q10,
and acetyl-sistine or knack.
alpha lipoc acid. These are generally safe, but you want to choose the right products and really
work with someone who helps you understand what they are because they're kind of not your general
multibitamins. And they also help liver detox, actually, by the way, these can be very helpful.
So your liver helps also clear hormones. They clear the medications, use an IVF. You don't want to
cleanse, but you want to just a general support of your detox pathway. So how do you do that?
You eat foods that help detoxification. All the broccoli family, broccoli, collards, cabbage,
Brussels sprouts, onions, garlic,
these all have sulfur in them
that increases glutathione
that is the main detox fire in your body.
Lots of water.
Herbal teas can be helpful.
Dandelion is a great detox fire.
Ginger, peppermint, many other things can be helpful too.
Lots of fiber that helps get rid of the excess hormones
from your gut that get excreted from your liver
and you need to recirculate them,
get them out of your body.
Blackseeds are amazing for this.
Beans, especially use.
also great. Alcohol definitely bad for you. I'm sorry, guys. I love a good drink down then,
but there's no world in which alcohol is good and the dose makes the poison, so higher amounts,
more frequent amounts are dangerous. It really raises estrogen levels. It really screws up hormones.
It really affects sperm. So if you're trying to have babies, don't drink. Also,
sweating is really helpful. So detoxification through saunas, exercise, cycling, all break. Also, you want to
reduce inflammation. So when you have hormonal stimulation, it can make your inflammation levels
go up. That can show up as lots of symptoms like fatigue or mood changes, bloating, skin flares.
The key is to lower inflammation by eating whole food, unprocessed food, lots of omega-3 fats,
same diet for everything pretty much, real food, low in sugar and starch, lots of omega-3s,
lots of fiber, lots of colorful for food's and vegetables, lots of anti-inflammatory foods like,
you can eat, lots of turmeric, ginger, rosemary, all helpful, all get rid of all the
starch and sugar that really helps to reduce the inflammation in your body.
Stress reduction also stress makes you inflamed.
So breath, work, meditation, yoga, gentle movement all help.
Get your nutrient levels up.
That really helps lots of demand on reproductive health when you're doing IVF.
So you need lots of nutrients.
Get B vitamins, Foley, B12, especially, zinc, magnesium, vitamin D, omega-3s, iron, all really important.
So you can get them through food, right?
eggs, greens, beans, nuts seeds, wild salmon, lots of good quality nutrients also available
and a high-quality prenatal or multivitamin.
You want to get your labs drawn to make sure you're knowing what you're doing, and that's
really why I co-founded Function Health.
So just go to FunctionHealth.com.
It's $365 a year for membership, twice your blood draws, a dollar a day.
It's your health, folks.
Prioritize protein.
As your body goes through a lot, you need more protein.
It helps you repair.
tissues and things. So make sure you get about a gram per pound of body weight, 80 to 100
grams usually is pretty good depending on your body size, helps your hormones recovery from anything.
Also, you know, your nervous system is, you know, taking a big toll when you're going through
IVF. You know, a lot of people, it's a hard thing emotionally. You know, infertility is hard,
it's psychologically exhausting, it's stressful, you know, and this all affects your biology,
all affects hormones, thyroid, gut health, fertility, all this stuff.
So simple practices, meditation, journaling, breathwork.
I do every morning breathwork in bed for 10 minutes.
I do meditation in bed just before you get out of bed for the morning.
Often I'm journaling practice in the morning if I can do that.
Just simple things can help.
And it doesn't have to be a lot.
Moving also helps, getting all the energy out of your body.
Like when you think about when you're chased by a tiger,
there's a book called Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers,
is they're chased by a lion.
and then they run like crazy.
They're freaking out.
They're stressed.
They're going to eat.
The lion catches one of them,
and they all go back to eating the other zebra,
you know, in the midst of this big herd,
they don't care because they know the lions they're eating this other guy.
So they basically discharge the stress through running as fast as they can.
So exercise really helps.
Also, social connections really important.
Meaningful connections are really good for your health.
So you can just get support through other people who've been through IVF
or just friends in general.
make sure your sleep is good.
Also really important.
Good hygiene like dark room,
no screens before bed, you know,
just wind down time, hot bath, ear plugs,
eye shades, whatever it takes.
Also, you want to heal your gut
because the gut plays a huge role in hormones.
Gut health and hormones are super connected.
IBF drugs can actually alter your gut motility.
They can change your microbiome.
They can affect your nutrients.
So make sure you eat a lot of the good stuff
like probiotic-rich foods,
yogurt, if tolerated,
kefir, sourcrate kimchi, all that's great.
Prebiotic fibers, as I mentioned, garlic, onions,
asparagus, flaxsees, chia seeds,
plantains, also good.
Don't eat ultra-processed foods.
Never should eat those or not food.
They cause lots inflammation.
And then think about doing a gut reboot.
Warm meals, soup, stews, cooked veggies, all that helps.
And give yourself time.
Like, it just takes time.
You need usually a couple months, two or three months.
Recalibrate yourself after having IVF.
The hormones, they need time to normalize.
your nervous system needs time to decompress,
your nutrient stores need time to rebuild.
It's expected, so don't be too hard on yourself.
So next question is really about something that I like to talk about a lot,
which is epigenetics.
Now, what are epigenetics?
It's a lot to talk about, but I'm going to help you understand it.
The question really is, how do you influence your genes,
and how long does it take to influence your genes
through lifestyle changes that will improve your baby's health in the long term?
How do you set yourself up with the right gene expression?
In other words, to conceive and have a healthy baby.
So what are epigenetics?
Well, you know what genetics are.
