The Dr. Hyman Show - Why Acne & Eczema Could Be Signs of a More Serious Health Issue | Dr. Mark Hyman

Episode Date: August 30, 2024

Could your persistent acne, eczema, or psoriasis be a sign of something more serious? Join me on "The Doctor’s Farmacy" as I reveal how chronic skin conditions are often linked to gut health and nut...rient deficiencies. I’ll share practical tips on how to support your skin by healing your gut, optimizing your diet, and identifying the root causes of inflammation. It’s time to understand what your skin is really telling you and how to fix it. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal This episode is brought to you by AG1 and Essentia. Get your daily serving of vitamins, minerals, adaptogens, and more with AG1. Head to DrinkAG1.com/Hyman and get a year's worth of D3 and five Travel Packs for FREE with your first order. Enjoy an extra $100 off your organic mattress purchase with code HYMAN at checkout on Essentia's site. Visit MyEssentia.com/DrMarkHyman for more details.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. A leaky gut also impairs the absorption of really important nutrients that you need for healthy skin like vitamin A, vitamin D and E, vitamin K and zinc. And the main driver of skin conditions is inflammation. So it's all connected. If you're a longtime listener, you might know that I've been drinking AG1 for a while now. I gave it a try one day and noticed right away how easy it is to drink and how much better it made me feel. Unlike a routine involving multiple pills and powders, which can be inconvenient and
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Starting point is 00:01:22 I'd like to note that while I wish I could help everyone by my personal practice, there's simply not enough time for me to do this at this scale. And that's why I've been busy building several passion projects to help you better understand, well, you. If you're looking for data about your biology, check out Function Health for real-time lab insights. If you're in need of deepening your knowledge around your health journey, check out my membership community, Hyman Hive. And if you're looking for curated and trusted supplements and health products for your routine, visit my website, Supplement Store, for a summary of
Starting point is 00:01:52 my favorite and tested products. Welcome to the doctor's pharmacy and another edition of Health Bytes. Hi, I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. Today, we're peeling back the layers, literally and figuratively, on what your skin reveals about your health. It's often where underlying health issues become visible, and most people don't realize that skin health comes from the inside out and can't be fixed by expensive lotions and potions. They may be helpful, but not if you don't get the foundations right. Did you know that your skin is not just a protective shell? It's actually your body's largest organ, making up about 10% of your total body weight. Your skin says a lot about your overall health, and it's like a window revealing what's going on beneath the surface. There's a lot of common skin problems, things like
Starting point is 00:02:34 acne, psoriasis, eczema, and rosacea. And they're not just bad luck or random or just some unfortunate occurrence. They're signals from your body that something deeper needs attention. In functional medicine, we're in the business of the medicine of why. We ask, why is this happening? Not what disease you have, but why? Now, conventional medicine focuses on what? What's the diagnosis? What's the disease? And what do you need to give to fix it? What disease? What drug? And it can be steroids or topical agents that sometimes might be necessary, but mostly can be avoided with diet and lifestyle changes. And of course, you can avoid their troubling side effects that sometimes come from the treatments. So if you're struggling with different skin issues like acne, rosacea, eczema, psoriasis, and you're curious about what they
Starting point is 00:03:18 might be telling you about your internal health, what's going on inside your body, I want you to stay tuned to this podcast because we're about to uncover how the best skincare starts from within and why understanding the why behind your skin's condition is the key to achieving lasting and radiant health. Here's the deal. The doctor often will say, okay, you have dry, scaly, itchy, white patches on your skin.
