The Dr. Hyman Show - The Dirty Truth About Environmental Toxins (And How to Protect Yourself)
Episode Date: March 17, 2025The pervasive presence of microplastics and environmental toxins in our daily lives poses a growing threat to human health, with impacts ranging from hormonal disruption and metabolic dysfunction to i...mmune system compromise and chronic inflammation. These contaminants, found in food packaging, water supplies, personal care products, and even the air we breathe, accumulate in the body and contribute to the rise in chronic diseases such as obesity, diabetes, cancer, and autoimmune conditions. Understanding their far-reaching effects is essential, but the good news is that the body has powerful detoxification mechanisms that, when properly supported through dietary choices, lifestyle adjustments, and targeted supplementation, can help mitigate their damage. In this episode, I discuss, along with toxin-expert Dr. Joseph Pizzorno, why we need to take action to reduce toxin exposures, reverse existing damage, and build a foundation for long-term well-being. Dr. Joseph Pizzorno is a transformational leader in medicine. Through half a century of work, he has helped establish and advance the academic, scientific, and clinical protocols for natural, functional, integrative, and environmental medicine. As founding president of Bastyr University in 1978, he coined the term “science-based natural medicine” and led Bastyr to become the first-ever accredited institution in the field. He has set worldwide standards of practice by authoring or co-authoring six textbooks for doctors, including the Textbook of Natural Medicine (over 100,000 copies in 4 languages across 5 editions) and Clinical Environmental Medicine. He is Editor-in-Chief of PubMed-indexed IMCJ—the most widely read, peer-reviewed journal in the field (25,000 copies each issue). He is a founding member of the Board of Directors of the Institute for Functional Medicine, where he served three terms as Chair. A licensed naturopathic physician, educator, researcher, and expert spokesman, he is also the author or co-author of eight consumer books (most recent, Healthy Bones, Healthy You! with his wife Lara). This episode is brought to you by BIOptimizers. Head to bioptimizers.com/hyman and use code HYMAN10 to save 10%. Full-length episodes can be found here: Microplastics: What They Are, Why They are Dangerous, and How to Protect Yourself Environmental Toxins: How To Eliminate the Silent Killers with Dr. Joseph Pizzorno How To Reduce Your Environmental Toxin Exposure
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of the Dr. Hyman show, we are all inundated with these microplastics and these environmental toxins
But there is good news. You can detoxify from these things
You can actually get rid of them from your body and you have to do a little work, but you can BPA has a rapid clearance rate
So it doesn't really last that long in the body only about five or six hours means about takes five or six hours for your body
To kind of metabolize and get rid of half of the BPA in your body
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Now before we jump into today's episode, I'd like to note that while I wish I could
help everyone via my personal practice, there's simply not enough time for me to do this at
scale.
And that's why I've been busy building several passion projects to help you better understand,
well, you.
If you're looking for data about your biology, check out Function Health for real-time lab
insights.
And if you're in need of deepening your knowledge around your health journey, check out my membership
community, Dr. Hyman Plus.
And if you're looking for curated trusted supplements and health products for your health
journey, visit my website, DrHyman.com, for my website store and a summary of my favorite
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What exactly are microplastics?
Microplastics are tiny little plastic particles less than 5 millimeters in size.
They can be as small as a grain of sand or even smaller, invisible to the naked eye.
Microplastics can be broken down even further into minuscule size plastic particles called
nanoparticles.
Nanoplastics are less than 100 nanometers in size.
For reference,
an atom meter is a billionth of a meter.
So not very big.
And are much, much more difficult to detect versus microplastics.
So why are these so bad?
They're pervasive in our environment.
They're ubiquitous and have become a significant environmental concern
due to their widespread pervasiveness in the water, in our soil, and our air.
And it can take anywhere between 20 and 500 years for plastic waste to decompose.
Even then, it never really fully disappears.
It just gets smaller and smaller and smaller.
Examples of how microplastics show up in our environment are everywhere.
Now, because of their small size, microplastics infiltrate ecosystems.
From the bottom of the ocean to the tops of glaciers.
I mean, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a microplastic island the size of Texas.
It spans from the west coast of North America to Japan. 70% of that debris
sinks to the bottom of the ocean. 14 million tons of microplastics exist on
the ocean floor. And microplastics have been identified in the core of ice caps
in Iceland where I just came back from. Pretty frightening because it's very remote.
Microplastics are easily ingested by wildlife and then they bioaccumulate up
the food chain, which then of course negatively impacts wildlife and human
health because we're at the top of the food chain.
So what impacts do microplastics have on human health?
Well, in the CDC's national report on human exposure to environmental
chemicals, scientists analyzed urine samples from 2,517 individuals, a sixth and above, for BPA and they found almost every participant
contained BPA. That's bisphenol A. Now exposure from the time we're in utero is also going on.
It's not just what we get when we're alive outside the womb. It's inside the womb. A recent study
published in Toxological Sciences analyzed 62% of samples
and microplastics were present in all of them.
With polyethylene, what plastic bags and water bottles and food containers are actually made
of, these account for most of the nano and microplastics.
Also these microplastics affect our immune system.
They drive inflammation.
Now, when they're inhaled or ingested in our food, they often will cause what we call dysbiosis
or imbalances in the gut flora.
They'll cause oxidative stress and inflammation which just drives further inflammation.
And chronic systemic inflammation is associated with every known chronic disease. In fact,
a new study in mice found that microplastics have been shown to penetrate the gut barrier causing
a leaky gut, which then creates more issues. We get more inflammation and the food particles
and bacterial particles then migrate into the bloodstream and the inflammation from
there affects every organ such as our liver, kidneys, brain. And they also
affect our metabolic health causing insulin resistance and worse. So this
just screws up your whole liver-gut axis and increases the risk of
pre-diabetes and diabetes and insulin resistance. So they affect every aspect
of our biology. They also disrupt hormones. These are also called endocrine disruptors and many plastics contain
chemical additives like phthalates or bisphenol A or BPA and brominated flame retardants which are
just a few of the main ones. So let's look at BPA. BPA is structurally similar to estrogen and
actually mimics estrogen in the body which is why it's known as Azeno or foreign estrogen. It binds
to the estrogen receptors and then it alters hormone signaling,
which is not a good thing.
BPA causes epigenetic changes.
So it literally changes the way your genes are expressed
by something called DNA methylation.
And then that causes all kinds of other issues,
reproductive issues, cancer, metabolic issues, weight gain.
It also affects reproductive system function.
