The Dr. Hyman Show - Why Most Of Us Are Nutrient Deficient And What To Do About It with Chris Kresser
Episode Date: September 21, 2022This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, InsideTracker, and Cozy Earth. If you’ve ever wondered if supplements are worthwhile or just create expensive urine, this is the podcast episode for yo...u. While I wish it wasn’t the case, I do believe we need supplements to make up for the nutrients we can no longer get through food alone. It’s extra important to note, though, that not all supplements are created equal. And please keep in mind they’re called “supplements” for a reason, not “replacements”—they are meant to supplement a healthy diet and lifestyle to provide the most impact. Today, I’m excited to take a deeper dive into this topic with one of my most trusted sources when it comes to nutrition and dietary research, Chris Kresser. Chris Kresser M.S., L.Ac. is the co-founder of the California Center for Functional Medicine, the founder of Kresser Institute, the host of the top-ranked health podcast Revolution Health Radio, the creator of ChrisKresser.com, and the New York Times best-selling author of The Paleo Cure and Unconventional Medicine. Chris is one of the most respected clinicians and educators in the fields of Functional Medicine and ancestral health and has trained over 2,000 clinicians and health coaches from over 50 countries in his unique approach. He has recently launched Adapt Naturals, a supplement line designed to add back in what the modern world has squeezed out and help people perform and feel their best. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, InsideTracker, and Cozy Earth. 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. InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. Right now they’re offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman. Cozy Earth makes the most comfortable, temperature-regulating, and nontoxic sheets on the market. Right now, get 40% off your Cozy Earth sheets. Just head over to cozyearth.com and use code MARK40. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Do we really need to take supplements? (5:14 / 1:54) Why our food is less nutritious than it used to be (13:32 / 10:10) Can you really get your nutrients from food? (15:28 / 12:10) The prevalence of, and most common, nutritional deficiencies (16:27 / 13:35) Testing your nutrient levels (21:35 / 18:25) Symptoms of common nutrient deficiencies (29:03 / 25:05) Can you take too much or overdose on nutrients? (41:57 / 36:58) What to look for in a quality vitamin or supplement (51:37 / 47:10) What nutrients are provided by plant vs animal foods (59:41 / 55:06) The most nutrient-dense foods (1:10:23 / 1:05:45) Learn more about Chris at ChrisKresser.com and check out his new supplement line, Adapt Naturals.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
If you have a severe deficiency of vitamin C, for example,
you'll get scurvy and that's pretty obvious.
You're not gonna miss that, right?
But if you have a mild deficiency of vitamin C,
you might find yourself getting a lot of colds and flus
and other types of infections.
You might find your inflammation
and oxidative stress is going up.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark. Now I know a lot of the listeners of this podcast are functional
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Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and that's pharmacy with an F,
a place for conversations that matter. And if you've ever wondered about whether you should take supplements or if they just make expensive urine, this is the podcast you want to listen to
because it's with my good friend, an extraordinary scientist,
thinker, and innovator in the field of functional medicine, Dr. Chris Kresser, who's a co-founder
of California Center for Functional Medicine, the founder of the Kresser Institute, the host
of the top-ranked health podcast, Revolution Health Radio, which I've been on multiple times,
and creativechriscresser.com, and the New York Times bestselling author of The Paleo Cure and Unconventional Medicine.
He's really the guy to go to for so much. And I certainly go to him for a lot of my information.
He's an educator and clinician in the field of functional medicine and ancestral health. He's
trained over 2000 clinicians and health coaches from over 50 countries. He was named one of the
100 most
influential people in health and fitness by greatest and has appeared on Dr. Oz, Time Magazine,
Atlantic, NPR, Fox and Friends, and lots more. And he's recently created a new product line,
and we'll talk about that a little bit, called the DAP Naturals, designed to add back in what
the modern world has squeezed out and help people perform and feel their best. So welcome, Chris.
Mark, it's always a pleasure to speak with you. I love our conversations and I've been
looking forward to this.
Okay, so I get to tell the con. Dr. Hyman, listen, I eat a whole foods diet. I eat healthy.
Why should I take supplements? I mean, our hunter-gatherer ancestors never had to take
supplements. Why should I take supplements? And isn't it just going to make expensive urine? And
why should I waste my money? And is it really worth it? And
by the way, a lot of people think it's worth it because I think there's a 20 plus billion dollar
supplement industry out there. So yes, some people obviously think so, but this is a question
clearly that has been debated. It's certainly something that doctors are still in question
about. And just a little aside, I often sort of would in lectures with doctors,
ask doctors, you know, who recommends supplements to their patients? And very few people would
sheepishly read their hand. And I'm like, how many actually take supplements? And like 70 or
80% of the room would raise. That's a great, I mean, that's actually a great segue because
I would say, I would say I was one of those people who asked whether supplements are worthwhile
if I'm eating a nutrient-dense whole food diet. And to be honest, Mark, in my heart of hearts,
I wish the answer was no. I wish that we could just get all of the nutrients we need from food,
because that is the way that human beings are designed to get nutrients. And you and I both
agree that no matter what the answer to the
supplement question is, a nutrient-dense whole foods diet is the core foundation for optimal
health. Like there's no doubt. Everyone I know who's thinking about this in the right way is on
the same page there. But the real question that you asked, which I think is the million dollar
question, is if you are eating that kind of diet, might you still benefit from
supplements? And I think the answer is unequivocally yes at this point because of several
factors. So number one is that changes in soil quality. So I think you and I have talked about
this before. You've written about this extensively, but we've seen over the last 50 years in particular changes to
the to the microbiome of the soil so it's the same thing happens to our that's
happened to our guts but in the case of soil it's because of chemical fertilizers
and pesticides and industrial agriculture and monocropping has changed
the composition of the soil biome so that the plants are less able to extract nutrients from that soil.
And we've seen declines of anywhere from 20 to 40 percent or more across the board in vitamins and minerals.
And one example I came across in a study that just really stood out to me and I've always remembered is we'd have to eat eight oranges today to get the same nutrition from a single orange that our grandparents wow wow wow that's just two generations
of course then we get diabetes but that's another problem yeah exactly well that's that's part of
what we're talking about here we see an increase in like the sugar and sweet content of the orange
but a decrease in the nutrient value so that's a a double whammy. You get hit on both sides. So even if you're eating, you know, healthy food, you're not getting the
same level of nutrition that even your grandparents got, much less the paleo ancestors that you
refer to. So that's number one. Number two is something I also know you're passionate about
was the shift from a local organic food system to an industrial food system that's global in nature.
And why that's important in terms of nutrient value is that as soon as you take a plant out
of the ground, that it starts losing nutrients immediately. And so that's not a big deal if
you're picking carrots out of your backyard or picking a tomato off the vine, or maybe you're
going to a farmer's market where the food was just harvested that morning or the day before.
But if you're like most people and you're going shopping in the grocery store for your produce, chances are that carrot might have traveled 1,800 miles,
which is the average length that a carrot travels to get to the grocery store.
Yeah.
Or it could have even come first.
I mean, in California, you get basil from Guatemala.
So, you know, by the time the food hits your mouth,
it's 40% to 50% depleted just because of how we are growing
and distributing food now across the globe.
So that's another big issue.
Yeah. I just had a reflection on my own garden. You know, I, I go to the farmer's market. I go to a really kind of
equivalent of like a local Whole Foods in the Berkshires where I live and I buy the best organic
broccoli and asparagus and it tastes okay. It tastes good. But when I grow the asparagus in my garden and I
pick it and I eat it literally within seconds, or when I take the broccoli from my garden and pick
it and eat it, it's like an entirely different vegetable. So the truth is most of what we're
eating is already so depleted. And the flavor that's in the plants comes from the phytochemicals
and the nutrients in them.
So it's not just that they taste better.
It's that they actually are better.
And I think that's what most people don't realize.
Yeah, you could even see it in the color too, right?
Because phytonutrients are what provide the color.
So you go to the grocery store and you buy a tomato.
It looks pale and kind of waxy.
If you were to bite into it or cut into it and taste it, it's kind of like water,
tomato flavored water or something like that. When I was growing up, that's how tomatoes were.
And then I can still remember the first time I tasted a real tomato off of a vine. It was like
an explosion in my mouth of tomato-ness that I had never even experienced before.
So this is a huge issue.
And I think it's one of the biggest problems we face in terms of nutrient density.
Another big one is a growing toxic burden.
So we have heavy metals like lead and mercury and arsenic and cadmium in the food supply. Now we have, we're still seeing stories
almost every week about lead and drinking water all over the country. We've got toxins like
glyphosate and bisphenol A. And in addition to the effect that these toxins have on our bodies,
they also bind to nutrients and they make those nutrients impossible to absorb. So that's a
big problem that keeps growing. And then, you know, there are several, I could go on and on,
but I'm going to stop with this next one. We have a growing prevalence of chronic disease.
