The Dr. Hyman Show - The 3 Daily Supplements Everyone Should Be Taking For Longevity
Episode Date: April 18, 2022This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Paleovalley, and ButcherBox. Our food supply is dramatically less nutrient rich than it has ever been, and it’s taking a toll on our health. A shocking... 99 percent of Americans are nutrient deficient, including over 90 percent who are deficient in omega 3 fats and 50 percent who are deficient in magnesium. In this episode of my Masterclass series, I am interviewed by my good friend and podcast host, Dhru Purohit, about the top supplements for longevity, especially NAD, which inhibits inflammation, increases metabolism, and increases insulin sensitivity. We also discuss how to critically evaluate supplement research and much more. Dhru Purohit is a podcast host, serial entrepreneur, and investor in the health and wellness industry. His podcast, The Dhru Purohit Podcast, is a top 50 global health podcast with over 30 million unique downloads. His interviews focus on the inner workings of the brain and the body and feature the brightest minds in wellness, medicine, and mindset. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Paleovalley, and ButcherBox. 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. Paleovalley is offering my listeners 15% off their entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com/hyman to check out all their clean Paleo products and take advantage of this deal. For a limited time, new subscribers to ButcherBox will receive ground beef FOR LIFE. When you sign up today, ButcherBox will send you 2 lbs of 100% grass-fed, grass-finished beef free in every box for the life of your subscription + $10 off. To receive this offer, go to ButcherBox.com/farmacy. In this episode, we discuss (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): The value of including supplements in your health routine (4:49 / 1:36) Top three supplements I recommend (7:03 / 3:43) How to critically review supplement research (26:28 / 21:16) Conventional medicine’s approach to supplements (27:09 / 22:14) The best supplements for longevity (27:09 / 24:38) The value of resveratrol (42:38 / 37:22) Questions from our community on brain health supplement recommendations, how to measure success of supplements, and more (49:32 / 43:55) Mentioned in this episode: Reduction in the Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes with Lifestyle Intervention or Metformin Long-latency deficiency disease: insights from calcium and vitamin D by Robert P. Heaney
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Why do we need supplements, right?
We evolved for the last 200,000 years
and there was no Whole Foods or GNC or supplement store.
We couldn't buy vitamin D or vitamin C
or any of this stuff.
We didn't even know what it was
and yet somehow we managed to survive.
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All right, now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Everybody, it's Dr. Mark Hyman.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy, a place for conversations that matter.
And today we have a special episode, a masterclass,
where it's a deep dive into topics we all want to know about, including inflammation, brain health,
autoimmune disease, sleep, and lots more. And I am joined today by my guest host, my good friend,
my partner by business partner, and host of the Drew Proud podcast, Drew Proud himself.
We're going to be talking about nutritional deficiencies and also what you need to know
to actually help change your trajectory of aging through the use of supplements.
What are the supplements we now know we all should be taking if we don't want to live a long
and healthy life? So welcome, Drew. Thanks, Mark. So excited to be recording. And also,
we're in the process of setting up our new studio, so it's exciting to be here.
And this topic is a topic that a lot of people have questions about.
The topic of what supplements should I be taking for longevity?
And I want to preface it and give you an opportunity to say there's so many episodes that we've
done and that you've done with guests where you talk about the foundations.
And supplements can be a part of that foundation, but it's really food, movement.
There's so many other things that are central. So you can't supplement your way to longevity. Can you talk a little bit about that?
I mean, the reason they're called supplements, not replacements is because they're supplements
to everything else you're doing. They're not the thing itself. And I think the foundational aspects
that we have available to us are food, phytochemicals, which I consider food,
but it's also medicine.
And they can be supplements,
but you can get them actually from food.
Obviously, movement and exercise.
And it's fascinating, Drew,
as I've been digging into the research
for my new book, Young Forever,
the mechanisms by which exercise works.
We all know that exercise prolongs life
and it prevents heart disease, cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer's,
but why, how?
And that's fascinating to me to understand
the way it works with some of our longevity pathways in our cells that are so central to
healthy aging. So you got to dial all those in and obviously sleep and stress, it's just,
there's no way around it. You need four legs of the stool, diet, exercise, sleep, and stress
management. And then under that, you've got to have community. You've got to have
the power of love and connection and community because without that, kind of we don't do so good.
And we know that from animal studies. If you just take two identical monkeys and one is raised with
a mother, one's raised not, they age at rapidly different rates. They get various different
illnesses that the other one doesn't get, even if they're eating the same diet. So it's really
important to understand that we are social creatures and we need,
we need the power of our connections, friends, and community. And sadly, our culture just creates
more disconnection, more isolation, even with all the social media apps, it's actually the opposite
of what is intended for most people, which is this, this driving disconnection and loneliness.
And that, that's really something that I think is a core piece of longevity. And we know that from the blue zones. We know that from even studies in America where,
you know, people who join a bowling group or a knitting club actually live longer. So it's not
just, you know, some, you know, big thing. It can be a small thing. It makes a huge difference.
Huge difference. So now that everybody understands that, and again, you talk about this all the time,
I talk about this all the time. Now we can go into the topic of supplements and really appreciate them
for what they are and understand the latest cutting edge stuff that's available to us so
i'm going to pin you down a little bit i'm going to say what are the top three supplements that
we could consider taking when it comes to longevity if you had three yeah that would be out
there well i mean this is the worst possible question you could ever ask me, Drew. It's like saying,
what are the three favorite foods you could want to eat? And that's it. I'm like,
what are the three favorite foods that you want to eat?
Lamb chops, sweet potatoes, and chunky monkey ice cream. I could live forever on that.
So I always say, the obvious question is, why do we need supplements, right?
We evolved for the last 200,000 years.
And, you know, you couldn't, there was no Whole Foods or GNC or supplement store.
We couldn't buy vitamin D or vitamin C or any of this stuff.
We didn't even know what it was.
And yet somehow we managed to survive.
So from an evolutionary point of view, supplements
are kind of irrelevant. But right now we're living so out of sync with our evolutionary biology that
we need to really look at the facts about what's happening with our food supply, with our nutrient
levels, both in our food and in our bodies, and the consequence of that for our health.
So I always say, I don't think anybody needs supplements, but only under certain conditions. One, you have to hunt and gather your own wild
food. Two, you have to drink pure, clean water. Three, you have to have no chronic stress. Four,
you have to exercise all the time as part of your lifestyle. Five, you have to sleep nine hours a
night going to bed with the sun and waking with the sun. And six, you have to be exposed to no
environmental toxins or external insults. Now,
if that's you, no, you don't need any supplements. But the rest of us, we should pay attention
because after almost 30 years of vigorously testing nutritional status on all my patients,
I'm beyond shocked at the level of nutritional deficiencies. And I have a clientele that's
generally well off, that understands health and nutrition, that's trying to do the right thing. I don't see a lot of people now, I used to, but don't see a lot of people now
who eat junk food and fast food and processed food. I've had a few of those. I call them Dr.
Hyman virgins where they don't know anything about health or nutrition. And I do their blood work and
it's terrifying. It's terrifying the the level of massive nutritional deficiency. One little kid I had, I'll just share a story. He had severe ADD. He had behavioral
issues, was kicked out of kindergarten, but he also had all these other health issues, asthma,
allergies, acne, stomach aches, irritable bowel, muscle cramps, anal itching. The list goes on and
on. He was seeing seven different doctors and tons of medication and he just was a mess. And all he ate was junk food, processed food, processed meats,
never saw vegetables in his life. And I could pretty much predict from his dietary history
what he was going to be deficient in. He didn't eat fish, so he's omega-3 deficient. He didn't
eat any seeds or grains or anything, so he was zinc deficient. He didn't eat anything with B
vitamins in it. He was folate deficient. He was magnesium deficient because he didn't eat greens or beans
or nuts or seeds. So he had all these deficiencies that were so common in the general population,
but his were so magnified. So what I see typically, and this is not my opinion,
this is the NHANES study, which is a large national governmental survey every year,
where they look at
the health of the population and they don't just ask questions, they actually go in and they
find people, they do testing, they see what their numbers look like. And based on these really
robust data of tens of thousands of people, 90 plus percent of Americans, probably 99% of Americans
are deficient in something. And the major deficiency is about 90% are deficient or more in omega-3 fats, 50% in
magnesium, probably 20% in iron, zinc is 40% deficient.
So we've got these major deficiencies of these key nutrients that are really essential
for biology.
And what people don't understand about nutrition and nutrients is that they're pleomorphic.
And that means in English that they have a lot of functions. So if you take a drug, let's say a statin,
it basically has one action. It blocks this enzyme that produces cholesterol,
HMGA-coa reductase. And it also has some other, we call pleiotrophic effects. It also
actually induces something called nitric oxide
synthase, which is good for producing nitric oxide, which may reduce inflammation. It also,
but also has other side effects. It kind of blocks CoQ10 production because it's also the same
enzyme and it may cause muscle injury. But there's generally very few pathways.
Nutrients on your hand, like magnesium, has 300 different enzymes that it regulates zinc same
thing 200 enzymes so so they have multiple functions throughout multiple parts of our
cellular physiology that if we don't have them it's like our cellular machinery can't do what
it's supposed to do and this is this was mind-blowing when i first heard about it drew
bruce ames one of the leading researchers in nutrition science. There's a test called after him, the Ames test to look for cancer-inducing compounds.