So when you have exposure to these microplastics and chemicals,
it impacts your ability to reproduce. BPA, for example, impacts the female reproductive system function. So when you have exposure to these microplastics and chemicals, it impacts your ability to reproduce. BPA, for example, impacts the female reproductive system
and fertility by affects the maturation of eggs in the beginning of your menstrual cycle. And BPA is
also associated with PCOS or polycystic ovarian syndrome and endometriosis, which by the way,
is an autoimmune disease. BPA doesn't just affect women, it also affects men and it screws up
spermatogenesis, meaning the making of new sperm. It's also associated with lower testosterone levels and reduced sperm count, reduced sperm motility and
increased sperm DNA damage. Not what you want to have if you're having a baby. We call these changes epigenetic changes.
They're imprinting on your epigenome, which then has
changes. They're imprinting on your epigenome, which then has transgenerational effects. So what happens to, let's say, the grandparent can happen to the grandchild because of the insult that
happened to the grandparent. This affects the fertility progeny of many future generations,
which is very scary. And we're seeing all kinds of weird stuff in animals, even in humans,
general abnormalities, influence on brain sex development. And BPA also has that effects for
men, right? They're anti-androgen.
Androgens are male hormones,
they're responsible for the maintenance of male sex traits,
like hair on the body and muscle mass
and all the things we like with men.
But BPA affects the brain sex development in fetuses
and alters gene expression.
So it literally changes the reproductive system
of the developing fetus,
which is really terrifying to me.
And we're also seeing a lot of linkages to these environmental chemicals
and plastics with obesity.
They're called obesogens, carcinogens, but obesogens.
And human studies have shown a positive correlation between urinary
levels of BPA and your BMI or your weight.
According to the NHANES data, this is the National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey data, which is tens of thousands of Americans
over decades and decades.
Those are the highest levels of BPA exposure or more likely to be obese.
Now why could it be just because the people who were studied who had a high BPA also didn't
pay much attention to their health for other reasons.
That's called the unhealthy user bias or maybe it's because they're eating more processed
foods and eating drinking for more plastic stuff.
Maybe there's a reason there.
But the mechanism is that it has estrogenic activity and it promotes fat cell division and accumulation. So basically BPA
causes some resistance. It causes more fat cell accumulation. It inhibits the release of an
important hormone called adiponectin, which is an anti-inflammatory insulin sensitizing hormone.
And it actually also helps regulate blood sugar, burning a fat and it's secreted by fat cells. But
when you have high levels of these toxins, you don't get adrenectin
and you don't get all the benefits.
BPA is also linked to abnormal cholesterol and dysbiosis, which
is the mouse in the gut floor.
And endotoxemia, meaning toxins getting in body from the gut that
are caused by damaged gut lining.
They're also linked to oxidative stress, to insulin resistance,
high levels of fasting insulin and also inhibits fat breakdown
and leads to weight
gain. So these are really nasty and they're everywhere and it's allowed in
our food supply. What else does BPA do? Well, I mean you probably don't want any
of this in your system and it's by the way everywhere. You really have to pay
attention to cans and packaging and credit card receipts and ATM receipts. All
these have BPA in them. So you just want to touch them. I never get to
receipts. Also BPA causes cancer. It binds to estrogen receptors, the ones we call alpha and beta, and it activates
the same signaling pathways in these estrogen-sensitive tissues that you would
from estrogen and that leads to breast cancer, ovarian cancer, uterus,
can even affect prostate health.
This increases all kinds of bad things like cell proliferation, cancer cell
formation, cancerous tumors.
And depending on the genetics and your environment and level of exposure, your risk is going
to be higher.
Now there are other mechanisms that BPA can cause damage with and those include what we
call cytotoxicity, which just means it's a poison.
So it's just directly poisons a cell.
It creates oxidative stress and it damages our DNA, which has tumor effects.
So there's just many, many pathways that this is bad for you.
What else? If there wasn't something else,
well, there's another thing, right?
Heart disease.
The long-term adult exposure to BPA
is associated with all sorts of things
like heart disease, hypertension,
atherosclerosis, plaque development, heart attacks.
As we saw, the data is just pretty scary about this.
And the research shows, for example,
a 10-year study in the UK done by Meltzer and others
found that higher BP exposure correlates with an increased
incidence of coronary heart disease, more heart attacks.
Another observational study, and this is observational, but it was pretty scary
actually in the New England Journal of Medicine.
And it looked at the presence of micro and nanoplastics in the plaque of 304
asymptomatic people who underwent carotid endarterectomy that's cleaning out the blockages and the arteries in the neck and that can help prevent strokes.
They looked at the microplastics in that plaque and they tried to track how it correlated
with heart attack, strokes and death from all causes about 34 months later.
What was really frightening was that polyethylene, one of these microplastics, was detected in
the carotid artery plaque of 58.4% of patients.
And PVC from PVC pipes, polyvinyl chloride from vinyl flooring, credit cards, medical devices,
furniture was detected in 12% of patients. Now when they looked through a special kind of
microscope called an electron microscope, looks at very small small things, it showed visible jagged
edged micro and nanoplastic particles in the plaque, significantly increasing the risk for primary end point events,
meaning heart attacks and strokes by 453%.
Meaning if you had higher amounts of micro and nanoplastics in your carotid artery,
you had a much,
much higher risk of having a major cardiac event or a stroke than those who
didn't have those microplastics in their arteries.
Now other studies have shown that people with high blood pressure and low heart rate variability tend to have higher total urinary BPA. So that's
concerning. So it can cause high blood pressure and heart rate variability is a very important
measure of your overall cardiovascular fitness. So what are the top sources of microplastic exposure?
You want to know now that it's causing all these bad things. Well, ultra processed food and packaging.
Just don't eat crap. You're going to feel like crap. It's not good for you.
There's no reason to eat it.
It's not actually food.
You should never, never put that past your lips.
And I've done many podcasts.
You can go back and listen to them on what ultra-processed foods are
and what they do, but it's pretty frightening.
So where are you going to find also these microplastics?
Well, cans, BPA lined cans, coffee cups, lids.
Who are you drinking all these coffees?
Bring your own cup.
Bring your own can. Salt, even salt has it. Table salt, which is
ultra processed food also has a lot, but sometimes that has microplastics.
Tea bags. They know tea bags are fine. Coffee filters, but they're not.
Polypropylene is a type of plastic that's used to seal tea bags and it keeps
them kind of together in hot water, but not good because that plastic can leach
into your tea. A single plastic tea bag at the brewing temperature can release, get this, 11.6 billion microplastics and 3.1 billion nanoplastics.
That's scary. This is from the Environmental Science and Technology Journal. Current coffee
machines, those plastic tubing and the plastic little things that they do. I mean, I don't
think we should be using that. Plastic water bottles, soda bottles, any beverage container,
which is BPA-lined, plastic containers, cups, bags, soda bottles, any beverage container, which is BPA-lined.
Plastic containers, cups, bags, shrink wrap, Tupperware, often cutting boards.
You have to be really careful and just try to use natural products.
Personal care products also another big source of these microplastics.
Face wash has these microbeads, exfoliants, phthalates, lotions, creams, toothpaste.