Six in 10 Americans have a chronic disease and four in 10 have multiple chronic diseases. And
you get hit on both sides with that one as well. So chronic diseases increase
the demand for nutrients. When you have a chronic disease, you actually need more nutrition than
someone without a chronic disease. And they also decrease the absorption of nutrients or the
utilization of nutrients. So let me give you an example. People with obesity or diabesity,
as you've termed it, they are less likely to absorb vitamin D from food and they're less efficient at producing vitamin D from a given amount of exposure to sunlight.
So someone who's obese might need to take 10,000 IU per day of vitamin D just to maintain a normal level versus someone who's lean, maybe 2,000 IU would be sufficient for them. So there's all
kinds of examples like that as well. So the truth is we're just not living in the world that our
ancestors lived in. And when I finally was able to accept that and come to terms with it, you know,
the question was, okay, do we, do I want to like hold onto this ideological stance,
you know, that we should be able to get nutrients from food
and suffer as a result of that and my patients suffer? Or do I want to like figure out a way
that we can close that gap and build on the foundation of a whole foods nutrient dense diet
with smart supplementation? And that's, that's where I've ended up in my career. I know that's
where you've ended up in your career as well. Well, you know, people say, Dr. Hyman, do I really need supplements? I said, no. I always say, I don't think anyone needs
supplements, but only under certain conditions. First, they have to hunt and gather their own
wild food. Second, they have to be exposed to no environmental toxins, have no chronic stress,
sleep nine hours a night, go to bed with the sun, wake up with the sun, drink pure clean water.
And if that describes you, then no, you don't need supplements. But for the rest of us, I think we do. Yeah, that's a great way of putting it.
And I think, you know, you just hit upon a couple of things that are worth emphasizing.
You know, the quality of the food we're eating is so much less than it used to be.
And a lot of that has to do with the agricultural practices that degrade our soil. And it's the
symbiosis between the microbes in the
soil and the nutrients in the soil that makes them free to be absorbed by the plant. So if you have
dead soil, otherwise known as dirt, which is what most of food is grown in America because of the
chemicals we put on are essentially poisons. They're like antibiotics for the soil. They kill
the microbial life of the soil. If you don't have those microbial compounds and the micro-oxygenal fungi in the soil,
the plants can't extract the minerals and the nutrients from the soil, which is why they're so
much less nutritious. And the other thing I think that people don't realize is that climate change
and increasing temperatures and carbon in the atmosphere is creating a bigger problem because
it's causing the plants to absorb
more carbon dioxide, which is a good thing. But what does that carbon dioxide turn into?
Well, carbon carbohydrates, it's the same root, right? So it turns into a starchier plant. So
by nature, the plants become less nutritious because they have more starchy carbohydrates,
less protein and less nutrients. So we're kind of in this vicious cycle of a degrading food supply while we're seeing increasing needs for
nutrients based on our increasing toxic world, increased stresses, and this sort of vicious
cycle you mentioned. Plus, you mentioned the medication issue, and that's another whole issue.
Doctors always say, oh, don't take this nutrient. It can interfere with your medication. Well,
the opposite is true. A lot of medications interfere with nutrients. And so 81% of Americans are on some type of medication
and they are, they're often interactions. Like if you're on a diuretic for blood pressure,
you lose magnesium. If you're on an acid blocker for B12, you can't absorb, I mean, for a reflux,
you can't absorb B12, you know, and I could go on and on. Metformin and folate, metformin.
Exactly. So that's, that's the whole issue. The other Metformin and folate, metformin. Exactly. Yep. Exactly. So
that's, that's a whole issue. The other thing I sort of want to, want to touch on is, you know,
this idea of can you really get your nutrients from food? And I think, you know, I, I generally
don't think so unless you're a complete OCD nut. And I, I didn't disparage one of my patients, but I had this one patient,
it's like, Dr. Hyman, I figured out if I eat four Brazil nuts, 25 pumpkin seeds, and four ounces of
liver, and this, and she went on and on, like basically covered every nutrient and where it
came from and what amount it was in each food and how to eat. So she was literally counting her
nuts, literally. It's a full-time job, right? It was a full-time job, yeah.
Other than her and a few of our patients, we've had the similar kind of Excel spreadsheet,
you know, where they check off the foods that they're eating.
And that's really what it does take often to get it right.
And, you know, most people are not going to go through that to that level of effort, for sure.
Yeah, for sure. The other thing I want to have you address next is this idea of,
are we really nutrient deficient? So yeah, the food may be less nutritious, but I mean,
how common are nutritional deficiencies in practice truly? And why don't we hear more
about it? And I know I've had the luxury and privilege of being able to test
tens of thousands of patients over decades for nutritional testing. And I do it on everybody
as a baseline. It's like I check blood pressure, check cholesterol, check heart rate,
check their weight. It's checking the nutrient levels. And it's just astounding to me the level.
And by the way, my practice is generally made up of people who are health conscious.
They're not like, I call them virgin patients who've been eating McDonald's their whole life.
And I have a few of those and it's even more shocking. But the level of nutritional deficiency,
even among an educated, well-off, conscious population is still staggering. So can you
just talk about the widespread nature of nutritional deficiencies, what we know about
them and what they are?
What are the most common ones?
Yeah, absolutely.
And that's what opened my eyes to this as well.
You know, 15 years of treating patients and every patient that walks through the door
gets a full nutrient analysis.
And I can probably count on one hand the number of patients that had adequate levels of all
nutrients in all of those 15 years, which is really shocking for
the same reason. I have highly motivated, educated patients who are way far above the norm in terms
of the attention that they're paying to this, and they were still not getting enough, and it was
contributing to all of their symptoms, everything from minor symptoms like fatigue and, you know, poor quality sleep and, you know, slight mood disturbances to full on disease, you know, autoimmune disease and gastrointestinal issues, thyroid problems, etc.
I know you've seen the same thing.
So, you know, let's just kind of zoom out and see, like, how do we even know how much nutrients that we need to thrive?
Well, the answer is we don't have great data on that yet
because most of the scales, nutrient density scales
and standards for how much we should get,
like the Recommended Dietary Allowance or RDA,
the RDA was designed in World War II
when they were trying to figure out
rations for soldiers. And that's certainly the question they were asking there was certainly not
how can we optimize these soldiers' health? They were asking, how can we keep them alive during
wartime? You know, how can we make sure they don't develop scurvy and rickets and these diseases of malnutrition. And so that's one problem. You know, the standard
that we're using is really only designed to prevent serious problems. It's not designed
for optimal health. Even within that standard, though, they often haven't been updated for,
you know, 25, 30 years plus. A great example is magnesium. So the RDA for
magnesium was last updated in 1997 and RDAs are based on body weight. So if there's been a change
in body weight over a given period of time, the RDA should be updated and go up, but it hasn't. So in 1997, the average body weight for a female was about 135 pounds,
and the average weight for a male was about 166 pounds. And the RDA was 420 milligrams per day
for men and 320 for women. Now today, though, the average weight of a woman is 170 pounds and the average weight
of a man is 196 pounds. And when researchers recalculated the RDA for magnesium based on this,
it went up to 650 for men and 530 for women. And the average intake is only about 340 grams a day in this country. So that tells us
most people are getting 200 to 300 milligrams per day less magnesium than they need. But if you were
to just go on the web and search for the RDA for magnesium, it's still 420 for men and 320 for
women. It's, you know, for 25 years ago. So, I think we're dramatically
underestimating the rates of nutrient deficiency for that reason. But even with all of these
caveats, the latest Nurses Health data show that the majority of Americans are deficient in not
just one essential nutrient, but several. So, I'll give you some stats here. 100% don't get enough
potassium. 94% don't get enough vitamin D. 92% don't get enough choline. 89% don't get enough
vitamin E. 67% don't get enough vitamin K. 52% don't get enough magnesium. But as I just said,
that's actually probably closer to 100%. 44% calcium, 43% vitamin A. I could go on, but
these statistics are shocking because they show that most people are deficient in most nutrients,
full stop. So how do we measure these? Because when you go to the doctor, they don't go,
wow, we just checked your nutrient levels and they're all deficient.
In functional medicine, we have ways of testing them, but what are the most important
diagnostic tests for nutrient deficiency that people should be focused on? What are the most
common ones? I mean, you mentioned a lot of them, but what are the things we actually want to test
for and how do we test for those? So this is one of the biggest challenges, unfortunately,
and you know this, Mark, from your practice, but it's very difficult. It would, what would be perfect is if
there was like a single panel you could run with a single body fluid that would accurately test
all nutrients. That's like the Holy grail. I wish I, you know, if there's one thing I've always
wanted as a clinician that I never, that I've never had, it's that right right? But you know that with each different nutrient, you have to test it
differently. So for example, you can't really assess vitamin K2 in the blood accurately right
now. There are some like surrogate markers you can use to estimate levels, but you're not getting
an accurate measurement. With iodine, if you want to know long-term iodine status,
you have to test it in the hair.