Starting point is 00:03:41 I know why you have those. It's because you have psoriasis. Well, psoriasis is just a name that we give know why you have those. It's because you have psoriasis. Well, psoriasis is just a name that we give to people who have those symptoms. It doesn't tell you about the cause. And psoriasis can have multiple causes. We're going to go down and dig deep into that. And you have to treat the right cause or a patient won't get better. Now, in functional medicine, we want to understand the full picture by looking at all the relevant signs and symptoms and your medical history. And we do a
Starting point is 00:04:05 bunch of diagnostic tests to help figure out what's going on at the root of the problem. And we then address the root causes by optimizing your nutrition, healing your gut, removing toxins, optimizing your nutritional status with the right supplements, getting the root cause. And you're going to learn that the root causes today are not the same for each individual with exactly the same diagnosis. If you have 10 people with eczema or 10 people with psoriasis, they may each have different causes and need different treatments. And not just a one-size-fits-all prescription, which is what we get in traditional medicine.
Starting point is 00:04:36 In fact, no two people have the same cause for the same skin condition. The good news is there's a lot you can do to optimize your skin health from the inside out. I always say beauty comes from the inside out. I always say beauty comes from the inside out, not the outside in. Now, the inside out approach to skincare doesn't just mask the problems, it addresses the root causes. I mean, if you have terrible skin, you can put a lot of makeup on, but that doesn't fix your skin, right? Now, if you've got a lot of inflammatory stuff, you can put a bunch of steroids on your skin, but that's not going to get rid of
Starting point is 00:05:02 the cause. And I'm going to share a case with you in a little bit, but it's pretty impressive. Functional medicine is really about addressing the root causes. And the side effect is that the rest of your health gets better too. It's kind of a good side effect. What's the conventional medicine approach to inflammatory skin issues? Well, it's not taking care of all these issues. You get to a dermatologist, right? And most of these treatments are aimed at reducing inflammation or suppressing the immune system to help calm symptoms, but they don't address the root cause of the inflammation. So for acne, what it'll do, it'll give you benzoyl peroxide, which is a topical treatment to kill bacteria.
Starting point is 00:05:36 Use retinoids like Retin-A or Accutane to reduce inflammation. They give you antibiotics, which may change the gut flora, like erythromycin, clindamycin, which can be problematic and really cause more long-term problems. And one of the stories I often see is when kids are in their teenage years, they'll often get antibiotics for years for acne. Later on, they'll have secondary effects, even if they've stopped the antibiotics, from the damage they've done to their gut, which then causes leaky gut, dysbiosis, and that leads to autoimmune diseases. So it's often a common story to sort of start out with gut issues, skin issues, get antibiotics, and then get autoimmune disease. They'll also do a lot of hormonal treatments with oral pills,
Starting point is 00:06:18 like birth control pill. They use something called spironolactone, which is often regulating testosterone that contributes to acne. There's side effects from these. You can get burning, dryness, irritated skin, flaky skin, gut imbalances. So not a great idea for a lot of these drugs. What about eczema? How do doctors treat that?
Starting point is 00:06:37 Well, they use steroids, topical steroids, immune suppressants, biologics, which are very serious. They're very expensive and suppress your immune system. They'll use antihistamines, moisturizers, emollients. All that stuff is fine. They use UV therapy, phototherapy, which is fine, but it doesn't really deal with the cause. What about psoriasis? What do they treat that with? Well, again, steroids, immune suppressants like methotrexate, cyclosporine, biologics, these TNF-alpha inhibitors, interleukin inhibitors, PDE inhibitors, PDE inhibitors,
Starting point is 00:07:05 PDE4 inhibitors, and they don't really cure the problem. They just manage it. What about rosacea? Well, again, they'll use antibiotic treatment and inflammatory creams. They'll use metronidazole, as I mentioned, or flagyl, tetracycline, but again, they don't deal with the cost. So how do I think about treating skin issues using the model of functional medicine? Well, the way I handle these skin issues is basically the same way I deal with anything else. Get to the root cause, right? Identify the imbalance. I address the cause. It's usually diet and lifestyle. Help the body repair, regain balance, fix the gut, get rid of toxins, balance hormones. It's basically following the functional medicine foundational principles of