You've got 20,000 genes, you've got 23 pairs of chromosomes,
which all have all these genes on them.
Those are fixed.
They're not changing.
They're like keys on a piano, right?
You've got 88 keys on a piano,
but your epigeno means above your genes.
Now, think of the epigenome like the piano player.
It can play anything.
Jazz, ragtime, rock, classical, you name it.
You can play whatever you want on that thing
because it's the control of those keys
that determines the songs that get played,
the song of life that gets played for you.
And so everything you do modifies your epigenetics
and in turn will get passed onto your baby.
And the good news is that you can change your epigenetics
quickly. It can happen within weeks. We do this with now epigenetic testing for biological age.
It's how we measure age because we can see where things are not going well, and we can actually
test those, and they correlate with a different biological age that's different than your chronological
age. So, for example, I did when I was 62, I did my biological age, and I was 43. And then I did a whole
bunch of stuff over the next two years to improve and fix my epigenome to be even healthier.
And I was 64, I did my epigenetic age, and I was 39.
So even though I got two years older, chronologically, I got four years younger biologically.
So that's the power that we have of lifestyle and doing things that can change our
epigenome.
Now, what affects it?
Our diet is probably the biggest factor.
Again, the amount of sugar and starch we eat is just the problem.
And the lack of good quality, whole foods, the lack of fiber, the lack of adequate
fats, good fats, protein, all really important. So when you want to improve, when you want to
improve your herb genome, you have to eat a way that doesn't cause too much insulin production,
which means low starch and sugar diets, higher fat, higher fiber, good quality protein, and so forth.
Also, nutrients play a big role in this and regulating your epigenome. So vitamins, minerals,
you want to have optimal levels. And again, it functioned out the company I co-founded,
we allow you to test all your nutrient levels. Because your doctor usually isn't checking
checking homocysteine, methamoc acid, vitamin D, zinc, omega-3-5s,
these are the things you should be checking to see where you're at.
And I can tell you in our population, 70%, and this is, mind you,
the level that the government RDA says you need to not get a deficiency disease.
So how much vitamin D do you need to not get rickets?
Or how much vitamin C do you need to not get scurvy?
Not very much.
It's a very different number than you need for optimal health.
So at the level that is the minimum to prevent a deficiency disease, we see 70% of members of function,
we have more 300,000 members.
Now, 70% have a deficiency in one or more levels of their nutrients at the lab reference range,
which is bare minimum, not optimal.
So think about that.
That's a big deal.
So you want to know your numbers.
Managing your sleep, managing stress, all that leads to better egg and sperm quality really
improves your epigenetic quality.
fertility, pregnancy, and postpartum aren't separate chapters. They're part of one continuous story of
hormonal shifts, metabolic changes, and deep transformation. And no matter where you are in that
journey, I want you to know this. You're not broken and you're not powerless. So much of what
affects fertility is influenced by the foundations, nutrition, blood sugar balance, stress, sleep,
nutrient status, and environmental exposures. Small, consistent changes in these areas can have a
profound impact over time, not just on your ability to conceive, but on your long-term health
and the health of future generations. Remember, you are the CEO of your own health, and the choices
you make today can shape your future. If you are someone you love is thinking about fertility,
whether you're just starting to ask questions, navigating challenges, or preparing your body
for pregnancy, I want you to know you're not alone. And this year, we're launching something new
for our community called the Ultra Learning Series, where you can connect directly with my team
at the Ultra Wellness Center for deep, practical conversations
and make functional medicine simple and actionable.
Now, our first workshop is functional fertility.
It's happened on Thursday, February 12th, at 12 p.m. Eastern time.
Dr. Cindy Guy, who I worked with for, I don't know, 30 years now, a long time,
and at least my nutritionist, will walk you through what really influences fertility
from hormones and inflammation to nutrition, environmental exposures,
and whole body health for both partners, because yes, it takes two.
This is a compassionate and,
And it's evidence-based conversation designed to give you clarity, confidence, and real tools no matter where you are in your fertility journey.
You're going to find the link in the show notes or just head over to Ultra Wellness Center on Instagram at Ultra Wellness Center.
And you'll find out everything you need to know.
And I really hope you'll join us.
Thanks for joining me for office hours.
I love diving into these topics with you.
Remember, you are the CEO of your own health.
And every choice you make can move you closer to healing and vitality.
I want to keep these episodes as relevant and useful as possible, so tell me, what do you want to explore next?
What questions are you wrestling with? What breakthroughs are you chasing?
Share your ideas in the comments on social media or through the link in the show notes.
I'm listening.
Until next time, keep taking charge, keep asking questions, and keep showing up for your health.
If you love this podcast, please share it with someone else you think would also enjoy it.
You can find me on all social media channels at Dr. Mark Hyman.
Please reach out.
I'd love to hear your comments and questions.
Don't forget to rate, review, and subscribe to the Dr. Hyman show
wherever you get your podcasts.
And don't forget to check out my YouTube channel at Dr. Mark Hyman
for video versions of this podcast and more.
Thank you so much again for tuning in.
We'll see you next time on the Dr. Hyman Show.
This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center,
my work at Cleveland Clinic, and Function Health,
where I am chief medical officer.
This podcast represents my opinions and my guest's opinions.
Neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests.
This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional care
by a doctor or other qualified medical professional.
This podcast is provided with the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other
professional advice or services.
If you're looking for help in your journey, please seek out a qualified medical practitioner.
And if you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, visit my clinic,
the ultra-wellness center at ultra-wellnesscenter.com and request to become a patient.
It's important to have someone in your corner who is a trained, licensed health care practitioner
and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health.
This podcast is free as part of my mission to bring practical ways of improving help to the public,
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Thanks so much again for listening.