If you do a urine test,
you can see how much the patient has consumed in the past 24 hours,
but that doesn't really tell you long-term status.
You know, nutrients like B12,
if you do serum B12, you can get a decent idea, but serum B12 doesn't go down until stage three
and four of B12 deficiency, which is the final stage. So to get a more accurate assessment of
early B12 deficiency, you have to test methylmalonic acid or homocysteine. So you get
the idea. It's very complicated and it's rife with problems, which is one of the
reasons why I think, um, the estimates of nutrient deficiency are, are even as shocking as they are,
are low because let's just take B12. If, if a clinician runs a serum B12 test and the B12 is,
is low normal, they'll be told, Hey, your B12 is normal. But if I was to then run
homocysteine or methylmalonic acid on that patient, they're way out of range. That already tells us
that that patient's not getting enough B12 and they're already experiencing significant effects
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Now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
So what are the top, like top nutrition tests?
And what are the ones we should be telling everybody to get?
And that are going to reveal the most relevant deficiencies?
Yeah, I mean, I think just to keep it simple, and even with the stuff that's available from
every local doctor, vitamin D would be at the top of the list, right?
So vitamin D3, right?
Yeah, a lot of doctors will measure vitamin D, not measure the right vitamin D would be at the top of the list, right? So vitamin D3, right? Yeah. A lot of doctors will
measure vitamin D, not measure the right vitamin D. Yeah. Yeah. Let's measure that, uh, 25 D and,
uh, pretty much, you know, you should be able to get this with, you know, every doctor's office
insurance. Um, I think serum magnesium as, as imperfect as it is, because it's only measuring the half a percent
of magnesium that exists in the, in the blood, not the night, you know, the rest of the magnesium is,
is locked inside of the cells and tissues. So it doesn't show up in the serum, but,
you know, you can kind of generally assess where it is. That's really important because magnesium is a critical nutrient. Just don't, you know, rely 100% on that. If you have
other symptoms of not getting enough magnesium and your serum magnesium is normal, I would still,
you know, follow up on that. I run B12 and folate on every patient in part because they're so
important for the health of the nervous system and the brain. And obviously we're suffering from epidemics there with brain and nervous
system conditions. And so many of the drugs, as you pointed out, Mark, interfere with B12
and folate absorption. So it's very typical for me to see low B12 and low folate in the serum.
I run homocysteine. Yeah. So you the serum. Uh, I run homocysteine.
Yeah. So you run those other tests too, the homocysteine. Yeah. So I run serum homocysteine
and that doesn't just tell you about folate and B12. It tells you about your inflammatory status.
So I think that's a really helpful marker. It's a risk factor for cardiovascular disease
and then urine and serum methylmalonic
acid as another way of checking B12 status. I do zinc and copper on every patient. You know,
copper, excess copper is associated with dementia and Alzheimer's and a bunch of other
neurodegenerative conditions. And zinc is critical for our brain function and immune function,
which is particularly relevant these days. So I always want to assess zinc levels and see where that is. Calcium is difficult to measure
in blood because it's so tightly regulated in the blood that if our intake drops, the body will just
pull calcium out of the bone in order to maintain a normal blood calcium level. And that's, of course, why low calcium intake in the
diet leads to osteopenia and osteoporosis. So for calcium, we use chronometer, which is just a way
that patients record what they eat very carefully over a three-day period. And then that gives us
an idea of how much calcium
they're getting on a daily basis. It should be, you know, 1,000 to 1,200 milligrams a day,
depending on, you know, age and, you know, whether they're pregnant, et cetera.
And if they're not, then we need to look at other ways of getting calcium. So,
that's a pretty simple approach with mostly
tests that are available from any doctor and then one way of assessing a nutrient that you could do
on your own with a simple app. So Chris, that was a really helpful overview of some of the
diagnostic testing. What I'd kind of like to know is what are the symptoms that people can identify in their own bodies for the most common
nutritional deficiencies? Because when I was in medical school, we didn't learn about how to
identify nutritional deficiencies unless it was scurvy or rickets or beriberi or pellagra. It
wasn't like, what is the kind of low level insufficiency or
deficiency symptoms for many common nutrients? So once I began to learn that, they were easy to spot.
And in functional medicine, we actually now have a curriculum for a nutrition focused
physical exam. So you can even identify not only symptoms, but physical signs of inadequate
nutrition. So take us through what that looks like and what
are the kinds of things people can identify for themselves for the common ones? And we can kind
of riff on that for a bit. Great. Yeah. I think one of the, you know, it's worth pointing out
one of the challenges here is that the body needs 40 micronutrients at least to function properly.
And if we don't get enough of any of them, everything kind of breaks down because nutrients are the fuel for every physiological process that happens in the body.
And what's difficult about this is that, you know, if you, if you have a severe deficiency,
uh, of vitamin C, for example, you'll get scurvy and that's pretty obvious, you know,
you're not going to miss that. Right. but if you have a mild deficiency of vitamin c you might find yourself getting a lot of colds and flus and other
types of infections you might find your inflammation and oxidative stress is going up and that might
manifest as like pain in your body and you know other symptoms that are not very easily you know unless you're a practitioner and you're aware of this kind of thing, trace back to a moderate or mild vitamin C deficiency.
So I just want to start there because it's important to know that mild, you know, not getting enough of these things is not necessarily going to kill you,
at least not right away. In the short term. In the short term, it could, it's going to increase
your risk of all kinds of chronic diseases that do, that are the leading causes of death. In the
U.S. now, seven out of 10 of the leading causes of death are chronic diseases rather than acute
problems. But, you know, if we start from just kind of the very basic
things to look out for, I'd say fatigue and low energy would be at the top of the list. You know,
there's so many people who just don't feel like they have enough energy to get through the day.
And if I have a patient that feels like that, I'm going to be thinking about nutrients right
off the bat. And, you know, that can vary for all of the B vitamins. B1 is
really important for energy. B12, folate is important for energy. Magnesium is, is important
for energy. Even vitamin D is important for energy. So it's not really, people don't tend
to think about that very much, but. Like, how do malgy and vitamin D go together, right? You
get muscle soreness and depression.
Yeah. So let's, yeah. I mean, let's just keep going down. So, uh, low mood, so maybe not full
on clinical depression, but you know, just, uh, mood swings or, or mood changes. Um,
certainly depression, anxiety, um, you know, lack of focus, and then the whole range of cognitive
symptoms like brain fog, difficulty with word recall, poor memory, inability to focus for long
periods. You know, if you go to your doctor and complain of this, they'll just pat you on the back
and say, welcome to old age, you know, or that's just part of the normal aging process. I don't
think it is. I mean, maybe to some extent,
but what happens when we age is we're less likely to absorb a lot of the nutrients that are critical
for brain functioning and cognitive health. So I would say that whole range of symptoms is important.
Digestive symptoms, this is something that people often don't realize is that
the gut is a smooth muscle.
It's part of the nervous system.
And just like every other system of the body, it needs certain nutrients to function properly.
So we need all of the fat-soluble vitamins are important.
The B vitamins are important.
Zinc is important for the gut.
And if you're not getting enough of those nutrients, your gut health is going to
suffer as a result. And then I would say, you know, if you're feeling depleted and you're not
really responding to stress very well, you're not very resilient, you feel like you're just
continually, you know, catching the latest cold or flu, or you're just, you don't have a lot of, uh, buffer for the daily
stresses of life, um, then you definitely have to look at your magnesium levels. That's probably
one of the most important nutrients that governs our stress response. All of the B vitamins,
of course, are really critical, uh, zinc and copper really important for the nervous system.
Uh, again, the fat soluble vitamins. vitamins. And then, you know, another one is
both male and female hormone imbalances. So women who are dealing with issues around menstrual cycle,
sexual vitality, and then men also dealing with similar issues with sexual vitality and just strength, recovery, and performance,
the production of all of the sex hormones, estrogen, progesterone, testosterone,
and all of the ways that those hormones are converted in the body depend on several different
nutrients. And when you're low in those nutrients, then you're not going to get optimal conversion of
those hormones. So the
entire endocrine system will be affected. So I know I just basically rattled off the whole body,
you know, most potential symptoms you could have, but that's the reality we're facing because
like I said, nutrients drive all of those chemical biochemical processes in the body.
Yeah. I mean, that's a lot, but I sort of want to unpack that a little bit. So first of all,
it's important people understand that vitamins and minerals and nutrients are
so critical to every function of the body because they're helpers for all the enzymes.
And enzymes are catalysts that convert one molecule to another molecule.
And this is happening literally trillions of times a second in your body.
So literally it's trillions of reactions a second in your body that all depend on having adequate levels
of nutrients to make these chemical reactions run.
And one third of your entire DNA codes for enzymes.
Think about that.
And that means that those enzymes are variable
in the population and some people need more or less
nutrients, but those are so critical to have the right
amounts and the right forms of nutrients to make those enzymes work and make your biochemical machinery work.
That's why they're so important.
