The Dylan Gemelli Podcast - Episode #132 Featuring Dr. David Rizik! The Evolution of Cardiology! Overcoming cholesterol myths and facts, the TRUTH about conventional medicine, Testosterone polarization, Heart Metrics and more!
Episode Date: June 12, 2026Episode #132 Featuring Dr. David Rizik! The Evolution of Cardiology! Overcoming cholesterol myths and facts, the TRUTH about conventional medicine, Testosterone polarization, Heart Metrics and mor...e! Many of you that follow me know that I am a bit obsessed when it comes to heart health and discussion so I jumped at the opportunity to interview such a well known and respected expert on cardiology, Dr. David G. Rizik. Dr. Rizik is currently Health System Chief at Banner University Medicine Cardiology, where he oversees clinical quality and helps drive continued advancement in cardiovascular care and treatment. Dr. Rizik has led many of the most influential clinical trials in coronary and valvular heart disease. His groundbreaking research has been instrumental in securing Food and Drug Administration approval for a range of innovative cardiovascular technologies, and he has been named a “Master Interventionalist” by the Society of Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions an honor reserved for the very top tier of interventional cardiologists globally. When I have experts in cardiology near me, I immediately get to grilling them for insight and information. Given Dr. Rizik's over 30 years of experience, he welcomed this with open arms! We get right to it discussing the evolution of cardiology and how many things have changed in terms of medicines, procedures and understanding of the heart entirely. We move directly into diet, discussing myths, facts and fear mongering that goes on in relations to ALL types of foods and diets relating to the heart. Dr. Rizik is a no nonsense, straight down the middle person, without going extreme in one direction or the other, which provides comfort and trust throughout the entire conversation. We move into another widely discussed topic... MEDICATIONS, both conventional and non conventional. I am able to get a direct understanding of statins and their true mechanism of action broken down with science that is easy to comprehend. We discuss areas where they are needed and others where they may be misused or over used. We also discuss several other types of treatments and medications and what kind of benefit they provide. Next we move to how general aging affects the heart and lifestyle changes that can help strengthen our heart health. We then move on to an in depth discussion on arterial fibrillation covering risks and treatments. I move on to asking Dr. Rizik about anabolic steroids and the true effects they have on heart health, both short and long term, which then leads us to discuss testosterone therapy and whether or not it is truly safe and effective! We close the conversation with a discussion on the importance of regular blood panels. Dr. Rizik is clearly on a rare level of intelligence and experience and his insight shows credibility and fairness in all aspects of the health care system. It was a breath of fresh air to listen to him dissect everything to where he backed up with science but made things clear and easy to understand! DO NOT MISS THIS EPISODE! Check out Dr. Rizik at Banner Health: https://doctors.bannerhealth.com/provider/david-rizik/673168 Follow Dr. Rizik on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drdavidrizik/ Today's episode is sponsored by QUALIA Life Qualia Life Supplements: Save 50% off PLUS AND ADDITIONAL 15% off with my code DYLAN www.qualialife.com/dylan _______________________________________________________________________________ THE DYLAN GEMELLI NAD Optimization Protocol POWERED BY JINFINITI!! SAVE 10% with code DYLAN https://www.jinfiniti.com/7-things-you-need-to-know-about-nad-dylan-gemelli-v1/ Get the Apollo Neuro for $99 OFF!! USE CODE GEMELLI to save https://apolloneuro.com/gemelli The worlds FIRST EVER Topical Glutathione at AURO WELLNESS! SAVE 15% with code "DYLAN" https://aurowellness.com/dylangemelli To PURCHASE MITOPURE visit Dylan's landing page and use code DYLAN to save 20% OFF!! https://shop.timeline.com/DYLAN TRULY Increase Your NAD LEVELS with WONDERFEEL NMN: https://getwonderfeel.com/?utm_source=DylanGemelli&utm_medium=podcast MESCREEN: The world's first and only at home mitochondrial efficiency test Save $100 with CODE DYLAN https://mescreen.com/cart/47561239626013:1?discount=&ref=DYLAN HIRE DYLAN ON THE MINNECT APP HERE: expert.minnect.com/@DylanGemelli Follow Dylan on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and Tiktok @dylangemelli and PLEASE SUBSCRIBE and leave reviews!! MAKE SURE TO GO TO DYLAN'S YOUTUBE CHANNEL for MORE video content!! https://www.youtube.com/@DylanGemelliBiohacking Email Dylan for booking, collaborations and/or to apply for the Dylan Gemelli Podcast DylanGemelli@gmail.com Visit Dylan's Homepage https://dylangemelli.com
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All right, everybody.
Welcome back to the Dylan Jameli podcast.
I am very excited.
And when my guest got introduced to me, I found out of my guest,
He was a local cardiologist, which I was unaware of.
I got a little bit even more excited.
And then when I got to meet him, I got more excited.
And then when I got his credentials, well, here we are.
I am going to try to do you some justice on your intro here.
But there are far, far, far more to you and things that you've done that we're going to get into that I can't wait to talk to you about.