Use Skin Deep, which is a database from the Environmental Working Group that gives you
a guide on what to eat and use and eat on your body and what to clean your house with that doesn't have all these
crappy things in them.
And watch out for your makeup.
As I said, skincare products are full of these microplastics.
What about your clothes?
Well, clothes also are an issue.
Polyester and synthetic fibers also are a big issue because when you wash them, those
microplastics drain into our water supply.
And a friend of mine has an appliance company, he's a CEO in Europe called Archilec and has developed a micro plastic filter and he's open sourced it to all
manufacturers of appliances. I don't know if they're using them, but they should. Now what about
kids? Well toys, plastic toys, especially those made from polyethylene, which can lead to direct
exposure to these chemicals when they're chewed or sucked on by kids. Kids stick everything in
their mouth. So all these plastic toys for babies and kids are terrible.
Also, there's a bunch of other places I mentioned receipts, you know,
credit card receipts, ATM receipts, gas station receipts, medical equipment,
like II tubing, IV bags, disposable gloves, and all that gets to us over time.
They enter the body through food and water, through inhalation,
through skin exposure.
That's kind of bad news, a little depressing, right?
We are all inundated with these microplastics and these environmental toxins,
but there is good news.
You can detoxify from these things.
You can actually get rid of them from your body.
You have to do a little work, but you can.
BPA has a rapid clearance rate, so it doesn't really last that long in the body,
only about five or six hours.
It means it takes five or six hours for your body to kind of metabolize and get
rid of half of the BPA in your body.
The bad news, we're exposed all the time, so it's hard for the body to kind of metabolize and get rid of half of the BPA in your body. The bad news, we're exposed all the time.
So it's hard for the body to get to a net zero.
And we're gonna actually measure this
in function health panels.
Soon we're gonna measure BPA levels.
So you can even test them.
You go to functionhealth.com forward slash mark.
We're not quite up there yet with that test,
but we'll get there soon.
We'll also look at PFAS for every chemical.
So we'll be able to start testing these things
and you can see your exposures.
So the first step is really to reduce your exposure. How do you do that? Air filters and
water filters. Water filters are great. You can use Aqua True, a LinkedIn show notes, also just a
reverse osmosis filter. Other types are fine. Swap out plastic food containers with glass ones.
Don't eat ultra processed food, right? So you're going to reduce your exposure to microplastics
and phthalates and PFAS from processing and packaging. Swap out your plastic cups for glass cups.
Use rock salt like Redmond's real salt.
That's my favorite.
Never heat food or drinks in plastic ever in the microwave or anywhere else.
Stay away from the instant meals that you cook in plastic like a cup of noodles, soup,
rice.
Just don't do that.
Avoid drinking from plastic water bottles, which is hard to do, but we should definitely
be doing that.
Both to not pollute the planet with plastic, but also to not pollute ourselves.
A new study found that a liter of water
from plastic water bottles contained,
and this is scary, 240,000 detectable plastic fragments.
I'm going to say that again.
A liter of water from a plastic water bottle
contains 240,000 detectable plastic fragments.
And that's about 10 to 100 times more than previous estimates.
And about 90% of these fragments were nanoplastics, not microplastics.
Also, you can use a steel water bottle, a stainless steel water bottle.
I would encourage you to do that.
I have one.
Avoid commercial to-go coffee cups, like from a coffee shop.
They're usually lined with BPA.
Ask to fill a stainless steel travel mug or transfer the hot contents to a safe
container, especially right after you get it, because I don't want to leave it in there.
Avoid cans, especially acidic food and drinks like soda, tomatoes, leach out,
unless it's a BPA free can.
There's companies that do make those.
BPA concentrations up to 40 times higher in canned food from sterilization,
pasteurization.
Don't try to have canned foods unless you know they're BPA free cans.
Don't take the receipt.
You know, you can, most of these have a BPA coating.
You can email it or text it or something,
but don't touch it.
Don't use plastic tea bags.
Use tea bags that are organic, unbleached,
100% plastic free, toxic free,
cotton coffee filters are fine.
Don't use Keurig or plastic tubing for coffee.
You can use a stainless steel French press,
pour over coffee.
And again, as I said, say no to receipts.
Bad idea.
Get an air filter.
HEPA filter is great.
I like air doctor.
I'll put a link in the show notes.
Watch out for also something called BPS because as soon as they find
our chemicals bad and we go, oh, BPS is bad, they come up with something else,
which may not be better, right?
And BPS is used as a replacement for BPA, but it can actually be more toxic.
That's how you reduce your exposure.
That's the first step is get rid of the source.
How do you actually detoxify your body from the
microplastics? Well your body has a built-in detoxification system. So you
have to support those pathways and it works better than any crash diet or juice
cleanse. So you have to support it by eating the right food. Foods actually
have components in them that help your body detoxify. So what are they? Well
antioxidants in general help scavenge free radicals. They protect against DNA damage, oxidative stress.
Vitamin C is great because it's a great antioxidant.
And you can get that from citrus fruit, oranges, kiwis, veggies.
Vitamin E, another great antioxidant from wheat germ oil, nuts, some veggies.
Vitamin A, which is from grass fed beef liver, chicken liver,
grass fed meats often have vitamin A.
Animal food is the main source.
Plant foods don't have actually pre-formed vitamin A.
Melatonin, which you can get even in your diet,
actually from meat, fish, eggs, pistachios.
Lots of antioxidants you can take in terms of herbs
like quercetin, curcumin,
quercin is in onions, garlic, and apples.
Carotenoids are like, you know,
they sound like where they're from, like carrots
and yellow vegetables.
Flavonoids like berries,
alagic acid and pomegranate.
EG, CG, which is a green tea,
astaxanthin from algae and salmon, krill, curcumin, milk.
So all these are great to use to help your body detoxify.
These herbs have been well studied
and they've been shown to actually upregulate
many of your body's own built-in detox pathways.
One of the powerhouses here,
and I have these almost every day,
are what we call cruciferous veggies.
Now these are things like broccoli, collards, kale,
Brussels sprouts and so forth, bok choy.
But a lot of other things are great too, like dandelion leaves, rosemary and so forth.
So all these can really help your body to upregulate these detox pathways.
Your body also has a lot of its own antioxidant enzymes.
So you can upregulate those enzymes by having the right cofactors like copper and zinc for something called SOD.
Catalyze, another important antioxidant enzyme your body makes. It needs iron and manganese.
Glutathione, really, really important. It needs selenium and cysteine and a number of other
amino acids. A grass-fed whey is a great way to boost glutathione, which is high in cysteine. I
use regeneratively raised goat whey like Mount Capra. Sulfur-rich foods, also great for boosting
detox pathways. So what are those? All the broccoli family, right?
The broccoli, cauliflower, kale, cabbage,
Brussels sprouts, watercress.