Absolutely.
And if I could just interject on that, like magnesium is a great example of that, right?
When we first started this, you've been doing this for longer than me, but when I first started, the stat I saw was magnesium was a cofactor for
300 different enzymatic reactions. About 10 years later, it was 450. And the most recent research
I've seen is that it's now over 600. So what that tells us is it's already a lot, but we're just
barely even understanding the extent to which these nutrients really provide that support to
all of the enzymatic reactions happening in the body. Yeah, that's exactly right. I mean,
I was going to say that. That's exactly what I was going to say. Like drugs work on a single
pathway or a single enzyme. These compounds, magnesium, zinc, whatever, it works on literally
hundreds of different enzymes. And things like vitamin D actually modulate gene expression and
hormone regulation. I mean, there's just so many different factors that they regulate in the body.
So when you don't have the optimal levels, it's a problem. And like you said earlier,
most of the nutritional guidelines are around addressing deficiency diseases, which we found
120 years ago. And we're still basing our nutritional recommendations on that instead of what do our
bodies need to optimally function, hence the word functional medicine. And Robert Heaney was a
vitamin D scientist who wrote a brilliant article years ago called Long Latency Deficiency Diseases.
So he says, well, if you don't have enough vitamin D in the short run, you get scurvy.
And if you don't have optimal levels in the long run, you get osteoporosis or depression or
muscle weakness, right?
If you don't have enough folate in the short run, it's an acute deficiency, you'll get
anemia.
But in the long run, you might get cancer or heart disease or depression or dementia,
right?
So it's a really different way of looking at these nutrients.
So what is the optimal levels?
And that sort of begs the question of the testing we went back to, we talked about earlier,
which I think, you know, there's a company that I've become the chief medical officer of called
Function Health, which is designed to empower people with their own health data, their own
health information, be able to do $15,000 worth of diagnostic testing for 500 bucks or less than
500 bucks and get your numbers, including a lot of these nutrient levels we're talking about,
and then learn what to do about them and not just what the reference ranges are, but what are the
optimal ranges? Like vitamin D, you say, well, if it's less than 20, that's a problem. Or some labs
say less than 30, but it should be over 45 or 50 to be in the optimal range, right? So we really
have to kind of rethink what we're doing.
Yeah, you know, Mark, there's another issue when it comes to nutrients that I think we should talk
about that I don't think gets enough airtime, and that's nutrient synergy. So nutrients don't exist,
they don't exist in isolation in the body, as you well know, they play synergistic roles,
and you could have adequate levels of one nutrient. Let's say iron, you're getting enough of it in your diet.
But if you're not getting enough of the nutrients that support iron absorption and metabolism,
then you could still be iron deficient.
So for example, copper, we know that copper is needed for iron to be utilized and absorbed.
And if someone's copper deficient, they could be iron deficient even if they're getting
enough iron.
We know magnesium is needed for the biosynthesis and transport of vitamin D.
So even if you're getting enough D, if you're not getting enough magnesium, you're going to have problems there.
And I mean, the list goes on and on.
But the point is that nutrients operate in this synergistic relationship.
So we have to make sure we're getting enough of all nutrients, not just individual nutrients. Yeah, it's true. I just think even one organ like thyroid, right? For
the thyroid hormone to be made, you need iodine. For the T4, which is the inactive hormone to be
converted to the active hormone, you need selenium. For the T3, which is the active
form to bind to the nuclear receptor to have its action, you need vitamin D3. So it's like you need
all these different things. They work as a team. And, and so what's so crazy about modern nutrition and
supplement research is they single out one nutrient that they think might be beneficial
and they study it alone. And I'm like, well, if Michael Jordan was the best basketball player in
the world, if he was on an NBA team by himself, he would lose every game. It's like, so, you know, that's, as you
well know, that's, that's an artifact of drug research, right? And you want to, they want to
isolate the single compound and then control all the other variables and keep them similar. But
that's, that's not how functional medicine works. That's not how the body works. It's really a complex symphony of
interactions all the time. And they work literally on hundreds of different pathways and enzymes.
And I mean, each nutrient can have literally hundreds of different effects in the body and
be on a hundred different processes. So it's important to make sure we're still learning
about that. Right. It's just crazy. I mean, I think we're just scratching the surface understanding because it's so complex that we have just applied our kind of reductionist,
you know, allopathic framework to try and understand these nutrients. And there are some
researchers out there like Gregory Skrinis and others who are looking at food synergy as this
complex web of interactions.
And maybe even with AI and some of the new tools that we're going to have available to us,
we'll be able to figure some of this stuff out.
But just for listeners, anyone watching or listening,
this is why Mark and I are such big fans of getting as many nutrient needs as you can meet through food because food has those.
When you eat a
food it doesn't just have one nutrient it has multiple different nutrients and often food
contains the actual nutrients that support the other nutrients in that same food that's nature's
intelligence right it's so true it's so true so many people ask me cool can i take all these
supplements at once i'm like i said you do your body know what to do i say listen do you realize
how many molecules are in the food you eat how How many phytochemicals? Hundreds and hundreds of vitamins,
minerals, all these different kinds of compounds your body has to totally deal with. Your body is
super smart. It knows what to do with all of it. So let's talk about another concept here. I think,
you know, there's a lot of fear sometimes about, oh, taking too much or overdosing.
And there are certain nutrients which you have to be careful of. And there's others that doctors,
you know, might do a blood test on someone taking B12. Oh, my God, you're B12 toxic,
you know, stop it right away. And I'm like, well, no, you really can't be B12 toxic,
only if you don't take enough folic acid. And so there are certain things you have to be careful
of. For example, the Inuit would know that if the foreigners, the explorers back in the day,
they didn't like them because they were disrupting their culture,
they would feed them polar bear liver, which had huge amounts of vitamin A in it,
and they would get vitamin A poisoning and they would die.
So you have to be careful of some nutrients.
So tell us about the ones we have to be careful of.
That's true. So you mentioned to be careful of some nutrients. So tell us about the ones we have to be careful of. That's true.
So you mentioned vitamin A.
I think that vitamin A is a concern at extremely high doses,
but it's worth noting that having adequate levels of vitamin D and K2
really increase the toxicity threshold of vitamin A.
So put another way, if you're deficient in D and K2,
you're going to get toxic effects of vitamin A at a much lower dose. Whereas if you're getting
enough K2 and D, you have to really like, you would have to be supplementing with crazy amounts
of vitamin A, or you'd have to be eating polar bear liver or, you know, lots of beef liver every day
for that to be a concern. Vitamin D, you know, you can't overdo it with D. I almost hesitate
to even mention it because 94% of Americans don't get enough. So we're not talking about a common
problem here. I just want to emphasize that, you know, most people are not on that end of the spectrum, but you and I have both seen people in the clinic who come in and they've been taking
50,000 IU of vitamin A a day for like years. Or vitamin D, you mean, vitamin D?
Or vitamin D, right. And their serum level is like 140. Well, that is toxic and that can increase
the risk of kidney stones and heart disease etc but
at the doses that most people take let's say 5 000 iu per day there's almost no risk of toxicity
that's true most people i mean you're right you're right chris i think i think there's a lot of
misunderstanding about what the ideal vitamin d level is and in the way we look at nutrients we
talked about this before is that it's it's a bell curve which is what's normal for the population. But if 80% of the population is low in vitamin E because we live and work
inside, your normal level would be 20 or 30. But that's not the actual ideal level. That might not
be optimal. And the reality is that you can tolerate a lot higher doses. Even the upper
range of what they call normal, like 100 on some tests or 75 is not really toxic at all in fact uh dr robert heaney did it was a vitamin d expert
did a study where they looked at 10 000 units a day for three months in healthy young males
and there was no harm at all from that dose which is a lot it's way more than i give most patients
so you know if you're a lifeguard your level might might be 200, you know, which is, you know, so I think people shouldn't worry about too much
vitamin D unless you're doing stupid doses or you're not taking a brand that's reputable.
Because sometimes the brands will say, oh, 5,000, but it might, they might have not tested the
product. Yeah. It's, I have some crazy patients who tend to overdo it. So I've seen a couple
cases, but I don't think it's a concern for most people.
As we said, almost 95% are deficient.
So that's a far bigger problem.
Calcium, I definitely have concerns about, but not from dietary calcium, but from people
taking too much supplemental calcium.
There are studies showing that can increase the risk of kidney stones and even heart disease.
Because when you take it in really large doses of the supplement, it ends up in the blood and the body doesn't
really know what to do with that. It doesn't get into the bones and the teeth where you want it.
It gets into the soft tissues instead. So that's a problem. I don't know about you, Chris, but I
never recommend calcium supplements. I don't. I mean, I used to because that's what I learned to
do as a
doctor yeah like 1500 milligrams a day but it's really not about how much calcium you're taking
in it's about how much is being absorbed about your vitamin d levels and about how it's being
used and and in countries for example in africa where they have like very low vitamin d i mean
calcium intakes like 300 or 400 milligrams a day they don't have any osteoporosis because they they
have lots of of other benefits that they have.