And he's like probably in his late 80s now.
He's still around.
And he wrote an article years ago, which basically mapped out that one third of our whole DNA,
our entire DNA codes for enzymes.
Enzymes are basically catalysts that change one chemical to another chemical in your body
to do what it's supposed to do.
Well, if one third of your entire DNA codes for enzymes, that's important.
So what do enzymes need to work?
They need coenzymes or cofactors, which are usually vitamins and minerals, but also
phytonutrients.
So how does
enzymes work? Well, there's a little key that goes in the enzyme, it turns it on,
and that key is usually a nutrient, vitamin C, B6, folate. For example, to make tryptophan
into serotonin, which is your happy mood chemical, you take the amino acid you're eating from
tryptophan, which comes from food like protein, turkey, everybody knows turkey and tryptophan, that has to get converted to serotonin. Well,
that requires vitamin B6. There's an enzyme. Or your thyroid, in order to make the thyroid that
your thyroid gland makes into the active thyroid hormone T3, you have an enzyme there,
which actually requires selenium. So if you don't have selenium, it can't work. Or
if you want to see the thyroid action on the nucleus where it actually does all its work to
control your metabolism, you need vitamin D as a cofactor to help it function at the nuclear level
to create the downstream effects, which is to turn on different genes and do different things.
They regulate your metabolism and so many other things. So nutrients are such a critical part of our biology.
And if we don't have enough of the required nutrients,
our health degrades.
And years ago, and I know this is a long answer
to your question, but I'm on a roll here.
It's all great knowledge.
We should, I love it, keep going.
There's a scientist named Robert Heaney who recently died,
who wrote an article called
Long Latency Deficiency Diseases.
So we all learned about vitamins. I mean, the vitamins we learned about only about 120 years
ago. The term comes from vital amine. It's a thing that's needed for your health or
vitality, basically. And they were first discovered because they started refining grains in the 1800s because the grain
mill came up and it was a great discovery that you could refine grains. And what happened was
they took out all the nutrients that are in the husk and the fiber and the ectosperm where all
the vitamins and vitamin E and everything is in in there and all they left was the starch and so they started feeding um this refined grains to chickens and the chickens all
got really sick and they started feeding it to prisoners and the prisoners all got really sick
they got like beriberi and pellagra and all these horrible vitamin deficiency diseases and and
they're terrible like they're really terrible diseases scurvy you know obviously it's something
people know about.
And these will kill you or make you demented or turn your skin into like this whole raw mess just from little vitamin deficiency.
And so that's what discovery of vitamins.
And they realized that these were sort of things needed in very little amounts that
had profound effects.
I mean, imagine if there was a drug that cost pennies, that had no side effects, that literally worked in days to cure illness,
I mean, that would be pretty amazing. But that's what vitamins do. If you take someone who's
vitamin deficient and you give them a vitamin like vitamin C to someone who's got scurvy,
it's like within a few days, they're better and everything's gone. So you mean vitamin C,
you think, oh, vitamin C, everybody's got vitamin C, but 10% of Americans are deficient in vitamin C at the level that
would cause scurvy.
This is no joke.
So long story short, one, our food supply has been hybridized to breed out nutrition.
It's bred for starch and maybe a little protein, but not for nutrients.
It's also grown in soils that have very little organic matter.
They can't extract the nutrients from the soil for the plant. So there are nutrients in the soil,
but the plants need the microorganism in the soil to actually, as symbiotic helpers, to extract
the nutrients from the soil to go into the plant. So then it's in the plant, then you can eat it.
But now maybe your broccoli today is 50% less
nutritious than it was 50 years ago. So that's another problem. And then we have increased
nutrient needs because we're under chronic stress because we're exposed to environmental toxins. I
mean, there were 80,000 new chemicals introduced into the marketplace since the 1900s. I mean,
our bodies have to deal with all that stuff. And there's chemical reactions and detoxification, and they all require nutrients.
And we are also under a tremendous amount of psychological stress, even in society.
And magnesium, your body wastes magnesium when you're under psychological stress.
So there's so many things that are happening in our omega-3 fats.
We don't get those because we don't really eat wild food anymore.
Maybe some fish, but that's got mercury.
So there's all these problems that happen because of our nutritional environment. And so more than ever now, people need foundational nutritional support. I believe
that. And I say this not from a, you know, sort of a general opinion, but actually from
really hard scientific data. And they go, oh, well, all the vitamin studies, they show that
they don't prevent heart attacks, they don't prevent cancer, they don't do this, they don't
do that, or they may have side effects. And the truth is the studies are just all poorly designed.
I mean, it's like, think about Michael Jordan, arguably the best basketball player in history.
If you put him on a court by himself, he could not win a single game, right?
Against another team that had a full team.
Yeah, right.
So nutrients work as a team.
And if you don't have all of them, your biochemistry kind of gets gummed up
and it can actually cause worse problems.
So for example, they did this large study called the carrot study
where they gave smokers who were at high risk for lung cancer beta carotene
because it seemed like people ate fruits and vegetables
with lots of beta carotene actually did better. But when they actually gave
the beta carotene as a supplement, what happened was there was more cancer. Now, and the science
was like, oh, this is terrible. Supplements don't work. I'm like, one, this is a perfect example of
what Michael Pong calls nutritionism, which is reductionism in nutrients, where you basically
see, oh, it's maybe this single thing
and we're going to replace that.
It doesn't work like that.
Which is how they think about drugs.
Drugs, right.
So basically the CARAT study
gave high dose of beta carotene.
Now, if you actually understand basic biology
and how antioxidants work in the system,
they work as a team.
So if you give one of them,
the way they work is they donate an electron
to some damaged tissue or free radical, like an oxidized compound in the body. So an antioxidant
will actually help deal with oxidative stress or rusting in the body. But the way it does it is it
donates one of its electrons. Then it becomes a radical. So for example, vitamin C is a great
antioxidant, but it'll donate one of its electrons. And then it becomes an ascorbyl radical, which is highly dangerous.
But don't worry.
Then you got vitamin E to help take that electron from vitamin E and give it to the vitamin
C. And it becomes a tocopherol radical.
And then that has to be dealt with by all these systems like poic acid.
And that then has to be dealt with by glutathione.
So you've got a whole system.
If you don't have all the antioxidants and you don't have the final pathways of glutathione,
you're going to get in trouble. And so you're going to actually create more oxidative stress
and more damage if you just give a high dose of a single nutrient like that.
All to say that it's another reason why that even if we have a good idea about a cocktail that would
be supplemental, this just is another
reminder why the base foundation of your diet is so key because there could be cofactors and
coenzymes and other aspects that are all related to this that we can't even begin to understand.
So having a really incredible diet, even if you do choose to dabble into supplements here and there to be a
bonus, a supplemental to your diet is such a key reminder. It's key. And so, you know, I believe
everybody needs a good multivitamin, fish oil, vitamin D. Yeah. So let's divide this and let's
go through this. Instead of the three, let's divide this into like foundational items that
are there. And then let's get into really the topic of today's episode, which is kind of these
bonus ones that are really being highlighted for their specific role in longevity.
So take us through the supplemental foundational ones.
I mean, so basically everybody should be on a good multivitamin with the right forms of
nutrients in the right balance.
And when I say the right forms and bioavailable, because for example, you can go to the drug
store and buy magnesium oxide,
but it's the cheapest form of magnesium, but it's poorly absorbed.
Or you could buy folic acid, but maybe your genetics don't allow you
to convert it to the effective form of folic acid called methylfolate,
so you need to buy methylfolate.
So it's really important to know what your body needs.
But a basic good multivitamin from a company that focuses on therapeutic products that are mostly doctor
related companies, but you can still get these products. That's a good place to start. Then
fish oil, really important. And there's many different kinds of fish oil. There's, you know,
you kind of worry about where it comes from. Was it distilled? Does all the, are all the toxins and
mercury out of it? Is it oxidized? What'satoxins and mercury out of it is it oxidized
how what's it preserved with what kind of animal is it from like there's a whole bunch of questions
right but but like there's also also ways of processing that preserve a lot of the benefits
of fish oil like big bull's health has a product called dutch harbor omega just transparently we're
involved with big bull health it's my mentor jeffrey bland's company and uh and it's very
impressive he's basically found a process by which they extract the fish oil
in Alaska from wild salmon and other fish that preserves something that is really important
in fish oil called pro-isolvent mediators. So you can get EPA, DHA, which is fish oil.
But then also what's so amazing about eating fish and fish is that there's these compounds that have been recently discovered that are like the brake on your immune
system. So we have an accelerator on our immune system, brake on our immune system. So our immune
system, they're so overactive in inflammation. So these pro-isolvent mediators, which have been
extensively studied at Harvard, are amazing. And they're contained in this particular fish oil,
Dutch Harbor Omega, because it actually processes in a way that doesn't destroy it.
The third key supplement is, and by the way, like I said, 90 plus percent of people are
deficient in omega-3 fats.
So that's just a no brainer.
And there was a big study that came out last year showing that individuals who were at
the right omega index had an extra three to five years of their life
yeah no doubt no doubt so if you're talking about longevity even though it's foundational like this
is one of those things to really look at those these are called essential fatty acids that means
they're essential for life they're like a vitamin if you don't have them you're screwed and they
they're every cell membrane in your body is made out of them your brain is 60 made out of them
your skin your hair your, all your body functions.
