The Dr. Hyman Show - What Dietary And Lifestyle Changes Get Rid Of Acne?
Episode Date: October 28, 2022This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health and Athletic Greens. Typically, the first thing we reach for to deal with acne is a lotion, potion, or cream to apply to the skin—and conventional medic...ine doctors frequently prescribe birth control pills. These approaches do not target the root cause of acne, however. A growing body of research suggests it’s not what we slather on our skin that matters most but rather what is going on inside our body. In today’s episode of my series I’m calling Health Bites, I talk about acne—the number-one skin condition in the United States—and its effects on not just millions of teenagers but an increasing number of adults. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health and Athletic Greens. Rupa Health is a place where Functional Medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 20 labs like DUTCH, Vibrant America, Genova, and Great Plains. You can check out a free, live demo with a Q&A or create an account at RupaHealth.com. AG1 contains 75 high-quality vitamins, minerals, whole-food sourced superfoods, probiotics, and adaptogens to support your entire body. Right now when you purchase AG1 from Athletic Greens, you will receive 10 FREE travel packs with your first purchase by visiting athleticgreens.com/hyman. Here are more details from the episode (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Common causes of acne (4:16 / 1:16) Foods to avoid if you have acne or are trying to prevent a breakout (5:34 / 2:34) The gut-skin connection (7:22 / 4:45) Considerations for using the birth control pill to treat acne (8:30 / 5:37) Dietary and lifestyle changes for reversing acne (9:30 / 6:30) Choosing skin-safe topical products (13:00 / 10:03) Mentioned in this episode Milk and Health Environmental Working Group’s Skin Deep Cosmetic Database
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I often treat the face by treating the gut.
It's not what you put on your skin that matters,
it's what you put in your mouth that matters,
that is determining a lot of what's happening
with our skin health.
So beauty and skin health really comes from the inside out.
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The Doctor's Pharmacy. Hey everybody, welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. It's Dr. Mark Hyman
and this is a place for
conversations that matter. Today I'm bringing you a new feature of the doctor's pharmacy called
Health Bites to improve your health by taking small steps every day that can lead to big
changes over time. So today we're talking about acne. Yes, acne, the number one skin condition
in the United States affecting millions of people. 17 million in fact, costing a billion dollars a year
in treatments and other problems. It's not just affecting teenagers, but also many adults. And
the first thing we have to deal with when we think about acne is all the over-the-counter products,
all the stuff on infomercials, all the things that we're supposed to fix our acne with lotions, potions,
creams, and gels. But unfortunately, they're not addressing the root cause. And that, my friends,
is what we're going to do from the framework of functional medicine. What is the root cause of
acne? Why do we get these inflammatory pussy pimples on our face and maybe other parts of
our body? Well, there's a lot of reasons. The biggest reasons, the biggest reasons are today in our culture, dairy and sugar, or
I would say anything that turns to sugar like refined carbohydrates, bread, rice, or pasta
bread, so forth, bread twice I said because it's really a problem.
So basically we have a diet that is driving inflammation, that is driving acne. It also is a diet that destroys our gut microbiome with processed food, lack of fiber, antibiotic use, environmental chemicals, all destroy our microbiome and lead to imbalances in the flora there that drive inflammation to the rest of the body and can cause significant skin issues.
Another big one, stress.
Stress is a big factor, and that raises cortisol, messes up your hormones. Hormonal changes can happen in women particularly
that are affecting their acne, such as polycystic ovarian syndrome. So we're going to get into all
that, but let's sort of talk about the role of diet and what we know. And there are many,
many studies. If you just Google acne and diet on the
National Library of Medicine website, you'll see that there's plenty of research about this. And
in fact, there's some great randomized control trials. There's a lot of observational trials,
but essentially sugar raises insulin. Insulin promotes the production of testosterone in women
and testosterone can cause acne. And it also causes inflammation. Basically, sugar drives inflammation throughout
your body. It also causes imbalances in your microbiome and flora. So if you really want to
get rid of pimples, you should cut down or dramatically cut out sugar, starch, and that's
bread, rice, or pasta, flour products of all kind. Dairy is another one. Dairy has so many different
hormones in it. It has 60 different
hormones naturally. Even if it's got hormone-free milk you're getting or hormone-free dairy,
it still has lots of hormones, including insulin, many forms of testosterone, progesterone,
and so forth. And these all affect us. And particularly the A1 casein cows, which are
the modern cows that produce certain type of milk
that's more inflammatory, cause more problems. So dairy is another huge cause of acne. And the
number of large controlled cows found, cow's milk increased the number of people with acne and the
severity of the acne. So really bad news. The other thing that is a big factor is fat and certain
kinds of fat, purely trans fats,
refined oils, they can be driving more inflammation and cause more acne. But the big two are really
dairy and sugar. And I would really encourage you if you have acne to eliminate dairy 100% and also
sugar and refined flours for a while and see if it improves because that often will take care of it and without a lot of fancy doctor's visits to the dermatologist and some
of the more toxic drugs that are used like Accutane.
We use topical antibiotics, we use oral antibiotics, we use Accutane.
These are not great drugs and they often cause secondary problems.
So the gut plays a huge role in overall health and the microbiome
plays a big role in our overall health. But it also plays a role with conditions like acne.
I had a patient once who had a really bad case of cystic acne and she ended up having
a number of parasites and we cured her parasites and fixed her microbiome and her cystic acne went away. I often treat the face by treating the gut. It's not what you put on your skin that matters,
it's what you put in your mouth that matters, that is determining a lot of what's happening
with our skin health. So beauty and skin health really comes from the inside out.