And this is a great example of nutrient synergy. So vitamin D, vitamin K2, and magnesium all
support calcium regulation and help calcium get into the bones and teeth where it's needed and
keep it out of the soft tissue. So there's speculation, like Chris Masterjohn, our colleague,
has written about this. He's speculated that if you consider nutrient synergy and someone has optimal levels of D, K2, and magnesium,
the RDA for the recommended amount of calcium might be more like 500 milligrams a day instead of 1,000 or 1,200, which is what's recommended right now.
And that's total, including diet.
That's including diet, yeah.
So not supplementing with that amount.
Yeah.
Right.
Iodine is one of those kind of Goldilocks ones because, you know, for most people, they can get enough iodine from diet or supplementation.
But for someone with Hashimoto's, iodine supplementation, particularly at higher doses, might be problematic, especially if they don't have enough selenium.
So this, you know, that's another thing. And then iron, you know, again,
iron deficiency, way bigger problem. Affects 2 billion people around the world. Iron deficiency,
anemia, even in the US, you know, it's still a big problem. But it's worth noting that hemochromatosis, which is a genetic condition that causes excess iron storage, is the most common genetic condition in people of Northern European descent.
It affects one in 200 people.
So that's not a small number of people in a country with 300 million people.
And, you know, I test, I do a full iron panel on everyone who comes into the clinic and I see iron overload all the time.
Do me too. I diagnose it so often. It's crazy. And I'm like, I'm like, why did nobody
ever pick this up on you before? That's right. People could have it for decades and not even
know it. So, so yeah, I, I'm not a big fan of iron supplementation typically, unless there's a
reason, you know, unless we see that that patient has anemia or something like that, even then I'll
often recommend liver or spleen you
know organ consuming organ meats if they're willing to do that because that can really
boost iron levels but it's a food-based form of iron so i think the body is able to you know
regulate the absorption of it better than with iron supplements yeah so we've got vitamin a
vitamin d iodine um calcium calcium calcium, and then a bunch more.
And then there's other fat-soluble vitamins.
Maybe, can you get too much K or E?
Vitamin E, alpha-tocopherol.
Yeah, there's studies suggesting that long-term high-dose supplementation with alpha-tocopherol,
which is the more common form of vitamin E, has been associated with
increased risk of prostate cancer in men and heart disease as well. Again, those are just
doses that we wouldn't encounter in nature. More is not always better. We have to get out of that
thought process in this country. What happened was they saw that vitamin E deficiency was
correlated with a lot of problems, people not saw that vitamin E deficiency was correlated with
a lot of problems, people not getting enough vitamin E in their diet. And they figured,
oh, hey, if we just jack that way up, maybe we can prevent some of these problems. But of course,
the pendulum swung too far in the other direction. So I don't recommend supplementation with
alpha-tocopherol at all. Tocotrienols are a different story. They're a new form of vitamin
E that's been recently discovered that doesn't have that long-term safety risk and they have
some unique benefits and effects. And in fact, I included a tocotrienol product in my supplement
line for that reason. But regular tocopherols that you find in most multivitamins and supplements,
I'm not a big fan of supplementing
with them either. Yeah. I want to get into the forms of nutrients in a second. Cause you know,
I think it's a really important topic that most people don't understand, which is it's not just
taking any old vitamin. It's what is the form of the vitamin? How bioavailable is it? How, uh,
is it actually absorbed? Is it in a form that's actually can be broken down and used by the body?
And there's so many other variables we get into.
Just to kind of close that loop on what we should be careful of,
I think selenium, some minerals are tricky.
I was just about to say selenium.
Selenium you got to be careful with.
Don't want to eat too many Brazil nuts.
Yeah, or even some supplements have like 300 micrograms of selenium,
and that's going to be too much for most people.
It's definitely a Goldilocks range for that one for sure. It's one of the more toxic minerals.
But some magnesium, for example, unless you have kidney failure, it's just going to be diarrhea.
It's not toxic. So it's kind of confusing. Some vitamins are bad and some minerals are bad to
overdose. Others are not. You can take all vitamins you want, and you're just going to pee them out.
Your body's not going to, you know.
We should mention potassium.
You don't want to overdo it on potassium because it plays an important role in muscle
contraction, including the heart contraction and action potential and cellular communication.
And so, you know, getting plenty, you know, our ancestors got up to 10,000 milligrams of potassium
in their diet and that's no problem.
But if you're supplementing, you should not be taking, you know, gram level quantities
of potassium, I think, because that can be problematic.
All right.
Well, let's talk about the forms of nutrients now, Chris, because, you know, people go,
well, you know, I can go to Costco or I can go to CVS or Walgreens and just pick up the cheapest vitamin.
It's a vitamin.
What's the difference?
It's got everything in there.
It's fine.
What is the problem with doing that?
And why should we be more diligent about the quality of the supplements we're taking?
And why does it matter?
Both in terms of the actual form of the nutrient, but also what else is in that vitamin in terms of fillers, gums and
flavorings and colorings and all this stuff.
It's kind of crazy.
I mean, you go to Bicentrum and it's like blue.
I mean, why do you want to take a blue dye for like 30 years?
I'm like, I don't want to take anything with blue dye.
I mean, if it's blueberry, I'll take it.
But it's like the blue pill or the red pill.
I'm like, you don't need a blue pill or red pill or red bill vitamins shouldn't have colors except their natural color yeah exactly
so yeah i mean i think uh the forms of the nutrients oftentimes um products will use
synthetic uh forms because they're a lot cheaper you know to put in there and the problem with that
is in many cases those forms are foreign to the body. The body has not encountered those forms of those nutrients historically and doesn't know how to digest and absorb and process them effectively.
So some good examples here would be folic acid, you know, is a synthetic form of folate and it's, you know, some people are able to convert that into
methyl tetrahydrofolate, which is a more active form of folate that we want. But in quite a number
of people, that conversion doesn't work well and they can end up with unmetabolized folic acid in
their blood. And that's been linked to cancer and other health problems. Yeah. Yeah. I'll tell you
a story about that, Chris. I just interrupted for a sec.
I was in this movie, Fed Up,
which was released in 2014
about the food system and obesity in kids.
And the director of the film was not a patient,
but she talked to me about this problem that she had
where she would have recurrent miscarriages
and she couldn't get to
have a baby. And she ended up having a pregnancy, but had almost a full term encephalic baby,
which means like no brain basically. And it was just horrible. And so she read this article that
I wrote years ago on methylation. And for those of you who don't know what that is, it's basically
the chemical reaction that happens all the time in the body that's facilitated
by certain enzymes that require B12 folate, B6, and a bunch of other stuff. And so she read the
article and there's a gene, like you mentioned, that people can't convert from the folate in your
diet to the methylfolate that you need to run everything. And she said to her doctor, hey,
I think I might have this. And she asked for the gene test and sure enough
she had the gene that was the funky gene that prevented her from metabolizing this properly
and then the doctor said okay i'm just going to give you some folic acid and she's like no no no
dr hyman says i need to take methylfolic so she did and and and it was quite amazing because during
the the the movie uh premiere and in the PR on the movie,
I was traveling on New York City with her.
And she had this 10-month-old beautiful baby boy with her that she was taking care of on
her little film tour.
And it was just such a beautiful story of how powerful these nutrients are and why it's
so important to get the right one and the right one for you.
Absolutely.
So yeah, that's a great example. And
so many women have benefited from that same kind of approach and where they've taken folic acid
that hasn't worked or even caused harm, they've switched over to 5-MTHF, which is the more active
form or even folinic acid, which is a more active form and they do well. So, you know, that's one example.
Cyanocobalamin is another example. That's a form of B12 that's often in cheaper B12 products. And
again, some people do just fine. They're able to convert that into methylcobalamin or adenosylcobalamin,
which are the more active forms, but other people cannot. And they can take cyanocobalamin all day
long and they don't experience any of the benefits that they would get if they were taking one of the
more active forms like cathelicobalamin. Yeah, exactly. And then, you know, vitamin A,
beta carotene is a less active form of the active form retinol. And carotenes have some important functions in and of themselves in the body.
So I'm not saying carotenes are bad, but, uh,
and a lot of people can convert carotenes into retinol,
but there are some people who can't do that very well.
And there are even some who can't do it at all.
So if you ever have seen someone who does like a carrot juice fast and then
their palms turn orange,
that was me.
That is one of those people.
I did that years ago.
I'm like,
I was drinking tons of carrot juice before I kind of got the message that
sugar wasn't so great.
And I was like,
Oh,
this is healthy.
It's a carrot juice.
I literally,
I'm like,
wow,
I look like I'm like,
you know,
the orange man.
Yeah. Yeah. I've been in a tanning bed.
So, you know, that can happen.
Less vitamin K1, which again is important.
It has some important roles on its own.
