The Dr. Hyman Show - Tired But Wired? The Hidden Loop Destroying Your Energy | Dr. Scott Sherr, MD

Episode Date: April 15, 2026

What if feeling better didn’t have to take months or years to figure out, but could start today? On this episode of The Dr. Hyman Show, I sit down with Dr. Scott Sherr to talk about why so many peo...ple feel stuck in what he calls a “sympathetic spiral of doom.” Energy is low, recovery isn’t what it used to be, and there’s a constant sense of stress that doesn’t seem to resolve. We walk through what’s actually happening beneath the surface, why it can be so hard to break out of that pattern once you’re in it, and how to start shifting your energy and recovery. Watch the full conversation on YouTube, or listen wherever you get your podcasts. In this episode, we discuss: • Why you feel “tired but wired” and what it actually means for your body • What’s keeping your energy low even when nothing obvious is wrong • How stress from your life and environment builds up and keeps you stuck • Why calming down doesn’t always work—and what to focus on instead • How to start rebuilding your energy so your body can recover and adapt We shouldn’t have to wait for something to go wrong to take action. The goal is to help your body function better so you can actually feel it day to day. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman https://drhyman.com/pages/picks?utm_campaign=shownotes&utm_medium=banner&utm_source=podcast Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal https://drhyman.com/pages/longevity?utm_campaign=shownotes&utm_medium=banner&utm_source=podcast Join the 10-Day Detox to Reset Your Health https://drhyman.com/pages/10-day-detox Join the Hyman Hive for Expert Support and Real Results https://drhyman.com/pages/hyman-hive This episode is brought to you by Perfect Amino, Korrus, Timeline, BON CHARGE, BIOptimizers and Pique. Go to bodyhealth.com and use code HYMAN20 to get 20% off your first order. Visit korrus.com/drhyman for 15% off their newest product OIO Sphere with code HYMANSPHERE15. Visit timeline.com/drhyman for 20% off a subscription on top of the new starting price of $79. Head to boncharge.com/hyman and use code HYMAN for 15% off. Head to bioptimizers.com/hyman and use promo code HYMAN at checkout to save 15%. Secure 20% off your order plus a free starter kit at piquelife.com/hyman. (0:00) Introduction and guest Dr. Scott Scherer (3:31) Understanding the sympathetic spiral of doom (5:06) Symptoms and signs of sympathetic overdrive (7:10) Sympathetic activation, mitochondrial function, and stress (10:02) Mitochondria: their role and impact in the body (12:31) Stress, metabolic dysfunction, and their effects (17:43) Nervous system, mitochondria, and the cell danger response (21:25) Survival, stress, and breaking the sympathetic spiral (23:11) Contributors to stress: top-down and bottom-up (25:56) Mitochondria, microbiome, and medication impacts (29:38) Mitochondrial dysfunction and mental health (32:19) Limitations of parasympathetic activation and addressing root causes (36:46) How mitochondrial stress leads to fight-or-flight (37:52) Steps to break the sympathetic spiral and support mitochondria (42:41) Methylene blue: benefits, uses, and safety (50:35) Methylene blue as an MAO inhibitor and for chronic infections (57:17) Case studies, third-party testing, and Transcriptions' evolution (1:02:36) Parasympathetic edge, recovery, and the GABA system (1:07:44) GABA, supplements, and interventions for stress (1:12:23) Addressing root causes and methylene blue usage (1:17:29) Transcriptions products, sleep formula, and practitioner ecosystem (1:19:49) OneBase Health, hyperbaric space, and final information

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I eat perfectly. I exercise six times a week. I try to get to bed on time and sleep. I'm feeling depleted. And I think people are in this state and they don't have a name for it. But you call it the sympathetic spiral of doom. And it's a loop. You have sympathetic activation, which is your fight or fight, your nervous system being activated. You have mitochondrial dysfunction. The challenge is any time you try to downregulate your nervous system, it actually might make you feel like you're crashing. People feel like they crash. When they go down and try to do their breathwork, try to do their meditation. Oftentimes, they feel terrible when they try to do it. If they can even do it in the first place,
Starting point is 00:00:33 you've only been able to function because you've been at that high of a state. You can't meditate your way out of this physiological stress to your cells in mitochondria is what you're saying, right? So what do we do? If someone's stuck, what's the first step to getting out of this loop? Today on the podcast, I'm joined by Dr. Scott Scher. He is a board-certified physician and a pioneer in health optimization medicine.
Starting point is 00:00:53 As an expert in mitochondrial function and the chief medical officer of prescriptions, he's helping people break the sympathetic stress loop to rapidly restore energy, focus, and resilience. I wanted to share something personal about my own health journey. Now, while back, I went through a period where I was recovering physically and working hard to rebuild my strength. I was doing all the right things, eating well, exercising. I was focusing on sleep and recovery, but I started looking more closely at how the body actually uses protein as we age. And here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:01:22 Our bodies don't always utilize protein as efficiently as we get older. So even when you're eating well, you may not always be good. getting the essential amino acids your body needs to support muscle repair and recovery. And that's when I started using perfect aminos. Now, I want to be clear, this isn't about replacing whole food protein. I'm a huge believer in getting high quality protein from real food. But perfect amino can be a very convenient way to complement your diet and to help make sure you're getting the essential amino acids your body relies on.
Starting point is 00:01:51 The essential amino acids are nine amino acids your body cannot make on its own. So you have to get them from food or supplements. and they play a key role in processes like building and repairing muscle, supporting your recovery, and maintaining overall metabolic health. For me, it's become a helpful part of my personal routine while focusing on recovery, strength, and maintaining muscle as I age, especially alongside resistance training and, of course, the nutrient-dense diet. So to get your perfect amino today, head over to bodyhealth.com and get 20% off your first order with the code hymen 20. That's B-O-D-Y health.com and use the code Hyman 20.
Starting point is 00:02:28 For years, my diet and my fitness were pretty dialed in, and yet I still felt like something was missing, especially during the darker months, and light was the variable I struggled to get right. And Khoras, the makers of Oyo, have spent years and millions of research and development to solve this. They didn't just build a light bulb, they figured out how to bring the sun indoors.
Starting point is 00:02:45 Back by more than 530 patents and Nobel-level science, Oyo by Khoris removed stimulating blue wavelengths at night so your body can do what it was designed to do, rest and recover. And when your circadian rhythm resets, everything improves. Your sleep deepens, your energy sharpens, even your immune system response. I've seen what happens when people fix your light. They don't just sleep better. They feel clearer, more grounded, and more alive.
Starting point is 00:03:08 If you're making one change this year that touches everything, start with your light. Learn more at corus.com slash Dr. Hyman and enjoy 15% off their newest product, OyoSphere with the code Hyman'sphere 15. That's K-O-R-R-U-S-com slash fear. and use the code Hyman Sphere 15. Welcome back to the podcast, guys. So good to have you. Thanks for having me, Mark.
Starting point is 00:03:32 Last time it was online. Today, it's in person. Yeah, it was online. We talked about hyperbaric oxygen. And today we're going to talk about a really important topic, which honestly affects so many people, including me. And, you know, I never heard it quite described like this. But you call it the sympathetic spiral of doom.
Starting point is 00:03:53 Bada, butabada bump. I asked exactly. And you know, at first I was like, ah, that's kind of hyperbolic, whatever. And then I started reading about it. Yeah. I'm like, oh, this is what it is. It's basically the way in which your system breaks down
Starting point is 00:04:06 from too much stress from your life and your psychology, but also too much stress from the environment. Yes, it's top down, bottom up. So the environment would be toxins and infections and all the stuff that we're exposed to. Right. And it creates a breakdown in our ability to regulate our nervous system.
Starting point is 00:04:26 And then it influences our mitochondrial function, which kind of makes it worse. So the body's this big web network or everything's connected. Right. And so you're kind of untangling the web to telling this story in kind of a new way. It's an old story.
Starting point is 00:04:41 We all know that stress is bad for us, right? Right. But like this is a very different frame of it. And I love it. And I think it's going to help a lot of people because you have to be systematic about it. Right. And a lot of us are feeling burned out.
Starting point is 00:04:53 Like we're doing everything like, I eat perfectly. I exercise six times a week. I try to get to bed on time and sleep. And it's just, you know, but sometimes I'm feeling depleted. And I think a lot of people out there are probably feeling that. And I think people are in this state and they don't have a name for it. And they just feel like crap and they don't know what's going on.
Starting point is 00:05:12 They're exhausted. They're wire. They're anxious. They're burned out. And today really want to like have people who are listening to understand, you know, what is going on with their energy, what is going on with stress? What are the psychological and the physiological cause of stress? And how do we start kind of navigating this from a therapeutic perspective?
Starting point is 00:05:33 Because, like, we all want out of this. I, as soon as like, yeah, I'm in this empathetic spiral of doom, and I don't want the hell out of this thing. So what is it? Explain to us, unpack it for us. Well, thanks again for having me, Mark. And, you know, what I like to just describe here is it's not a diagnosis for people. This is more of a pattern.
Starting point is 00:05:49 As you mentioned, it's an age-old pattern. But I realized recently that it was really a, significant discovery for me to understand that it's a spiral and it's a loop. You have sympathetic activation, which is your fight or fight, your nervous system being activated. You have mitochondrial dysfunction. Mitocondrial dysfunction, mitochondria, as all your listeners know, is a part of their cells that make energy. The combination of sympathetic activation and mitochondrial dysfunction is a loop. And what happens here is that this loop can either start with mitochondrial dysfunction directly, that's what I call bottom up, or it can start with sympathetic activation from outside,
Starting point is 00:06:24 side stressors, say it's your job, your relationship, you have a snoring partner that is snoring and you can't get to sleep at night, outside stresses, or even worse things like trauma or things that happen when you're younger that have maintained you in this place where you can't stay safe. Either way, whether it starts with mitochondrial dysfunction directly, or it starts with sympathetic activation externally, or for most people, it's both. And then it's something that just makes you fall off a cliff. It could be... Let me pause your first.
