The Dr. Hyman Show - Treating Post-COVID, Or Long-Hauler, Syndrome
Episode Date: April 16, 2021Treating Post-COVID, Or Long-Hauler, Syndrome | This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp By now, most of us are familiar with post-COVID syndrome, also called long-haulers syndrome, in which a pat...ient who has had COVID-19 experiences long-lasting symptoms. While medicine is still trying to fully understand the reason why a percentage of COVID-19 patients go on to also experience post-COVID syndrome, there appear to be parallels to chronic fatigue syndrome experienced from the Epstein-Barr virus. In this minisode, Dr. Hyman speaks with Dr. Patrick Hanaway about using a Functional Medicine approach to treat post-COVID syndrome. He also speaks with Dr. Matt Cook about several cutting-edge therapies he is using to treat his patients with post-COVID syndrome. Dr. Patrick Hanaway is a board-certified family physician trained at Washington University. After 10 years as Chief Medical Officer at Genova Diagnostics, Dr. Hanaway became the Chief Medical Education Officer for the Institute for Functional Medicine. In 2014, Dr. Hanaway was the founding Medical Director of the Cleveland Clinic Center for Functional Medicine. His research focus is on nutrition, the microbiome, and evaluating value in Functional Medicine models of care. Currently, his teaching focus is on cancer, COVID, and uncertainty. Dr. Hanaway was initiated in 2009 as a Mara’akame (Indigenous healer) by the Huichol people of the Sierra Madres in Mexico. He holds community fires, leads ceremonies, and offers traditional healing sessions. This part of his practice provides some much-welcome spiritual and emotional insight into addressing our imbalances as a nation. Dr. Matthew Cook is a board-certified anesthesiologist who has completed a fellowship in Functional Medicine. His practice, BioReset™ Medical, provides treatments for conditions ranging from pain and complex illness to anti-aging and wellness. At BioReset™ Medical, Dr. Cook treats some of the most challenging to diagnose and difficult to live with ailments that people suffer from today, including Lyme disease, chronic pain, PTSD, and mycotoxin illness. His approach is to use the most non-invasive, natural, and integrative ways possible. Regarding the current pandemic, Dr. Cook has spent the past several months distilling the latest research, talking with experts around the world, and integrating his vast clinical experience to provide up-to-date information to the public and medical practitioners. This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. BetterHelp lets you get affordable counseling anytime, from anywhere. As a Doctor’s Farmacy listener you can get 10% off right now by going to betterhelp.com/drhyman. Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length conversation with Dr. Patrick Hanaway, “The Functional Medicine Approach To Treating COVID-19 And Post-COVID Syndrome” here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/PatrickHanaway Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length conversation with Dr. Matt Cook, “Regenerative Medicine: Healing Chronic Pain and Addressing COVID-19” here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/DrMattCook
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Where I'm going with the patients that I'm seeing at this point in time with post-COVID
syndrome, and I've got a number of them now, is really focusing on immune activation,
using mushrooms, using those kinds of things to help support their immune system to reactivate it,
as well as mitochondrial support. Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark. And over the years,
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Hi, I'm Kea, one of the producers of The Doctor's Pharmacy podcast.
Most of us are now familiar with post-COVID syndrome or long hauler syndrome in which
patients who have had COVID-19 experience lingering or long lasting symptoms. Dr. Hyman
recently spoke with two of his colleagues about how they are approaching the treatment of these patients.
Here he is with Dr. Patrick Hannaway.
All right, so let's say someone gets COVID, they recover, and we're seeing this phenomena in up to 87% of hospitalized patients.
So it's probably less if you're not hospitalized.
But I see this in many of my patients who are not hospitalized, who get what we're calling post COVID syndrome or long hauler syndrome.
And it's very reminiscent of what happened
with Epstein-Barr and chronic fatigue syndrome.
In fact, SARS, the original SARS,
40% of those who survived at three years
had chronic fatigue syndrome.
And that's a staggering number.
So what is the functional medicine approach
to looking and dealing with this post-COVID syndrome?
And what's the recovery model?
These people who are having, let's say, the post-COVID syndrome, they have other underlying issues that are going on.
They have other underlying triggers. It may be related to, you know, heavy metal toxins or organotoxins or mycotoxins or hidden infections or antigens or celiac disease or some other process that's going on that has to be taken care of and looked at also.
It's not like you're just going to treat the post-COVID separate from everything else that's going on in their body.
And so we've got to dig into what is the root source. And the way I think about it is I talk about those roots of the tree, which are the intrinsic
aspects of our lifestyle.
But then there's the soil, right?
It's the exposome.
If you're exposing the roots of the tree to poor soil, you're not going to be able to
get healthy.
And that's where we want to bring our focus.
Absolutely.
I mean, what you're bringing up, Patrick, is really important is that the body is a
system and there are a lot of things that perturb or disturb the function of that system.
And functional medicine is about finding out what those things are that disturb function.
What are those things that optimize and enhance function and getting rid of the things that
are making your machinery gummed up and providing the things that help you run optimally.