Starting point is 00:07:44 how you treat somebody. And then the body's natural intelligence basically takes care of the rest. If you're working with a functional medicine doctor or you come see us at the Ultramonus Center, we'll take care of you. It's important to start with comprehensive lab testing to look at the root cause. Like we mentioned, for example, the fungal overgrowth or bacterial overgrowth or deficiencies in nutrients or increase in risk of thyroid issues with certain problems or other factors like gluten, which may be tested on lab testing. So you need to kind of look at these things, heavy metals. Now, sometimes you may not need them, but probably you mostly need to figure out what's going on. And the other thing I look at are some of these sort of specialty
Starting point is 00:08:20 tests like food sensitivity testing, allergy testing, testing the stool, microbiome, testing for bacterial overgrowth. This we'll call a SIBO test, which looks at methane, hydrogen, and sulfide in the gut. We look at food sensitivities with Cyrix testing. We'll look at H. pylori if you have rosacea through either a breath test, stool test, or even antibodies. We'll do food allergy, IgE profiles. And you can really look at a lot of this stuff. Now, I co-founded a company called Function Health to help you identify stuff, and there's ways you can check for indoor and outdoor allergies on that with IgG testing. You can look at a celiac panel, and you can go to an independent lab, but you need to find someone who's going to work with you to do this, or you can be autonomous and do
Starting point is 00:08:59 it on your own and check gluten and food allergies and nutritional deficiencies. Many things I talked about, thyroid, omega-3s, heavy metals, insulin resistance, all these things are in the basic Function Health initial set of tests that you get when you're a member. You can go to functionhealth.com forward slash mark. There's like a lot of people on the waiting list, but that allows you to jump the waiting list of 200,000 people, and it'll help you get those tests at a very reasonable cost, including hormones that we're going to talk about. So what else do you need to test? Well, hormones, testosterone and other hormones like dihydrotestosterone,
Starting point is 00:09:30 androstenedione, IGF, stress hormones like cortisol, toxins like lead and mercury, looking at your white count, whether you have high levels of neutrophils or lymphocytes, eosinophils can tell you a lot about what's going on with the gut microbiome, with what's reacting in your body. We look at nutritional deficiencies like omega-3, zinc, iron, vitamin D, magnesium, all part of the panel. We look at your metabolic health, like insulin, glucose. So basically, you get a full assessment of what's going on. And most people are pretty surprised by what they find because people have stuff.
Starting point is 00:09:59 If you don't look, you won't find it. There's a long time between often diagnosis and the onset of problems because doctors don't look. So what do you do if you want to treat this? How do you approach this? And how do I think about this as a functional medicine doctor? Well, the first step is to get rid of the bad stuff and put in the good stuff. That's basically all functional medicine is. It's being a detective, find all the bad stuff, right? Gut issues, food sensitivities, toxins, hormonal dysregulation, whatever, get rid of it, and then add in the good stuff, the right? Gut issues, food sensitivities, toxins, hormonal dysregulation, whatever, get rid of it, and then add in the good stuff, the right food, nutrients, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:10:29 So the first thing is to get rid of the foods that potentially can be triggering inflammation in the skin. The most common cause is food. So I would try an elimination diet, and that's usually three or four weeks. And you get rid of the most common allergens and the potential triggers, including dairy, gluten, soy, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish, corn, processed food, sugar, caffeine, alcohol, nightshades. Now, you can do a more limited one that's a little easier. I call it the 10-day detox diet. You can have eggs in that and nuts, but it takes out most of the grains and dairy, gluten, all the ultra-processed food, and it usually works for most people. So you can check that out.
Starting point is 00:11:06 10-Day Detox Diet is the book and lots of resource on that. What you can eat, though, is as important as what you don't eat, right? You need lots of anti-inflammatory foods, whole, unprocessed foods, veggies, fruit, nuts, seeds, good quality protein, healthy fats. Some gluten-free grains might be helpful. The second phase is the reintroduction. And you want to do it slowly, one food at a time every three days, no more. For example, eat dairy for three days and see if you react. And then eat gluten for three days and see if you react. You don't want to add everything back at once by going
Starting point is 00:11:39 to have a pizza, which is going to cause a problem because you don't want to know what's what. And then you might feel like crap and don't know what was causing it. The challenge phase is after you've identified food reactions, you can actually sort of wait a little longer, maybe another few months, try to heal your gut, and then try to re-challenge your body to see how much you can tolerate. And if you're really having a reaction, like if you have dairy and you get eczema, well, just don't eat it, right?