Starting point is 00:06:50 Just define sympathetic activation. Yeah. People are like, what is that? And define, like, a little bit better mitochondria. Sure. Because these are, these are central to your thesis of the sympathetic. So let's get our terms right, because I think people are like, otherwise, there'll be just be talking doctor stuff.
Starting point is 00:07:05 I'm sympathetic, you know? I'm sympathetic. No, no, no, it's not bad. Yeah, no, good point. So, yeah. So I feel them sympathetic to those that are insipathetic. The sympathetic nervous system. So sympathetic is your fight or flight part of your nervous system.
Starting point is 00:07:17 So it's your, it's running away from the proverbial saber-tooth tiger, as we somehow always. I don't know why. But you're getting chased by something. Yeah. But unfortunately, we're getting chased all the time in modern society, whether it's with our phones that are actively in our faces all the time and doom scrolling at three o'clock in the morning going, why is this the way it is? Or it's outside things like your job or your relationship, but we're not, we don't reward people resting or relaxing. So the sympathetic nervous system is part of your autonomic nervous system. You have your sympathetic branch, which is your activation, fight or flight, and you have your parasympathetic,
Starting point is 00:07:51 which is your rest, digest, detoxify, and heal. But modern society doesn't reward that side, right? It rewards the hustle. I mean, in medical school, my friends and I had shirts that said, sleep is for quitters. Not surprising. I grew up in New York. Surgeons don't have lunch.
Starting point is 00:08:08 That was ours. There you go. Same kind of thing. Like, you just, you hustle, right? You go and you grind, right? That's what we reward. And then, unfortunately, that's how society has created this stress externally for us that we have to perform, we have to have more, do more, do more, do more all the time.
Starting point is 00:08:25 And so instead of just running away from the Sabre 2 Tiger and then, you know, hanging out the rest of the day because hopefully we lived, maybe we probably didn't, but in some cases we did, right? Then you would have the time to relax because your nervous system would be activated and then it'd be shut off. But that's not how modern society works anymore. As you know, we're constantly stressed, constantly on pressure, constantly on meetings. And that's that sympathetic activation. And most of us kind of think we thrive in that environment, and we can for a little while. But the problem is that when you're sympathetic all the time, you're releasing hormones like cortisol, your neurotransmitters like noraphenephrin and epine, adrenaline, and adrenaline, yes,
Starting point is 00:09:00 neurodrenaline and adrenaline that are stimulating the whole system to work harder. Because if you're in that sympathetic nervous system activation all the time, I call it sympathetic overdrive, you're just shoving all those neurotransmitters and hormones out all the time. And that causes deterioration in immune system function, in hormone function. and in your mitochondria itself. So to define mitochondria, which we can do now, the mitochondria are part of the cell that helps make energy, right? When I was in high school, my daughter is in ninth grade.
Starting point is 00:09:28 She learned she's got the basic cell. She just learned, she's like, Dad, she got the basic cell. It's got a nucleus. It's got cytoplasm. It's got gulgy bodies. And it's got this one little cool organelle called a mitochondria. I'm like, huh, this is what I learned when I was probably that age too. You learn that the cell has one mitochondria.
Starting point is 00:09:43 But that is far from the case. It has like thousands. Some cells in our body have thousands of mitochondria per cell. And some cells, actually, there's one human cell that has zero, and that's the red blood cell. Yeah, the red blood cell. Right. But most mitochondria per cell are in our reproductive organs. Eggs, oocytes, sperm are the number one.
Starting point is 00:10:00 They've got to swim. And legal energy to swim. Yeah, and the eggs have more, though. Women have to, you know, create and make the baby. And so they have more. But just behind that is your brain, your heart, your liver, your musculoskeletal tissue. So detox, everybody is hugely energetically intensive. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:16 realize that is like if you need it if you're going to be able to detox you have to have a huge amount of mitochondrial energy and so we have thousands of mitochondria in our brain for example as I mentioned the problem is and the statistics are crazy it's like 94% of u.s. adults have some element of metabolic dysfunction right and if you have metabolic dysfunction you also have mitochondrial dysfunction which means you can't make energy effectively ourselves are like gasoline powered cars right we make ATP as you know we make also carbon dioxide we make water and we also make what are called reactive oxygen species. For radicals, yes, exactly. And so we need those. But if we have too many, or if we're stimulated for such a long time or a period of time, like you're sympathetically
Starting point is 00:10:55 overdriven, right? You're stimulating the mitochondria to make so much energy or trying to. And what happens over time is that the mitochondria can't keep up. They can't keep up with energy production. They can't keep it up with the detoxification required because you don't have enough antioxidants around. And then the mitochondria become under significant amounts of stress. And so you're in this place now where you have sympathetic overdrive, mitochondrial dysfunction in the majority of people. And it's a spectrum now, but all of these people, everybody, so many of us are on this sympathetic spiral as a result of that. And what's really interesting is the connection between the stress response, which we all can
Starting point is 00:11:29 relate to, and our mitochondrial function, which is basically something that, you know, most of us don't think about. And by the way, most doctors don't know much about that we learned basically in biochemistry in the first semester of medical school, how to, you know, food and oxygen go through our little crept cycle mitochondria. You memorize all the intermediates, right? And we memorize it for five minutes before the test. And we forget about it. But mitochondria are central to almost every single disease that we see in chronic illness,
Starting point is 00:12:01 whether it's dementia or cancer or heart disease or obesity or diabetes or all the neurodegenerative diseases. It's just quite, it's quite profoundly important. And you're right. Like if you, if you are in this stress response and then you're also exposed to all the stresses of being in the modern world with microplastics and pesticides and heavy metals and latent viruses, infections, long COVID, tick infections, mold exposure. Insulin resistance. Insulin, like the whole thing. Yeah. And then, of course, our ultra sort of processed diet that I was getting to that. Yeah. Yeah. You know, our highly sugary processed diet. So, you know, we all. or stressing our stress response,
Starting point is 00:12:44 because you're, by the way, eating crap makes your body stressed, even if you don't psychologically feel stressed. Right. And also it stresses your mitochondria. So then you get all these insults. You talk about this sort of metabolic stress. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:56 You know, what are like the main symptoms? People are in this synthetic spousalibular do. Like how would people listen, you know, I have this. So when it comes down to when the mitochondria are so stressed, they shift over from being, making, being able to make energy effectively. Instead of making energy like with oxygen, they actually shipped over into something called the glycolytic state, which is making less energy
Starting point is 00:13:16 because they're trying to protect themselves from all the stress that they're on. And when that happens, there's an overcompensation of the sympathetic nervous system. The sympathetic overdraft gets even higher because you physically feel worse. And these are the symptoms you're talking about. We're talking about feeling tired but wired, feeling like you can't recover anymore from anything that was pretty small before, something small. Now it takes you two or three days, like you go to the gym, you don't feel like you really recover for two or three days. You go on an airplane, don't recover for much longer. Or you have a bad night of sleep and you feel terrible the next day.
Starting point is 00:13:49 Or your mood is all over the place. It used to be pretty stable throughout the day, barring going through perimenopause or something like that. It used to be stable. And now it's all over the place. You also can find that just overall your energy level is just kind of up and down throughout the day. Like you're relying on things like caffeine and stimulants to try to give you enough energy, giving enough brain function. And the challenge oftentimes, and I have,
Starting point is 00:14:10 patients like this. It's like, Doc, I just need to feel better. I need more stimulation. I need more energy. And oftentimes it's not about giving them more energy. It's actually about calming down the whole system, this whole loop, this spiral, and then allowing them to get back to making energy more effectively. And so there's a spectrum here, Mark, and you and I know this. We have people that are super, you know, complex and they've been sick for a long time and have, you know, very significant mitochondrial issues. And then you have people that are on the other side of the spectrum where they just don't feel very good anymore. Like they're just not waking up feeling like they have energy, Their energy is waning throughout the day.
Starting point is 00:14:43 Their recovery is not as good. And like oftentimes at those people, that something often happens where they feel like they just fall up a cliff. It's like that extra little stress that just did it and then all of a sudden the things go down. Yeah, they kind of manage along and they do they crash. Yeah.
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Starting point is 00:17:44 A lot of people have this. Super common. And if you look at it at a spectrum, you know, most of us are somewhere in that spectrum. Yeah, yeah. So you talk about this feedback loop between the nervous system and the mitochondria because I think it's a little bit hard conceptually for people to understand, well, how do that work?
Starting point is 00:18:01 Yeah. Your nervous system, yeah, or you're sympathetic. sympathetic and your stress response, your relaxation response, but how does that relate to your mitochondria and your energy system? And what is that connection and feedback loop? One of the main hormones that's being vilified right now is cortisol. Cortisol is your stress steroid hormone, as you know. When you're under fight or flight, when you're in sympathetic overdrive all the time, you're pumping out cortisol all the time. We're supposed to have cortisol rise when we wake up in the morning. It helps us wake up from being asleep, and then it's supposed to slowly go down throughout the day.
Starting point is 00:18:37 Yeah. The challenge is that most people do not have that pattern anymore. And what cortisol does is it stimulates the production of, it's a steroid hormone. It also stimulates and initiates the norapinephrine, aneprethenephrine, so norapenephren, noradrenaline and adrenaline in the system, too. And what happens when you have a lot of cortisol around and a lot of those neurotransmitters is that you are just telling your mitochondria that you're under stress. You need energy now.
Starting point is 00:19:03 And as a result of that, it is going to your mitochondria and saying, mitochondria, you need to make more energy now because you're under a lot of stress, this cortisol is high. And as a result of that, you're getting the mitochondria that are like, we can't keep up. There's too much energy requirements that you're giving us.
Starting point is 00:19:19 And so that's why it flips over into this something called the cell danger response, which I know you know about, which is when the cell says, we have to protect ourselves. And the mitochondria says, we're sensing too much stress. We can't actually keep up. And so when it does, it tries to protect itself, But when that happens, you start making less energy. And when you start making less energy, you start feeling like you're not able to compensate.
Starting point is 00:19:40 You're not actually able to show up. You're tired. You're tired. This is the tired but wired kind of feeling. The ability of the mitochondria to kind of like register this danger is interesting. And you know, you talk about this new concept, this cell danger response. But if you actually look in the medical literature, it's there. There's a lot of scientific papers about this.