And I think that's a very unique model. It's not something that we learned in medical school, but it is really the foundation
of functional medicine. And it's super powerful for all sorts of things. And I believe that this
is where functional medicine will shine as we start to see millions of people with post-COVID
syndrome. Whether we're working on someone where we're trying to prevent them from having a severe illness or treating
them for post COVID syndrome, you know, or working with them at any point in severity,
the approaches are actually similar. The specifics change, but the approach is the same. And that is
what we're working to do is work with the system of what's happening with the gut microbiome and
how it informs the immune system? What's happening with the activation
of the cytokines and the overall inflammatory response process that's going on? What's
happening in relationship to the exposome and risk factors that you have? What's happening
with metabolic health in terms of the ability of the virus to be able to attach to the receptor
in the first place? Taking all of these things into consideration, we start looking at risk.
And so from a nutritional standpoint, we're saying, well,
what can we do to mitigate risk of, as you said,
of obesity of metabolic syndrome and work with that, you know,
the kinds of approaches of beautiful paper by Deanna Minnick that I helped her
out with, you know, goes into all of that. And we talk about, you know,
what ends up coming down to what looks like a low carb Mediterranean diet.
You might call it a pagan diet. You know, it's like the, you know,
it's that kind of approach that's going to help our overall metabolic health
and wellbeing. One of the things where,
where I think one of the key impacts of the,
of the SARS-CoV-2 virus is actually on mitochondrial health and well-being.
And we see the changes in the mitochondria and the ability to produce energy being significantly impacted.
Now, whether that is a direct effect from the SARS-CoV-2 virus or it's a side effect or a sequelae from the hyperinflammation that's going
on, we see that being affected. And we see that also in so-called post-COVID syndrome or working
with long haulers. Now, interesting to me that when we look at places like Mount Sinai and other
that are setting up academic centers for this, they're thinking about it as we have a vascular
problem, you have a pulmonary problem, you have a GI problem. You have a cardiac problem. You have a neurologic
problem. You have a psychiatric problem. And I look at it and I'm saying like, well, gosh,
there's muscle problems and there's cardiac problems and there's brain problems. And gosh,
those are the three places that use the most energy in the body. Maybe this is related to
the mitochondria.
So when you start talking about, you know, other kinds of outside the box therapies, ozone and things of that nature, you know, that are not that there are experimental, they've done some
interesting studies in Italy early on looking at that. And, but to me that they're, they're working
on the antioxidant capacity and improving the efficiency of the mitochondria
so that there's energy production. And we know that mitochondrial health and immune health are
intimately related to each other. So here we are talking about, you know, for instance,
those IV nutrients of vitamin C and NAC and glutathione that are all going to have an impact
mitochondrially. They're all going to have an impact mitochondrially.
They're all going to have an impact on oxidative stress.
You know, it's a similar constellation of things that may actually be used, you know,
for cancer and for cancer scavenging in terms of vitamin C.
So it's fascinating there.
But, you know, with the post-COVID piece, I'm really focusing on mitochondrial function and being able to mobilize and feel like
that's really where the essential aspect of it is, which as you said, is not dissimilar from
the Epstein-Barr virus work from the mid eighties with Paul Chaney and others in terms of what do
we do? How do we actually help those people who have some kind of post-viral fatigue
syndrome? And where I'm going with the patients that I'm seeing at this point in time with,
with post-COVID syndrome, and I've got a number of them now, is really focusing on immune,
immune activation, using mushrooms, using those kinds of things to help support their immune system to reactivate it,
as well as mitochondrial support. And whether that's NAD, various vitamins, N-acetylcysteine,
CoQ10, you know, there's a whole array of different components that get built into that,
phosphatidylserine and others. And so I use products that are really focusing
on that PQQ as well as CoQ10 and CoQ2. And so I come back to the dietary aspects,
really ensure that there's not high glycemic foods, you know, no processed foods and focusing
on good fats and good pure amino acids, clean amino acids or proteins that people are taking,
doing that and then focusing on the immune system
and the mitochondria.
That's where I go.
I do believe that it's gonna be a combination
of foundational lifestyle therapies,
diet, exercise, sleep, relaxation, stress reduction,
and then all the same nutraceuticals
that you do to prevent and
treat it. And then for people that get stuck, I think there are adjunctive therapies like
intravenous therapies of IVNAB, IV vitamin C, IV glutathione, phosphocholine, and even
things like ozone can be extremely effective intravenously. There's also peptides and exosomes
and a whole category of things that
are used to help people break the cycle. And I've seen these therapies work in a number of patients.
So I'm hopeful. I think there's, there needs to be more research on this. We need to move forward.
The challenge is that I don't think that, that many people are funding any research on this
because it's not like at the end, there's a product or a drug or a vaccine that's going to
make billions of dollars. So we're kind of stuck.
But I do believe that these therapies are out there now, that they're available,
that there's enough evidence to create a rationale for their use,
and that they're safe and potentially very effective. Dr. Hyman also spoke to Dr. Matt Cook, who is using many of these therapies to treat his patients.