Protein also, amino acids are critical for up regulating your detox pathways.
So you want to make sure you have at least a gram per pound of ideal body weight.
And you have to really need that.
Otherwise, if you're detoxing and you don't have the amino acids to support your
liver detox pathways, you're going to be in trouble.
Also, you need to have the right B vitamins, particularly the B vitamins, B6, B12, and folate
to support methylation. Really important. And you can get those from grass-fed meat,
from pesterase eggs, poultry. Certain enzymes are really important.
Hydration, also really important. The solution to pollution is dilution.
That's what we learned in medical school. Make sure you drink half your weight in ounces of water
per day. Use a water filter, as I mentioned, reverse osmosis. Make sure you drink half your weight in ounces of water per day. Use a water filter as I mentioned, reverse osmosis.
Make sure you hydrate to get rid of the toxins.
So you want to have plenty of urine, clear urine.
If it's yellow, you probably don't have enough water.
Fiber, really important.
It's like a sponge that binds the toxins
and prevents you from reabsorbing them.
So try to eat 25 to 30 grams, even up to 50 a day.
You can actually take fiber supplements
like soluble or insoluble fibers.
And insoluble fibers, for example, are non-digestible ones that pass through the GI tract.
They add bulk to the school but you want soluble fiber foods and veggies which has kind of like
a gel-like substance in the intestines and really helps all areas of health.
That reduces inflammation, it feeds your gut bugs, it aids your blood sugar control,
also binds to the cholesterol and bile acids, helps the excretion.
And many of these microplastics are fat soluble,
so they're bound to cholesterol.
For example, we saw in the study on heart disease
that the microplastics were detected in the plaque of arteries.
Right? Remember that?
So, you want to eat more fiber,
especially the soluble fiber that helps BPA exit the bile through your poop.
Now, there are different types and sources of soluble fiber.
One of the best types is beta-glucans, which are found in oats,
but you want glyphosate, gluten-free, whole steel-coat oats.
Pectins, which are in apples, oranges, pears and nuts.
Certain mucilages, which are like kind of,
if you put it in water, you'll gum it up pretty quick,
but that's great.
Like flax seeds, chia seeds, psyllium seeds.
Inulin, chicory root.
These are all pre-biotic foods.
Drew some artichokes, onions, garlic, asparagus.
And sweat.
Also, you don't want to forget about sweating.
Sweating is really important.
It's how your body gets rid of a lot of toxins.
So in 2012, there was a study of human excretion of BPA
in blood, urine, and sweat.
And they found that BPA concentrations were higher in sweat than in urine.
And out of 20 participants, 16 had detectable BPA concentrations in the sweat,
but only two had detectable levels in their blood.
So basically they're fat soluble.
So when you sweat, you actually have one of the main mechanisms
to get rid of these environmental toxins.
That's why I love saunas.
The results of the study suggest that sweat testing can be a cool tool for checking BPA
monitoring and inducing sweating is a clinically useful tool to facilitate the release of BPA
through the skin.
It's not routine for doctors to test BPA but it can can be tested in urine or blood, even in sweat as I mentioned.
Function Health is going to be offering that test.
Go to functionhealth.com forward slash mark to learn more.
But yeah, I really want to sweat, right?
You only want to sweat to get it out.
Certain supplements can be very helpful.
CoQ10 has been studied by researchers at Harvard and it shows that it reduces free radicals caused by BPA in worms, which is I guess good. Chlorella also can help support detoxification.
Probotics also helpful.
They bind to BPA, phthalates, polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons, like lactobacillus, bifidobacterium,
saccharomyces biliardae, all help your gut health,
help improve liver function, prevent all kinds of stuff
from going wrong in your body.
They have great effects on your endocrine system.
Also you can take other supplements like N-acetylcysteine. I take that every day to boost glutathione. I also take lipoic
acid, which is an antioxidant. It helps boost glutathione. And you can take some fiber supplements
like psyllium or just take flax seeds or even chia seeds every day. Are you feeling stressed, sluggish
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In the case of toxins, how do toxins actually interact with our biology cause such problems?
Yeah, that's actually a very good question. I'm kind of breaking it to three categories.
Category one is, while we pay attention to individual toxins and know a lot about the disease caused by individual toxins
Number one priority is total by load of toxins
How much arctic you have, how much lead you have, how much bisphenols you have, how much sialase you have, etc
Because what happens is all the toxins cause oxidative stress and deplete glutathione from the body.
Glutathione is the most important antioxidant in your body, but more importantly, it's the key way we protect our mitochondria.
And the longest living people with the least disease have the highest levels of glutathione.
That's right.
If you put glutathione, your mitochondria die, and you die sooner and have more disease.
Yeah.
Okay.
So you have decreased total load.
Then we look at, okay, so now what do the toxins do individually?
So they can range from, this is where classically the main problem with toxins is, they displace
nutrients from the body.
So for example, any enzyme that depends upon calcium in the body, they have high levels
of lead, it displaces the calcium from the body, they have high levels of lead,
it displaces the calcium from the enzyme so they don't work properly.
So they basically poison enzymes.
Why is that important?
Bodies are enzyme machines.
What about enzymes on machines?
Enzymes aren't working, our machines aren't working, and we get sick.
That's number one.
Direct poisoning of the enzymes by the topic.
I just want to emphasize that for a minute. enzymes you know are such a huge part of our biology
that one third of our DNA codes for enzymes one third of our entire genome is coding for
enzymes that have lies metabolic reaction to the body and all those have to be functioning
for us to be healthy.
It's like the metabolic machinery that it has to run everything. And as toxins bind to those enzymes in a way
that blocks their function, leading to faulty biology, which leads to disease.
Yes, exactly. Very well said, Mark. Exactly what happens. And going on with what you said
about DNA, in the third area now, that's a huge problem after the toxins is, they damage
our DNA. So when we look at
the research on the correlation between the bio of a particular toxin and a particular
disease we're looking at, if you do it according to age, you don't see very many correlations
until about the age of 50. Because up until about the age of 50, our body is pretty able
to adapt to the damage to the toxin and work around it.
When we're here about age 50, there's two big things that happen.
Number one is our body load of persistent toxins has now become much, much higher.
So these are toxins that take so long to get out of our body, we can't get rid of them.
So our PCBs, for example, if you go to a restaurant and eat farm fish, some of the PCBs in farm
fish have a half life ranging from 10 to 20 years.
It takes four half lives to get rid of the toxin.
If you go eat that farm fish, and some of those toxin will bring your body for the rest
of your life.
So what happens is...
Unless I live to 200, then I'll get rid of them.
There you go, right.