Because we're going to get into my favorite topic that everybody knows I like to talk about.
and that is the heart and cardiology. And my guest is at the forefront. And I cannot wait to get
into so many different things that interest me. So he is currently the health system chief at Banner University
and Medicine of Cardiology. And he's overseeing clinical quality and helps drive continued
advancement in cardiovascular care and treatment. But he's celebrated worldwide for his
contributions in the field. And he has led many of the most influential clinical trials in coronary and
valvular heart disease. He's had some ground-breaking, breaking research that's been instrumental in
securing food and drug administration approval for a range of innovative cardiovascular technologies.
And he was actually named a master interventionalist by the Society of Cardiovascular
angiography and interventions. So I can go on and on all day. It's not like an epitaph.
It does. It does. Couldn't have written it better myself. So my friends, I want to
I want to introduce to you, my new friend, Dr. David Rising.
This has been fantastic.
You know, we were talking before we went on, and this has just been wonderful, getting
to know you and hearing your interests and my own interests, how they intersect.
So let's have some fun.
We're going to have some fun.
I'm going to get into a ton with you.
We got conventional medicine.
We got alternative medicine.
You've been doing this for so long, and you've seen done and heard it all.
let's go back in time a little bit
and kind of when you started off
what drew your interest to cardiology in the heart
they said you were going to ask great
and probing questions and you've hit it out of the park
on the first question in 85
I was in medical school in St. Louis
and my
my dean
had heart attack
and
they put him to bed rest
they didn't do
any type of
by today's standards, groundbreaking therapy, and he was forced to retire. It's been a meteoric
evolution or revolution in what we do. And now, if that same dean had a heart attack today,
we would open the blocked artery and have him walking around on the first hospital day,
out on the second hospital day, whereas in 1985, he was, in 1985, he was,
was in the hospital for two weeks.
Mm-hmm.
And we would want him back to work within two weeks.
So if you think about it, we had that 1985 heart attack patient in the hospital for two weeks.
And in 2026, we went him back to work by then.
It's been a meteoric revolution.
So back then when that happened, is that what you were going to school for?
I was going to go into, I was going to be an OBGYN.
Oh, wow.
I was going, I was going to be a perinatologist, a high risk obstetrician.
I figured that was it.
And in a very short period of time, our dean got sick.
And then I went and saw my first early embryonic stages of catheter-based therapy of a balloon.
angioplasty and that happened all within a week or two and I knew I got bit by the bug.
Really?
And I'm just, I just flipped. I just made a wholesale conversion to a whole new way of thinking
about what I wanted to do with my career. I have not since then, I haven't worked a day in my
life. Yeah. I have not worked it because this is incredible. It's an incredible journey.
You learn something new every day. Every patient is like a finger.
It's every case is like a fingerprint.
It's different.
It's new.
It's unique.
It's been remarkable.
And interventional cardiology, which is what I do, it's the greatest profession because it's
constantly changing.
What we did five years ago, a lot of that stuff we're not even doing.
That's how quickly the field evolves.
Regret many years of not studying the heart as much as I did because I coached professional
bodybuilders that were steroid users.
And I should have been more involved.
into the heart as opposed to liver, kidneys, things that were getting hammered by steroids.
But in actuality, the heart's getting the worst end of the state.
It's getting the worst end of the stage.
Yeah.
And I would like to discuss some of that with you later, the effects.
Right.
So that they can hear it.
Right.
Not just for me from an actual doctor because I preached it, but they don't want to hear it unless it's coming from someone like you or.
So I want to get into that.
But, you know, the fascination and what I've learned about the heart has, like, stimulated me for the rest of
in my life because it's so intricate. There's so much there. There's so much to learn. And I think when
you get a greater understanding of what it does, how it functions, how important it is, and then how to
actually take care of it properly, I think that's the key. And that's where I'm going with this is I want
to talk to you about care of the heart for each individual. And I can't stand this whole, oh,
you're too young. You don't need to worry about that. We need to be starting early to be preventative to
hopefully mitigate anything that could be occurring in 40s, 50s and 60s of that.
they're on. So if we start early protecting it, Michael.
Think about it for a minute. It's about the size of your fist. This is the sum total of the size
of this organ, and we've only scratched the surface. Right. It's amazing. Now, the band surgeon
knows the hand inside and out, and while some treatments may have evolved, the hand surgery
is still hand surgery. The heart's the same size, but the evolution in cardiovascular care
every year of this
this size organ is just remarkable.
I want your thoughts on diet.
We're going to start with there
because that is one of the most polarizing things
in my world, especially,
and I'm sure yours with when it comes to carbs and fats
and this is terrible for you,
but no, it's great for you, the low-fat diet this.
I want to get into that right now with you.
I was on the Lisa Gibbon show,
and Suzanne Summers was her guest,
and it was called Diet Wars.
this was back in the on 2000 or some sometime around there and they had four or five dietary experts on
and she called it dietary wars because these four or five dietitians were absolutely at war because
they couldn't agree one said low fat one said low carb there was a one said low calories doesn't matter
what you eat low calories i can tell you this about about diet let's start back when you were
in grade school when i was in grade school the nuns showed
us the food pyramid. Remember that? And God bless the nuns, they were, you know, from the old
country. But 60% of the calories on that food pyramid was carbohydrates. I can tell you that's
probably wall in it. That's probably not in our best interest. Because there are countries,
for instance, where the majority of the individuals don't eat meat. They're vegetarian. And,
Yet, in some parts of these countries that are vegetarian, they have the highest rate of coronary
disease and not just coronary disease, but premature coronary disease, 30, 40, 50 years of age.