There's also nutritional deficiencies that are big drivers of problems. For example, zinc, vitamin A, vitamin E
are playing a big role. So omega-3 fats are really important in keeping inflammation down.
Certain fats actually are really important, like evening primazole, which is an omega-6 fat called
gamma-linolenic acid. It's actually a very effective anti-inflammatory, helps with gut
repair, but also seems to be
hormonally regulating in women and can help with reduction of acne. So I think it's really
important for women thinking about treatment, not just think about things like the oral birth
control pill, which many doctors prescribe to regulate women's periods, that can be helpful,
but it also can cause secondary problems like impacting the
microbiome, micronutrient deficiencies that are a result from taking it, increasing overgrowth of
yeast, and potentially even inflammation from hormones. So I'm not a big fan of the birth
control pill as a strategy for treating acne. I mean, it has other benefits, obviously, but
I think it often can cause an exacerbation
or a worsening of acne after you stop the pill. So it's really important to get to the root cause
and to deal with the drivers of acne. It's pretty interesting when you look at the
science behind this and you see that a lot of the challenges we see because of our diet are
really driven by the poor quality diet we have and all the
things that are going on with milk.
Now, the Dietary Guidance in America say to drink three glasses of milk a day as an adult,
two glasses as a kid.
There's very little data on showing that this is actually good or effective or healthy.
In fact, there's plenty of data showing the opposite.
And I've reviewed this before on the podcast, but I encourage you to check out an article
called Milk and Health by Drs. David Lidwig and Walter Willett from Harvard,
which reviewed all the evidence of milk and presented a case for why it's not nature's
perfect food and may actually be harmful and not something that we should be having
mandatorily recommended to us in our dietary guidelines or in school lunches, which is
really incredible.
Actually, I was with a Native American recently and he said, you know, we are mandated to have
milk with every school lunch for our kids. And most of us are lactose intolerant and can't drink
it. So it's unfortunate. So we want to basically get really a strategy to deal with this.
The first thing you want to do is get rid of all the dairy. It's
nature's perfect food, but only if you're a calf. Make sure you eat a very low glycemic, low sugar,
low starch diet. So liquid sugar calories, flour products, sugar, just cut them out if you're
having problems. Eat an anti-inflammatory diet, lots of fruits and vegetables, antioxidants,
anti-inflammatory compounds. They really, really help. So get those plenty.
Well, five to nine, I think is just minimum, but plenty of servings, probably eight to
10 or 12 servings of fruits and vegetables a day.
Also get more anti-inflammatory fats like omega-3 fats, really important.
Also, you can try evening primrose oil, which is an omega-6 fat.
You might need to get those as supplements.
And include anti-inflammatory foods that you diet, things like turmeric, fish oil from eating fish,
ginger, green tea, nuts, dark purple and red foods like berries, green foods like dark leafy
vegetables, omega-3 eggs also really helpful. And there's certain supplements can be helpful,
even primrose oil, maybe 1,000 to 1,500
milligrams a day. Zinc, about 30 milligrams a day. Vitamin A, maybe 5,000 to 10,000 you want
to do under supervision because it basically can be toxic when taken for a long time. Vitamin E as
well. And probiotics. Probiotics can be very helpful for the gut. Certain probiotics can
improve acne, lactobacillus, and others. And the other thing that we didn't really touch on too much is that
food sensitivities can be a big factor. So you may not have a true allergy, but different foods may
just trigger inflammation. For example, I mentioned dairy, but also gluten. Eggs can be a factor,
even though they're healthy. Different foods foods you might want to do an elimination
diet like the 10-day detox diet to actually see what happens when you clear out all the
inflammatory potentially uh inflammation triggering foods that you might be sensitive to
so there's really a lot of things you can do to fix your acne uh and in addition to the dietary
cleanup in addition to um getting sorting out the nutritional deficiencies,
dealing with your gut is really important.
So a gut reboot, we've talked a lot about this on the podcast, but how you do a gut
reboot, it may require work with a functional medicine doctor.
I call it the weeding, seeding, and feeding program.
That's where we weed out the bad guys, seed the good guys with probiotics, and then feed the gut to get it healthy and support the growth of healthy bacteria. Also,
you know, make sure you deal with stress, which can be a triggering factor. High levels of cortisol
and inflammation from chronic stress can drive more skin issues. And also be careful what you're
putting on your skin. A lot of the products out there are full of all kinds of chemicals and additives.
Check out Skin Deep, which is the Environmental Working Group's guide on how to use products
that are not full of toxins and crap on your face.
So make sure, basically my theory for what you should use topically is if you could eat
it, you can use it on your body because everything goes through your skin.
You don't want to actually have a topical set of compounds that you're putting on your body because everything goes through your skin. You don't want to actually have a topical set of compounds that you're putting on your skin that are causing
more systemic issues. So there's a lot we can do to resolve acne. I've had such great luck with it
with so many of my patients, young, old, at all stages of life. And if you focus on the root causes,
get rid of the dairy and sugar, fix your gut, optimize your nutrient status, deal with stress, you're going to do fine.
So that's my little health bite on acne.
If you want to share this with your friends and family, please go ahead.
We'd love to hear from you.
How have you cured your acne with diet or lifestyle or supplements and the right things
that actually help balance your system out. And if you love this podcast, please subscribe and we'll see you next week on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
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