Yeah, you have to live past 100 to get rid of them. There you go. Right. Yeah, you have to live past 100 to get rid of them. Okay. So then, so what's happening is the biolow is going up. But now the biolow going up,
we've chemically damaged our DNA, so our ability to respond to them and adapt to them has now become
limited. And now all of a sudden, all the disease correlations start showing up. So total load,
And now all of a sudden all the disease correlations start showing up. So total load, damage to enzymes, and damage to DNA.
But there's more effects, right?
Oh, many more effects.
There's the immunotoxicity, which is leading to all the inflammatory and autoimmune diseases,
right?
Mitochondrial injury, which leads to poisoning of our energy metabolism.
So there's damage to our gut lining that happens because of toxins that damage our enzymes
in our gut, make our gut not be able to work.
Every level of our biology, there are endocrine disruptors.
They disrupt our hormonal function.
So every level of our biology, these compounds are interfering with them.
And I think you know the story, but the reason I got into functional medicine was I was living
in China and long story short, I got poisoned with mercury from the pollution there cleaning on my air filter
plus I'd even do the fish for decades was a kid and I had lots of fillings and I
Had the level on a challenge test of 187
Which is that for those you don't know like if I see someone over 20 I get worried
I rarely see anybody over 100. I don't remember last I was 100
I've had a couple people who had higher levels than me. One was a dementia patient.
But I literally had every system in my body break down.
My gut broke down, my cognitive brain broke down,
my immune system broke down, I felt allergies.
Everything broke down.
And I developed chronic tooth syndrome
and no one could fix me.
Went to the doctor for years until actually I went
to the conference where I first met
you in Hawaii and an IFM conference like in 1997 I think.
And I was on up claim with a guy who was a naturopath and I was telling him I just learned
about functional medicine.
I was going to my first conference and I learned about this naturopath and I was like, well
gee maybe you should check your heavy metals.
I'm like, what really?
So I did a hair analysis, I had a high levels and then I did a challenge test. And that was the beginning of my exploration of functional
medicine. So I learned it the hard way. I learned it the hard way. And I know, I find
this as well in my patients, so many patients are coming in with these diagnoses and underlying
it is this toxic load. So let's talk about the kind of big categories of toxins. You
mentioned a lot of
things. Immune system. Okay, so the immune system is very very successful
to environmental toxins. So I just gave a lecture on PFAS, the
proflorinated compounds. Forever chemicals. Where are they from?
Worst place, fast food. Fast food. Popcorn, fast food are the worst by far.
I'm microwave popcorn.
Microwave popcorn. Okay.
Because if you said regular popcorn, I don't know how to see.
Regular popcorn is fine. Microwave popcorn is problematic.
Okay.
When I was looking at this, I was looking at
COVID and PFAS.
And I looked at people who had either no COVID or mild case,
compared to people who had a severe version of COVID.
Once you got severe version, you have 50 to 100 percent higher levels for T-facil in the
body compared to those who do not get bad COVID.
Wow.
So just a simple thing like that.
Enough damage to the immune system, couldn't get rid of the COVID virus fast enough, now
you got problems.
Yeah.
Immunotoxicity is a real deal.
You know, I had a patient who would bring me up like Crohn's disease and got everything.
And it turned out she had really, really high blood levels.
You could be toxer from blood and she got better.
I've seen this all over and over in my career.
Some of the chemicals other than metals, which we can test for, are blood tests.
And we do that at Fletcher & Health where people can get their blood tests.
But also we do it through traditional challenge testing, which is where you take a chelator and it binds the metals and you can see
what's going on. And the test is really not done in traditional medicine. It's a test that I do
anybody who's got a chronic illness because I have to rule it out. And often I'm surprised, I had a
guy, for example, I had long COVID, you just mentioned, and I was kind of shocked. Like he had,
his mercury was like 93. This challenge was really high. His blood level was 18. And I was kind of shocked. His mercury was like 93, and his challenge was really high.
His blood level was 18, and he was struggling
with lung coli and gut issues.
And I'm like, well, this is what's going on, right?
And so I think if you start looking, you start seeing it.
And I think there's a whole swath of other compounds that
are, I would call them, in a petrochemical sphere that
are synthesized compounds that are, I would call them in a petrochemical sphere, that are synthesized compounds, that
are problematic. So what are the top compounds that are concerning to you, that we're exposed
to on a regular basis, and where are they found, and how do we avoid them? Yeah, again, another
excellent question. So when I look at the toxins, you know, the easy way to think about them is metals versus chemicals. So we're looking at metals, arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium. The four big ones,
substantial portion of the population have elevated levels that cause a lot of disease.
When we're looking at the chemicals, we have perfluoronates, the PFAS, the forever chemicals.
We've got the bisphenols. So people think, oh, BPA is bad, make it plastic, that's
BPA-free. Well, guess what? They put other bisphenols in, they're just as bad. Phthalates,
a lot of the health and beauty aids have phthalates in them.
So like sunblock or makeup.
Yeah, sunblock, makeup, things like this. A lot of phthalates. Well, why is that problematic?
Phthalates bind to insulin receptor
sites and give people diabetes. Okay so there are so many chemicals I've been kind of systematically
working my way through but so far in terms of chemicals these are the three I'm paying the
most attention to. BPA. BPA and phthalates. Phthalates. Which is just so much research.
Not saying there aren't other problematic chemicals, but these three bilinear cells cost so much.
There's only 144,000 other chemicals.
Well, there's 12,000 of these forever chemicals.
Yeah.
Just one category is 12,000 chemicals.
I think that's the thing that, you know, sometimes it's daunting for people because like we're living in the sea of these chemicals.
Yeah.
The, you know, the newborn study that the environmental work group did showed there were 287 chemicals in the umbilical cord
of a brand new baby before it even took its first breath.
And 217 of those chemicals were neurotoxins,
everything from flame retardants, pesticides,
dioxin, PCBs, you know, DDT,
things that were banned had been banned long before,
decades before these kids were born.
They're in their mothers, and they're in the environment, and they're in these babies.
So when you're born pre-polluted.
Now we're going to the next set of toxins, and that is the herbicides and the pesticides.
Agrochemicals.
Yeah, industrial chemicals for agriculture.
So let's look at just one category, organophosphate pesticides. Okay? If you measure the by-load of pregnant women, you measure the level of organophosphate pesticides,
and you compare, look at the IQ of children born to women with the top level organophosphate
pesticides compared to women with the lowest level organophosphate pesticides, and you
are not statistically all the differences in weight and ethnicity, things of this nature, just look at organophosphate pesticide levels,
highest levels, top 10% of women,
seven point drop in the IQ of the children,
and they never get it back.
So in utero, the body is being saturated with neurotoxins,
so it isn't any surprise the brain does not develop properly
when it's exposed to neurotoxins. is it any surprise the brain does not develop properly when it's both in your toxins
Yeah, so I said before that I'm focused on PFAS, histrionols and phthalates
You've got to focus on on the pesticides
Particularly organophosphate pesticides are probably the worst of all of them whether you've got chlorinate pesticides are problematic in many other categories
Yeah, it's true. I mean, I think I read a study that was based on farmworkers'
children, migrant farmworkers' children.