It regulates inflammation, prostaglandins. I mean, it's just really, really important.
So it regulates metabolism, blood sugar. So it's really critical to have the right one.
The next one that I think in addition to malty and fish oil is vitamin D. 80% of us are deficient or insufficient in vitamin D. It's so important. And COVID has kind of highlighted the
consequences of this because when you look at the data around COVID, if you're low in vitamin D,
you're 70% more likely to end up in the hospital, on the ICU and die. If your vitamin D level is
higher, it's actually you're 97% protected from ending up in the hospital or dying.
And if your vitamin D level is over 50,
which is where I like to see it, nanograms per deciliter, there was zero deaths, zero deaths,
which is better than any vaccine out there. I think so. And people are sort of ignoring that
for the most part. But the data is very clear. So multi-official vitamin D. And then if I had to add
a couple others around the margins, it would be magnesium or really
magnesium-rich foods.
And then maybe a probiotic because our guts are also messed up.
So that's sort of the stack that I like to sit on with everything else.
And with the D, how important do you think it is, the K2?
And you always hear that conversation.
Yeah.
So you need vitamin D3, which is different than a lot of doctors prescribe.
And vitamin K2 is also a fat-soluble vitamin. It should be made by your gut bacteria.
It's often not because our guts are messed up, but it works in conjunction with vitamin D and
helps with the improvement in cardiovascular health, bone health. And it's actually also
an important supplement. So I often prescribe them combined.
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Pharmacy. Okay, Mark. So that's the foundational area of supplementation. Let's get into the next
one, which are these targeted supplements that are out there, again, built on top of incredible
lifestyle, foundational diet, sleep, movement, all the things you shared, community. Get into
some of the really interesting ones that are showing up now in the longevity space.
The bonus supplements.
Yeah. Before we do that, I just want to address a couple of things that we didn't touch on. We
talked about the general research around supplements, and I think it's confusing for
people because you look at these big studies and they often don't show a result. And it doesn't
mean that it's not effective or important. I don't want people to understand that because
we don't rely on just studies like that because
often they're poorly designed or they don't take into account the biology of the nutrients
or if I, for example, if I give vitamin E to a bunch of smoking, overweight, non-exercising,
junk food eating people, it's not going to do anything, right?
Right.
And what's the timeline of the study?
Yeah.
So are they looking at that?
It's complicated.
Yeah.
It's not going to replace a healthy diet and lifestyle.
The second is, you know, how does conventional medicine view supplements?
And I think this is a really important note because, you know, many times doctors will
say, oh, supplements, they just create expensive urine.
It's a waste of time.
You'll get everything you need from food.
And I'm like, well, gee, if that philosophy were true, then you shouldn't drink any water
because it just comes out as pee.
So why bother drinking any water?
Your body takes in what it needs and it lets go of the rest, which is exactly what it's
supposed to do.
The other thing is that in that closet, and this was shocking to me, Drew, at Cleveland
Clinic, which is arguably one of the best health um establishments in the world mayo and clinic cleveland clinic
like one and two um the doctors are very smart they're very well educated they're they're up on
the latest research and you know i thought they'd be more conservative and so we did a survey when
i got there of one who who was using supplements for themselves, who was recommending to their
patients, and what was the percentage. And I was just shocked. 70% of the doctors at Cleveland
Clinic were recommending supplements to their patient, whether it was an OB with a multivitamin
for prenatal, or whether it was an endocrine doctor for osteoporosis, or whether it was a
heart doctor for CoQ10 or folate
or fish oil. It was so prevalent and I was shocked. So I think if you go into a conference
and you ask doctors, who's actually supporting patients getting supplements? And very few will
rinse their hands. You say, how many of you are actually taking supplements? Most of the doctors
are. It's also funny that sometimes I come across physicians, again, well-intentioned and everything,
who would be so strong to recommend a prenatal, but then are like, oh no, the patient doesn't
need to take anything if they're not pregnant or trying to have a baby or whatever. It's like,
well, let's just think about that. You want a woman to be taking a prenatal vitamin.
And now there's actually companies that are out there that have prenatal
vitamins that are also for men because their sperm is a big part of that. We have a former
employee that started a company called WeNatal. So there's like supplements for the mom, supplements
for the dad and their process of trying to conceive. But anyways, going back to the mom.
So you want a mother to take a prenatal vitamin to help grow a healthy baby and a healthy baby
brain and take this thing and that, but then you're not recommending anything for her afterwards. That seems kind
of like a little crazy. Yeah, it's a bit crazy. So going to your question about what's happening
in the space of longevity, it's fascinating. I'm really deep in that science right now. And I think
the question is, what are you trying to achieve with supplements in the space of
longevity? What pathways are you activating? What are the important longevity switches in the body
and how do you regulate those? So I think aside from the foundational stuff, which has a lot to
do with extending life, you mentioned the fish oil study, vitamin D. I mean, there's just so much
data on this. That's really impressive. But in terms of specific thinking about which product supplements are effective for
longevity and aging, there's a number that really come to mind. And just to kind of back up a little
bit, and I'm going to get a little geeky here if it's okay, because this is a masterclass.
Please do.
There are a number of things called the hallmarks of aging, which are
these fundamental dysfunctions that happen as we age, if we age abnormally. So aging should be
considered a disease. It's not normal. The way we see aging in this culture is a sign of abnormal
aging. And we think it's normal because it pretty much happens to everybody, which they get
old disease and decrepit. If you're 65 years old, it's like you're going to have three or more chronic
illnesses.
Just how it goes, right?
But it's not inevitable.
And so one of the hallmarks of aging is as a dysfunction of these nutrient sensing pathways.
So we have exquisite systems in our biology that sense either abundance or scarcity.
Oh, there's too much of a food.
We want to start to build and grow and make stuff in our body. But if there's scarcity,
it activates all these repair and healing and general methods. And we need both. We need,
we need both a demolition team and we need a construction team to actually continue to renew
and rebuild our bodies. And a lot of these supplements that we're talking about are
working on some of these key pathways. So one of them is really important. It's called NAD. NAD, you've probably
heard about it. It's an important compound that's part of your cellular metabolism, helps produce
energy. But it turns out it has a lot broader effects. And one of the key nutrient-sensing
pathways is something called sirtuins. These compounds, these pathways were discovered in
1991 by Lenny Gouartet and his colleagues at MIT. And it was a real breakthrough because they were
able to stimulate the certain sirtuins in yeast models and mice models and extend life dramatically,
double it, sometimes even up to a thousand years equivalent in a worm or 120 or 140 in a human, how they were doing it with some of the
mice studies. So what turns out is NAD is a sirtuin activator. So when NAD levels are good,
which means you have energy, it turns on the sirtuins, which then creates a whole downstream
series of effects that creates longevity. So it sends out a massive DNA repair team, which is awesome because we get 100,000 hits to our
DNA every minute, basically from various insults from food, from oxidation from metabolizing food,
from environmental toxins, from all sorts of things. Second, it actually inhibits one of the
key hallmarks of aging, which is inflammation. And we talked a lot about
inflammation on the podcast, but it does so through a particularly important mechanism
that is one of the master inflammation switches in the body, which is called NF-kappa B or nuclear
factor kappa B. And essentially this is a transcription factor. Transcription factors
are what tell your gene what to transcribe. So how does your DNA know what to do? Well,
it's listening for messages all the time from signals from your body. And NF-CAPB is a signaling molecule
that tells your DNA to make more cytokines, to make more inflammation. So when you activate
sirtuins, it shuts that off. It also increases your metabolism, increases your insulin sensitivity,
which we've talked about a lot on the podcast. If you want to be healthy, you have to be insulin sensitive. So it's through a whole series of different mechanisms, NAD has multiple actions
through sirtuins in addition to just powering up cellular energy. And some of the studies from
David Sinclair are just mind boggling. He uses derivatives. So NR, nicotinamide riboside is
made into NMN, which is then made into NAD in the body. So this is
the normal consequence of like cellular reactions. So you can give NAD as a shot or as an IV, but
if you want to take it as a pill, you have to take it as NR or NMN. And David gave NMN to these mice.
Now, these old mice, now they have these mice treadmill, which I'm not a researcher, so I don't
really know about it, but they have these mice treadmill that have an upper limit because no mouse
has ever run more than two kilometers, like young, old, any mice, right?
And so they had this mouse treadmill, it was like two kilometers and then it would just
kind of turn off.
It was like overheat and it stopped.
And they gave this old mice NMN and the mouse ran three kilometers and broke the treadmill. So it's pretty amazing.
And even in some studies, it regulates all sorts of stuff like hormones and fertility.
In some studies, they've literally been able to reverse mouse pause. So take menopausal mice
and give them NMN and they start menstruating and get fertile again.
Wow.
It's really trippy. So that's just one example of one compound.
Another one I think that's really important is something that actually, and I think curcumin
or this product I think are really important, which is regulating inflammation through,
again, these very variety of effects.
But there's a compound called HTB, Himalayan Tartary Buckwheat derivative, that has like 132 phytochemicals, including quercetin and rutin, which quercetin also is a longevity supplement.
So it contains a lot of these things.