India is a great example.
And a high rate of diabetes.
Again, India is a great example of that.
So let's start off by dispelling the myth that meat is bad and that we are not meant to eat meat.
That's just not accurate.
You have in the dietary world, you have the people that say, eat low calories.
And I suppose there's some merit to that, but you can't, there's no one size fits all for everyone.
So the first thing I would say about eating right diet is you're going to have to
tailor it to what you can do.
And going to bed hungry is a bad idea.
It's not sustainable.
It doesn't want.
work. You see people who do that and they lose weight, but very often in my profession, they don't
sustain the weight loss. I am a believer of a low carbohydrate diet. I'm not a believer in a
let's eat bacon six times a day and lick the grease off the pan. That's not correct. But low carbs
and low carbs can include meat, lean meats. And if you're on the low carb diet, what you get rid of is the
bread, the rice, the pasta potatoes, and the sweets.
And sweets comes in a lot of different varieties in that sweets could be the chocolate
moose or the frosted flakes, but you get rid of that.
And I do like the low, low carb diet for vegetarians.
If people choose to be vegetarians, they still have to figure out how to get a source of
protein.
There's a lot of protein malnutrition amongst vegetarians.
So there are lots of good sources of protein.
that you have to get, but you can't rely on on carbohydrates in that because that's just not healthy
even. So I think that a person who is searching for a diet has to find something that a works
for them, B, that they're not going to bed hungry, that they are being filled, you know,
that there's satiety, and that they can, the most important thing is that they can, that they can
sustain that type of that type of diet. There's no one size fits all. And I don't like the word
diet. I like the word it's a lifestyle. It's a way of eating. So there's so much out there,
especially with the internet. There's a lot of nonsense on the internet, but you can search for a
lifestyle or a way of eating in your life that is sustainable and that it gets you to your goals. And one of
those goals because you said we're going to talk about the heart is looking at let's let's
simplify it yeah look at your cholesterol profile and look at your hemoglobin a1c look at your sugars
and your cholesterol profile and cholesterol profiles are interesting because people look at their total
cholesterol and they say well this is my cholesterol but we have to put it in the context of
your good cholesterol your bad cholesterol your triglycerides some people like to look at you know
particle size and everything. So you have to look at the total cholesterol group of
parameters and your sugars and your hemoglobin A1C. You know, and I would say,
find a doctor you trust or a practitioner you trust and discuss those numbers,
those parameters and put it in the context of how I eat. What's my lifestyle?
Man, I was in the hospital and I had to do the calf lab and everything. I did. I did. And
I wish I had this to show you.
So me and my wife and my mom were up there with me
because I started having weird heart palpitations
and then they, you know, they did the catheter.
It checked, no blockage or anything like that.
Just a low rejection fraction.
And if I could show you what they gave me
as a heart healthy menu, it would have blown you away.
I said to my wife, I said,
chicken parm.
It did margarine, dinner rolls.
Oh, margin.
Marjorin is like deadly.
Yes.
This was on the heart-healthy menu.
Margarine is deadly.
Where did we ever come up with this myth that margarine was an alternative to butter?
I don't know.
I'm still trying to figure that out, 40 years later.
Yeah, yeah, I lived through that thing.
So when I started studying food labels and nutrition when I was 11,
I fortunately due to an eating disorder, but I became a nutritionist,
and I was learning that low fat was the answer.
And I lived that way for so long.
And until I made the changes, I went from eating 10 to 15 grams of fat a day for
years to now 130. And I can't touch, like, I just got a blood panel back today. And I yelled at her
to come in there. I said, look at this. I mean, it was the best blood panel I've had in like a decade.
I'm getting chills to even saying it. So much of our body functions, they're going to be fat dependent.
Yeah. Brain function is fat dependent. Yes. So, you know, there's been a lot of myths. Yeah.
Internet hasn't helped it much. But I'm delighted to hear you did exactly what I said. You put your
your dietary or your eating style, your lifestyle, in the context of some objective piece of data.
Well, that's your weight, that's your cholesterol profile, A1C, and those types of things.
That's very important.
And that's where I want to go next.
So cholesterol is like one of the most polarizing topics in the world now.
I mean, it really is.
This food, like we said, which I'm really glad that you did talk about it being personalized, by the way,
because that is so key and important.
And some of these people, they get so angry about being a carnivore
or eating a ton of carbs or this and that.
Listen, you gave facts, which are phenomenal.
Low carb might be better.
It might be more optimal, but there's no one-size-fits-all-for.
No one-size-fits-old.
Right.
So that is more needing to fit whatever profile you have,
whatever allergies you have, whatever, et cetera, right?
So then we get to this topic of cholesterol.
I have data that shows the dangers of it being too low.