That can be converted into K2, but not always.
So it's helpful to take vitamin K2, preform alpha-linolenic acid,
which is a precursor to EPA and DHA,
the long-chain omega-3 fats, only about half a percent of that gets converted into EPA and DHA.
So people who are supplementing only with flax oil, they could end up being deficient in DHA,
even if they're consuming a ton of that stuff. So those are some of the main examples.
Dr. Justin Marchegiani Yeah, a lot of people who are vegan will supplement with, for example,
the omega threes from plants like walnuts or flax seeds.
And they don't convert and I test everybody's essential fatty acid levels.
And it's just shocking, you see high alpha linoleic acid, linoleic acid, and then really
low EPA DHA, which are the active important forms that you need for your brain function and inflammation and regulating all these different functions in your body and it
just they just can't make it so it's really important and then and then besides that chris
you know there's also the problem not just the form of the nutrient from its bioactive form but
even from its absorption for example magnesium we talked about with 700 enzymes magnesium citrate
and glycinate and threonate and all these other forms are well absorbed, but oxide is not, but it's also the cheapest form of
magnesium.
So that's what's in most of the supplements you get in the grocery store or Walgreens
or cheap supplements.
And I'm like, sure, you got magnesium in the label, but it's not, it's like not working.
Yeah.
And you, there are things you could do, like you can chelate it and make it a buffered
form, or you can turn it into a bisglycinate and make it well absorbed.
But just the standard magnesium oxide is just going to go right through you, literally.
And that's what happens when people take too much magnesium oxide and they use it as a laxative.
And it might work as a laxative, but it's not working as a magnesium supplement because it's it's literally going through you and then as you
mentioned mark you know there's a lot of products that just contain a lot of stuff that you don't
want to be putting into your body um you know on a regular basis all the all the dyes and the
artificial compounds and things like that so like lactose and gluten sometimes say oh well
they say you know oh it oh, it's cheaper.
It's, you know, it's 20% cheaper or whatever.
But I'm like, okay, if you're not getting any benefit, then you're, you're, it's, you
know, the difference between $22 and $24, like if you're getting a benefit from the
$25 or $24 product, but no benefit from 22, what's the more expensive product really?
It's the one that you're paying almost as much for, but getting no benefit from at all, or even being harmed by.
It's sort of like that, you know, you get a car with 10 miles per gallon or a car with 100 miles
per gallon, you know, it's like it didn't matter. So let's talk about something else.
Especially over time.
I want to talk about this sort of next topic I'm really interested in hearing from you about is
phytochemicals and phytonutrients. It's one of my favorite topics to talk about.
And the more I learn about it, the more excited I get. It's really where the food is medicine
conversation comes in. And you can get these from food, but you can also get these from various
supplements and different forms. You know, why are they so important? And I also want you to
touch on the idea that that um you know is important
because there's a lot of people who who are embracing a eating philosophy that i have some
concerns about that can be very therapeutic in the short term but it's people who only eat meat
the carnivore diet meaning they don't eat any vegetables carnivore yeah and i mean it's sort
of the opposite of vegan right it's like only animal products. So I wrote an article a while back called What's the Optimal Human Diet?
And I did a really deep dive on this topic.
And I looked at it from through different lenses.
So if we study ancestral diets and human populations from all over the globe, from different time
periods, what can we determine from that in terms of the best mix of foods?
What can we determine from clinical research, actual randomized controlled trials?
And then what can we determine from observational nutrition research, which is highly problematic, as we both know, but you can for, I came to the conclusion that the optimal human diet contains a combination of plant foods and animal foods in some combination.
Now, what that specific ratio of plant versus animal foods is can vary from person to person, culture to culture.
There are examples of cultures that have extremely high intake of animal foods with a fairly low intake of plant foods that works really healthy, like the Inuit, for example.
Then you have examples on the other end of the spectrum of like the Tukasenta in Papua New Guinea, who consume almost entirely plant foods, but then went out of their way to obtain just even a small amount of highly potent animal foods because they understood
that that balance was important. And then you have everything in between, you know, where people
consume sort of more roughly even percentage of calories from animal and plant foods. And the
reason that that's important is that we get different nutrients from different foods. So the essential vitamins and minerals are often higher in animal foods.
So organ meats, for example, are really high in zinc and iron and choline and B12 and folate
and all of those essential vitamins and minerals.
But the plant foods tend to be higher in, not surprisingly, the phyto, which means plant,
in the plant forms of nutrients like carotenoids and flavonoids and lignans and beta-glucans and all of these nutrients that, you know, 50 years ago, we knew very little about their impact on human health.
But when you look in the scientific literature in the past 10 to 20 years, you just see that even though these are not currently thought of as essential, meaning we can't live without them, you can technically live without them, but you're not going to live a very good life
if you're not getting a lot of them. And you're not going to live a very long life, most likely.
That's right. I mean, I just came back from Ikaria in Greece, and it was amazing what they
ate there. And they ate so many wild foods, Chris. And they had one staple in their diet,
which was wild sage tea. And all these wild herbs growing everywhere. And they had one staple in their diet, which was wild sage tea and all these wild
herbs growing everywhere. And I was like, what is this wild sage stuff? So I kind of looked it up.
I found the plant name for it and got all geeky about it. And it literally is very, very rich in
catechins, which are the compounds in green tea that are so beneficial for longevity, for healthy aging, for detoxification
as an antioxidant. Yeah, they help detox heavy metals, blood sugar. So it's quite fascinating
to see how these staple plants in these cultures are so important, especially those who live to be
100. Because in Icarus, one of the blue zones are people that live to be well over 100. And they
have wild greens. I mean, you go to any restaurant, they like wild greens on the menu I'm like how do they do this
they just go out and pick out greens everywhere and I'm like there's summer greens there's winter
greens right so I think the phytochemicals are so key but you know what really is exciting to me and
this is an interesting conversation we haven't really had but I met this guy named Fred Provenza
I've had him on the podcast twice he's written a lot about this and steven van valette also who's now at the utah state is uh and was at duke has done a lot of work looking at grass-fed
animals eating a wide variety of plants that have high levels of phytochemicals in their meat and
milk which is mind-blowing and they found for example if certain goats are eating certain shrubs
like you know whatever i just mentioned about the wild sage, that they have as high levels of catechins, for example, as green tea.
So in a way, we're seeing phytochemicals in animal foods, which we never thought before existed.
And then what seems to be more interesting is that they get metabolized to different forms
that may be even more effective, right? That's right. Yeah. And, you know,
the animals are doing the work for us. And, you know, the animals are doing the work for
us. And in many cases, the animals do that work more efficiently, because that's the food that
they're designed to eat grasses and other plants that we couldn't even digest if we were to eat
those. And we certainly wouldn't extract all of the nutrients from them. And you can even see this
just like on a very basic level, if you're eating pasture raised eggs, and you have your own chickens, let's say, in your own backyard or you're getting them from the farmer's market, you'll see the color of the yolk change throughout the year as those chickens are eating different compounds.
You can even see that in milk and taste the flavor of the milk change if you're getting milk from pasture-raised cows.
So, yeah, that's a really important thing thing to understand it's not just what we eat of
course it's what anything that we eat that also eats is eating right right exactly you know pasture
raised animals but yeah just going back to the carnivore thing you know i think you and i are
on the same page here like i i've i've had paul saladino on my podcast, who's a big proponent of the carnivore diet.
Sean Baker, I've talked to.
I try not to be dogmatic about these things.
Just keep an open mind.
And, you know, I've had patients who've been suffering from severe autoimmune disease who've done a carnivore diet and have had a miraculous response.
So I just want to at least acknowledge that that happens. And, you know, I don't begrudge,
I don't judge anybody who is in that situation for pursuing that approach, because it can be life changing. And I totally understand why someone would do that. At the same time,
that doesn't mean that it's the best strategy to follow long term. You know, there are lots of
things that we do to improve our health in the short term that are not sustainable long-term. How about like fasting? Fasting, they call it the cure
for all disease, right? But it's pretty obvious that you can't fast for the rest of your life,
where your life will be very, very short. So I think I kind of tend to think of carnivore diet almost as a, as, as that kind of approach,
like a, a very intensive, um, gut rest where most of the food's being absorbed pretty high
up in the small intestine and it gives the colon and the large, large intestine a rest.