But it also contains a compound only found in this ancient grain, which isn't really a grain, it's a flower, called Himalayan Tartary Buckwheat, which has only recently been recultivated after thousands of years of being sort of out. And it goes in the Himalayas and it's called Tujoba. And it actually
is regulating some of the inflammatory systems that are involved in senescent cells and chip
cells. So as we age, some of our cells just get older and they don't really die. They're kind of
like zombie cells, but they're not just inert. They're actually
creating a whole inflammatory cascade. And then they're causing other cells to become
senescent zombie cells. It's terrible. So you get this kind of wave of inflammation.
And so this can help to kill that. And there's something called chip cells, which are
cells that are from the bone marrow, from damaged stem cells that produce white blood cell. And you get these funky white blood cells
in your body that are just generating tons of inflammation. So some of these compounds really
help to regulate this inflammatory senescent thing. So one of the hallmarks of aging is
cellular senescence, which means the aging of your cells. And how does that happen? These
zombie cells is essentially what happens.
And we can go into how they're created,
but it's really fascinating
how these natural plant compounds combat this.
And what's also exciting, Drew,
is there are so many other compounds,
in addition to just three,
that are super powerful,
like green tea extracts, epiglottic catechins,
resveratrol, you might've heard about.
Resveratrol was the thing
that was first sort of discovered,
which is from red wine, that helps to activate sirtuins to extend life by a third. So if you actually take resveratrol from red wine, you give it to mice, they'll live a
third longer, which is equivalent to humans being 120, right? Which is kind of cool. But then how
much resveratrol did they get? They got a lot. They got the equivalent of 1,500 bottles of red.
Well, they got the 1,500 bottles of red wine.
So don't try this at home, okay?
But what was interesting is that the resveratrol,
and this was fascinating and it's kind of wild.
These pathways, these conserved longevity pathways
that are really survival pathways,
when they're activated, they're so powerful
that they have so many beneficial effects
so even though the mice kept eating junk food and not exercising their metabolism got faster
their their exercise capacity increased what we call vo2 max they reversed their diabetes and
insulin resistance and high blood pressure and even while eating crap right
so i'm like wow what if you actually ate well and exercise and then use this as a booster
amazing so that's that's the and there's also incredible compounds that are
now looking at how we can actually help to extend life called fist fistine which is f-I-S-T-I-N, which is from strawberries.
It's a compound from strawberries, but it turns out to be an incredible longevity supplement.
So, fluorophane, which comes from broccoli. Broccoli sprouts are the highest concentration
of these. So, this is a hugely detoxifying molecule, anti-cancer. It improves glutathione.
It really helps with some of the key longevity pathways. So, I think, you know, you've got
these incredible compounds
and there's more, obviously.
There's compounds from persimmon,
there's compounds from lychees, there's berries,
there's compounds in Chinese medicine.
There's all these wonderful compounds
that actually help to activate these longevity pathways.
We were talking about AMPK and before,
but, you know, quercetin, resveratrol, catechins, curcumin,
all these things from the plant kingdom
all regulate these pathways. So do I think we should take three? Yeah,
there's probably a lot more that are going to be coming around the pike. And I think a basic
longevity stack of supplements would be NAD, HTB Rejuvenate, and I think vitamin D is up there for
sure. But, and I would like to sort of see a polyphenol blend,
like a polyphenol blend. And if I could put it all in a pill, I would put in catechins,
I'd put in resveratrol, I'd put in quercetin, I'd put in festine, I'd put in curcumin. I put
in a lot of these very important compounds that come from plants as a cocktail of various
phytochemicals that all have very different effects, but that's what I would do.
It's great.
I love it.
There's a lot of ones that you covered there, Mark.
Just a few questions on some of them individually.
So in the case of NAD, because you mentioned NAD, and then before that you have NMN and
NR.
So there's a few different supplements that are out on the market. You know, a lot of
different people who are involved with different one. I think you recently had like Tony Robbins
on the podcast and I think he has a new company that you're an advisor to. So which form do you
take and is there a difference between, you know, what you would recommend to most of your patients?
So Lenny Guarte from MIT has really focused in on NR, nicotinamide riboside.
And he sells it through his company he's involved with called Elysium.
And the product is called Basis.
And I think that's a legitimate, well-researched product.
David Sinclair thinks that NMN is a better precursor molecule to give and is studying
that extensively.
And not as widely available.
And there's sources in China,
but harder to get for now.
But I think his research is really coming along.
And third, you can do it, and those are oral,
third, you can do it as a sub-Q injection of pure NAD
or an intravenous drip of NAD.
Now, intravenous drip is hard,
but the sub-Q injection is just like a diabetic needle.
And I tend to use that one, but I also take the oral too.
Is that typically something like an IV drip?
So it's administered by like a nurse?
A doctor, yeah.
Yeah, so that'd be you going to like a wellness center or somewhere where they regularly do those things.
Yeah, but you could do sub-Q every day, which is basically a diabetic syringe.
You just do it yourself and you just buy the bottle, you dilute it.
And I use that on a regular basis. And I'm sort of experimenting because I want to see what if I
do all these things and I recheck my biological age, I'm going to get younger. So I'm using
myself as a guinea pig. But I'm doing things that are safe and I know are potentially effective and
the side effect profile is low and the cost isn't exorbitant. Yeah. So I would probably say for most
people, an easier thing would be either to supplement with like NAD as like a pill form or like NMN.
And, you know, if you Google a little bit.
Or NR.
Or NR.
Or NR or NMN.
I think NAD is harder.
It's not really available.
You probably don't want to be recommending that everybody's out there starts injecting
subcutaneously.
No, no, no.
No, but there's Truniogen.
There's Basis.
There's all these companies out there that are-
Yeah, there's a lot of really great companies.
Thorne Research has a whole bunch of-
So you believe in it strongly enough that you'd say like if somebody was serious and had a good foundation, that this is an area that they could explore.
Probably the number one thing I would say to get your NAD levels up.
And when my book comes out, Young Forever, in 2023 in February, you'll be able to understand more why I'm saying this, but it regulates some of the
key pathways for longevity that are so important. And as we age, our NADD levels drop. So restoring
those NADD levels restores so many of our cellular processes to a youthful phase.
So let's talk about resveratrol. And still, there's a lot of people that think like,
great, I'm going to get it from wine. And again, wine doesn't have as much resveratrol
as we would need to hit comparatively for the clinical trials and studies that are out there
on the research on resveratrol. So would you put supplemental resveratrol in your list of things?
Yes. I did mention it. So it's in part of like the, I would do a polyphenol cocktail.
Right.
And it would include resveratrol, curcumin, epigallactocatacan gallate
from green tea
and quercetin
and festine
and all these things
that are now being studied.
Because the beautiful thing
about these is they're,
you know,
if you don't like OD on them,
and I'm going to talk
about that in a minute,
and you get a reasonable dose,
they are pretty safe
and they're well-researched
and they're cost-effective.
And do we have enough data to say they're going to extend your life by a third?
No.
But do we know the mechanism of action?
Do we know how they work?
Do we know the biological effects of them in real time?
Yes.
I mean, it's hard to say, I'm going to give you, Drew, these supplements at 40 years old
and I'm going to wait 80 years and see if you get to 120.
It's like, it's a hard study to do. So we have to go by intermediate things. And so the hierarchy
is, you know, is there science? Is it safe? Is it cost effective? Now, a lot of these molecules are
not meant for us, right? They're plant molecules that the plant uses to defend themselves.
They're their own immune system, their defenses, right?
And they can be a little toxic in a way, right?
Because they are trying to deter pests
or they're trying to protect against UVA radiation
or they're trying to do something
that is protecting them from some harsh environment.
That's why this Himalayan buckwheat
has so many of these compounds
because it's grown in really harsh conditions
in the Himalayas.
And it turns out that there's this concept called xenohormesis. Xeno means foreign. Hormesis means a stress that makes you stronger. So exercise is hormetic. In other words, exercise will cause you
to tear muscles, to push yourself, but then you repair faster. Or hypoxia, short bursts of hypoxia of low oxygen states will actually cause your mitochondria
to kick in even more and you'll get a souped up energy system by that.
Or a cold plunge.
I just came back from Antarctica, we did a polar plunge and it was cold, jumping in the
South Pole with the icebergs floating
around.
But that activates brown fat, increases your metabolism, resets your autonomic nervous
system, has so many benefits.
Saunas, and I just did a sauna cold plunge this morning.
A sauna increases heat shock proteins, which helps refold proteins that are deformed, that
are a key part of the aging process.
This whole phenomenon of proteostasis, which is keeping our proteins properly folded so they can do their
right action. Well, there's a lot of insults that happen and that kind of gets screwed up, but
when you take a sauna, it helps to fix that. Or it activates your innate immune system to help
protect against infections or activate healing response in your body. So there's all these
hormetic therapies. So the plant compounds are kind of a little bit of a poison almost.
It's like a little dose is good, a little more maybe not good.
So it's kind of finding the Goldilocks level of all these things,
but they basically are little stresses to your system that make your body go,
oh, I better get my shit together and figure out what to do to stay safe.
And it activates various
pathways that are involved in repair, in healing, in reducing inflammation, increasing metabolism.