I'm sure you do as well
and I you know
that's the trouble that I have
because we're going to get into medications
after we talk cholesterol
because I really want to talk to you
about conventional non-conventional
because I have a lot of thoughts there
but when it comes to the cholesterol itself
the first thing I want to ask you about is
LDL itself and then I want to get more intricate
into the like the LP little A's
the APOBs the particle sizes like you said
but let's just look at LDL specifically
and total
we're for you
do you think it's a good idea range-wise to be?
Because, you know, some people will say that you need to be in the hunters because your brain needs it.
I know your cellular membrane needs good fats and cholesterol in the body to protect it.
But then there's people like, they drained my cholesterol down to 30 and I panicked.
I said, this is terrible when I got those blood markers back.
You know, when I first found plaque of my arteries, where do you fall in that gap of where you think LDL is necessary?
how important is it for our function?
Well, you know, if this were 15, 20 years ago,
the guidelines and the recommendations had just achieve an LDL of 130.
And we've learned that it depends who you are.
It depends on your risk.
If you're somebody who's never had a heart attack
and your mom and dad are 100 years old
and they've never had a heart attack,
that might be a different LDL
than the person who's, you know, dad and every other.
every male member of their family has died at age 45, that would be a different LDL target to achieve.
Or if you have had a heart attack, if you have coroner disease, if you've had bypass surgery,
if you've had stents, if you've had a heart attack, or if you have a high plaque burden,
let's say you've done a CT scan and you have a high plaque burden, that's a different LDL
than the person with no substrate or family history for heart.
heart disease. When you were born, your LDL was like 10. Then again, you were drinking amniotic fluid
for the last nine months. I have evolved my thinking, and I don't get crazy on every single person who
comes in and say, your LDL needs to be, you know, single digit. It's just not accurate. Now, I have
patients who've had coronary disease and recurring coroner disease, and we really do push the LDLs down
to less than 50. The new cholesterol guideline recommendations really talk about
getting it down less than 50 pharmacologically.
But there are, there's a spectrum of who you're treating.
Sure.
And for some people, the LDL of 100 is just fine and a cholesterol of 150 is just fine
because they're not at risk.
For others who've demonstrated risk or who have a genetic familial substrate for risk,
those are the people we do have to be more aggressive.
There are medications,
there is this thing called exercise.
Everybody wants better living through chemistry,
through pharmacology, through statin drugs,
repathas, some of the injectables.
Everything needs to be tailored
to the person sitting in front of you.
If you were, do you, when you were dating,
before you were married,
did you use the same line on every girl you dated
or did you tailor your conversations
to the person you were talking to?
Sure.
You have to take.
tailor what you discuss to the person sitting across from you. It all depends on who they are
and what their DNA and their biology and their physiology is. There are many, many patients
that have to be treated with statin drugs. And you need to really drive that LDL significantly
down because their risk is there. There are many patients whose risk is not there. And you don't
need to be aggressive with pharmacology.
You can use alternatives.
Can, you know, give them time when they come in.
You can give them time to try and get it down by weight loss, exercise, dietary modifications,
and then monitor what kind of diet they're on and see what the effect of that is.
Yes.
So when I was on first put on the medications.
Yeah.
What were you put on?
So initially, I went to Mayo Clinic with the thought.
and the plan of what I wanted to do, which was PCSK9 inhibitors, which was Repatha,
and I wanted to take Vespa with it, and I did not want to take the stat.
I started taking it, did not care for it, and I had enough data.
The bad unit.
Yeah, and the data that I had from so many people was that it really wasn't going to be for me
or what I wanted.
I had an elevated LP little A.
I had a family history of cholesterol, but mine wasn't terrible, but it was great.
It was like 130 LDL, and my HDL was a lot.
always kind of stuck in like the 48, 50 range. Not great. The H-TL. Yeah, not great. And that's due to diet.
Average male in this country is about 45. So you're not awful, but that's about average.
Yeah. But my diet was just strictly like so vegetable related where it was like 15 servings of
vegetables a day, two servings of oatmeal, egg whites, peanut butter and yogurt, fat-free. Like,
I was terrified of fat. It was, the fat is the boogeyman, right? Oh, yeah. No, terrified. But
I was teaching people the opposite, but I had in my head, oh, you're the exception.
It's going to make you a fat.
Right. Even though I know anyway.
So I went in there.
They told me it would be bad practice to put me on the stack that I wanted.
Then the statin was the only thing.
And you and I know, statin increases your LP little A, which was my major problem.
3.30, right?
And my dad had a heart attack when he was 59.
So I went and did what I wanted to do.
Which was what?
The rapath of the Bacepa.
I did some niacin and I implemented some natokinic.
But you also exercise.
Oh, yeah, like a beast.
Probably too much.
Maybe too much.
Yeah.
So I ended up getting the LP little A down to 94 of 3.30, which they told me was impossible.
You know, they.
They all.
Yeah, right.
But when I changed to the high fat diet and I increased my calories by 1,300, because I was severely under-eating.
My HDL went up to in the 80s.
but that's beautiful oh it's just awesome my particle sizes went my one of my particle sizes
was 6,000 went down to 2200 my ldl medium or small but it's right in range anyway the l dl
which i had gotten pretty low did go up so did my apobbe so they put me on azetamide
a zetamide yeah yeah yeah i just got a blood panel back i've been on it 30 days and my ldial went
from 128 to 69 yeah apo b went from 96 to 67
So what you just said is I personalized.