Starting point is 00:12:01 You're not going to be able to eat it. Or you might try sheep or goat. So that'll really help you identify what's working. Now, there's some tests that you can use to help track which foods are reacting, but almost the gold standard is what we call elimination provocation testing. And that'll allow you to know which to take
Starting point is 00:12:16 in your back in your diet and which to keep away. I had one patient who was really quite amazing. She was a young woman in her 30s who was literally allergic to her boyfriend because of his sweat. And she would have these horrible rashes all the time anyway. Her face was all red. She had itching everywhere. She was racking everything. And it was really horrible that she was struggling so much. And so what I said, just do an elimination diet. Let's get your gut sorted. Give her probiotics,
Starting point is 00:12:45 give her zinc, give her fish oil, give her vitamin D, give her good resources to help sort of heal her gut and see what happens. And it was quite amazing. She basically quit all the inflammatory foods. She got off gluten and dairy, sugar. She went on the 10-day detox diet. She had a complete resolution of her symptoms and she has no more reactions and she's doing great. So the body can't heal. First thing you have to do is quit all the bad foods, right? Get rid of not just the food sensitivities, but all the inflammatory foods, all the ultra processed food. Gluten and dairy are like the number one and two culprits when it comes to inflammation in the diet. Of course, besides sugar, refined sugar, flour, all that stuff is really bad. All the inflammatory
Starting point is 00:13:24 fats, refined oils we eat. You might be eating a low glycemic, nutrient dense, whole foods, anti-inflammatory diet. I jokingly call it the vegan diet. And what does that do? Well, it balances your blood sugar. It's higher in protein and micronutrients, phytochemicals, fiber, good fats, right?
Starting point is 00:13:39 That helps you balance your blood sugar and your hormones. You don't get all the hormonal surges. You don't get the high androgens. It helps reduce inflammation in your body in general. And it makes your skin look better and makes you younger looking, right? And it also provides a lot of the essential nutrients we need for skin health. You also want a lot of polyphenols. These are really important.
Starting point is 00:13:58 These are colorful plant compounds like phenolic acid, flavonoids, steel being lignans, resveratrol. These are just all the incredible medicines in food that help reduce inflammation and reduce oxidative stress. And a lot of the damage to the skin is because of inflammation and oxidative stress. It helps repair damaged DNA and damaged lipids. It improves all your skin damage you might've had and reduces skin legions. It inhibits the growth and the stimulation of T-cell cells, which is good in psoriasis. And it accelerates wound healing, which is awesome. These polyphenols can increase the benefit because they help decrease the expression of IgE receptors, what we call toll-like receptors on mast cells.