Starting point is 00:19:59 It's not just some woo-woo thing. It sounds kind of a lot of crazy. but you actually look at it. And I think most physicians don't understand what it is. No. So, you know, what I'm just hearing, as you say, is when you have chronic stress, whether from the top down or bottom up, from, you know, your brain or from, you know, the toxin, crap and shit we're all exposed to, it stresses your mitochondria, and then it flips into this
Starting point is 00:20:21 cycle, this cell danger response. Yeah. Is that the same thing as the sympathetic spiral of doom? That's part of it, right? Because when you're in that sympathetic spiral, you're almost always flipping over into that cell danger response. And so, so unpack, what is the, cell danger response. The cell danger response is a natural response that the cells do when they're
Starting point is 00:20:38 under stress. There's multiple stages of the CDR, and there's a very, there's CDR, cell danger response, yes, sorry. And as a result of having this pattern, we have a way of either going anabolic or catabolic, which means that we can either build up or break down in the system. And what the CDR does, when the cell danger response is active, we get into more of a catabolic state. We start breaking down, parts of our body to try to protect it, where in the anabolic state is really when we're building up and getting stronger. That's when you're in a safe space, right? When you're in safe spaces, you're parasympathetic.
Starting point is 00:21:12 I call it the parasympathetic edge, really, and we can talk about that. But the idea is when you're in the parasympathetic mode, you're resting, digesting, you can turn off the cell danger response. But you can't turn it off if you're always in stress mode. And the cell danger response is basically protecting you from stress. It's protecting you so that you can survive. It's a survival mode. It's also activated in the short term when you have acute stress, when you have acute infection, you have acute additional stress outside, external stress.
Starting point is 00:21:41 But it's supposed to turn itself off. But it can't turn itself off if it doesn't have that anabolic, parasypathetic activation. And that's the challenge. And in addition to that, what happens over time is that you deplete a lot of the intermediates, a lot of the vitamins, minerals, nutrients, and cofactors that are responsible for shifting you out of the cell danger response. So just the very fact of trying to manage the danger, you're using a lot of nutrients. Tons of it, yeah. And you deplete your nutrients. Yes.
Starting point is 00:22:07 And then you end up in this vicious cycle where you need the nutrients to fix the problem, but you don't have the nutrients and it de pleas them. And you're still in the stress mode and you're still right. So the major question is, well, how do you approach it? How do you work on optimizing somebody's capacity and increasing their reserve, getting them out of the sympathetic, but also supporting their capacity to flip out of that cell danger response and support mitochondrial function? Well, that's an important question.
Starting point is 00:22:30 I want to get into the practical aspects of how do people end the sympathetic spousalibum and how do they stop the cell danger response? Before we get to that, I want to kind of unpack a little bit about your top-down, bottom-up idea here because it's important because you can enter into this sympathetic spousyardium from your psychological state, from trauma, or from your biological state, from things you're exposed to in the environment you may have control over or your diet, which you do have control over. So can you kind of walk us through? the top-down, bottom-up explanation.
Starting point is 00:23:02 Yeah. And we're the contributors to the sympathetic spoutive doom and cell danger response. So I think if we understand what those are, we can start to think about how we might approach them.
Starting point is 00:23:10 The top-down part, let's talk about that first. The top-down part is how are we stressed? What is causing our sympathetic activation? And the amount of things that can be doing this is unlimited in this point.
Starting point is 00:23:24 We can talk about it from social media to politics to what's going around in the world right now with war, and things like that. Two things that are distressed in the world right now. I mean a little. I mean a little.
Starting point is 00:23:34 I mean, it's not going away. Yeah. And we are wired as humans to do two things. Survive and reproduce. That's it. That's what we are wired to do because that's what the species requires. And so as a result of that, what do our news media? What does our social media do?
Starting point is 00:23:52 It wires you. It's wired or it's created to fit into those two patterns. survival and reproduction, mostly survival. So fear, right? Fear is the biggest one. And so there's tons of things that are coming outside of us all the time that are trying to instill fear in us. It could be everything from the things I mentioned. It could be within your own home, right? If it's a relationship that isn't great. If it's a job that's too hard, if you're not getting enough sleep, that's a huge one. Because if you're not getting enough sleep, you're not going to be able to regulate your nervous system either. And so that's what I call the top-down aspects. And I could fill in maybe
Starting point is 00:24:29 All the psychological stuff. All the psychological stuff. And you've been to your childhood trauma. Yes. It could this could, and I have, I mean, you've had patients like this, too, that, you know, they were abused as a child and they never feel safe in their own body. There's no way they can ever heal. There's no way they can ever really fully, truly be their best self because they're always
Starting point is 00:24:44 in this locked in sympathetic state. But there's ways there are people to come out of that. A hundred percent. Yeah, we'll talk about that. And then that's exactly what this is all about. It's about understanding the pattern and then seeing how to break. So that's the top down. That's the top down.
Starting point is 00:24:55 That's the bottom up is really, you did a great job really. when we were talking about direct mitochondrial stress, you know, things like infections and they're very sensitive, mitochondria, very sensitive. They are. Everything affects them. They do. They do. It's, I mean, they're a sensitive organelle. There's a lot of them. There's quadrillions of them in our bodies, huge amounts of them. That's a big number. It's huge. I can't count that eye. I can't either, but it's a quad. I know that. I think after that I can't remember. It's like, I don't know if it's quint after trillions is quadrillions, everybody that's listened. And so it's a lot of mitochondria. And so we need a huge amount of energy.
Starting point is 00:25:29 fact that we need to make about 150 pounds of it every single day of ATP to maintain our energy capacity. And as I mentioned, 94% of us can't do this on a regular basis. And that's because of the things you mentioned. You talked about insulin resistance and toxins on our environment, medications that we take on a regular basis that actually have a dysfunctional impetus or actually make our mitochondrial do worse, things like metformin, even, things like birth control pills even because they deplete nutrients that help with mitochondrial function. Not to say people should. get off their medications, but, you know, but even proton pump inhibitors, which are a big one. That's acid blockers or a big one that's thoroughly in cause of abuse of drugs, which is acid blockers from
Starting point is 00:26:09 people eating a crappy diet. Yeah, but statins too. Statins also have significant impact. And that's the number one class of drugs. Yeah. So the number one and three classes of drugs is causing mitochondrial damage. So statins and they have effect on both Complex 1 and Complex 2, which are the two first proteins in the mitochondria that help you make energy. And pesticides do it. Infections do we talked about it. And then, of course, this sympathetic activation,
Starting point is 00:26:31 which can be overarching to everything, but on its own can cause mitochondrial stress. And I think that the way I kind of picture this and I talk about it with my patients is that,
Starting point is 00:26:40 you know, we're talking, it's not just one thing. You know, it's often a combination. And you're going, you're riding along. Combo package.
Starting point is 00:26:46 Yeah, of course. You know, it's the bundle. And like, you're riding along, you're doing okay until you hit around for most people,
Starting point is 00:26:53 though it's getting worse now, like around like your mid-30s, late 30s, like early 40s, and then, and things start going a little, you know, pear-shaped, as they say in Ireland, one of my favorite expressions. And they're like, yeah, a little pear-shaped.
Starting point is 00:27:03 And things kind of go, like, why am I not recovering as well? Why do I need more sleep? Or why don't I feel as rested when I wake up in the morning? Or why does when my son comes in when he gets home at school at 4 o'clock, and he says, like, hi, dad, I go, what do you want? You know, I start, like, what's going on there, you know? And so you start noticing these things. But as you said, Mark, it's happening in earlier ages because of just the,
Starting point is 00:27:27 amount of toxic exposure that people have on a regular basis, which is crazy. Yeah, it's a lot. It's a lot. And, you know, the truth is, we have a lot of mitochondria, but they're fragile. Yeah. And they're very sensitive to any insult. Even like this disturbances in your microbiome. For sure. And the bacteria in your gut can cause harm. Yeah. You know, the microbiome mitochondrial connection, people don't even think about it. Yeah, the Interkingom Cross-Tock stuff is so cool. It's very impressive. Yeah. And, you know, you mentioned quickly metformin. I think I want to just quickly double click on that. This is a drug that's widely being used for diabetes.
Starting point is 00:28:01 I've used it for years in my practice. And it can be a good drug for diabetes. But it does have a weird side effect, which is an inhibits mitochondrial complex 1. And this is like one of the first steps in producing energy from food and oxygen. And one of the studies that most concerned me was they did a randomized control trial
Starting point is 00:28:19 where they did progressive resistance training, meaning must-sting training in two groups, one taking metformin and one- I'm not taking mitformin. Yeah. And the one taking mitformin didn't have any muscle gains and it inhibited muscle growth. Yep. And that concerns me.
Starting point is 00:28:34 So it's being used a lot for longevity and aging. I feel strongly that it's not something people should use for that. I think in certain cases in certain patients, it can be an adjunctive therapy and is a transition to get off of drugs because you can reverse all of it with lifestyle. But like, yeah, I just, I think it's important. So, so you've got, you've got all this top-down, bottom-up stuff, It even gets more interesting than that because a lot of new research and we've had Chris Palmeron and others talking about the mitochondrial role in mental health.
Starting point is 00:29:03 Oh, yeah. So it's not just that you lose energy and you're tired from the stress. Your mitochondria play a big role in dysregulating your mood and your brain function. So talk about that. Yeah, that's a big piece of it. I'm glad that you had Chris on. I think his work is so great looking at metabolic dysfunction and the reversal using the ketogenic diet, for example.