I looked at what my body biology is, and I changed it based on that.
I used to think that exercise and a low carb significant protein diet had no possibility of changing all of these cholesterol parameters.
And I was young and naive and I was just wrong.
Right.
And that's the, as cardiology has evolved with all of the wonderful,
invasive and interventional therapies we have, it has also evolved in terms of our understanding of
how to modify cholesterol and therefore modify risk. And what you're saying is you are a perfect
example of how I started this when I answered your first question, personalize it,
individualize it. Yes. And that's where I was going with it is everything you said falls in line
with what I do and what you stand for, which is it's person to person. And I always, I say this all the time.
I know what I'm talking to somebody brilliant because they say that.
Otherwise, the people that get stuck in their ways,
it's like the 60-year-old coach that used to win all the time
that doesn't change with the times that gets fired.
They can't win, you know,
because he doesn't relate with the players anymore and doesn't adapt.
Clearly, you've adapted over time.
You have to.
Yes.
There's an expression that I use.
I say retool or retire.
If you don't do that as a physician,
and you have to do that as a coach,
you have to retool as a coach,
you have to retool in every day.
discipline of life. As a parent, you need to retool. I have four daughters. How I connected and
communicated with, other than loving them unconditionally, how I connected and communicated with them
when they were six and eight and ten is different than when they were teens. And now they're in
their 20s, retool or retire. Absolutely. I love you, man. I do. I love this kind of conversation
because we relate so well, but I like to hear from somebody that's been doing it a long time that is
open-minded and that sees the validity and the benefit in both sides of the equation, which you
clearly do. And that's why I want to try to get a little bit deeper than into the medication side.
Because once again, it seems like everything around the heart is so polarizing anymore.
And I think fairly, I do.
Oh, that's fair.
Do you think, and I'm going to say this, and I hope that you can answer it precisely without
worrying about anything, which I'm sure you can, do you think staff?
statins are overprescribed?
Yeah, I think statins are overprescribed because are they wonderful drugs and are they
life-saving drugs?
They are.
That wasn't your question.
Your question is, are they over-prescribed?
A person walks in to a doctor's office and gets a panel of blood tests, thyroid studies,
you know, chemistries, et cetera.
And the minute some physicians see this LDL of a lot of.
110, they say, oh, we got to put you on Staten drugs. I've seen that. Yeah. I have seen people who are
not at significant risk get put on Stantins because, oh, I think you, you asked the perfect question.
What's your number? What's your parameter? Which, when do you put people on these drugs?
It's more complicated than, gee, it's a number, okay? And so if you have a person at low risk who has an LDL of 100, that's different than the
person who's had triple bypass
surgery and three or four different
stent procedures who has an LDL
of 100. Those are different beasts.
So if you
go to a doctor and without having
this complete discussion,
we are treating a number
and I always tell young physicians, don't
treat a number, treat the patient. If
all you're doing is treating a number, then it's being over
overprescribed, potentially overprescribed.
But do I think statins work?
Well, yeah. I think statins
work for the right people. I think
think eZidomide works for the right people. I think Vesipa, EPA, works. And then I think there's a
bunch of alternative agents that work for the right people, for the right indications.
You know, it's sort of like saying, when do you bypass someone? That is such a individualized
question. We have medical therapy, which in some people with coronary disease works. We have stents,
which in some people with coronary disease works, and we have bypass surgery. We have three
therapies, bypass, catheter-based therapies or stents, and medical therapy. Not everyone,
it's funny, I tell people, well, we did a cardiac catheterization on you, and you have a 40%
blockage in your one artery. They say, oh, you're going to stent it, right? Or you're going
to bypass it. And my answer is 40% blockages are not going to hurt you. They are not going to
kill you. That's individualizing invasive therapies. That's medical therapy. That's control of
high blood pressure, control of diabetes, control of cholesterol, walking, stop smoking.
There's a whole bunch of therapies for people short of bypass and stents.
But when appropriate, when you individualize it appropriately, bypass and stents are life-saving.
They're game-changing.
So the most fun part of my day, my wife always says, people say, what does your husband do
when he gets, you know, frustrated or tense, and she says he goes in and he operates.
and there is something very relaxing about being in that operating room theater, the cat lab, and doing that.
But the most fun I have is just talking with patients.
We have an office, I have two nurse practitioners, and we sit down with a patient, and we provide them their therapy options.
And it's always more than a single strategy.
So is plaque reversible?
Yes, no, maybe.
there were a bunch of CT scan studies in the 90s.
They were taking people with elevated cholesterol
and LDL cholesterols,
and they would do a CT scan at time zero,
and then they would really drive their cholesterol down with drugs.
What we found is at minimum,
you can arrest progression.
Your question is, is there regression?
There were some studies,
in the Midwest where they infused, you know, high-density lipoproteins.
That was promising, but not sustainable.
It's hard for me to give you a hard yes on that because I don't think we've investigated
that, but based on the best science that we have right now, I would say at minimum,
it's arrestable.
You can arrest progression of disease.