So your body's really smart. And I think, you know, I always say disease is your body's best
way of dealing with a bad set of circumstances. It's doing its best. So the beautiful thing that,
and this is really such a core principle of the foundational functional medicine is your body has an innate desire to be healthy.
Its default state is healthy.
It's not sick.
You know, Andrew Weil talked about this in Spontaneous Healing.
How do we activate our body's healing system?
I mean, you cut your skin.
You don't go, oh, I need you to close up and do this and recruit white blood cells and get stem cells
there and make new skin. Your body just knows what to do, right? And not just on your skin,
but all the way through. So the question is, how do you activate that? If you're nutritionally
deficient, if you have no zinc, if you're low in protein, if you're low in vitamin C and deficient,
your skin won't heal, right? Your skin won't heal because you don't have the raw materials.
You don't have the right messages.
And the same with all these other mechanisms.
We need the right ingredients.
And so this is really what's fascinating in the longevity research is we're now learning
about what are the ingredients that we need for longevity?
And what are the things that actually are really critical and essential?
And a lot of them are these compounds from plants.
And a lot of them are these things that our body naturally makes it diminish over time with age, but can be replenished and restored, restoring youthful
levels of function activity like the mouse that ran three kilometers and broke the treadmill.
So outside of people like piecemealing their own stack of all these things that you had
mentioned, are there any formulas or things that are out there on the market that are
like close or like validated that are kind of some of the things that you're talking about?
I'm still looking at it, to be honest with you, Drew. I kind of am very suspicious about what's
what. And I think a lot of products have window dressing or they're not the right forms or
it's not thoughtfully designed. There are a lot of companies that are thinking about doing this.
So you can buy individual products of these. You can buy cocktails. Thorne has a lot of these.
Designs for Health has a lot of these.
There are companies that are looking at the longevity space and starting to design
products that provide a lot of the things that we need.
Yeah. And as more of them come on the market, I'm sure we'll talk about them over here,
but you got to probably do a little bit of investigation, but at least some of the basics
that you've covered on the foundation piece, there's plenty of companies that make really
good quality ones there. And there's plenty of companies that make really good quality NAD, NMR, NMN, and NR.
Thorne does have a really interesting product called Resveracel that has a few of the ingredients
that you mentioned, but the dosages are a little low.
Yeah.
It's resveratrol and phytostilbene and nicotinamide, riboside, NR.
And it's fine.
Like it's a great cocktail.
I recommend it.
But I think there's more.
There's more. Yeah. For sure. And the doses matter. You're like, you probably need like a,
you know, more of stuff like a thousand milligrams and they might give you 500 or
a hundred or 200, you know, you need the right dose. Yeah. And of course, if you're working
with a good practitioner, they can help you piece this together. And then who knows, maybe one day
you'll come out with something so that you'll make my life easier. And I'll just take that.
Yeah. I'm for very, very selfish reasons, Drew. i want to do it because i don't want to be taking 15 bottles of
pills i want everything in one one bottle so mark this is the part of the interview where we're
going to go into some questions i feel like you put in a good done yeah this is so much fun i'm
just getting started okay fine and then go off on any tangent that you want to this is a really
good opportunity for us to go into questions and they're right in alignment with some things you've
been chatting about so one of our uh dr hyman plus community members which is your online
membership community um people can go to your website and learn more about that they ask what
is the best vitamin for brain health that you would add into your longevity stack so all these
things that you've been mentioning you know is there anything that people are really worried i
mean the scariest diseases on the planet are things like dementia and alzheimer's yeah i mean it's do you need anything about a separate
supplements just for that or does all this stuff work for those things too i mean there's three
things that are come to mind that are the most important which is a you know b complex that
regulates methylation which is b6 folate b12 and and they're critically essential for healthy brain
function the second is fish oil we talked about,
60% of your brain is fish oil and vitamin D. So if you get a good multivitamin and a vitamin D
and fish oil, you're covering those bases. That's really important. And then if you really want to
get fancy, you can start with more mitochondrial support because your brain has more mitochondria
than any other organ. I think your heart and brain
are more or less the same. The brain actually has more. Every cell is filled with these energy
producing factories and they need a lot of help. And so mitochondrial nutrients are a key part of
longevity, including lipoic acid, carnitine,utathione. I heard recently that melatonin is actually one of the most potent mitochondrial nutrients.
Yeah.
It turns out melatonin is very helpful for aging as well and can regulate inflammation.
And it's pretty interesting.
I think, you know, we sort of think of melatonin for sleep, but actually it may be regulating
a lot of other
really important functions that have to do with longevity. I would love to, you know,
we're not affiliated with them, but there's a product that I've been taking and I just love
to give a shout out because I've tried so many different things. It's called erbitonin. So it's
plant-based melatonin and they have two different versions. They have a 0.3 milligrams, which is
great for like longevity. And a lot of people, a lot of practitioners were talking about including melatonin in people's stack when it came to helping support their
immune system, especially with COVID. For sure.
And then there is another one that they make that's three milligrams of plant-based melatonin
instead of the synthetic melatonin. And that was for people who struggle with jet lag or
sleeplessness or other stuff. And it's a really great company that's out there. You can Google
it and probably find it on Amazon and other places. And again, no affiliation with them.
Amazing. I mean, it basically just helps with inflammation. Like you said, it can put a break
on inflammation. It can do a lot of really important things with cancer and maybe reduce
risk of cancer and other things. So this next question, again,
from our Dr. Hammer Plus community is around the topic of biomarkers and how do you measure
your progress? So the audience member asks, are there easily measurable biomarkers that can be
assessed for whether these longevity supplements are doing anything and if you're heading in the
right direction in the first place? So what are some of the things that you're using to look at
all aspects of your life when it comes to knowing are you heading in the right direction?
I mean, I think it's complex, Drew.
I think there's both the more traditional testing we do
and there's some innovative testing around biological age that's happening.
It's really kind of merging from the science.
So the typical things that are really important to look at are the things that look at what is your nutritional state.
We were just talking to InsideTracker, which uses your regular lab tests, but actually interprets them in a different way.
So look at your 43 different biomarkers that are pretty available on regular blood tests, like your vitamin D or your homocysteine or C-reactive protein or your lipid levels, cholesterol, blood sugar, stuff that's pretty commonly done.
I mean, some of them, not all of them.
And then they analyze that and they say, okay, where are you off from the ideal? Like, where are you off from
optimum? Because your homocysteine, which is a measure of your BOLI B12, B6, the lab says 14 is
good. But ideally it should be six to eight. If your level's 14 or over, your risk of dementia
goes up by 50%. So you don't want to go on the regular lab values.
So there's a lot of those conventional tests, which are great.
Then there's, you know, if I had like two tests probably to actually look at,
one would be a glucose tolerance test with insulin.
It's an old test.
Doctors don't measure it properly.
They use glucose tolerance tests for seeing if you're diabetic or for women who are pregnant. They don't do it with the average patient.
And they certainly don't measure insulin fasting or one and two hours after, which is probably the most important medical test you could do to figure out how you're aging.
Fasting insulin.
Fasting and-
With also a glucose tolerance test.
So you basically drink the equivalent of two Coca-Colas of glucose.
Yeah.
First you take your blood sugar and you take your insulin then you drink two coca-colas of glucose and then you measure your
blood sugar insulin an hour later and two hours later and if your insulin is high that is driving
the longevity pathways in the wrong direction unnecessary aging inflammation everything's
diabetes weight gain heart disease inflammation, all the things. Diabetes, weight gain, heart disease, cancer, dementia,
all the downstream consequences
and accelerating all of the hallmarks of aging.
So it's really bad.
So that's a really important test.
The other-
And just one clarification on that.
Fasting insulin, very cheap test.
I think it costs like anywhere from like $13.
You can go to your regular doctor and ask them for that, including your medical work.
If you're going to go to your doctor and ask them for a glucose tolerance test, you probably
want to find somebody that's familiar and has maybe...
They don't know how to interpret it.
I've had somebody, I say, go do this with your doctor.
I don't want to do it.
I don't know how to interpret it.
So then do you have to look for an...
That's why I say I'm not going to listen to your heart because I don't know how to listen
to your heart sound.
So it's irrelevant.
Well, at least they're honest. Like find out, figure it out. You're a doctor. So then how do you have to look for an... I was like saying, I'm not going to listen to your heart because I don't know how to listen to your heart sound. So it's irrelevant. Well, at least they're honest.
Like find out, figure it out.
You're a doctor.
So then how do you navigate?
If you're talking about like literally this is one of fasting insulin, that's pretty
straightforward.
And again, we've written a bunch of newsletters on this topic.
So we have the updated recommendation for what the optimal ranges are.
But again, you want people to be under five for their fasting insulin, right?
And then ideally even maybe somewhere between
three and four. Yeah. I mean, my level when I test is often less than two fasting. I mean,
you just don't want to have high insulin because it's just, in your resting state,
it prevents all the longevity pathways from being on. If your insulin is high,
your longevity pathways are shut off. Totally. So then how would somebody navigate if they want
to go and get this glucose tolerance
test?
Is it that, okay, you just have to get lucky and call and ask me around?
Or do you go to an integrative doctor?
I mean, you go to a functional medicine doctor, an integrative medicine doctor.
There are now companies that you can order stuff on your own.
I'm involved as a medical director of a company that's launching soon called Function Health,
which is a company that you can get $15,000 for the test for $1,000,
all the things that are- Will they do this glucose test?