Starting point is 00:14:38 Mast cells are the cells that are releasing histamine that cause eczema. Mast cells are like the guards of the immune system. They help protect you from infections and allergies by releasing the things that you don't like, but they have a benefit like histamine. These mast cells have IgE and toll receptors that when they come into contact with an allergen like a pollen or a pet dander or a pathogen,
Starting point is 00:15:00 like some toxin, they cause them to release histamine and all these other inflammatory cytokines and nice itching. You, they cause them to release histamine and all these other inflammatory cytokines and nice itching. You know, you've had a histamine reaction when you get a bug bite, for example. So if we decrease the expression of IgE and TOLAC receptors on the mast cells, it helps prevent too many of these cells from releasing histamine and it makes you feel better with less allergy symptoms. Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark. Sleep is the foundation of wellness and happiness,
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Starting point is 00:16:41 So the big question is, how do you eat for better skin health? And what are the skin supporting nutrients and where do you get them? Both phytochemicals and polyphenols and good fats and all the stuff we need, right? So there's a lot of these things we need. And I created a table for you and I'm going to put in the show notes that lists all the phytochemicals, where to find them, all the fats, where to find them, all the nutrients, where to find them in your food, and how to start adding foods in your diet that can gradually include a lot of the things that are necessary for reducing inflammation in your skin, for reducing oxidative stress, for providing the right fats to have healthy skin. So check out that table in the show notes. I think
Starting point is 00:17:21 you're going to get a lot of benefit from it. All right. So what else do you need to do besides focusing on eating skin supporting nutrients? Well, focus on your gut health. And what we do and what I do in functional medicine is double down on the gut. So I basically do an elimination diet and an inflammatory diet. So it's basically an addition diet, right? I eliminate the bad stuff and add in the good foods. And then I focus on gut health as the next step for fixing the skin, which is so counterintuitive, right? Your dermatologist probably not talking to you about your digestive system or your gut symptoms. Oh, am I bloating? Oh, go see the gastroenterologist. Well, no, that's the problem, right? That's why you're having skin issues. So you have to treat the bacterial overgrowth, the fungal overgrowth, all that stuff. And you can use
Starting point is 00:18:03 herbal products. I use oregano, for example. I'll use something called candabactin AR and BR, which are great natural antimicrobials, both antifungals and antibacterials that help. You can get those on drhyman.com. I have a supplement store. I've sourced the best quality products, or you can maybe find them somewhere else, but be careful of the source. And it's also important to repair the gut lining. And there's a lot of things that help do that, like bone broth, the amino acid and glutamine, different kinds of colostrum.
Starting point is 00:18:30 I use SBI Protect from Orthomolecular. That's a great product that helps support the gut healing. In fact, in a 12-week double-blind placebo-controlled trial published in Nutrition, patients with acne who consumed lactoferrin-enriched fermented milk, like colostrum, basically, they showed significant improvements in their acne symptoms compared to those who consume fermented milk without the lactoferrin, which is a beneficial compound from
Starting point is 00:18:54 colostrum. The lactoferrin group experienced a 38% reduction in inflammatory lesion count, a 23% reduction in total lesions, and a 20-point reduction in the acne grade, which is a way to categorize acne severity. That's pretty impressive. And even further, the sebum content went down by 31% in the lactoferrin group. So really, really awesome. Now, you want to eat prebiotic and probiotic-rich foods. Those are important. You want to have the right bacteria. There's a lot of versions of these bacteria, but I'm just going to name a few. And we need a diverse array of bacteria to help support our gut health. I'm just going to name a few probiotics like
Starting point is 00:19:34 lactobacillus rhamnosus, GG, lactobacillus casei, paracasei, lactobacillus acidophilus, bifidobacterium longus, bifidobacterium lactis, lactobacillus plantarum. So there's a lot of different strains, all of which are available in a multi-strain probiotic that we use. I like seed, for example. They modulate the immune system and they help reduce inflammation. And you can get them also from food, right? Fermented foods like yogurt, kefir, sauerkraut, kimchi, miso, tempeh, all great. And the probiotic supplements are in capsules, powders. I would encourage higher doses, like 5 to 10 billion, all great. And the probiotic supplements are in capsules, powders. I would encourage higher doses, like five to 10 billion, even more.
Starting point is 00:20:08 And other supplements also important for your skin health. Vitamin D is essential, right? It helps maintain skin barrier function and immunity and helps regulate the cells that produce keratin in the skin. It also is effective for improving psoriasis and eczema too. Quote, normal vitamin D in labs is said to be over 20 nanograms per deciliter. Some labs say 30, but it should be 45 or more. And that's not going to be enough
Starting point is 00:20:31 for psoriasis flares. And we really should aim for higher concentrations. In fact, higher levels of over a hundred may not be harmful and actually are protective against psoriasis flare-ups and more might be better. You have to watch your levels, make sure you don't get toxic, but anybody can take 5,000 units a day. My favorite is vitamin D Supreme from Designs for Health. You can take vitamin D3 from pure encapsulations. They have up to 10,000 a day from that can be helpful. But you have to test. You have to know what your levels are, test before, test after a few months, get the dosing right. Vitamin A, also really important. It promotes skin growth and renewal, particularly in the form of retinol.