Whether or not you get actual regression, I don't think we have the science to say.
say that. But I think that's, you know, we, we want to develop the liquid
draino, if you will, for the arteries. And we don't have that yet.
But you can, like you said, you walk in, you got 40% blockage. You can
disdain that, right? You can keep it there. But
Mother Nature's a bitch, too. Yeah. She can, you know,
people get worse, even who play by the rules. You keep
asking about statins, and it's a, these are great questions you're asking.
if I said to you now when you drive home put a seatbelt on please put a seatbelt on that's a
probability if you put a seat belt on and you drive home and you get in a car accident the probability
is with a seat belt on you are unlikely to have a fatal event in a car accident okay that's a
probability I can't tell you if you wear a seatbelt there's no way you can die in a car accident
I can't tell you cannot tell you that if you
exercise, eat right, diet, and take statins that you will never have a heart attack.
It's a probability.
And that's where Mother Nature, number one, Mother Nature can play a role.
There are people who do all the right things, but still get worse.
But the probability is if you do the right things, you won't.
And then there's about probably 10,000 things that we still don't understand.
Right, of course.
We're just learning so much about this little organ.
Every day, every week, there's leapfrogs in our understanding.
But we still don't know a lot.
And 20 years from now, you and I are going to sit here with a lot more gray hair,
and we're going to be talking about this again.
And we'll say, God, remember when we thought cholesterol and diet were the only things, right?
Oh, yeah.
Well, we won't be sitting here with gray hair because I'll color.
I don't think you worry about that.
So you know what I think would be really sweet if you would do?
Because one of the things I can't stand, and I used to do this, I don't do it anymore.
And there's a reason why I don't do it anymore is talking out of our backside in terms of we make these comments because so-and-so said something was good or something was bad.
But we don't know how it works or what it does and why it does it.
It would be great if you could just give like a little short mechanism of action explanation on what a statin actually does.
Like, how does it even work?
Okay, let me put it in the simplest terms possible.
Please.
It downregulates through the liver your cholesterol production.
It down regulates cholesterol production through this very complicated
cascade of events that ultimately comes back to the liver.
That's the simplest way to think about it.
I can give you complex mechanisms, and that's why you go to medical school.
But for an audience, for a lay audience, I think the best way to think of it is it's turning off cholesterol production through this cascade of events that is ultimately liver dependent.
So does a statin then say you have a combination of soft and stabilized plaque?
Does it harden the soft plaque?
No.
Think what you're, does it cause the plaque to become harder plaque?
Like stabilize the soft plaque?
Absolutely it doesn't.
Okay.
That is, there are some people who think that's true.
Yeah, they do.
I'm going to give you the David Rysick theory of that.
Please.
People may start on a statin at a young age, and then they don't have a heart attack.
But by the time they present to their doctors, they're now older.
They're like 10 years older than those who didn't lower their cholesterol,
and one of the body's natural processes is to develop.
calcium. Okay. And as you develop calcium, I think a lot of that's because patients who are on statins
and on a lot of these other medications don't have heart attacks. So when they do present to their doctor,
they are older and they have more of a tendency to have produced calcium or harder plaque,
but it's not the statin doing that. Let me ask you a question. Why is it that smokers who present with a heart
attack have a better prognosis than non-smokers. Now wait a minute, did you just really say that?
If you take two people or groups of patients who have heart attacks and some are smokers and some are
non-smokers, why do smokers have a better prognosis, hospital prognosis with a heart attack?
Because they're 10 years younger when they have their heart attack. It used to be a myth that if you
smoke, you're going to have a better prognosis if you have a heart attack. Well, it's not actually
accurate. It's just you're younger
when you have your heart attack. Yeah. Okay.
That makes sense. Well, then
let me ask you this.
So one of the other things that everybody
always says is that heart disease is just getting
worse and worse and worse and worse as time
goes on. Like more people are encountering that,
having more problems, and it's just
getting worse. Now, A, is that
factual? You tell me and B,
what do you believe
if say that is true is
the cause? Well, I'm going
to tell you,
we are going to have an epidemic in this country because we sit around on computers like this,
and our young people are not exercising.
Yeah.
You know, recently I think Robert Kennedy was actually right when he is trying to re-institute
some of these physical fitness things.
I know he's a polarizing figure in some ways, but on this issue, he's absolutely correct.
we're not doing enough activity.
Our young people are not.
And there are, you know, you and I watch football,
there's a lot of great athletes out there.
But that might be a smaller proportion of the entire population of young people.
Young people are sitting on those cell phones in front of TVs in mom's basement,
on computers.
I think we're going to get to an explosion in heart disease.
So that's going to be generational, a few generations.
from now, you're going to see that.
I think one of the reasons some people think that we have more heart disease in this country,
the baby boomers.
Those born between 49 and 64, 1949 and 1964, they're getting into the coronary disease age.
They are going to, you're going to see their health care needs, cardiovascular therapies,
explode.
So as the population ages, and remember the baby boomers, that was that 50 boomers, that was that
15-year period after World War II to the early 60s, as they get up into their 70s and especially
their 80s, yes, you're going to see an explosion in health care needs and cardiovascular disease.