Yes. So all the tests that, and the advisor and medical director, so I've determined what the
tests are, what the interpretations are, not just what the tests are. Because if you go,
oh, your interpretation of homocysteine is 14, that's okay. Not okay, right? If your insulin's
15, which it says on a lab test, that's not okay.
It should be less than 10, ideally less than five. So all that is possible. And I think we're
going to be democratizing lab tests and patients' own ability to self-assess and treat themselves
in ways that are safe. And also when to know to go to the doctor, because not everybody can do
everything on their own. Can I ask one more question about the glucose tolerance test?
Because I know people are going to be curious about this and I'm actually curious because
I've never done that test before. So when you're going and you're doing this glucose tolerance test,
you have to be at the clinic because you have to take a before and after. So you're hanging
out there for a little bit. So ask around, talk to an integrative doctor, talk to a functional medicine doctor,
look for somebody open-minded.
And typically speaking, because a lot of...
Would OBGYN be more likely to be knowing how to navigate because they're working with women
with gestational diabetes?
I mean, they might, but they don't measure insulin and they don't know how to interpret
insulin.
Okay, got it.
So this is really looking for somebody who's in the know.
Yeah.
And I've talked about this before,
but I had a patient that, you know, 25 years ago,
they just kind of turned the lights on for me about this
because she was an apple.
We've talked about her before.
And she really big, you know, round tummy, skinny arms and legs.
And I got, this woman is diabetic or pre-diabetic
or she's in trouble, right?
And I measured her blood sugar, perfect.
And then I gave her glucose tolerance test, blood sugar, absolutely perfect. Like not even a little
bit high, even after having two Coca-Colas. Her insulin on the other hand was off the chart
because her insulin was trying to keep her blood sugar down. And what happens is your insulin keeps
going up and up and up to try to control your
blood sugar until your pancreas gets so tired that you can't manage that anymore. And then
you become more insulin resistant at the cell level, and then your blood sugar starts to go up.
But rising blood sugar is a very late stage phenomena. By the time your blood sugar goes up,
you're way down the road of pre-diabetic and metabolic bad health. The first step is your
two-hour insulin goes up. Then your fasting insulin goes up. Then your two-hour sugar goes up. Then your fasting
sugar goes up. So it's a fourth thing that happens in the whole process. And that's the only thing,
we're looking so far down the stream, we need to go upstream. So that's one test. The other is a
body composition, which is a little hard to get, but look at where the fat and muscle isn't
distributed in your body. If you have a lot of visceral belly fat, that is the number one driver of aging. So you got to get rid of that. And that's
sugar and starch. That's basically what I mean. A lot of gyms have these scanners. I think they're
called like- They're a DEXA scanner. They have body composition scanners that look at your total
body composition, which is looking at just your total body, which aren't as accurate. You want
to know what the compartments are. So for example, if you have strong arms and legs, but all the fats in your belly, you might get an average that looks okay,
but it's not okay, right? So if somebody wanted to do that test, where would they go?
You'd have to go to, it's like the same test that doctors use to check for osteoporosis. It's a
different software program and it's called dual energy x-ray absorbed geometry or DEXA. And
essentially it's a way for
very very low radiation less than flying across the country seeing what your bone density is and
your body composition is and and and where the fat is is important and then then then then there's a
few other things and obviously you want to check your your lipids and your vitamin d and all the
homocysteine all that stuff inflammation markers but But there's a whole new tranche of testing that's emerging that's helping us really look at the aging process
itself. And the two that are really important is, well, there's maybe two, three, four.
It turns out there's something called your biological clock. And Stephen Horvath discovered that the patterns of little tags on your DNA in the epigenome,
the epigenome is basically the control mechanism that controls which genes get read.
So your genes are like the piano keys.
Your epigenome is like the piano player.
They can play jazz, rock, blues, whatever, classical, just with 88 keys.
So in the same way, the epigenome determines which genes are silenced, which genes are
turned on.
And so it turns out that this pattern of DNA methylation, we call it, these epigenetic
tags, like bookmarks in your book of life, determined, when you look at them in the ways
he looked at them, actually determine your biological age.
So I just did a test to look at my DNA methylation.
I'm 62, but biologically I'm 43.
So my biological age is-
So you and I are almost the same age.
Almost the same age.
I'm going to get younger than you soon, so watch out.
So I'm working to get to 25.
I'm still 39, so.
And then I did my telomeres years ago when I was 58 and they were 39. So I'm about 20
years younger biologically than I am chronologically. And then there's telomere testing,
which I know there's controversy about, but your telomeres are a good indicator of your biological
age. And then there's other testers who are not directly measuring your biological age,
but are measuring things that are so important that indicate you're aging fast around inflammation.
And there's a guy at Stanford, David Furman, who's looked at thousands and thousands of
blood analytes, compounds.
When you go to the doctor, they do like 20 tests, 30 tests, 50 tests, 100 tests.
He'll get thousands.
You've got tens of thousands of molecules floating around your blood that most of which
we just ignore.
We don't check for.
And he's being agnostically just looking for what was the correlations between these abnormal
inflammatory markers and chronic disease and death.
And it was this huge AI machine learning, very sophisticated science technology.
But at the end of the day, it's like there's these four inflammation tests that are extremely
predictive of your rate of aging and disease.
And so you can actually check it and then intervene and then check it again and see
what's happening. So it's called iAge and it's going to be out probably in the next few months.
And these are all emerging. And then there's tests that look for cancer, which is kind of
an interesting thing because you can have latent cancers that are out there that you might not
notice. And before you kind of had to wait till you had a subtle tumor, had a symptom. I mean,
there's screening tests for colonoscopy, pap tests, breast mammograms, but it's pretty,
pretty bad in terms of the rest of the cancers for screening. I mean, my father died of lung
cancer. My sister died of, she had non-hepatitis and she died of bile duct cancer. So it's really
hard to get those early. Turns out that now there's something called a liquid biopsy. What does that mean? Rather than have to take a tissue
sample with a knife, right? You literally just get a blood sample and you can find the proteins
from over 50 different cancers in your blood if they're there. So if you have some really small
cancer, I mean, a solid tumor is typically going to be going for 20 or 30 years before you can see it on an MRI. Like that's, right?
But with this test, you can actually pick up early signs of cancer and then 90 to 95% of
cancers that picked up earlier cured. So it's a way of doing sort of a, it's not really a longevity
test, but it's a way of actually hacking a little bit of longevity so you don't end up getting something that
you wouldn't be able to find otherwise.
And I know we covered a lot of different things, but just a couple of takeaways from that,
from what you shared is, you know, for those that are not getting their fasting insulin
on their normal metabolic health labs that come back, that's like one test that's like
a no brainer.
No brainer.
That's a no brainer.
No brainer. that come back. That's like one test that's like a no-brainer. That's a no-brainer. The glucose
tolerance test at the two-hour level with the insulin response, that might be a little bit
more tricky. It might be harder to navigate. But if there's doctors that are out there that are
doing this test regularly, reach out to us and we'll maybe put up a little website to make a
listing of people that can follow that area. Yeah. And there's a surrogate test for insulin
resistance that I really like, which is a special kind of cholesterol test, which you can
get at LabCorp. You can get at Quest. It's not very expensive. It's really the 21st century
cholesterol test and most doctors still don't do it. The one from LabCorp is called NMR,
which essentially is put your cholesterol in an MRI machine and sees the particle number and the
size and looks at all your triglycerides and your HDL and the sizes.
And that gives you an indirect indication
of insulin resistance.
Because if your particles are small,
you have a lot of particles.
If your triglycerides are small,
if your HDLs,
if your triglycerides are large,
but your HDL and LDL is small,
you know there's a problem.
And it gives you an insulin resistance score
out of zero to 100.
Like me, it's helpful.
And the one from Quest is called Cardio IQ,
which is very similar.
Yeah.
Especially important for those people.
We have a newsletter coming out on the topic of LDL.
If you think that you eat like a really clean diet and your HDL is going to be a little
higher and people have natural variation with sometimes their LDL and your doctor sometimes
gets worried and they're like wanting to put you on a statin.
But in that instance, that'd be a good opportunity for somebody if they want to go deeper to find somebody who will run
one of these tests on you so that you can know, is that higher LDL really a problem?
Exactly.
Or is it okay for you?
I mean, honestly, Drew, this should just be standard of care at this point. There's no,
it's been around forever. The data is so clear on this. There's no ambiguity. I mean,
it's just doctors have habits. Their lab test requisitions have the same thing on its head for 20 years. They don't change it. I i mean it's just doctors have habits their lab test requisitions have the same
thing on its head for 20 years they don't change it i mean it's and partially it's an interpretation
thing if you're not as familiar with yes that test yes you know my uh but that's like that's
like the worst rationale i ever hear from doctors like well i don't know how to interpret it well
learn you're you've got to keep learning as a doctor it's not just what you learn in residency
things change like i'm constantly learning. I mean, I spent six,
eight hours yesterday just studying scientific papers and learning all kinds of new stuff that
is certainly new, not stuff that I ever heard about in medical school. And it's really new
discoveries since I graduated. It's like science and medicine are not static and and unfortunately you know
doctors it takes over 17 years to get what discovered in science into practice on average
uh and and often people get in their little ruts and habits and totally so much compassion for them
especially after a crazy year of covid and trying to help all these patients and everything that's
there but shout out to all the doctors that listen and yeah and the other thing is work with your doctor in a way that you can find a colleague
who's going to collaborate with you, right? And be a partner as opposed to the guy in the white
code who tells you what to do and doesn't give you a lab test results.