And they estimated that in the offspring of that cohort,
there were 41 million lost IQ points in those children.
And I think they're everywhere, right?
We're sort of living in a sea of them.
We can't really completely avoid them.
I'm on the board of the Environmental working group and there's wonderful guys there on
how to find products that are low or don't have these compounds.
Skin deep is their skincare database.
They have what household products that you can buy for cleaning that are not going to
pollute your environment.
There's ways you can choose food based on lower pesticide counts and 30 dozen, actually 15.
And there's guys that want animal protein and fish,
you should even how to reduce your exposures.
So there's a lot of ways to reduce your exposures,
but part of the problem is we really can't avoid them
entirely, we're all like polluted.
And I guess they were born pre-polluted.
So from your perspective as a practitioner, you can see this and you can see the data
and it's kind of terrifying.
If toxins are causing all the diseases, what the heck can we do about it?
Because other than trying to reduce your exposures and stop eating fish and don't eat paint chips
and filter your water and have an air filter in your house and those these skincare products
and stuff, we're still not going to be completely able to avoid them.
So, so how do we actually start to think about this from a practical point of
view of,
of treating people with environmental toxicity and how do we diagnose them
properly?
So there's actually some really good news here because there are some very
simple things we can do
that have huge impact on our toxicity.
So first thing we wanna do is talk to the garbage.
So I recommend that everybody get, have their doctor
measure a laboratory test called GGTP.
So GGTP is a liver enzyme that in the past was measured
to determine the percent of hepatitis.
If a person has inflammation in the liver, they start leaking liver enzymes into their
blood, and you measure the enzyme in the blood and say, aha, hepatitis.
They stopped using GTP for hepatitis because other tests were found to be more reliable
because GTP was reacting to other things.
So it turns out, within the quote normal range 10 to 50
depending on the lab, GTT goes up in proportion to toxic load and as you
detoxify GTT goes down. I mentioned that Corporal Wendt's program I did. So I
mentioned my GTT then and it was 27. I thought that was okay because I saw the
research saying once it's hit 30, you have
an eightfold increased risk of diabetes.
Well, it's not concerning, go from 29, no risk, or 30, more risk.
I thought, well, 27 is too high.
So I started getting more and more careful.
Started getting more careful, went down a couple of years later, down to 24.
Then I measured a few years late, a few years ago, and went down to 17.
I just measured it two months ago, I was down to 16.
Yeah, so between a GTT between 15 and 20 means you've done a good job of getting rid of enough toxins that the body doesn't have to increase GTT. Why is my
increased GTT? Because it recycles glutathione because glutathione protects
us from toxins. Okay, you're down to 15 to 20. You probably done a good job
getting rid of toxins. Now if you below 15 to 15 to 20. You probably done a good job to get rid of toxins.
Now if you're below 15, it may not need to have low toxic load. You may need to have
to make an ability to increase blood disfiance to protect you from environmental toxins.
The people I've seen with the biggest problems with environmental toxins have low GTTs. I
call them yellow canaries. They can't detect themselves. So right there, you have to
monitor. Now what's the next thing you just think about? I don't know what to say about that test.
That test is a really inexpensive, common test. It's not part typically of your annual physical.
It's not part of your typical hepatic liver function test. You have to ask for it specifically.
It's called GGT.
And I think it's something that I've been measuring
on every single patient for decades.
It can be high with alcohol, liver disease,
it can be high with fatty liver, from diabetes,
from a lot of other things.
But it's a very important biomarker.
And as part of Function Health,
which is the company I co-founded,
it's part of the standard panel you get
for 100, 500 bucks, 100 in good buy market,
but it's really important because of that.
Right, right on, very, very useful test.
So that way you can monitor what's going on.
So as my teacher, Dr. Bastier, would say,
don't kid yourself.
You can think you're living healthily,
but you might have this little thing you do here
and all this just food you really love.
You can't buy it organic, but you can eat that anyway.
You can find how many of your little exceptions,
how bad are they at enough?
Okay.
The second thing to do is
report the body's own natural detox system.
And we spent millions of years evolving these things
and we sabotage them. How do
we sabotage them? A lot of the toxins are excreted from the liver into the gut, what
we then expect to go out through the stools. But we evolve that system when we're consuming
150, 100 to 150 grams of fiber a day. Now we consume 15 to 20 grams of fiber a day.
89% lower.
Which means that instead of going out through the stools,
it just reabsorbs through intrapathic recirculation.
So number one, eat more fiber.
Eat more fiber and you'll probably get rid of things
more effectively.
Number two, only organically grown foods.
And number three, from your kitchen,
remove all the plastics, remove all the nonstick things,
only use glass and ceramics.
It's the only safe things I'm aware of.
Yeah, filter your water.
Yes, okay, so what we do is we have a carbon block filter
right in the main coming to our house.
So all the water, whether they're drinking it,
whether they're taking a shower, is clean. And our air conditioning
and the heating system in the house, we use what's called a Lennox filter and
it's rated at MERV 16, M-A-R-V-16. And that will get rid of 99.9% of the toxins
in the air in your house. Very effective. Yeah, very important to kind of keep your home environment clean.
Keep your home environment clean.
Refill with no toxic materials.
But I think one of the things I want to bring up is this whole idea of detoxification.
And it was really from a perspective of a traditional doctor and training I had,
it was quackery. Our bodies you know, our bodies detox, whatever,
but like, there's no reason to think about
improving detoxification.
And yet when we deeply look at the science
of the biology of detoxification,
which includes your breath, your skin, your hair,
your stool, your liver, your kidneys,
it's a whole system.
And it requires the right building blocks
to actually function.
It requires the right materials
and the pathways have to work.
And it's a really well-worked out model.
And we learned nothing about how to fix it,
except when you're in the ER,
and I was an ER doctor for many years,
someone comes in
with a Tylenol overdose, we give them this drug, quote, drug called Nucromist, which
smells horrible.
It smells like rotten eggs.
You make them drink it, which is like punishment for taking the Tylenol overdose.
And then you have a bunch of charcoals.
And essentially what this compound does
is boost glutathione, it's N-acetylcysteine,
which is essentially a supplement, right?
And I was like shocked when I learned that later,
but it literally will rescue the liver from failure
after a big insult like a Tylenol overdose,
which works by depleting glutathione.
So, you know, we kind of use it in traditional medicine, we just don't realize what we're doing. But I think what I'm talking about
is sort of breakdown. How do we optimize each of the types of detoxification systems we
have? Because it's really about building in to your life the automatic ways to upregulate
the biology of detoxification in your system. And I do that every single day.