In India, if you take certain parts of India where diabetes is rampant, I have a couple of really good
friends who are cardiologists in India. And as diabetes increases, I heard a statistic, something like,
Like one third of the world's diabetics will be in India by the year 2040.
Wow.
That's going to be a crisis.
That is going to be a crisis.
Yeah, considering their population.
It's going to be a crisis.
And there are other types of heart disease.
I mean, right now you and I are talking about coronary disease and heart attacks and bypass and stents.
There is a whole population of people with valve disease.
We haven't even talked about that yet.
You know, when the life expectancy after World War II was a little bit over, or after World War I was a little bit over 50, we didn't see diseases of the elderly.
People died between 50 and 60.
Now that we are living longer, we are seeing valve disease.
Remember, the life expectancy has gone from mid-50s to late 70s in 100 years.
That's just spectacular.
Yeah.
So we're seeing more diseases of elderly.
For instance, prostate cancer.
prostate cancer is the disease of elderly men, not 50-year-old men in general. And so we are seeing
a higher proportion of prostate cancer patients because we're living longer. And that's true for
heart valve disease. The valves of the heart, these one-way doors that allow blood to go
in and out of the different chambers of the heart, they degenerate. They wear out. We're seeing a lot of
that. And we're going to see an explosion in valve disease. And, you know, I mean, it's good that we have
because it's hard to prevent valve disease.
It's not like coronary disease where you can do preventative things.
So, yes, there is going to be more heart disease for a number of different reasons.
Is heart valve disease, then, is that related to heart failure?
It can be if the valves get bad enough, if the valves, if you get, have you heard of
mitral valve prolapse or mitralrogensitation?
If the valve, the mitral valve leaks or the aerobic valve leaks, the heart will enlarge over time
if not treated, and that will result in heart failure.
Heart failure is the blood backing up basically into the lungs.
Yeah, bad analogy, you flush the toilet, doesn't work, everything backs up under the
floor.
If the heart doesn't work, everything backs up into the lungs.
Yeah.
So what's the most prevalent form of heart disease?
Is it heart failure?
Is it clogged arteries?
Like, what do you see the most of?
Actually, and I'm not a rhythm specialist, I see a lot of rhythm disturbances of the heart.
I mean, the simple stuff like hypertension, elevated blood pressure, and elevated cholesterol,
anybody can manage that, really.
You don't need a cardiologist.
However, yes, we see a lot of coroner disease.
Yes, we're seeing an increasing amount of valve disease, but we haven't talked about atrial fibrillation,
rhythm disturbances of the heart.
It's probably one of the most common things that I see in my practice.
I see that talked about over the past five to ten years more than ever.
seems like there's more monitoring of it.
There's more discussion of it, more on.
Cardia app on your phone, you know, they've created a whole technology that you get from
Amazon over atrial fibrillation because it can lead to stroke.
Explain what that is because we always hear aphib, aphib, a fib.
And I swear to you, 95% of the people that say aphib, all they know is that you get it
on your Apple Watch or an app and don't know what the hell it is.
Exactly.
Seriously.
The heart is this beautiful organ.
I mean, think about it.
If your heart rate is 70 beats a minute, that means 70 times a minute, times 60 minutes
in an hour, times 24 hours in the day.
And let's say you're 60 times 60 years that heart beats.
And the upper chamber of the heart, upper chambers, the atria, beat in synchrony with the lower
chambers, the ventral.
So it's one to one.
You're asleep.
You're awake.
you're exercising and you get
bum bum bum bum bum bum
this synchronous beautiful organ
well
like you can have a 60 year old home
and the brick and the mortar on the outside
of that home is in great shape
the electrical wiring in the basement gets a little old
the electrical wiring of the heart ages
it gets a little old
and what happens in atrial fibrillation
is the upper chamber of the heart starts fibrillating.
It has an electrical current that is causing the upper chamber of the heart to fibulate,
while the lower chamber is still not beating in synchrony with it.
So atrial fibrillation is a rhythm disturbance,
where the electrical wiring of the heart is a little off,
and you are actually fibrillating.
So because it's the upper chamber, the atrium,
and it's fibrillating quickly.
It's called atrial fibrillation.
Now, why is that a problem?
Because as it fibrillates,
blood, when it works in synchrony,
upper chamber, lower chamber,
upper chamber, lower chamber.
Blood moves smoothly through the heart.
When you fibrillate,
blood can pool and stagnate
in that upper chamber of the heart
and a clot can form.
I see.
And that's where you can have
a stroke-related.
to atrial fibrillation.
And as the, and it's a, it's a, a disease that increases higher prevalence with age.
So again, like everything else, as the population ages in this country, as the demographics
are shifting to an older population, we see more a fib.
Does that fixable and treatable?
What we have done, what rhythm's back.
have done with atrial fibrillation from drugs to devices is one of the great success stories in cardiovascular medicine.
Really?
Yeah.
It's been, it's been incredible.
They rhythm specialists, and I'm not a rhythm specialist, but I see a lot of at fibroids.
They have drugs, blood thinners to prevent stroke.
We have medications to suppress atrial fibrillation or convert you back to a normal rhythm.
and then they have these devices,
radio frequency ablation devices,
where you can go up
to that area with that abnormal electrical focuses
and basically zap it,
or ablate it,
and put you back into a normal rhythm.