Starting point is 00:21:10 It helps regulate the production of sebum, the growth and shedding of your skin cells. It's really important for your gut lining integrity, prevent a leaky gut. And it's also essential for your immune system functioning. When you have enough vitamin A, it enhances turnover of cells, allows the new cells to replace the old ones, and that leads to smoother and more even skin. That's why retin-A is used for wrinkles. A lot of food sources, retinol is the preformed version of vitamin A, which you can get from only animal foods like liver. It's the best source, fish, egg yolks. Carotenoids are a pro-vitamin A. They're like not an active vitamin A. They can be converted into vitamin A,
Starting point is 00:21:49 but some people don't do that well. But they're obviously in the orange and yellow vegetables, carrots, sweet potatoes, pumpkin, butternut squash, red bell peppers. They're also in leafy greens, spinach, and kale. But the conversion rate from carotenoids to vitamin A is low, maybe anywhere from eight to 60-something percent. Now, people eat a lot of carrots, or sweet potatoes rate from carotenoids to vitamin A is low, maybe anywhere from eight to 60 something percent. Now people eat a lot of carrots or sweet potatoes can develop caroteneemia,
Starting point is 00:22:10 which can turn their skin an orange yellow color. I had that once. I decided to drink a lot of carrot juice at one point in my life and all of a sudden my skin turned orange. I had to stop that, but that doesn't get converted to vitamin A as well. Now you might want to supplement. You might actually need vitamin A as a supplement between two,000 to 5,000 units a day. You don't want to take an overdose of that. Cod liver oil is great. It's a good source of vitamin D, omega-3s, and even vitamin A. My favorite omega-3 is really important because omega-3s are so important for skin health.
Starting point is 00:22:40 They make your hair lustrous, your skin nails strong, your skin clear and shiny and moisturized. And the one I like is Big Bold Health Omega-3 Rejuvenate. It's got extra anti-inflammatory compounds and it's really great for you. It's one I take every day. I usually do about 2,000 milligrams a day, which is two capsules. Zinc picolinate is really good for your skin too. Zinc is really important. You can do Thorne's zinc picolinate,
Starting point is 00:23:10 about 30 milligrams a day. If you have acne, you might need more, up to 50 milligrams. Zinc can sometimes interfere with the absorption of other minerals like copper. So if you're taking zinc supplements for a long time, you might want to think about adding a little copper or have a multi that includes copper. What else is good for your skin? Well, there's something called evening primrose oil that has a very special fat called GLA. GLA can reduce inflammation. It helps different skin conditions like eczema, psoriasis, and dermatitis. It helps your skin look great. It helps elasticity and firmness, makes you look younger. You can get it from evening primrose oil, from hemp oil, spirulina, borage oil. I actually, one of my tricks was, there's a oil that contains both flax oil and borage oil.
Starting point is 00:23:52 I think it's called Barleen's Omega Twin. When people have dry skin in the winter, I have them put it on their skin, and it's amazing to clear everything up and make your skin look great. And what other nutrients are good for your skin? Well, selenium is important, about 55 to 2,000 micrograms a day. I like selenium with thionine. Vitamin C, also important for collagen and inflammation,
Starting point is 00:24:11 is a great antioxidant. I like liposomal vitamin C from Designs for Health, about 1,000 milligrams a day. Vitamin E, also really important. It's a great antioxidant. It helps skin healing, repair, moisturize your skin. My favorite is Metagenics E-Complex. And it has a mixture of tocopherols, not just alpha tocopherol, which is the main one in most vitamin E's, but also delta and gamma, which are more anti-inflammatory and antioxidant.