And maybe some stuff happens there that's pretty similar to what would you had experienced
fasting, but it allows you to do it for longer because you're still getting some of those essential nutrients. But I just have concerns about somebody following that approach,
you know, indefinitely for the rest of their lives, because there's not a single example
that I'm aware of, of an ancestral population that only ate animal foods with no phytonutrients at
all. And then just the research that's coming down the pipe on phytonutrients at all. And then just the research that's coming down the
pipe on phytonutrients and their benefit and importance to health is makes me cautious about
that for sure. Oh, totally. And I think, you know, it's also not just what you're eating,
it's what you're not eating, right? So if you're not eating plants, you're not having gluten,
you're having all these other things that could be potentially irritating to your gut and and so yes sometimes i do take people off a lot of plant
foods when i'm trying to heal autoimmune disease i take them off grains and beans i do the 10-day
detox diet which essentially is an elimination diet and that really works really well so i think
it's really about personalizing the approach figuring what you need but but you know the the
fact that that you and i sort of agree after looking at all the research is not a surprise i mean the data is the data and if you
take if you take a dispassionate look at them that's not ideologically based then you can
actually you know come up with pretty similar conclusions right i i you know i always say don't
let your ideology run over your biology like i have a friend who's a vegan and we just we just did his blood test and it's like i mean he's a 50 year old guy but he's you
know he's he exercises he's he eats healthy foods you know doesn't eat junk but he's severe anemia
he's iron deficient he's got severe b vitamin deficiencies he's got significant vitamin d deficiency you know he's got um probably epa and
dha oh my god he's supplementing yes he was he said he was supplementing with this product and
this is an example he sent me the package it's like oh this is a plant-based form of epa and dha
with like a thousand milligrams of epa and dha i'm like it's kind of suspicious because i've been
doing this a long time and i don't really know how that works. Like, okay, you can get algae and get DHA, but you can't get EPA.
And like, I just was confused, but I'm like, all right, well, let's just check.
Cause I'm like, if you found something, let's hope it works.
And it was like his, he was like zero, like zero EPA, DHA.
And I'm like, God, you know, it's marketing.
It's just not true.
And so he's, he's have,'s had all these significant nutritional deficiencies.
I was like kind of shocked to see it in someone who was so conscious about their diet.
He wasn't a junk food vegan.
Totally.
No, we used to do, you know, for a while in my clinic, we had a way that we would onboard
new patients where they would do a blood test before they even came to see me in person
so that I had the test
results. And so I would see the results before I saw the patient or heard anything about their
complaints or what they were up to or their history. And over time, I began to be able to
recognize, oh, this is a vegan. This is a vegan's blood work. This is a vegan's blood work. Because I would see the same constellation of patterns, you know, low B12, low anemia, iron deficiency anemia, low EPA and low
DHA, low zinc, you know, et cetera. And of course, that's not true for all vegans. But there is
definitely a higher risk of those kinds of deficiencies happening in those situations.
All right. Amazing. So let's talk about what the
most nutrient-dense foods are, because I think people are going to be surprised by this answer.
What are the most nutrient-dense food on the planet? Organ meats, liver, liver number one.
So this was Ty Beal, who's actually, Stephan Van Vliet and Ty Beal and some of these new researchers
who have been studying the nutritional value of pasture-raised animal products
and animal products in general.
And this was a study that was published in Frontiers.
It was spring of this year.
It was Ty Beal and Flaminia Ortenzi.
And they work for an – I think it's an NGO, but it's an
organization that's, that's trying to address hunger and starvation around the world and
malnutrition around the world. And so their goal was to figure out what are, what's where, where
can we get the biggest bang for our buck? You know, if we're going to like find foods that we
want to give to the people who are suffering from malnutrition around the world.
What should we give them? Should we be giving them beans? Should we be giving them
healthy whole grains? I'm doing air quotes here for someone that's not watching. Should we be
giving them lots of kale? What is going to make the biggest difference in their nutrient levels?
And so they created a scale to assess the nutrient density of these foods.
This study was unique compared to all previous research that's been done on this topic in that it was the first one to actually quantify and consider the bioavailability of a nutrient.
Very important.
Because, for example, if you look on paper, you can see that spinach contains a lot of calcium. So you think,
oh, if I just eat a cup of spinach, I'll meet my calcium needs for the day. That's not the case
because spinach also contains oxalic acid, which inhibits the absorption of calcium. So you only
absorb 5% of the calcium in spinach, whereas from like dairy products or, you know, bone in salmon or even cruciferous vegetables, it'd be closer to 30%, right?
So they actually considered bioavailability, which was a landmark effort.
I'm so happy to see a paper that finally did.
Now, the top 10 foods,
five of those top 10 foods were organs.
So you have liver, kidney, heart, spleen, and pancreas.
Wait, what about thymus?
I like the thymus.
I like the thymus.
Thymus wasn't on there.
Those are sweetbreads.
I love that.
I don't actually even know.
Oh, God, I went on a date once,
and I said, hey, want some sweetbreads?
And she's like, sure.
And she didn't really know what it was.
And I'm like, she thought it was bread.
I'm like.
Like a muffin or something.
So those five foods.
And then you have shellfish, small dried fish, dark leafy greens.
So like kale, collard greens, etc.
And then vitamin A rich vegetables like the brightly colored red peppers, yellow peppers, etc.
That's the top 10 nutrient dense foods.
But it's interesting.
If anybody wants to just Google nutrient profile of liver compared to let's say nutrient profile of the most amazing vegetable you could ever think of like broccoli or whatever kale everything it is and it's like it's like an olympic athlete versus kind of a high school player it's like that weekend warrior it's like it's such a massive
amount of scale difference it's like the graph is here versus here you can't really see my hands but
it's like on the podcast like really different and. And I'll give you, yeah, we quantify that.
So in this scale, lower was better.
So like a score of one would have been the most, you know, the highest score you could
get for nutrient density.
Liver had a score of 11.
Even other organs were like in the 40s, 50s, 60s. And when you started to get into like dark leafy greens, which are amazing, super nutrient dense, they were more like in the hundreds.
And then you had like whole grains were in the thousands.
Wow.
And then, you know, then they had like processed and refined flour.
It was just not even on the chart.
It was like, you know, they it was like you know they couldn't
even quantify they couldn't it couldn't be in the same scale because they're so devoid of nutrients
and now that's 60 of the calories that the average american consumes is from ultra processed
food so we wonder why we're suffering from an epidemic of nutrient deficiency now there's two
points i want to also come up with the the liver thing. First is like people are listening to, but I mean, I'm Jewish. I grew
up on like chopped liver. So I, and we were really poor. I lived in a, in a one bedroom apartment
with my mother. And every night we'd have like chicken livers and onions. I thought it was a
gourmet meal, but it was the cheapest thing she could get. But, but one of the, one of the things
is like, how do you take it to make it taste good? And two, what about the toxins in liver?
Because people are thinking about this thing.
Well, liver is basically your detox organ.
So are you just getting all these nutrients, but you're also getting all these toxins?
Can you talk about that?
Yeah.
So that's a common misconception.
But we'll start there, and then we'll go back to how to prepare it.
So the liver is the organ that processes toxins, but it's not the organ that stores them.
And that's the key difference.
So actually the storage of toxins in our body happens in our fat tissues.
So this is why if you eat animal products and products it's and you're eating particularly like dairy products
which is pretty high fat it's very important to get pasture-raised you know organic products
because any toxins that those animals are exposed to are going to be stored in the fat tissues not
in the liver so yeah that's pretty easy to you, it is a common misconception and it's not really a concern.
In terms of making it more palatable, there are a lot of ways to do that.
You know, one is probably the simplest and most straightforward is, and this is what I often tell to my patients,
is like take two, three ounces of liver, chop it up, add it to ground.
If you're having, let's say, beef, pasture raised ground beef, and you put some Mexican seasonings in there and to make, you know, tacos or something like that.
Most people are not going to even be able to detect that there's, that there's liver in there
and you don't need a lot because it's so nutrient dense. You only really need one or two servings of,
you know, three ounces of liver a week to get the full value.
So that's, that's one way to do it. Just some people cook it in milk. That's like an old,
I'm not sure what culture that came from. You know, milk has some other issues, maybe not a good idea for some people, but if you tolerate dairy, you could consider that
adding it to like meatloaves, like a grain-free kind of meatloaf
is another way to do it.
But you should probably be telling us, Mark,
because it sounds like you grew up eating it all the time.
Well, listen, I love chopped liver,
but that's not for everybody, especially on a bagel.
But anyway, the chicken liver and onions,
you get organic, organic chicken livers,
and you stir fry onions,
and you put the chicken livers
in and stir fry them and you serve it it's so good uh yeah and pate is another great way to
get liver and you can put on like you know flax crackers i i actually um you know really like it
and i went to this uh another blue zone sardinia and and and they'd serve the whole nose to tail
thing this guy had this pig and he was like,
listen, we flavor the meat before we kill the animal, meaning we feed it all these phytochemical
rich plant foods, acorns, carob and wild this and wild that. And it was so amazing. And he was so
excited about preparing this pig meal. I don't really eat that much pork, but I was like, okay,
this guy made it for me. And he served like all the different parts. And then one of the things,
he had this whole dish of organs. It was like spleen and liver and lung and i was like i don't want to eat lung before but i guess i'll
try it and it was actually pretty good so yeah you know um all right so but you know i actually i met
this guy chris a quite amazing guy i was um and my favorite sauna place is a russian bathhouse
russian turkish baths in new york city you took me there i did
it did it was so good that was great and uh and this guy's like hey are you dr hyman i'm like yeah
yeah he said oh wow i love your stuff but you know i want to tell you what i'm doing i'm like what
and he's like i had this company called mighty meats i'm like okay well what is that he's well
we make organ meat hamburger and i'm like wow that's amazing that's amazing. So he's going to send me some.