Starting point is 00:29:25 And that's a big symptom of what we just described here. And by the way, when we talk about metabolic dysfunction, it's kind of confusing term. Metabolic dysfunction in this context means how we turn food and oxygen into energy in the mitochondria. That's our metabolism. Yes. And then I would just add to that that how we are able to address the stress of making energy as well. In the sense that when we make energy, we make ATP, we're also making waste products, as I mentioned. And that's the other part of metabolic health is that you're able to make energy effectively
Starting point is 00:29:52 and you're able to neutralize the stress of making energy. But I love your definition because people get so confused by it, so I appreciate you mentioning it. So when it comes down to brain health and mental health disorders, depression, bipolar, even schizophrenia, and some of the major ones, like you see amazing capacity to work on mitochondrial function and see these things get so much better. I mean, people throw around and don't like the word cure,
Starting point is 00:30:16 but in some cases people coming off of medications, like entirely. And I've seen this. Like curing schizophrenia with diet and keto-dye. It's amazing. And I have a colleague that's on this with bipolar disorder, right? And so I feel like where it comes down to is that this is a mitochondrial dysfunction dysfunction, at least a significant component of it. There might be neurochemical things for sure, but you know, you and I both know, I learned to medical school that depression was a serotonin deficiency. How did that work out? Not so well. Wait, depression isn't a prozac deficiency? It's a prozac deficiency, right? And so everybody, we need to put prozac in the water. That was like, not LSD anymore, but the prozac. And we know now that-LST would be better. 100%. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:53 That would have been an interesting experiment in New York City back in the day. We know that depression is not a serotonin deficiency. And we know the people that have depression have no lower levels of serotonin than people that don't have depression, right? So I think that, you know, that's an interesting thing that we all learned that's completely wrong, right? And that's what I learned in medical school. And as we now know that mitochondrial dysfunction is so much more of the actual game here.
Starting point is 00:31:16 Now, understanding why people have the mitochondrial dysfunction is absolutely essential. We talked about the top down, the bottom up, and how you have to address the causes, for sure. But in the essence of this conversation, what I would say to those that are listening is that we can help people right now by working on mitochondrial function and sympathetic activation,
Starting point is 00:31:35 while long-term trying to figure out what those inputs are that are causing it, too. But seeing mitochondrial function improve, and then all of a sudden depression, anxiety, insomnia, get better, it's been transformative to people that I work with. No, it's huge. And I think just people should, stay tuned to the end of this podcast.
Starting point is 00:31:52 We're going to get to fix this, but I have a few more. No, it's good. I keep foreshadowing. No, no, it's good. It's good. We're going to get there. One of the ways, you know, as people are listening, I imagine the thinking is, well, you know, okay, I know how to activate my parisembatics system.
Starting point is 00:32:06 I can meditate. I can do breathwork. I can do yoga. I can maybe exercise to improve my mitochondria. But, you know, co-plungees, saunas, whatever. But you said something, which is interesting. You said, you can't parisoneys. sympathetic your way out of cell danger. What do that mean? So this is the thing, right? Because
Starting point is 00:32:25 You can't meditate your way out of this like physiological stress to your cells in mitochondria is what you're saying, right? Yeah, you can't. I mean, because you're in this sympathetic locked in kind of mode. And the challenge is any time you try to downregulate your nervous system, it actually might make you feel like you're crashing. Because when you try to get yourself out of sympathetic and get into parasympathetic, but you've been in sympathetic for a long period of time. So you're in that fight or flight, your mitochondria, as we've been talking about, had been under a lot of stress for a while, and we've depleted vitamins, minerals, nutrients. We're in that cell danger response location of your cell spectrum of capacity to make energy. And then you're trying to bring down the nervous system,
Starting point is 00:33:05 but what can happen when you do that is that you've only been able to function because you've been at that high of a state. And when you bring down the nervous system without enough support, on the mitochondrial side, especially, immune system would really be helpful too. You'll see that you have this crash. People feel like they crash. When they go down and try to do their breath work, try to do their meditation, oftentimes they feel terrible when they try to do it, if they can even do it in the first place. Because the other challenge of this too, Mark, is that people don't even know what it feels like to be back in parasympathetic mode. They don't even remember what it felt like to calm down their nervous system. And so it can be very difficult to do breath work or tell somebody
Starting point is 00:33:42 to meditate or the last thing you want to do is to tell them to calm down, of course, right? That doesn't work. If anybody's married or has a partner, they know rule number one, of being married is that you don't tell your partner to calm down, right? It doesn't mind. I was talking to my son who's eight. He's like, dad, he has three sisters, three older sisters and my wife. He's like, dad, what are the things you never tell a girl? I'm like, number one, do not tell them to calm down. Good advice. Yeah, yeah. So that's the thing, right? If you're in this locked in state where you're in this metabolic dysfunction related to being in this cell danger response, not being able to make enough energy, you can't just breathe your way out of it. And so you've got to
Starting point is 00:34:18 really deal with those root causes. Like, you know, say if you're mercury poisoned or your betrothed of fish and your thighs are working, it's hard to get enlightened. You know, you got to, like, you got to deal with those biological things. Yes. And then the, often the psychological things or the physiological stress gets better. But it takes time. And, you know, it's interesting. I, I really sort of fascinating when you come up with this, because I, I've noticed this for years of my practice. I was like, gosh, when people have a physical stress, meaning a toxin, an allergen, infection, and it's poor diet, whatever, it actually, causes a, like a trouble with the whole system.
Starting point is 00:34:53 Like it's not just, it's not just causing, like a mental stress causing stress. It's physiological stress. It creates the same fight or flight, the same sympathetic activation, the same, even if you, even if you're kind of cool and everything's fine, you can still feel stressed because of having mercury in your system. 100%, yeah. And I think that's something people don't realize. So it's not just psychological, it can be biological causes of psychological
Starting point is 00:35:17 stress. 100%, and that's what I tell my patients all the time. It doesn't have to start with that sympathetic activation, but it begins somewhere, and then at some point, they both often, they both have to be addressed, right? Which is you can't just address the mercury exposure. If you don't address also the sympathetic activation that was caused by the mercury exposure. Even if it wasn't a top-down issue before, maybe you had some mild things that were stressful, but not too bad, but all of a sudden, you're mercury toxic.
Starting point is 00:35:46 That's a different story. So when you work on mercury toxicity, you also have to work on a sympathetic activation too. Because if you don't do them both, you're still going to be left in a place where you're still sympathetically activated. And you know how it is. You've worked with patients like this. You know that if somebody is so fight or flight dominant, there's no healing that you can do with these patients. No, it's true. It's impossible. And it's really difficult. It's like the one time I agree with our conventional colleagues that if you're giving them supplements, it's like giving them expensive urine, you know, if you're not addressing the sympathetic activation. The sympathetic activation.
Starting point is 00:36:16 along with the root cause if it was mitochondrial first, right? And so that's why it's so nuanced here, but it's so important to kind of piece this out as you are and discuss it. But then even like the mitochondria stress from toxins or whatever, it actually makes the body stay in fight or flight. So explain that connection between the mitochondrial stress from things that are just insults that you didn't have to do it, like that are not mental insults,
Starting point is 00:36:42 causing this you to be in this mental state of fight or flight. Right. So the idea is that when you have a lot of mitochondrial stress, you're not making enough energy. Okay. And when you're not making enough energy, the system goes, oh, no, I need more energy. And what it does is tries to compensate by increasing your sympathetic nervous system, increasing your capacity to find out psychologically how you can help the situation. So it's almost like it's a bottom up where you have these sensations and activation of inflammatory pathways and et cetera in the body related to mitochondrial dysfunction that over. overtly psychologically, this manifest in you trying to figure out why this is happening or trying
Starting point is 00:37:22 to give you more energy. Yeah. So to maintain the capacity that you need to make any energy at all. And so you get in this loop where it doesn't have to be any of that overt sympathetic activation from outside sources. All of a sudden, it's just the mitochondria itself that are not making enough energy and then causing the system to compensate for that. Okay.
Starting point is 00:37:40 So let me see if I get this straight. We've got this thing that you described, which is something I think most of us who practice this way for years have already seen. We never called at this, but the sympathetic spial of doom, which can come from the top, down, bottom, up. It's a lot of mitochondrial dysfunctional stress, a lot of inability to produce energy in ourselves, which runs everything. And we end up in this cell danger response.
Starting point is 00:38:01 So we've got like sympathetic spiral doom, cell danger response. So people listening go, yeah, that's me. Right? I'm listening, go, yeah, that's kind of me. So, like, what do we do? Like, if someone's stuck, what's the first step to getting out of this? this loop. The first step... The spiral of doom.
Starting point is 00:38:18 The spiral is to escape the spiral. That's what you want to do over the long term. But initially, you want to figure out ways to help somebody now, to help break the spiral, and get them additional support so they actually can maintain and benefit from long-term support. So the idea is that you're a functional medicine expert. You've founded the field, basically, with Jeff and others. You know that working with people and optimizing their health, vitamins, minerals, nutrients, optimizing their gut, their neurotransmitters,
Starting point is 00:38:46 they can take a long time to do, right? Yeah. And if you're in this spiral, it's very difficult to do as well because, again, you're clamped down, you're sympathetically activated. So the goal of breaking the spiral is to support the mitochondria now,
Starting point is 00:38:58 as much as possible, and at the same time, slowly start down-regulating the sympathetic activation, slowly down-regulating the nervous system so it can calm down. But you have to do it in that order. You have to start off with supporting mitochondrial first, mitochondrial function first.
Starting point is 00:39:13 So does not meditate first, and then fix your mitochondria first, then meditate. Because what can happen is if you go too soon on the parasympathetic side, trying to calm down the nervous system without having mitochondrial support, that's when you get into trouble too because you physically and mentally can't compensate because you don't have enough energy capacity. And so your energy capacity is still low. You've downregulated your nervous system,
Starting point is 00:39:38 and now the sympathetic activation, the fighter flight is down. You're trying to calm down the nervous system, but you don't have energy that you can make. you don't have enough energy. And so as a result of that, you crash. And I've seen this in my practice all the time where if you start working on the nervous system too soon, people crash. And so the key is to work on mitochondrial function now and give immediate support so that when you start down regulating and calming down, that this nervous system has enough capacity, the whole system has enough capacity because the mitochondria is supported. Okay, so let's talk about that. How do we fix
Starting point is 00:40:10 mitochondria? Because it certainly wasn't something that we all learned in medical school. It's It's something that's one of the essential features of functional medicine, which is understanding how to diagnose and treat mitochondrial dysfunction. Right. It's a little bit tricky because, you know, the best way to look at mitochondria is doing muscle biopsy, but that's not fun. Yeah, no. But there are other tests.