Right. Totally. One more thing about that and testing, and again, how this came up is that
somebody from the Dr. Hyman Plus community was asking, how can you measure the progress? Would
you also throw in how important do you think it is for people to get like a nutritional
screening? And are there a couple of labs that you want to shout out that people could look
at as possible? I mean, honestly, I do most of my nutritional testing through LabCorp or Quest.
You do. So these advanced ones that are looking at all the deeper panels and advanced nutrient
testing. Yeah. I mean, my favorite is from Genova called the ION panel, Individual Optimized Nutritional
Panel. And for me, and they were creating some learning curve to learn how to interpret this,
right? I look at all the amino acids. I look at all the fatty acids so I can tell someone's
omega-3 deficient. So I'm not guessing. I look at all the antioxidant levels. I look at oxidative
stress levels. I look at vitamin D levels in this test. I look at magnesium and all the mineral
levels. I look at heavy metals. I look at something called organic acids, which is basically urine
tests that looks at all these metabolites of different pathways that relate to nutrients.
So you can tell if you're deficient in carnitine or B2 or CoQ10, or if you have B vitamin issues,
or you're low in biotin, or you're have B vitamin issues or you're low in biotin or
you're low in magnesium or you're low in glutathione. And I can tell a lot from looking
at these different tests. So that's my go-to. But I think for the average person, do an omega check
from your omega. This is all through regular labs and your regular doctor. Omega check test,
which is omega-3s and all the fatty acids. Get your 25-hydroxyvitamin D3. That's vitamin D test.
Check your homocysteine level, which relates to folium B12. Check your methylonic acid,
a more sensitive indicator of B12. Doctors just check B12. They don't check this.
Check your red cell magnesium if you want to see if you're low in magnesium, because typical serum
magnesium is really a very poor indicator, and even red cell is not as good. But you can get a
good idea of what's going on there. So those are just foundational things that you can easily,
you can do plasma zinc levels, you can do iron levels in your blood, and you can do ferritin
levels. So you can do a lot of the common nutritional factors. You can test easily
through regular lab tests. It's not expensive. Yeah. Just got to ask your doctor to run those.
This is a really great question. What should I
take if I'm on a budget? Tell me what I should absolutely not sacrifice. And I think that
one of the things that that just brings up is that, look, if you're really on a budget,
sticking to the foundations of the things that are the normal things that you do,
that's going to be the one of the people. There's so many people that don't even get that right.
There's so many people that don't work out on the basis that they need to work out to support muscle health and avoid muscle loss as they get older. There's some people
that don't get the sleep that they need. So if you're truly on a budget, which supplements often
are a splurge that are there, focus on the basics. What else do you want to say about that?
I mean, think about it. Exercise is the poor man's NAD. Why? Because exercise works through
activating sirtuins, which are these master regulators of longevity and metabolism and insulin resistance
and DNA repair and inflammation control, right? So just by exercising, you're activating this
whole cascade of longevity effects without taking NAD, right? So there's a lot of ways to do it.
Dietary restriction, right? Basically time-restricted eating.
Eating within an eight to 10-hour window.
14-hour, 16-hour fast every day activates the same pathways and more.
Hot and cold exposure, which you've talked about and you've done a bunch of classes on.
You can take a hot bath and a cold shower, or go in a cold bath.
These don't have to be expensive.
And these are things that are available to all of us.
Just focusing on your diet and the quality of your diet is hugely important.
And yes, it can be expensive if you want to eat only regenerative, organic, grass-fed,
blah, blah, blah.
But if you focus on just eating real whole foods alone and increasing your plant intake,
even if it's not the greatest soil, even if it's still good. And focusing on a
phytochemically rich diet is super important. Focusing on a diet that's rich in the right
amino acids and the right types of carbohydrate and the right types of fat. So diet is hugely
important. I've written about that with a vegan diet. And then if you want the extra, extra,
I think there's a lot of data on this i mean first of all the cost
benefit of what you're going to save in terms of your good health and lack of having to deal and
pay for disease later is important to consider right so you're not just it's like why do you
change the oil in your car so your engine doesn't blow up right you don't want to pay for the for a
whole new engine so you put the oil in your car every every whatever 10 or 50 000 or 30 000 miles so in the same way
um there there are some basic supplements that don't cost a lot that that are on the 80 20 rule
way more maybe like the 95 5 um so multi fish show vitamin d that really can be had for pennies a day
yeah pennies a day uh Yeah. Pennies a day.
And you think about what you spend money on,
it's one cup of coffee at Starbucks is probably a week worth of supplements, right?
So I think it's just look at your priorities,
look at what you spend your money.
There's a really wonderful book I read when I was younger
that really influenced my thinking called
Your Money or Your Life.
And it's really about like really quantifying the work and the energy it takes to make money and the hours you spend
with the value you get when you spend it, right? So how are you spending your money? It doesn't
equate to your values. If you care about health, if you care about, but if you're spending, you
know, tons of money on, I don't know, like, you know, drinking tons of alcohol or wine. Maybe that's not your best
strategy, right? Or maybe you're spending tons of money on video games or I don't know, whatever.
Like, where do you put your time and your money and your value? So we always can look at, even if
we don't make that much money, we can look at how do we spend our money? Where is the value creation
in our lives and how do we be more strategic about it? Here's another great question that we have,
which is somebody asking, I take a lot of supplements and I'm a little bit worried about,
you know, can one impact the other, the timing of these? And I know it's a big picture question,
but any resources or places that you would guide people to who are concerned about that,
if they're taking a lot of supplements and you know does one
counteract another does this yeah i love this question i love i love this question i mean first
of all first of all um do you have any idea the amount of compounds medicinal compounds and
nutrients in an average meal that's healthy like not your your processed food, but like I ate last night, I had mushrooms,
garlic, bok choy, grass-fed steak, and a Japanese sweet potato, which was a cornucopia of compounds
that are extremely active biologically in my body. And I could worry about it and go through it,
but essentially you're eating like tons and tons and tons of stuff. So your body is so smart. It knows what to do. Now, there's certain things you
shouldn't do together, right? If you're taking charcoal capsules because you have gas or because
you're taking it for some mold treatment, that can absorb all the nutrients. So you don't want
to take them together. And there's certain things you need to take on an empty stomach to do better.
Certain things you need to take with food to do better. Like, for example, the fat-soluble vitamins, vitamin K, D, E, vitamin E, they require fat
to be absorbed.
So you need to have it with a meal.
But my view is, when is the right time to take supplements?
When you remember.
And what do I do personally? I just take mine when I
take, you know, probably a handful of stuff every morning. And I might take some stuff later in the,
in the day too. But I, I try, I don't know. I'm always worried about when and what, no,
I don't. I just like, my body knows what to do. It's going to handle it all. They don't counteract
each other for the most part. Right. And if you're on prescription medications, obviously there might be some considerations that
you have to think about. That's important, Drew, because there's two things. Doctors always talk
about, oh, don't take this supplement. Don't take fish oil if you're on Coumadin. Don't take
vitamin E if you're on blood thinner, right? Because they're talking about nutrient-drug
interactions. But what about drug-nutrient interactions?
And a lot of drugs deplete nutrients, right?
So you take a diuretic for blood pressure, it caused you to lose magnesium.
Well, what's the cause of low blood pressure?
High blood pressure, low magnesium.
Or they say, you know, take this acid-blocking pill because you got heartburn.
Well, that blocks the absorption of B12 and zinc and magnesium and calcium leads to osteoporosis
and all kinds of problems, right?
So it leads to depression and B12 deficiency and cognitive impairment and neuropathy.
And so, yes, the drugs often interfere with your nutrition.
So it's not just the one way around.
It's both ways.
Yeah, there was a really innovative company.
I forgot their name that was working on trying
to address this for some of the most common drugs.
They reached over to you on email, I forgot their name, but we'll put them in the show
notes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Basically, it's a company that's actually focused on the science of how to mitigate
the effects of drugs.
So example, if you take a statin for cholesterol, it blocks the enzyme that makes CoQ10.
CoQ10 is necessary for your mitochondrial
function for energy. All the things we've been talking about around longevity switches all have
to do with the mitochondria. So you're kind of gumming up your mitochondria and you can't
produce energy, which is why your muscles hurt. It's like after running up a mountain,
your muscles hurt. Why? Because you just depleted all the energy in your muscles,
right? But when your muscles hurt without exercising because of
a drug, it's because you're depleting the energy in the cell with a drug that blocks a key compound,
CoQ10, that is necessary to make energy, right? And I could just go on all day about examples,
but you get the idea. All right, Mark, we have a few more minutes here. Let's try to do a rapid
fire. I don't know if that's possible, but metformin was in the news recently and somebody
here is asking about that because they're saying, what about metformin for longevity?
Yes.
And have you seen some of the new stuff that was there?
Yes, absolutely. In fact, yesterday I was literally working on this part of my book around
the effects of metformin. And again, earlier I talked about these nutrient sensing pathways
that regulate our ability to actually build and grow new tissue or to clean up and recycle and get old parts out.