Now, because I've just built it into my life
because I know I'm not a great detoxifier.
I've checked my glutathione snips
and I have methylation snips.
I have genetics that makes me more likely
to accumulate toxins.
So I have to upregulate those pathways.
What's your approach to sort of giving people guidance
all the way from diet to lifestyle to supplements
that actually help their biology do the things it's supposed to do. Yeah very well said. So
number one and number two and number three are avoidance avoidance avoidance. Don't let the stuff
into your body. And everyday choices we make. So for example, you pump your own
gasoline. The answer is probably yes. You smell the gasoline. We smell that gasoline
that's benzene going into your body. You're smelling something that doesn't smell right.
Get away from it.
So we need an N95 filter.
Yeah, right. N95 filter on your nose. So anyway, avoidance, avoidance, avoidance.
I hold my breath. It's great. I hold my breath for the entire time the gas tank is filling up.
Yeah, it's challenging to do. So I think I'll say some specific things to do, but it's every time
you have a choice, look at what the less toxic environment, the lower environmental toxin load choices that you can make.
So stand up when you're pumping your gas like.
When you're having to go out to eat in a restaurant,
well, talk to the people at the restaurant,
and if it's one of your favorite restaurants,
I'm getting a little far field here.
Cook as much of your own food as you can.
I just read a study on the way over here where it showed that for every meal a person eats out,
the dead end of friendship between fast food
and regular restaurants, fast foods are worse.
Every time a person eats a meal out
versus cooking food at home,
they increase their blood levels of the fresher chemicals by 1%.
1% per meal.
Okay.
So, choosing where you eat your food is a way to start.
Make us sure that food is organically grown.
If you are going to go out, if you have a failed place to go out, meet with the owner,
meet with the cooks, and say, can you prepare your food in ways that are less toxic? If you are going to buy food
that is from a grocery that has been prepared, come to you in plastic or come into you in lined
paper containers, immediately put it into glass. She might say, well, it's been sitting there since
it was made and sitting there in the grocery store.
So my lecture today I showed, it's time dependent.
Even though it's been going up
as long as it's been in the grocery store,
if you're leaving that container,
it's still gonna keep going up.
So at least you can stop it there.
So put everything into glass containers.
I said before, increase your consumption of fiber.
But it's also simple things like,
you take a multi-vitamin in mineral.
The majority of the population
is deficient in multiple nutrients.
I mean, US population,
99% of people are deficient in one or more nutrients.
Half are deficient in five or more.
So just right there,
what are those nutrients needed for?
Detox systems.
So use a good multi-vitamin mineral.
Does not have to be super high dosages, but it
has to be a little bit of everything.
How do environmental toxins affect our health?
Well, they do it through a lot of different mechanisms, but they're basically poisons
and they cause inflammation, they cause oxidative stress, they cause DNA damage, they cause
disruption in our mitochondria, They damage our stem cells.
I mean, the whole flood of environmental toxins, there's over 80,000 of them now that have
been introduced to the industrial sort of world since the early 1900s that we've never
been exposed to before and we somehow have to figure out how to deal with them.
Well, thank God we have a system to do it, but it's still overwhelmed.
So environmental toxins, as I said, drive cancer.
They are hugely impactful, for example, in blood sugar and insulin sensitivity.
Most people don't realize that diabetes and pre-diabetes and even obesity can be driven
by environmental toxins.
Something called bisphenol A, which is a compound that's found in the lining of a lot of cans,
plastic bottles, on paper, receipts
from credit cards or gas stations.
When you touch that, it goes to your skin.
And bisphenol A is a huge driver of insulin resistance and prediabetes, independent of
what you're eating.
It affects cholesterol metabolism.
It drives inflammation, oxidative stress, mitochondrial injury, screws up our thyroid function, affects
our appetite, leptin signaling. I mean pretty much everything gets haywire when we're
exposed to too many environmental toxins. Now the downside of living in the
modern world is that we're all pre-polluted when we're born. There's 287
known environmental toxins found in the umbilical cord blood of a newborn. I mean
basically they take out the blood of the umbil cord, send it to a lab, and the average amount of toxins is 287,
many of which have been banned for decades,
like DDT or PCBs or dioxin.
And 217 of those are neurotoxic,
meaning they're directly damaging to the brain.
There's pesticides, phthalates, bisphenol A, which I just mentioned, flame retardants,
heavy metals like mercury, lead, arsenic, and they have huge effects across the spectrum
of human health.
So, what are the ones that we should really be paying attention to that we really want
to avoid and get rid of?
The first I just mentioned earlier is bisphenol A, or BPA.
It's found in plastic water bottles and canned foods.
It's a synthetic compound that mimics estrogen in the body.
We call these xenobiotics, or xenoestrogens.
And they're hugely impactful in regulating hormonal health
and risk increasing risk of cancer.
And it's been linked BPA to breast cancer,
to infertility, reproductive issues, obesity, heart disease,
and it's not that hard to get rid of it in your life.
Basically, don't touch credit card receipts,
don't touch gas station receipts
that come out of the machine,
don't eat from plastic bottles unless they're BPA free
or from canned foods unless they're BPA free.
So make sure you look at that. You
can use stainless steel, glass, bottling packaging, look for BPA canned foods.
The next compound is phthalates. Phthalates are also plasticizers and they're found in
food containers, children's toys. It's banned in Europe. There's a legislation in Europe
called REACH. It gets rid of most of these chemicals that are allowed in America.
When there's ever an attempt to limit by law or a bill to reduce our exposures, the food
industry and chemical industry comes in hard with tons of lobbying dollars, millions and
millions and millions, tens of millions of dollars to defeat bills.
There was one on Bisphenol A that got defeated.
Unfortunately, it was trying to be banned,
but it didn't pass because there was so much
lobbying against it.
But it's found in children's toys,
it's found in like the plastic little rubber duckies
in the bathtub, so they stick it in their mouth,
bad idea.
Also makeup has a lot of phthalates in it,
so get rid of all your unhealthy makeups,
and we're gonna talk about how to do that,
but there's a beautiful website called ewg.org, the environmental working group.
They have a skin deep database.
You can put in your product, what you like to use or other products you can find that
have no contaminants and see the level of toxins and what they are and find alternatives.
So they also are really bad for you because phthalates cause hormonal chaos.
They're linked to different cancers, to birth defects, to thyroid problems.
So make sure you check it out.
And the basic rule is if you wouldn't eat it, you probably shouldn't put it in or on
your body.
Right?
So for skincare products, everything goes through the skin.
When we go to the emergency room with a heart attack, what's the first thing we do?