Starting point is 00:40:30 How do you think about approaching mitochondrial dysfunction? Because, yes, it's got to be focusing on the causes. Like if you're eating something that's bad or if you've got exposure to toxins. But let's assume you're working on those because you have. to, what else can you revive these little poor baby little mitochondria that don't feel so good? Well, I think you're kind of alluding to the idea of testing to see how mitochondria are working. And there are new tests out there that are working on giving you a direct sense of what's happening in the mitochondria. And there are maybe there are a number of them that are on the market already.
Starting point is 00:41:03 Some of them might be more ready for prime time than others. What do you think is the... Well, I mean, there's a couple out there. I mean, the ones that I use are more the indirect measures. Like you do like organic acid testing, for example, looking at the intermediate. mediates that are associated with making energy and also oxidative stress markers, inflammatory markers. Those are really good indicators, really, of mitochondrial function.
Starting point is 00:41:22 There's things like Meascreen and Midaswab and others that are out there that I think are interesting. I think they're new. In the end, what I see here is it's really nice to have the data, for sure, because then you can get a sense of how people do over time. But so much of this, as you know, Mark, is subjective. But people really do know how they feel. If you, even guys who are not as good as women as we know about telling you how they
Starting point is 00:41:44 like, well, how did you feel last, you know, five years ago? Tell me about your energy now versus five years ago. Like, oh, yeah, I had a lot of energy. I had no issues. And now I get brain fog. I get that dip during the day and I feel terrible. People can typically give you a sense. So subjectively, such a big part of this. And when that's hard, but it's so important because it's how you feel on some level. But what it comes down to is that when you're looking at optimizing mitochondrial function, it is giving the mitochondria what it needs to make energy effectively and to address the stress of making energy. Vitamins, minerals, nutrients,
Starting point is 00:42:16 antioxidants, getting rid of heavy metals. This is your work. This is my work. The challenge with all of that, though, is that it takes time. It doesn't happen overnight. And so I've kind of fallen in love with a compound called Methylene Blue
Starting point is 00:42:29 that you know of. That is a very novel compound in some respects, but it's been around for a long time. But it's one of the most effective ways at supporting mitochondrial function right now. And the reason is that it works on the energy production cycle of things. It helps with energy production. And it also works directly like an antioxidant.
Starting point is 00:42:51 So our cells are like gasoline-powered cars. Methylene blue at low doses, as long as it's a clean source, four milligrams to 25 milligrams or so, works both as an energy enhancer and as a detoxifier. So it's more like an electric power vehicle rather than a gasoline-powered one. And so it's become one of these big levers that I can pull with patients. to be a bridge, to be that bridge. I like a picture. I often will put up a picture of the Brooklyn Bridge. I love the Brooklyn Bridge. I grew up in New York. And it's this bridge where you can help people right now while they're on that path. So if you're starting at like letter A through H or something in the alphabet on your path to optimizing your health, that first beginning can be really hard, really hard because you don't have energy to go take a walk around the block. You don't have enough energy to make your own food. You don't have enough energy to maybe get out of a relationship. that's toxic, right? But once you start giving people enough energy, supporting that capacity without causing stress on the system, that's when they can make huge gains across the alphabet
Starting point is 00:43:52 in my analogy here, getting them to LMO or whatever. And then they're able to start really making changes that they really want to make. And so I see Methylene Blue as a fantastic bridge for so many people on this path to their own health optimization journey. You know, and the mechanism of action is really interesting, right? It kind of acts as an electron carrier, which is electrons are really what goes through this little mitochondrial, you know, assembly line to make energy to make ATP. And it kind of bypasses some of the complexes, like two and three that are kind of in the way. So if there's mitochondrial dysfunction, it kind of like leapfrogs over it a little bit, right? Yep, it bypasses that. And then you get more ATP and you get less
Starting point is 00:44:32 oxidative stress. In my practice, you know, one of the doctors was sharing with me how they were doing intravenous bethylene blue and how they had a Parkinson's patient. And the immediate, you know, improve their symptoms. And I don't know if it was a long-lasting effect, but it was an incredible thing because we know that Parkinson's is fundamentally a mitochondrial disease in the part of the brain that has to do with motor function. Right. And so can you kind of explain how that might all be possible? Yeah. So in the end, neurocognitive disease, metabolic, as we've been talking about, everything has these parts of the cell called the mitochondria that help make energy, your immune system, everything. And so if your mitochondria aren't working well, you have significant incapacity,
Starting point is 00:45:10 in the areas that have the most mitochondria that are affected. And so in Parkinson's, you know, it's in the substantia nigra in the brain, for example. So one cool thing about methyling blue I should mention is that it is highly bioavailable, which means that orally absorption, oral absorption of methylene blue is almost as good as IV. The only difference with IV is at how fast it gets in the body, but most people don't need IV. Most people can use oral and get the same mitochondrial benefits. And so what you were describing on what's called the electron transport chain in the mitochondria, So the mitochondria has these proteins that are all kind of aligned up.
Starting point is 00:45:42 And electrons that we get from our food, mostly carbohydrates and fat, they get donated to this chain using something called NAD and FAD, which people know NAD these days, right? That's a hot topic I know. So you get these carriers, electron carriers, NAD, and FAD, that bring electrons into the mitochondria. So what happens is if you have those first couple proteins not working very well, Complex 1 or Complex 2, the whole rest of the system breaks down. you don't have the capacity to make energy. And most of the mitochondrial toxins out there
Starting point is 00:46:12 are affecting complex one and complex too. We talked about statins. We talked about metformin. Infections, pesticides, more are affecting those first two complexes, those first two complexes, excuse me. And so if those first couple complexes aren't working, the rest of the system breaks down.
Starting point is 00:46:27 So what methylene blue can do is it can come in, it can bypass the complexes that aren't working very well, and donate electrons directly up the chain. So all of a sudden, you're able to start making energy, in these cells. It's almost like a bypass road. If there's a broken road,
Starting point is 00:46:40 just kind of goes around it. Yes, and it also can recycle things like NAD and FAD, so those can maintain their capacity to take electrons from your food, even if those particular complexes aren't working as well as they needed to. So it's this amazing capacity to bypass and compensate for almost any capacity or incapacity of the electron transport chain to work. And that, even to the much as so as it's actually the antidote for cyanide poisoning.
Starting point is 00:47:06 So cyanide... Right. is actually a... It kills you by stopping your mitochondria from working. Complex four. So the fourth complex in the mitochondria, complex four, is destroyed by cyanide. And what methylene blue can do
Starting point is 00:47:18 is it does these ninja moves of going across membranes and being an electron acceptor so you can maintain electron flow through those protein complexes, even if you're poisoned by cyanide. And so that's just demonstrating the power of this particular amount. And it's actually how I learned about it was in the emergence room.
Starting point is 00:47:34 As an emergency room doctor, if someone comes with cyanidein poisoning, this is the drug that you give to cure people. Right, so it's not common, but it's there. There's another one called methemogloomenemia, which is more common, and that's also why it's used in emergency rooms all over the country. That's from carbon monoxide poisoning,
Starting point is 00:47:49 and also if you've, like, the huffing glue or like the stuff, if you have too much of that, that gives you the incapacity to carry oxygen on your red blood cells, and methane blue changes the iron state to make sure that you can. I recommend magnesium to most of my patients, and for good reason. It's involved in hundreds of biochemical reactions in the body, including regulating the nervous system, supporting muscle recovery, and helping your body transition to a restful sleep. Now, what's interesting is that newer research is starting to look at how
Starting point is 00:48:20 certain forms of magnesium may support brain health and sleep quality. Now, one randomized clinical study, adults who took a brain-available form of magnesium reported improvements in sleep quality and daytime functioning compared to placebo. Now, magnesium is one of the most common nutrient deficiencies I see and low levels can contribute to stress, poor sleep, muscle, tension, and low energy. And the challenge is that most magnesium supplements only contain one or two forms, and they're not always well absorbed. And that's why I recommend magnesium breakthrough by bioptimizers. It's a full spectrum formula that includes seven different forms of magnesium, designed to support your brain, your muscles, your stress response, and your sleep. I take it as part
Starting point is 00:49:01 of my evening routine. Try today and go to bioptimizers.com slash hymening. use the code hymen at checkout to save 15% off your order. That's B-I-O-P-T-I-Z-E-R-S.com slash hymen and use the code hymen. As a doctor, one of the questions I get all the time is, how bad is alcohol for me really? Now, many people reach for a drink at the end of the day to unwind or to feel social, and it works in the moment. But even moderate alcohol, as little as one drink can disrupt sleep. It can leave you groggy in the next morning and it puts stress on your body in ways most people don't realize. Plus, alcohol is classified by the World Health Organization as a group one carcinogen, meaning there's strong evidence linking it to certain cancers, including breast and colon
Starting point is 00:49:45 cancer. So while an occasional drink isn't catastrophic, alcohol isn't actually a health-promoting substance. And if what you're really looking for is relaxation, connection, or that subtle eating lift, is there a smarter, gentler way to get it? Well, yes, that's where Vesper comes in from Peak. Vesper is a non-alcoholic, adaptogenic appare-teep designed to give you a mindful alternative to your usual drink without the next day sleep disruption or the next day brain fog. Ingredients like altheonine and lemon bomb help your body relax while the gentian root adds a subtle uplifting effect. You feel calm, bright, and present, not sedated. I've been paying close attention to this category and Vesper is the most thoughtfully formulated option I've come across.
Starting point is 00:50:26 If you're ready to rethink your evening ritual, Vesper is a thoughtful, healthier option. and get up to 20% off for life at peak.com slash hymen. That's P-I-Q-U-E-Life.com slash hymen. And it also, it also acts as an M-A-O inhibitor, which is, M-A-O is like a monoamine oxidase, that's really regulates neurotransmitter function, but you get higher serotonin, dopamine, or penephrine, it can have improved mood, neurocognitive effects, right?