Starting point is 00:24:35 There's some herbs that can help, like curcumin. Designs for health, curcumin is great. Curcumin veil, it's called curcumin veil. 400 milligrams a day. It's great. Uh, and again, you can order these online, but you know, I also go where I curated the best products and, uh, I did a lot of work on finding the best in the market, uh, that mostly were physician grade. Uh, and you can go to drhyman.com to learn more about them and check it out. Proper hydration is really important. A lot of people are dehydrated. Often I encourage people to use electrolytes with their water at least a couple of times a day.
Starting point is 00:25:08 Use half your weight in ounces of water per day. So if your weight is, let's say, 180 pounds, you need 90 ounces. Also, light is great for your skin, right? Ultraviolet B phototherapy is very good. It helps with different skin disorders like psoriasis and eczema. There's narrow and broadband and you want to be careful. It can burn the skin, but it reduces general inflammation and helps the skin barrier and decreases the overgrowth of cells like hyperplasia, which is called overgrowth of cells. And it can do that for psoriasis. So UVB phototherapy is really good for reducing the abnormal thickening of the skin and by targeting the hyperactive immune pathways for psoriasis. The UVB also
Starting point is 00:25:50 helps promote healing and can normalize the skin's immune response. And that can help the healing process and reduce the severity and frequency of flare-ups. But I would just say that if you don't deal with the other causes, you can do all the UVB you want. It's just going to basically make you symptomatically a little better, but won't get rid of the problem. And if you do want to do it, you can try it in conjunction with everything else. But I wouldn't just do it alone. And you probably could do it two or three times a week.
Starting point is 00:26:15 And the frequency depends on how severe it is and your response and so forth. But basically start with a low dose and you gradually address the frequency, duration, intensity of the sessions based on your progress. Now, there are home units. You can get UVB phototherapy at home through lamps, bulbs, handheld devices. You can get natural sunlight. It's free, harder to control the dose. But bottom line is your skin is a window to your overall health.
Starting point is 00:26:38 And things like acne, rosacea, eczema, psoriasis, they're not just random annoyances. They're signals that something deeper is going on. And thanks for joining me on this journey to uncover what your skin is telling you about your health. If you have questions and want to dive deeper into these topics, I encourage you to explore my related content, which is linked in the show notes. True skincare starts from within. By embracing an inside-out approach to skincare, focusing on gut-healing foods, and tackling the root causes, you can unlock lasting, radiant health and beautiful skin.
Starting point is 00:27:11 Thanks for listening today. If you love this podcast, please share it with your friends and family. Leave a comment on your own best practices on how you upgrade your health and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. And follow me on all social media channels at DrMarkHyman. And we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy. For more information on today's episode, please check out my new video and audio podcast, Health Hacks. It airs every Tuesday and includes a more detailed breakdown of these Friday Health Bites episodes. I'm always getting questions about my favorite books, podcasts, gadgets, supplements, recipes, and lots more. And now you can have access to all of this information by signing up for my free Mark's Picks newsletter at drhyman.com
Starting point is 00:27:49 forward slash Mark's Picks. I promise I'll only email you once a week on Fridays and I'll never share your email address or send you anything else besides my recommendations. These are the things that have helped me on my health journey and I hope they'll help you too. Again, that's drhyman.com forward slash Mark's Picks. Thank you again and we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy. This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Health and Wellness Center and my work at Cleveland Clinic and Function Health where I'm the Chief Medical Officer. This podcast represents my opinions and my guests' opinions and neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests. This podcast is for educational purposes only. This podcast is
Starting point is 00:28:25 not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for your help in your journey, seek out a qualified medical practitioner. You can come see us at the Ultra Wellness Center in Lenox, Massachusetts. Just go to ultrawellnesscenter.com. If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner near you, you can visit ifm.org and search find a practitioner database. It's important that you have someone in your corner who is trained, who's a licensed healthcare practitioner and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health. Keeping this podcast free is part of my mission to bring
Starting point is 00:29:00 practical ways of improving health to the general public. In keeping with that theme, I'd like to express gratitude to the sponsors that made today's podcast possible.

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