For post-COVID, I think I break it down into two categories,
whether people are remote or whether they're in person.
If they're remote, I have everybody taking this peptide,
Thymus and Alpha-1.
And I'm having people, if they've had COVID,
take this peptide for three to six months.
And I'm noticing people-
Like every day?
Every day.
And so when they do that, people tell me,
God, I feel a lot better.
And I've had a lot of people remote that had a lot of symptoms.
And then they start taking, it's just a little insulin syringe.
And they just inject like a tenth of a cc every day.
And when they inject this tiny amount of fluid, it starts to regulate their immune system.
And I'm seeing it help basically almost all post-COVID symptoms.
And so... Is this kind of thing good for going Lyme or...
It turns out it's also really good for Lyme.
It's also, I put everybody that has SIBO and leaky gut and GI inflammation on it.
And so it's kind of an all-purpose work-rehearse peptide that turns out to be great for either,
I think, for prophylaxis to prevent from getting
covid and and so anybody that if if one person in the house gets covid i put everybody else in the
house on this on this peptide if you have it acutely it helps and there's different dosing
that we do depending on whether you have an acute or you don't and then finally for these long
haulers these people that have this, for these long haulers,
these people that have this COVID for a long time,
we're doing that.
And it's been really, really helpful.
I like other peptides also.
I like thymus and beta-4,
which is also really good for regulating the immune system.
And I like BPC-157, but not for everybody.
And there's some issues with that.
There's a whole list of different peptides
that are used for all kinds of different things.
And I think that, you know,
this is really an interesting emerging field
of medical therapy.
So what do you do for people who are here in the office
that you see have post COVID
and how are they doing with the treatments?
So my feeling on this is interesting
is that everything that works for pre COVID
and everything that works for treating acute COVID
works for the long haulvid and everything that works for treating acute covid works for the
long haulers exactly right yeah so so so uh ozone probably number one um vitamin c glutathione
intravenous vitamin c intravenous yeah intravenous ozone um there's a a vitamin called nad which
seems to stimulate your mitochondria and it. And it's a ubiquitous molecule
in the body that has all, it's basically a signal of your energy stores. And so we use that. And
interestingly, one of the first things that happens when you start treating people with NAD
is their vascular health starts to improve. And reason is is that cells love nad because it's like money to a cell yeah and so it represents
potential energy and so then the if you put a molecule in a vein the first thing that's going
to happen is it's going to try to diffuse out of that vein.
And then when it tries to diffuse out of the vein, it's going to get absorbed by the cells that line your vein and artery. And so then what happens is you improve the health
of those cells. So I have a lot of people that come with vascular problems and I start doing
NAD and they get better. Well, guess where COVID goes? To your your blood vessels and that's why people have so many
problems with their heart or their kidney or their brain because it's it's inflammation in the blood
vessels and then it can leak out and then get into the nerves which is why we're trying to put
something in the blood vessel whether that be ozone whether that be ozone, whether that be vitamin C, whether
that be glutathione, whether it be NAD, I've submitted IND for exosomes to the FDA.
Research proposal.
Yeah, research proposal.
And so we're going back.
We're on our second.
For exosomes.
For exosomes.
It's going to be helpful for.
Yeah.
We're going to do a randomized clinical trial with exosomes for COVID.
Amazing.
And so I think we're going to get approved in the next day or two.
We're like two or three rounds deep with the FDA, just going back and forth with the PhDs.
So there's a whole realm of medicine out there that is just emerging over the last few decades.
It is still on the margins that you and I are in.
Places like Cleveland Clinic, they've introduced functional medicine.
They're starting to do this more and more in different healthcare centers and hospitals around the country. But,
but, you know, it's unfortunate because people really have trouble accessing this. But I think
the work you're doing and stuff we've done at Cleveland Clinic that I've tried to do over the
years is really trying to break ground. So this is more accessible for everybody because ultimately
it has to be covered by insurance. It has to be accessible. The cost has to come down.
And it has to be something that people can get access to.
Right now, it's hard.
But I think people should have hope.
And there's a lot of stuff they can do that isn't that expensive.
Diet, lifestyle issues, sleep, exercise, the right supplements.
And even some might be treatments may not be that expensive.
So I think there's ways to get yourself healthy in this time that people really need to focus on.
And the challenge for us is that,
we just go about our lives, we're busy and this and that,
but now more than ever,
people need to think about their personal health,
not just for themselves, but for their family,
their communities, for their society,
and really the world,
because we're really facing this pandemic
that's not going away.
And we need to be smart about how do we protect ourselves
and make us more resilient in the face of it.
Functional medicine is the science of creating health and resilience
and making your system an inhospitable place for disease.
In every infection, there are two factors at play, the microbe and the host.
While we can't control the microbe, we do have extraordinary control over us, the host.
If you'd like to learn more about anything you heard today, I encourage you to check out Dr. Hyman's full-length conversations
with Drs. Patrick Canaway and Matt Cook. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider sharing
it with a friend and leaving us a review below. Until next time.