Starting point is 00:50:52 So it's dose-dependent. So lower doses of methylene blue will increase noraphenin and serotonin. Higher doses will also increase dopamine once you get to do about 100 milligrams or so. The key, as I mentioned, is that it's dose-dependent, meaning that a little bit will do a little bit of that, and more of it will do more. So there are people that have talked about
Starting point is 00:51:11 how methylene blue just helps people feel better because it increases serotonin, but that's not the case at all, right? We're talking about small amounts compared to the huge effect on mitochondrial function. People listening to want to know how to take it. Like, you know, what are the doses like? How do you do it?
Starting point is 00:51:25 You know, I see a lot of people, like, sucking on these lozenges, it makes their tongue all blue. They can just swallow it. It's okay. You can swallow it. Right. Yeah, because as I mentioned, it's almost 100% bioavailable, which means if you ingest it, whether you dissolve in the mouth as a trokey, or if you swallow it, you can get the same mitochondrial benefits. The key here, Mark, and I think this is important for your audience to know, is that methylene blue is not a natural compound. It doesn't come from the earth. It's a synthetic ingredient. And as a result of that,
Starting point is 00:51:52 it can be sometimes contaminated with heavy metals, things like lead, mercury, cadmium, and arsenic. In the manufacturing? In the manufacturing? In the manufacturing? in the manufacturing process. And so to take the synthetic thing just for a minute because I know some people don't like the idea of taking anything synthetic, the way I like to talk about this is that not everything natural is good for us.
Starting point is 00:52:10 Okay, you can forage. Arsenic is, yeah, arsenic. Orsonic would kill you, right? Mushrooms. Like, I was in medical school, and I saw two people die of liver failure because of foraging for the wrong mushrooms, for example. So, and of course the dose makes the poison, right?
Starting point is 00:52:22 So you can have low doses of natural products that can be okay, but high doses of nicotine, for example, can kill somebody, right? And so on the other side of things, synthetic argument. Not everything synthetic is bad for us is what it comes down to. We live in synthetic worlds. We have lots of synthetic things all around us, right? My son, when he was four, he had a tracking cellulitis or a skin infection up his leg, and I was looking at it, go up his leg in front of me. And so I took him to the hospital and I got a antibiotics, which are synthetic, and if you're taking insulin right now as a diabetic, if you have type 1 diabetes or type 2,
Starting point is 00:52:53 it's a synthetic ingredient. It's not from a pig anymore. Right, right. And so there are reasons why we need synthetic things. And I think methylene blue falls into this category where it's a synthetic compound that can help so much, especially in the short term. And I think over the long term, as you get more optimized, you don't need it as much. And do you use it in conjunction with other mitochondrial support?
Starting point is 00:53:13 So in functional medicine, we talked about CO-Q-10 and creatine and carotene and poc acid, N.in, and N.O.flavin and magnesium, potassium, cypartite, and all these wonderful ribose that can be supportive. And I've used them in my practice to great back. benefit, often together with, you know, things like heart failure. Of course. But you have to use them in conjunction with methylene blue or not as much?
Starting point is 00:53:38 It works better when it's being used in more of a synergistic, mutual way, as you just described it, because not only so methylene blue, what it's going to do is the increase metabolic rate because it's going to increase the amount of energy you're making. So low doses are very supportive. They don't cause a huge amount of stress. But it is much better to have it as a full ecosystem that you're creating. in the mitochondria. So you're grading all the substrate, meaning you have the capacity from vitamins, minerals, nutrients, like all the things that you just mentioned to support mitochondrial
Starting point is 00:54:07 function and use the methylene blue. It's like a supercharge. Because the things you mentioned do a great job with mitochondrial function, but it takes time for all of those to work. Whereas you give some methylene blue in the system, within about three days, once you find the right dose, you will feel a difference. It's not something that happens 30 days or a month later, which can happen with many of the things that you mentioned, which I love, and I use in my clinical practice, too. And they're so supportive and necessary. But what Methylene Blue can do is in that short term, give you the boost that you need and so that you start feeling the difference much sooner. So this is the most important tool for getting out of the sympathetic spoutive doom?
Starting point is 00:54:41 I found it's the fastest tool to be able to do it from a mitochondrial perspective, right? Because you want to be able to support the mitochondria to help it relax. And a good example of this. And it's okay to take it every day? So in the beginning, yeah, as long as you're keeping the dose low, my sense of this is that... What is the dose to love me? Right. So usually... So typically milligram dose
Starting point is 00:55:00 that I find that's really great for the mitochondria is somewhere between 8 to about 25 milligrams a day. If you're keeping the dose less than 30 milligrams per day, you don't even have to take a day off and you can take it every day. If you're taking above 70 or 80 or 100 milligrams of methylene blue, then you do need to take more days off.
Starting point is 00:55:16 So the thing about it, methane blue kind of has this sort of bimodal capacity. What I mean by that is like low doses of it around what I just described as a range, fantastic mitochondrial function. sometimes a little bit higher than that. But when you get to about a milligram per kilogram, which is around 50 to 70 milligrams of methylene blue and above,
Starting point is 00:55:32 what happens then is it becomes more of an anti-infective, actually. It's a fantastic antimicrobripeti at higher doses. And it does that because it produces something in the body called hydrogen peroxide. And hydrogen peroxide, you know, you can buy this store. That's actually what your white blood cells produce to kill infections. Exactly. And so what methylene blue does is it creates more of a hydrogen peroxide capacity, and you kill bugs easier,
Starting point is 00:55:52 and you also enhance your antioxidant systems if you have the capacity. And that's the key. And that's why if you have an acute infection, I use it all the time in high doses. But if you have a chronic infection, chronic Lyme, chronic mold, I use it at the higher doses.
Starting point is 00:56:05 But I ramp them up. I don't start up. Yes, because if you give somebody a high dose of methylene blue right off the gate and they have chronic Lyme, they're not going to feel good if you give them 50 or 100 milligrams right away. So slowly increasing their dose,
Starting point is 00:56:19 mitochondrial support, and then higher doses can be fantastically effective. for chronic Lyme, for chronic mold, for even people with spike protein, I've seen some interesting things as well. And also, you know, it's just, as a result of that, even viral infections as well, I've seen some really interesting things. But the majority of people are going to use lower doses from mitochondrial function. That being said, some people have these chronic infections that are causing significant, you know, infection, or significant mitochondrial dysfunction. But I was going to say, I was going to tell a patient, a story about a friend of mine, as a colleague, he's like,
Starting point is 00:56:49 Doc, I've had anxiety for, you know, my whole life. And I started taking meth, and it's gone. Wow. You ask, well, why is that the case, right? Is that because we changed his neurochemical stuff? No, it's because we gave him significant mitochondrial support immediately. And then he's like, I've never felt this good. Like, what did? And as a result of having enough mitochondrial support, his system started being able to unclench itself. Yeah. And because now you're making enough energy, and now the system can start healing. And I found methylene blue at these low doses to be fantastically effective, Mark. And initially I was very skeptical, you know,
Starting point is 00:57:25 because I was like, this is a compound that doesn't come from the ground, and my dad's a chiropractor for 45 years. Like, in the beginning, he was militantly against Western medicine. But over the years, he now knows that it's important to use too. But so I was blown away the first couple years when we started using it. People, I had this, we had this one lady with mild cognitive impairment. She started telling stories about her childhood that nobody in her family had ever heard of before. Her brain came back online.
Starting point is 00:57:49 I had another lady that had chronic mold, done all the remediation in her house, in her body, still felt terrible, started giving her some methylene blue. She was back to work in two weeks. It was crazy. And then I had another lady with chronic ankylosing spondylitis, like severe pain disorder in the back, inflammatory issues. Nothing had ever worked. She started taking methylene blue, and her pain just went away. And I was like, this is back in 2020. So, you know, we were the first people to really pioneer this back then in 2020 at the company at our company.
Starting point is 00:58:19 And so we've seen gigantic amounts of anecdotal data. And then there's researchers that have been doing this and showing that these models of Alzheimer's, models of Parkinson's, you know, others looking at it in traumatic brain injury, looking at it in stroke. And so it's just, it's a fantastic compound that, you know, it's gotten more popular over the last couple years, which is great. But understanding what you're doing, like, dosing-wise and making sure you're getting good quality stuff is absolutely essential. Like the stuff on Amazon is garbage mostly. Most liquids out there are not as potent. even if it says it on the label, it's, you know, it's a huge deal. And so I'm very much a proponent of using it, but using the right company stuff,
Starting point is 00:58:55 the right products, and the right dosing is absolutely essential. And just to be transparent, you have created a company. Yeah, we have a company. Yeah, we have a scriptions, which I use. But, but it, you provide methylame blue. Yeah. And you have different forms of it, but you run through all third-party testing and make sure it's the right dose and that there's no contaminants.
Starting point is 00:59:15 And so it is, Is there a method that you've kind of developed that? Yeah. Are you able to do that? So at Triscretions, which is our company, we decided to make this company, by the way, Mark. We actually evolved it out of a nonprofit organization. So we have a nonprofit called Health Optimization Medicine and Practice. You've met Dr. Ted in the past, who's our founder, Dr. Ted Ocho.
Starting point is 00:59:35 And the idea with the nonprofit was to create an ecosystem for practitioners, for training, and for learning how to optimize health rather than focus on disease, and very much aligned with functional medicine. And out of that, we birthed the transcription company because you wanted to help people right now along that path. And Transcriptions was the first company to come out with a commercial product of Methylene Blue using it in 2020. I thought Ted was crazy at the time.
Starting point is 00:59:59 I'm like, what are people going to want their urine to be blue because your urine returned blue. Well, by the way, yeah, you make sure urine green or blue. Exactly. It concentrates in the urine, so you've got to watch out for that. And you have to, so you don't surprise. You can stay in your clothes. Yes, you've got to be very careful.