So you need both of those. You need the demolition crew and the construction crew.
Well, metformin acts on one of these nutrient-sensitive pathways called AMPK,
and it turns it on, which helps improve blood sugar control, but has all these other effects
of AMPK. AMPK inhibits mTOR, which is good because it
increases autophagy, so cellular cleanup. It activates sirtuins, which then improves DNA
repair and inflammation. And so there's all these wonderful benefits of activating AMPK,
right? And metformin does that, but is that the best way, the only way? Well, it's again,
looking for the silver bullet. I think there's
a lot of ways to activate MPK just by time-restricted eating, for example. Simple.
And we should really pay attention to the science of actually how we can regulate
these pathways without necessarily medication. Now, that's not to say that there might not be
a use for metformin, that it might not be okay, but it actually has side effects. It's not completely side effect free. It's generally
well tolerated. It's very cheap. There's all these new class of drugs also being developed
called senolytics that help with the senescent cells, the zombie cells. There's drugs called
rapalogs, which are imitating rapamycin, an ancient compound found in Rapa Nui on Easter Island that actually inhibits this pathway or silences mTOR, which allows your body to clean up all the garbage
through this recycling process called autophagy. So there's all these ways to do this. And I think
there's going to be drugs that are going to be part of the longevity suite of treatments. But I
think the basic foundational stuff of lifestyle and the right supplements can get you probably 90% of the way there
Yeah, and when I was saying metformin was in the news
I haven't a chance to drill down into this study
But you know headlines from CNN men's use of diabetic drug just before conception is linked to 40% increase in birth defects
Was on metformin. Yeah, specifically so more birth defects taking the drug. What's that taking the drug taking the drug?
Yeah, exactly birth defects taking the drug. So there's a lot that we don't know.
Every prescription medication has to be sort of drilled into and is going to have other aspects.
So we just need to look at that. And we have to look at also naturally when we're doing a lot of
these studies that are there, the biggest, I actually wrote a newsletter on this. We'll link
it to the show notes, but the biggest study showing compliance and results for diabetes,
like the largest trial that was done, publicly funded trial, not funded by the drug companies.
It looked at metformin versus like placebo versus people who just had like really strong coaching
and were given lifestyle recommendations and exercise and like taught how to cook.
And the group that did the best was the group that wasn't on anything at all.
So you never really think about drug companies don't necessarily do trials against compared
to what.
Compared to what?
There's always great research around metformin and that's a big reason why it's a darling
drug in the longevity industry.
If you're including a lot of other lifestyle basics, you may not necessarily need it and
you can hedge against the risk by not taking it.
And here's the thing, Drew, that people need to understand is that these pathways that
these drugs act on are not drug receptor pathways.
There are bodies listening, basically like a satellite dish, listening to the communications
from our lifestyle and our environment.
And so you can activate all
these pathways through things that have activated them for hundreds of thousands of years. The
phytochemicals in food, exercise, restricting calories for periods of time. All these things
that our bodies naturally did as part of evolution, we're so adapted to and it's beautiful.
It's like, so that's what I'm really interested in.
How do we teach people these fundamental pathways
so they can learn how to regulate them
through the most natural and often cheapest pathways?
Two more questions here and then we'll wrap up.
Any overrated supplements,
just something that you wanna get a chance to talk,
it's maybe getting a lot of attention
or like people put a lot of interest in it,
but it's like, you know, maybe we should hold back a little bit in our exploration.
Is there anything that you feel like people are either overusing or putting too much weight in?
Great question. I've never really thought of that.
Actually, anytime marketing gets involved, you know, there's always somebody that's out there
that wants to talk about this. Yeah. If everybody's promising this is a fountain
of youth, there is no. There is no fountain. There's dozens, not only dozens, there's
hundreds of different pathways, mechanisms, and systems that all have to be functioning,
and they require a broader way of intervention. It's not going to be like a longevity pill.
That's it. So there's a lot of this stuff. And the same with supplements. There's no perfect
pill or thing that's going to work.
I think if there's anything that in my mind,
and I'm still agnostic,
but based on everything I know,
I think metformin probably works,
but I think other things will work better
that we can do that are non-pharmacological.
On the topic of LDL,
this is one from our live audience right now
from the Dr. Hyman Plus community.
Are there any supplements that can help
with lowering cholesterol,
specifically the small particle LDL?
And I guess this also just comes back to,
do you need a supplement for that
or is lifestyle going to make a much better change?
If you have really small particles,
you could take anything in the world, if you're not
going to change your diet and get rid of starch and sugar, it's not going to get fixed, right?
I mean, you know, you can take, you know, tons of niacin as a drug, you can take statins, you can
take the Repatha drugs, the PCKS9 inhibitors, that's going to help. But the reason your particles are small is because you
have prediabetes. So fix the prediabetes and reverse it with lifestyle and exercise. It's
going to work way better. Minimize sugar, refine grains. Those are going to be the biggest
contributors to- Yeah, 10-day detox diet and exercise, and you'll be amazed what happens.
Yeah. As somebody who had, even though I thought I was
really looking at like the sugar in my diet and the included sugar, the amount of prior to wearing
like a continuous glucose monitor, the amount of, you know, oat milk or almond milk, right? Liquid
calories. And also the quantity of, I used to have like – I love sweet potatoes, but like I used to literally base like an entire meal on like a bowl of sweet potatoes on its own.
And again, nothing wrong with having sweet potatoes and those other things, but there are certain vegetables in high quantities that essentially it's like eating a lot of sugar, right?
Exactly, yeah.
And I was doing a lot of – because this was the trend of a lot of like the flours that are made out of tapioca, cassava, cereal.
I was eating a clean diet, but it was a clean diet of packaged foods.
And my LDL, small particle size, shot up.
As soon as I cut those things out, it started to radically come down.
A friend of mine found this like healthy vegetable snacks and she was showing me this thing.
And I was like, is this healthy?
And I'm like, let me look at it.
And it's like, oh, it's tapioca and cassava.
These are fine, but they're super starchy and it's going to high glycemic.
It's going to drive up your sugar.
One other thing on the topic of LDL, you recently had Max on your podcast, a mutual friend of
ours, Max Lugavere.
Love him.
Love Max.
He has a little hack that he put out there.
Now, I don't know if it affects small particle size LDL,
but he reduced his LDL by 33% by using,
switching from a French press to using now a paper filter,
like an unbleached paper filter,
because the paper filter removes out cafe stall.
And cafe stall is one of the compounds inside of coffee.
Specifically,
you get it from French press if you're making it that way.
And if you're not using like a filter, that has a dramatic effect on your LDL levels.
And there's tons of scientific research around this.
Like I went through all the papers of the day with our writer, Taylor, and it's pretty mind-blowing.
So you can't use the gold filters they have now.
You got to use paper it seems to be that paper filter in particular yeah uh is the thing that ended up working yeah um i don't know
about the mesh filters if they're too porous yeah it's unfortunate because you know paper is
right but you can find unbleached paper unbleached bamboo paper filters and if you go on amazon you
go to your natural health food store you can find uh unbleached right because filters. And if you go on Amazon or you go to your natural health food store, you can find unbleached, right? Because a lot of those paper filters have toxins inside
them, other stuff. So there's a lot of eco-friendly and cleaner paper filters. So we have a whole
article coming out about that. So we can include that inside the show notes. Mark, this has been
fantastic. I literally have probably like another 37 questions that we could go through.
And I probably have 37 answers that would each take an hour.
I know, I know.
I know.
I'm sorry.
I get carried away.
I hope I didn't bore people with my science geekiness.
But I'm really deep in this stuff now, Drew.
And it's just so fascinating.
I was sort of sharing with a friend that it's sort of like looking into the mind of God.
You know, how do we work?
How are we designed?
How do we play with that design in order to create health?
It's just so fascinating.
And I'm so excited about it.
I came into it.
Yeah.
Well,
we'll do a whole series.
We'll do a whole series,
especially with your book coming out next year,
2023.
We'll do a whole series on longevity and just continue to break out these
parts.
So Mark,
I'm going to pass it over to you to conclude us out for today.
Well,
everybody,
thank you so much for listening to the doctor's pharmacy.
I love having you as part of our community.
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Have you found nutritional supplements to help you?
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Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman.
Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope you're loving
this podcast. It's one of my favorite things to do and introducing you all the experts that I know
and I love and that I've learned so much from. And I want to tell you about something else I'm
doing, which is called Mark's Picks. It's my weekly newsletter. And in it, I share my favorite
stuff from foods to supplements, to to gadgets 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
nothing else i promise and all you do is go to drhyman.com forward slash pics to sign up that's
drhyman.com forward slash pics p-i-c- That's drhyman.com forward slash PICS, P-I-C-K-S,
and sign up for the newsletter,
and I'll share with you my favorite stuff
that I use to enhance my health
and get healthier and better and live younger longer.
Hi, everyone.
I hope you enjoyed this week's episode.
Just a reminder that this podcast
is for educational purposes only.
This podcast is not a substitute
for professional care by a doctor
or other qualified medical professional.
This podcast is provided on the understanding
that it does not constitute medical
or other professional advice or services.
If you're looking for help in your journey,
seek out a qualified 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, 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.