I don't know any affiliation with the company, but I was like, yeah, it's great.
Have you heard of this?
Mighty Meat?
Have you heard of this company?
I have, yeah.
Yeah.
And it's this really cool guy.
It's great.
They're more and more like Epic, you know, has some, if you go to Whole Foods and you
get, they have bar, you know, meat bars and some of the meat bars have liver in them mixed with bison or beef or whatever.
And so that's another good way to get some liver in your diet if you're having trouble cooking it or preparing it on your own.
Now, what about the supplements that they have with organ meat pills?
It sounds kind of weird, but I'm wondering, does that work?
That works for sure. I have an organ meat supplement
because I found in my many years of working with patients,
I could only get a very small percentage of people
that actually eat the organs.
Liver is one thing,
but then spleen and kidney and pancreas,
that was a whole nother ballgame.
I saw kidney bean pie.
That was good.
Beef and kidney pie.
Remember that?
Absolutely.
But yeah, and kidney pie. Absolutely. You know, but, but yeah. And then heart, you know, heart is,
is kind of, I call it the gateway organ meat because it's,
it's a little easier for people to eat, but it's technically a muscle.
It's not actually an organ and it doesn't have the same nutrition.
It's loaded with CoQ10, which is great, but it doesn't have the same nutrient profile that liver and kidney and spleen have.
So, yeah, the organs, you want, you know, obviously you want them to come, the supplements to come from 100% grass fed animals.
We use a source from New Zealand where I think the cattle are just exposed to far fewer toxins, no GMOs, no antibiotics, no growth hormones, none of that
stuff. And then, you know, it's just basically the organ meats, they're raw, and then they're
frozen. And then they are dried. And then that that powder is what's in the capsule. So it's
about as close as you can get to eating organ meats without actually eating them.
That's amazing.
You know, it's interesting.
This is not a surprising thing.
When you look at animals like lions, they eat all the organs,
and then they leave the meat for all the scavengers.
And then you see Native Americans also do the same thing.
If anybody saw Dancing with the Wolves or The Last Mohican,
they go like to eat the organ, eat the liver.
You grab it, and that's what you eat first so it's like the delicacy so i think the highest status people got the organs right exactly exactly well all right so so let's talk about what you've done chris because
you know you and i have been in this business a long time and it is frustrating to try to find
the right supplements to find the best products to to know what's good people are confused and
you know even even myself who have been in this business a long time i really have to to know what's good people are confused and you know even even myself who
have been in this business a long time i really have to you know do a lot of due diligence before
i recommend to my patients this company or that company and then even then i go like i don't know
are they doing what they say they're doing and you know it sounds like good in the marketing but like
you decided to create a supplement company called the dap naturals and and it's quite it's quite
different than other companies so how's quite different than other companies.
So how is it different than other supplements?
And tell us a little bit about it.
Yeah, thanks, Mark.
So yeah, I've been doing this for 15 years,
not nearly as long as you,
but it feels like quite a while.
And I, you know, I didn't,
I waited that long to create a supplement line
because I feel like it took me that long to learn what I needed to learn to make something that was actually added value and was different than what was already available.
So one of my big motivations was I think most people are really confused about supplements.
You know, I've seen this over and over people. I ask everyone
I've treated in that 15 year period to bring everything they're taking into the clinic for
their first appointment. And you know, Mark, people wheel, they wheel in a suitcase, you know,
full of stuff or shopping bags full of products. And we start going through them. And I'm,
I'm just like horrified often by what's, what's in the bag. And people started, you know,
their aunt told them about something nine years ago and then their doctor, and then they watched
a summit and they started four other products. And I don't blame them. It's just super confusing
to be a consumer in today's marketplace. And, you know, half the time they're just throwing
their money away. But some of the time they're actually throwing their money away but some of the time they're
actually doing taking stuff that is causing harm it's not only not helping it's it's actually
causing harm yeah or they're just taking way too much you know they're doing way more than they
need to be doing so i set out to just give people a simple but super effective plan that they can
follow on a daily basis where they can get all of the
nutrients they need, both essential vitamins and minerals, like we've been talking about,
and also the phytonutrients, the bioflavonoids, the carotenoids, beta-glucans, et cetera,
and just kind of set it and forget it, right? So we created this, what we call the Core Plus
Bundle. It's a daily stack of five products. It contains, it's a multi,
an organ supplement, not surprising. A mushroom product, eight of the most evidence-based edible mushrooms like reishi, chaga, lion's mane, turkey tail, cordyceps, et cetera,
tocotrienols, and magnesium. And when you put these together, they work in a synergistic way
that really just supports all aspects of health. And we're using, again, won't surprise you,
all of the most bioavailable forms of nutrients, methylcobalamin instead of cyanocobalamin,
P5P instead of peroxidine, R5P instead of riboflavin, folate instead of folic acid. We're using 100% grass fed organs in the
organ product. For the mushrooms, we're using the full extract. So you have all of the terpenoids,
the terpenes, the beta glucans, all of the compounds instead of just a simple isolated,
you know, isolated nutrients that you get from the mushrooms. We're using Delta and Gamma-Tocotrienol. So, you know, this is the product of my 15 years of research and clinical
experience. And I really put everything I had into creating this because I wanted to give people
products that they could really trust. That's so great. I actually can't wait to try them. I want
to get them. Are they available? You'll get them. How do people get them? They're available now.
Yeah, they're available now. Yeah, they're available now.
So adaptnaturals.com.
The Core Plus bundle is what we recommend.
And, you know, Mark, we've been talking this whole time about how important a healthy diet and lifestyle is.
You and I always have said this.
You cannot supplement yourself out of a bad diet and lifestyle.
No, no.
And I put, you know, my money where my mouth is. We built an app
called Core Reset, which has recipes, meal plans, shopping lists, guided stress management, audio
videos with me and other guests, movement programs. I wanted to give people everything they need to
just follow a program for a month and get as healthy as possible.
And that should always be the foundation.
Don't take my supplements and just expect that you're going to be able to keep eating pizza and cheese doodles and stuff.
You have to make those other changes too.
I mean, that's why they're called supplements, not replacements.
Yeah.
So we built this app and we're
giving it away for free to anyone who buys the bundle. Like that's how serious I am about this
diet and lifestyle being absolutely critical to this process. And we didn't want that to stand
in the way we wanted to make it super easy for people to make those changes. And you get the app
for life. You can keep it. It's free if you order the bundle.
There's lots of great content in there.
That's because you got the malty in the bundle.
You got the organ meats.
You got the mushrooms.
You got the magnesium, the vitamin E.
It's like awesome.
I want mine.
When do I get mine, Chris?
I'm super excited about it. Come on, we've been friends forever.
When do I get mine?
It's on the way.
It's on the way.
No, I've been taking it myself, of course.
What do you mean i just got
back from a trip where's my supplements well i i couldn't send it because the vitamin e is a little
heat uh the gel caps are heat sensitive i didn't want it sitting outside your door okay okay okay
all right well chris i'm really proud of you man you you know you i would just i want everybody
to know like i i i've been in this space for 30 years and there's a lot of people who are in don't
show medicine and they're all doing a great job but there's a few that really stand up
and stand out and who've done the really hard work and my go-to for a lot of stuff is chris
when i want to kind of dig in on a topic i'm like like, what does Chris think? What did he do? And he's just so religious about having an honest accounting of the research and not based on ideology or
belief, but based on what does the science say? And so Chris is one of my heroes in functional
medicine. And I just, you know, I just want to say that upfront because I don't say that lightly.
He's a friend, obviously, but I think that the work he's done is so important to advance the
field. And he's brought so many issues to clarity that people are confused about.
And I've used his work in a lot of my books and sort of referencing and digging into stuff
because he's already done the homework.
So I just kind of have to cheat and go see what he did and dig a little deeper and find
it out.
So I'm really proud of you, Chris, for creating this Adapt Naturals company, for doing the
hard work of creating the supplements.
I encourage everybody to check it out.
Go to adaptnaturals.com.
And I'm just really, really happy that you did this, Chris.
Oh, Mark, that means a lot coming from you.
Definitely my mentor and hero in the functional medicine space.
We wouldn't be able to do it
without all of the contributions you've made.
So I'm honored to have helped in some small way.
And thanks for having me on the podcast.
Of course, Chris.
And everybody listening, I hope you enjoyed the podcast.
If you think somebody would benefit from listening,
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Leave a comment.
Tell us how your life's been changed by upgrading your diet and lifestyle,
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And we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy. Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope
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I hope you enjoyed this week's episode.
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This podcast is provided on the understanding
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If you're looking for help in your journey,
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