Starting point is 01:00:12 And so we came out with the first commercial product in 2020, and I was a little bit hesitant, to be honest, because I was like, I saw the research. It was very compelling. But then the other issue that I was very hesitant about is that it took us about a year and a half longer to launch the company to find a good source of methylene blue. Even when it said pharmaceutical grade, USP grade, it was contaminated with heavy metals, or it was not as potent as it said on the label. The challenge is, and you know this, you get a compound from another country. We get ours from Japan. Korea, even China, I mean, it doesn't matter where you're getting it from. You're going to get what's called a certificate of analysis with your product, with the ingredient itself. That certificate analysis is technically supposed to be a third-party assessment of that particular ingredient. But can you trust that that's coming from another country? No, right. Is China policing itself? Right. I'm not even throwing China under the bus, any other country, right? And so what we do, which most companies don't do, unfortunately, you know this in the supplement world, even across the board, is that we test it again, once it comes into the United States,
Starting point is 01:01:12 with another independent lab to make sure that it's safe, to make sure that it meets our specifications. And only then do we put in our products. And then we tested again, final product to make sure it's the exact amount of milligram dosage. And we've tested a lot of things on the market. But in the end, I didn't get into this to sell methylene blue. I get into this because creating patients. I saw this pattern. Yeah. I didn't know, I didn't name it into this. And you can be using conjunctually with your other areas of expertise, like hyperbaric oxygen, Red Light Therapy, which can also help modify mitochondrial function, right? 100%.
Starting point is 01:01:41 Yeah, this is not just a zero-sum game. It's not like one thing. What I find with Methling Blue is just a fantastic supercharger, accelerator bridge for our patients that are just stuck. And then all of a sudden we unstick them. They can become unstuck, I guess. And then we can actually let them finally heal, finally maximize their potential because you can't heal when your mitochondria is stuck. I agree. It's one of the sticky issues in functional.
Starting point is 01:02:07 medicines, how do you unburden someone's mitochondria? How do you get them out of this cell danger response and this, what you call the sympathetic spiral of doom? So let's kind of talk a little bit about what you call the parasympathetic edge. What is that? Why is it important? And it's, you know, people talk about, you know, pushing hard and just going through and, you know, going through the barriers that you feel and kind of overcoming resistance.
Starting point is 01:02:32 But you're saying maybe that's not the best way. So what is the parat sympathetic edge? So this is the opposite. of the sympathetic spiral. This is the parasympathetic edge. But the deal, I have a friend of mine, he's the only Olympic skier and former wide receiver on the Philadelphia Eagles. His name's Jeremy. And he told me when he first started doing his competitions, he would listen to like Metallica and like hard metal. But by the time he was Olympic level, he was listening to Mozart and Beethoven. Why? He didn't need his nervous system to be functioning at a sympathetic level. He needed to drop down.
Starting point is 01:03:05 just a little bit to find that edge so that he was right in there. And you talk about people that are high performers, they are not in sympathetic overload. They are just below that in a place where they can maintain their capacity. Navy SEALs are famous for this, right? They can find ways when they're in operations. They're not sympathetically dominant. They've done training so much. Like Michael Phelps is a great example of this too, right?
Starting point is 01:03:32 you have trained so much for every eventuality that nothing is going to make your nervous system go too high. Because if it goes too high, we can't function that high. We don't do well. And this is where, like, the classic example is, like you have that dream where you're supposed to give a speech and you can't remember your lines. Because when your sympathetic nervous system is so high,
Starting point is 01:03:50 on such high alert, you actually lose blood flow to the front of your brain, which is where you have what's called your executive function. Your capacity to maintain things, bring things from your long-term memory. Like, you go blank. You go blank. That's that sympathetic activation. And so we want to have people learn is that when we downregulate the nervous system, you're going to function better than you're even thinking that you're functioning at a higher capacity
Starting point is 01:04:13 when you're at sympathetic dominance. Because when you teach people that you can bring people down and have them function at a better level, it is like night and day. I mean, the main, a good example of this, another one, just to give another example, is recovery. Like, we're now in 2006, people care about recovery, right? We were kind of like, oh, but, you know, five or ten years ago, if you were an athlete in the professional sports, nobody gave a crap about recovery, right? And so people were burning out, they were getting injured and things like that. But now if you focus on knowing you can strength train three times a week at most, and it's better than strength training five times a week.
Starting point is 01:04:49 Why? It's the same deal. Because are you going to exercise optimally? That is sympathetic. But as soon as you finish exercise, you need to drop yourself down into parasympathetic to actually gain muscle and actually build because you build. because you build most of your muscle when you're out of the gym. Because cortisol actually caused you to lose muscle. Yes, it's catabolic.
Starting point is 01:05:08 But the GABA system, and that's the system that is involved in calming down the brain, GABA is your primary inhibitory neurotransmitter. That is your neurotransmitter that puts the brakes on your firing, calms down your nervous system, and it's enhanced when you have increased insulin, for example. So after you eat, your GABA levels go up, for example. But GABA is deficient in so many of our people, in so many people, because of the lives that we live with stress all over the place. So GABA deficiency is actually more associated with depression, anxiety, insomnia than any serotonergic issues that you can ever imagine. But you say that you're taking GABA because you can buy GABA supplements over the counter.
Starting point is 01:05:51 Right. So GABA as a supplement is not a good idea. Yeah. Yeah. But you're saying there's another compound that comes from the toxic mushroom, the M&E musk. Gary Mushroom, which is agarine. Yeah, agron, yeah, agron, yeah. Agaron, yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:04 And so what it comes down to, like to break it down just briefly. So GABA, again, your breaks of your brain, right? If most of us are running around GABA deficient because of the sympathetic activation, the spiral that we've been talking about, the challenge is that if you go to your regular doctor and you say, I have anxiety, I have stress, I have depression, they're probably going to give you an SSRI. Maybe they'll give you a benzo, which, you know, they don't want to give you, but they might give you a short amount of it. Now, when it comes to benzos and alcohol,
Starting point is 01:06:30 like Valium or Valium, Atavans, yeah, right. So those medications and alcohol, they all bind to the GABA receptor, but they vastly deplete GABA in the process, giving you more GABA issues over time and more anxiety, more stress, and then you have more tolerance to those drugs, you need to take more of them, et cetera. And so GABA supplements sounds like a good idea, right? But the problem of the GABA supplement is that GABA is too big of a molecule to get into the brain. If you take GABA and it works for you, you have a leaky brain. Meaning that your blood-brain barrier is not doing what it's supposed to keeping things out. And so, well, what do you really have there?
Starting point is 01:07:07 Oftentimes, you have a leaky gut, as you know. So if you optimize the gut, I've had patients like this where GABA works for them beautifully. They feel nice and calm and relaxed. Be optimized their gut, seal it up, GABA supplements stop working. And when I first started talking about this a number of years ago, I had a number of clinicians that came up to. me and said, Gaba supplements, if they work for my patients, it's diagnostic they have a leaky brain. And I was like, this is interesting. And I started learning more about it and seeing it in my own clinical practice. When you optimize the gut, which you know I do in practice all the time,
Starting point is 01:07:37 the brain gets better. So GABA supplements don't work. If they do work, go see a practitioner. But there's something else you can take, which is from the mushroom. Yeah, but the mushroom has, so the aminina mushroom has a very cool compound called agarine, or agarin. And it's a long-acting molecule that works in the GABA receptor, binding to where GABA would bind. The cool thing about the GABA receptor is that there's a, it's five subunit receptor, not getting too technical, but you have a place where GABA binds itself. And then you have separate sites called, you know, separate sites or allisteric sites where other things can bind. Yeah. Where aggrin binds is where directly where GABA would bind. So when you take it,
Starting point is 01:08:12 you're not depleting GABA in the process. The thing is, if you're binding something out a separate site to the GAB receptor, say it's CAVA, for example, or CBD or CBG or Magnolia bark or Valerian, These are all binding to separate sites, increasing the amount of gabba to bind. But if you don't have enough gabber around, that's not going to, what's going to happen is over time those aren't going to work very well for you. They're going to stop working. Scott, so this is really fascinating stuff. And I think that, you know, getting a parasympathetic edge is key. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:41 Ending the sympathetic spoiler jume is key. How do you kind of support people to kind of maintain, they've sort of broken the cycle a little bit? Yeah. And we're going to refer you to resources. you've written a lot about this and I want to ask you how to decide of where people can find it more information, but how do you maintain a more stable state rather than keep falling into the sympathetic spiral of doom? Yeah, I think the first place is to know what it feels like to not be in that state, right? Because when you know that the system is now calm down, you're going to
Starting point is 01:09:10 feel better. You may not feel 100% better right away because you still need a lot of long-term support. You need support with, you know, your vitamins, your minerals, your nutrients, your diet. These things can take time, as you know, and be difficult, and then you fall off the wagon, and come back up and things like that. So, but I think what it comes down to for me is that you need to have short-term ways to intervene, right? Short-term way for me is methylene blue is just a great capacity enhancer in the mitochondria. Optimizing the GABA system can be great. And TROSCIPTION does have some products there.
Starting point is 01:09:40 We have something like called TroCom and TROZU that can be helpful. You don't have to go product. You can also learn how to meditate and do breathwork and start taking more walks in nature, get better sunlight. These are all going to be helpful too. It doesn't matter of where people are on their level of capacity to start doing something, right? Sometimes it's helpful I've found is to give them something like something that downregulates the nervous system, something that's GABA ergic, that works on the GABA system, to give them the experience of what it feels like to not be in that sympathetic step.
Starting point is 01:10:11 And doing it in a very supportive way. So their mitochondria supported typically is what I try to do first, as I mentioned, and then I'll have given them the experience. You can still get some reactive anxiety. when that happens because you're used to being at a certain level. So that's short term. So short term giving people the experience of where there is. We talk about in meditation, there's no there there there.
Starting point is 01:10:30 But in parasympathetic edge, there absolutely is a there there. So knowing what that feels like. And then you can try to modulate that in various things that you're doing in your day-to-day life. Powerful. But that's the thing. Like your day-to-day life becomes your meditation, becomes your life, right? You have to find ways during your day to break down, not breakdown, but calm down, the system, right? taking more breaks, getting outside in the sunlight.
Starting point is 01:10:54 And then that's more medium term. Long term is like, okay, why are you so sympathetically activated? We talked about this. Is it external stuff? Is it the top down? Do you need to get out of a bad marriage? Do you need to sleep in a different room to just get a sleep divorce from your partner? I think about 50% of U.S. couples sleep in different beds, different rooms.