As a doctor, we slap on a toothpaste tube cream full of nitroglycerin because it
goes right through the skin and it's the fastest acting, but I'm taking it by mouth or before
we can get an IV in, we just slap that on. And so it goes to the skin, hormone patches,
testosterone gels, we know the fentanyl patch. I mean, there's all kinds of drugs that are
delivered through the skin. So when you're putting on your skin
It's actually getting inside your body. So you want to make sure that if you wouldn't eat it
You shouldn't put it on your body like coconut oil, but you can eat that and you can put on your body
So that's a win, but there's a lot of products out there that are safe that you can use
Another one that's concerning is glycol ethers. They're in household cleaning products cosmetics paints
They damage fertility the lead to birth defects,
they wear some allergies, asthma.
And these are really bad because they're pretty much
in all of our household cleaning products.
And the environmental working group, EWG,
also has a whole guide on household cleaning products.
So you can use the least contaminated products
or ones that have no toxins in them that work well.
So make sure you check that out. there are so many other toxins like heavy metals mercury lead arsenic
Mercurys from fish from our fillings from coal burning plants pollution lead is often found in
Crystal wine glasses or glaze plates. I see many many patients have those and they get sick from that
It can be in the ground
It can be from coal burning if you're in a cement plant or a coal plant.
That basically goes up in the atmosphere, comes down in the soil, your kids are playing
with it, they'll be dragging the house, the baby's on the floor. So lead exposure is real.
There's houses that still have leaded paint. All the leaded gasoline that was used for
years, all that went in the air and goes down to the soil. It can be in vegetables if you're
growing in an urban environment. For example, you're growing greens and you think you're eating kale and being healthy,
it could be full-let. Now, arsenic also is a big problem and it's found in rice many places because
in the ground, it can be in pressure-treated lumber that you have in your deck and getting your feed.
It can go actually in chicken feed to prevent the feed from going moldy,
which is great for the feed and the mold,
but it's not good for you,
and it gets in the chicken and you eat it.
So it's pretty important for us
to make sure that we get rid of those.
So I think the key is we need to avoid toxins.
And so the question is,
what are the top strategies
to reduce our toxic burden?
Well, we can basically remove the toxins,
but we also have to upregulate our detox system.
So, first thing is avoid plastics wherever you can.
Try stainless steel, like containers, I have those,
or glass containers for storing food in your fridge.
Steel and so water bottles, glass containers are great for leftovers. Don't fridge, stealing some water bottles, glass containers
are great for leftovers.
Don't buy water and plastic water bottles, get a water filter.
I like reverse osmosis and you can actually get a water bottle, bring it with you.
Make sure you detox your home.
Get simple cleaning products, a laundry detergent, cleaning products for windows, for counters,
for dishwashers, stuff, everything.
And there's a great source, Thrive Market.
It's an online grocery store, basically.
You can get all the best cleaners from seventh generation and other eco-friendly, non-toxic
food companies.
And now, of course, check out EWG's guide on household cleaning products, on skin-fear
products.
They're great.
So I think make sure that you just are diligent about getting
toxins out of your home. Second is mercury is a big one and often we don't pay
attention to what we're eating and people eat tuna fish, swordfish, sushi.
Sadly all the oceans have been polluted and no matter where you get your fish
from it's pretty much pre-polluted. There's microplastics, mercury and other
toxins, PCBs, Farm fish can be just
as bad. So there are a few kind of ways to get around it. One is to eat very small fish,
sardines, mackerel, herring, anchovies. Small salmon can be okay, but still that can have
mercury. Also, there's a great regenerative aquaculture company called SeaTopia.fish and
they actually provide beautiful, delicious,
clean fish that you can get frozen, sent to your home. It's amazing fish actually. And also reduce
your exposure to the problems that are from all the chemicals in your environment by having the
air filter in your house that reduces their airborne pollution.
Indoor air pollution is a real thing,
whether it's mold or whether it's other things
like contaminants, off-gassing from furniture or rugs.
I mean, you wanna obviously try to have a clean home
and not full of products,
but I mean, you buy a Tempur-Pedic bed
and it smells awful, it's off-gassing.
Those are called VOCs, false organic compounds.
You really wanna avoid those in your house.
And then you wanna start to learn about
how to actually upgrade
and increase your body's own detoxification system.
And the best way to do that is by using
a couple of strategies that are really important.
One is maximize your intake of phytochemicals.
Plant-based compounds, these nutrients in plants,
work on upregulating different pathways in the body,
including a lot of detox pathways.
There's amazing cornucopia of phytochemicals
that work on boosting glutathione
and boosting our detox pathways
and increasing our ability to get rid of stuff.
So the biggest category is the cruciferous vegetables.
Broccoli, collards, cabbage, kale, brussels sprouts.
They really upregulate glutathione in the body
and help to maximize the main detoxifier.
Also, there are amazing things like garlic and onions
that also contain sulfur that are great for detoxification.
Also things like rosemary, curcumin, ginger,
and the skin of a lemon, like if you grate lemon into a salad or something, the skin of a lemon has limonene.
These all help up-regulate our detox pathways.
We also need the right nutrients, right?
We need methylation support, B12, folate, B6, we need magnesium, selenium, zinc, and
many other minerals and vitamins to actually help up regulate our detox pathways.
We need amino acids in the form of protein to help with some of the amino acid pathways.
So there's lots of ways we now understand the body's own built-in detox system and we
have to support it.
The next thing you do is sweat.
So your body gets rid of toxins through both exercise, increasing the lymphatic flow and circulation
through exercise, increased circulation and also sauna.
Sauna is an amazing way to boost your detox system and help body remove a lot of the environmental
toxins which are fat soluble and you can actually measure them on the sweat.
You also want to take the right supplements as I mentioned.
So you want to take additional support of a good multi, methylated support, zinc, vitamin
C, glutathione, boosting stuff, N-acetylcysteine, lipoic acid, milk thistle, a lot of other
herbs can be used to help to boost the body's detox pathway.
So I highly recommend getting on a regular support system for that.
I do because we're all exposed.
Sometimes if you have a real big issue, you might need to see a doctor and get treated.
Like I did for mercury poisoning, I needed chelation.
I needed to actually use a medication to help remove the metals from my body.
If it's lead, you can use EDTA.
If it's mercury, you can use DMSA.
They're extremely effective.
They need to be used properly and safely with a doctor's supervision.
There's a lot of steps to properly getting rid of mercury but you
need a good functional medicine doctor. If you love this podcast please share it
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Thank you so much again for tuning in.
We'll see you next time on The Dr. Hyman Show.
This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center, my
work at Cleveland Clinic, and Function Health where I am Chief Medical Officer.
This podcast represents my opinions and my guests' opinions.
Neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests.
This podcast is for educational purposes only
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This podcast is provided with the understanding
that it does not constitute medical
or other professional advice or services.
If you're looking for help in your journey,
please seek out a qualified medical practitioner.
And if you're looking
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It's important to have someone in your corner who is a trained, licensed
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Thanks so much again for listening.