Starting point is 01:11:13 It's not a small thing. They have a more PC word of like sleep union or something like that now instead of sleep divorce. It doesn't sound as bad. But if you need to sleep in a different room, so you get better sleep, you should, but that can be hard, right? So trauma, you mentioned this as well. And this is where things become harder, right? This is where your experiences with psychedelics specifically are very interesting, right? Because like looking at psychedelics like ketamine and MDMA and it's legal and ibigame like you did, right? Like these are huge. And I know you've already, you've spoken openly about this, which I really commend you on because I'm very often sending my patients to go get ketamine with our friend, you know, Dave Rabin and others that are out there that are really good at creating a huge neuroplastic response to these medicines.
Starting point is 01:12:02 And that's where the real healing is going to occur long term. We can give the people the experience of downregulating their nervous system now. We can give them modes of operation at a day-to-day basis. But if there's elephants that are hanging around in the room, those are still there, you know? And we have to address those. From the mitochondrial side, it's the same thing. We have to address the mercury toxicity.
Starting point is 01:12:24 We have to address the toxic exposures or the... Practice functional medicine, basically. Exactly, yeah. Yes, exactly. Like, that's... Work the system, yeah. You have to be the system is... And your system is fantastic for that, right?
Starting point is 01:12:37 That's what you do. And that's what's beautiful. But that takes longer. Yeah. It's great. So can people stand methylene blue long term, or is it like a maintenance thing? What I've had people typically do is that find your right dose. My main way of doing that is start off at a low dose somewhere I'm at four or eight milligrams,
Starting point is 01:12:56 which is a quarter or half one of our trokeys, and then increase your dose every three to five days. See how you feel at one dose. Take it in the morning, typically. So one whole troche is 16. Yeah, one whole troche is 16. Then one quarter is four milligrams. So take four milligrams in the morning. See how you feel.
Starting point is 01:13:13 Take it on an empty stomach. You don't have to dissolve in the mouth, okay? You can if you like, but your mouth is going to be blue. That's okay, too. It works faster. up here, but the same amount of methylene booze going to get in the body. See how you feel for about three days. Take it in the morning. Don't feel much. Go to eight milligrams. See how you feel. Take it an empty stomach in the morning. If you don't feel much, go to 12,
Starting point is 01:13:31 then go to 16. But somewhere between 8 and 16 for most people is when they're going to start feeling, wow, I do have more energy. Wow, my brain's functioning a little bit better. I don't have as much brain fog. I'm not getting that energy dip in the middle of day. My inflammation is better. Even my pain might be better. My mood seems to be more regulated. You will know, and that's what I find is that and then when you start increasing the dose more from there, you don't typically see as much return on your investment. Usually there's like a sweet spot for people. And once you find that right dose, how long or how often should you take it? It depends on what you're taking it for. If you're taking it as a bridge, you're kind of early on in your process,
Starting point is 01:14:05 you might need to take it every day. And I have patients that are on it every day for a while. But over time, the goal is always to come on it less or use it less, only needing it when you only using it when you need it. So, for example, when you get more optimized, you're still going to have mitochondrial stress, you know, and the question is when you use it. So a good example is when you're traveling on an airplane. On an airplane, you're going from about 21% oxygen in the air that you're breathing at sea level to about 18% relatively on a plane. That's a huge hypoxic stress, low oxygen stress on an airplane because you're pressurized to about 8,000 feet above sea level. The best jet lag hack that I've ever found, Mark, is to move to Colorado because I live at 5,500 feet. And so when I go on an
Starting point is 01:14:45 airplane, it's 8,000 feet, pressurization, then I come to Austin to visit you. I'm at sea level. I feel great because I've been at altitude for a while. And I was just at 8,500 feet in Montana, and I felt it. You need methylene blue for that, man, because actually what I have is anybody that's coming to visit me, I always give the methylene blue before they get on the plane. And then I was actually with our nonprofit, Dr. Ted and Boomer, who's our CEO of Transcriptions, and Home Hope, we were in Tibet. and we were at Mount Everest Base Camp at 17,800 feet. 17,000. It was very, very high.
Starting point is 01:15:19 We didn't have, we had intermittent oxygen. We had oxygen canisters, but we using methylene blue, it was game-changing. Really? That wasn't the only thing we used. We used diomox and we used... I got a pretty significant altitude sickness. When I was in Bolivia, we drove right up to 16,000 feet. There was no climatization.
Starting point is 01:15:34 There was a hotel there, and my oxygen saturations were down in the 70s. I'm sure. Yeah. Ted's were low, too, and we had them on oxygen. Yeah. But we were using Diamox, which is a drug for altitude. We're using Viagra as well. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 01:15:46 Because it helps with nitric oxide and blood flow. And then we're using methylene blue. So as you get more optimized, Mark, you don't need it as much. Yeah. And you don't need it as often. And that's, but I have everybody, all of my patients have a higher strength methylene blue in their medicine cabinet just in case. Which is. Like, which is 50 milligrams in strength.
Starting point is 01:16:01 So we have something called tropluss blue, which is available to practitioners. So if you're a practitioner, we have a practitioner. And why would you use the 50? So the 50s are great for acute infection. acute stress overall. And so I use it for acute infection, acute stress. So if somebody has like a concussion or has a acute injury, I give them higher doses. For a short period of time.
Starting point is 01:16:22 Yeah, for short period of time. And sometimes I combine it with antibiotics. So my mom, for example, was bitten by a Lyme tick in New York. She's around 70. And so, sorry, mom, I gave way your age. But I gave her, I gave her methylene blue, about two milligrams per kilogram, about 150 milligrams for five days. And she also took doxy at the same time.
Starting point is 01:16:43 We wanted to give her doxy because she's in New York. Lyme ticks are everywhere, right? But we checked her lime titer is four weeks later. They were negative, right? And so it's not like it's the only thing sometimes, but it's also being used as monotherapy for urinary track infections as well at these high doses. So I give higher doses. That's amazing.
Starting point is 01:17:00 Intermittently, but it's the lower doses that I use and maintain. So for me, I'll use it about three times a week, four milligrams every day, four milligrams at a time, sometimes twice daily. You can dose it in the morning, sometimes. I'll dose it again early in the afternoon as well, because it doesn't typically keep you up. It's not like caffeine or a stimulant. It should just give you more energy. I feel like you can just kind of go, you know, that's the idea. And then when you find that right dose, often you'll know it. If you're pretty well optimized, you can also use it for endurance. I have guys that use it because it
Starting point is 01:17:27 increases aerobic capacity. Oh, good. Okay. So I have cyclists that use it. I have a bike trip to summer. Yeah, exactly. And I have ultramarathons that I use it. I know you've, you've used it as well and had some experience as well. This has been such a great conversation. where can people learn more about your work, about the sympathetic spiral of doom, or cell danger, all that stuff? A couple different places, and thank you for having me, Mark.
Starting point is 01:17:48 So my personal website is my name. It's my name, Dr. Scott Sch-E-R-S-H-E-R-R-D-R-R-D-R-C-C-R. The company that makes some of the products we've been talking about today is called troscriptions. It's the word trokey and prescriptions mashed up into troscriptions. We are pharmaceutical grade.
Starting point is 01:18:07 We're physicians that run the company and we have precision dosing with all of our products. I really care about all of that. So does Dr. Ted. And you can check it out at troscriptions.com. We have Just Blue, which is our pure methylene blue. We have something called Blue Canotene, which is a combination with methylene blue,
Starting point is 01:18:22 nicotine, caffeine, and CBD, which is fantastic for focus. It's more for stimulation, but great as a stimulant. Then we have trocom and TroZ, which are more on that GABA side, turning that brain off, that GABA urgic side. So trocom and TroC and TroC,
Starting point is 01:18:35 and then we have a whole practitioner. And the ProZ is for sleep. Trozzi is about the most comprehensive sleep formula that I've seen on the planet. It's got eight different ingredients, including the GABA system. So Trosi is fantastic. And we also have a practitioner ecosystem. So if you're a practitioner, you can sign up for our practitioner account. You can either buy for your office or we have direct shipping.
Starting point is 01:18:53 We have a huge portal and ecosystem that I've developed over the years with my team. So that's at Troscriptions.com. And then the nonprofit is called Health Optimization Medicine and Practice, or Home Hope, for short, it's homehop. And there you can find if you're interested in training, we have CME certified courses. We have a whole ecosystem there that's very much aligned with functional medicine as well. And then where else? I think, you know, on our website, on Transcription's website, there's a lot of information on the Sympathetic Spiral of Doom.
Starting point is 01:19:22 I've been talking a lot about more about this and I will continue to be doing it as well. And again, this is not a diagnosis. It's a pattern that you and I have seen in clinical practice for a year's mark. But the key, I think, is the sequence here, is mitochondrial support first, then sympathetic down regulation. And in that order is the key. And then we break the spiral. We escape from it long term using the work that you do and that I do in clinical practice. Amazing. Well, thank you. Thanks for you doing, Scott. Thanks for always helping me when I reach out to you on the hyperrejection stuff. Oh, yeah. And then finally, I have one other company
Starting point is 01:19:51 called One Base Health. And that's a company that's involved in the hyperbaric space. I know you have a chamber now and we have some good experiences too. Yeah. Well, thanks, Scott. Thanks for you do. Just bringing the science to everybody and being dedicated to helping people live a healthier, better life. Right back out to Mark, thanks for having me. If you love this podcast, please share it with someone else you think would also enjoy it. You can find me on all social media channels at Dr. Mark Hyman. Please reach out.
Starting point is 01:20:14 I'd love to hear your comments and questions. Don't forget to rate, review, and subscribe to the Dr. Hyman show wherever you get your podcasts. And don't forget to check out my YouTube channel at Dr. Mark Hyman for video versions of this podcast and more. Thank you so much again for tuning in. We'll see you next time on the Dr. Hyman show. This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center, my work at Cleveland Clinic, and Function Health, where I am chief medical officer.
Starting point is 01:20:37 This podcast represents my opinions and my guest's opinions. Neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests. This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided with the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey, please seek, out a qualified medical practitioner. And if you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner,
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