Okay.
The rhythm specialists,
and I would say industry,
the companies with whom they work,
have just on a spectacular,
spectacular job of treating
atrial fibrillation. There's so many great therapies out there for a fib. If somebody has a fib,
that's something that happens frequently, right? To them. Yeah, if you have a fib once, your chance
of having aphib again is pretty significant. So, like, I remember the first time I was actually
waiting a table. I was 19 years old and I was walking and I felt that happened where it went.
And it stopped for a second and then went right back in and I panicked, man. Like I went to the cooler.
Isn't that funny how you feel? Dude, I went to the cooler at Olive Garden. That's the first waiter job I had.
just sat in there and I mean I was stone cold because I freaked out. It happens to me like once
every six months and now I know it's like okay. Okay. So you have what's called a very good warning
system. Now can you imagine some people have no idea they're in a fib. Their heart rate can be
150 or 160 beats a minute and they have no idea. And that can be bad because over time if you
have uncontrolled atrial fibrillation, your risk of stroke goes up and your risk
of developing damage to the heart muscle goes up.
So you have a great warning system.
Oh, that's good.
Man, I'm telling you, I was scared.
Sitting in the cooler.
I was just, I went in there, I didn't know what to do.
I thought, man, I'm toast.
You know, like, I don't know.
It's amazing how rhythms can.
Oh, it's scary.
Yeah.
It can be very scary.
Like I have recently had quite a significant amount of heart palpitations and found
out it was like severe dehydration.
Yeah.
Severe Jardians had drained me.
Yeah.
Of potassium and glucose and everything.
everything else. And I kept, I'm taking this medication to improve my ejection fraction and I'm
going, why is my heart so disturbed? We need more patients like you. People who take this seriously,
people who read and people who insist that you've obviously insisted that whoever is providing
care, counseling you is individualizing your therapy. You are, you are my favorite patient. You are
informed and you're constantly looking to understand either what's new or what works for you.
Yes.
That's great.
You have to understand your own body and you have to ease into it and be willing to trial
and error because it's really honestly what you do, what I do, what we do in life is trial and error.
Absolutely.
Everything.
Yep.
And the quicker you understand that, I think the more likelihood you have of being healthier
and teaching people a better way.
Absolutely.
I mean, what do I do with diet?
What do I do with bodybuilders and training?
I take in one thing and subtract it.
Otherwise, I'd have these guys that come to me.
I'd be coached and they say, well, I want to run the stack of seven things.
And I'd say, brother, if you do that and you start having this problem and this problem, all of them cause the same problem.
I don't know what's doing what.
I don't know if you could get by with just using two of these instead of seven, you know?
Right.
And so it, everybody lives on the concept of more is always better.
Yeah, right.
You know, and oftentimes more is often worse.
Way worse.
Yeah.
So, and Pete, you know, you know this too.
We want it right now.
We're right now.
It's your gratification.
Yeah.
That's who we are.
It's a marathon and it's not a sprint and all of this.
Well, let me ask you this because I brought this up earlier and I'm very curious about
this and I'm doing this for my former bodybuilding community friends here.
When it comes to the anabolic steroid side of things, because the problem with those guys is they,
they have this one-track mind and they don't really think about tomorrow. All they care about is
getting big. Now, I've talked with some brilliant minds about the dangers of being too heavy for
too long, eating too many calories. But I want to talk about the impact that anabolic steroids
can have on the heart directly. Direct toxin. Yes. So for the people that think, oh, it's safe,
or oh, it's fine. It's not a big deal. Direct toxin. Okay. It's cyanide. I mean, direct toxin to the heart.
I have seen in my years, I have seen champion bodybuilders,
household names in that world, physicians.
I have seen physicians who went from these lanky, thin people
when we started practicing together to these thick guys who can't scratch their head or something,
who become very plethoric, they're red-faced and the act.
me. It is, I can give you all the things it does to the liver or erectile dysfunction. I go through
all. Oh, yeah. But your question was about the heart and all I can tell you is it is directly toxic to the
heart and over time you run the risk of developing a cardiomyopathy. Cardio heart myopathy muscle
pathology. You run the risk of causing the strength of that heart muscle, that good squeeze of the
heart muscle to diminish. And often, once steroids cause a myopathy, damage to the heart muscle,
it's irreversible. And now you're, you know, the one bodybuilder, you know, he ended up getting
a heart transplant that I took care of. I sent him over to a Mayo Clinic and he got a transplant.
I'm simplifying steroid. Simplifying it, it's directly toxic to the heart. That's all. It doesn't get any better than that.
What about a normal dose of testosterone replacement therapy?
Testosterone replacement therapy as guided by a responsible physician
who reviews your testosterone numbers.
One of the problems, it's sort of like our predisposition to excess.
People get a little bit and they want more and they want more and they want more.
You have to avoid that and you have to go, you have to be,
your care has to be overseen by a responsible physician
who is basing this on science data numbers, blood tests,
and not just, you know,
if you said I'm going to smoke one cigarette a day,
I'd have a hard time arguing with you
that you're going to die from that one cigarette a day.
Our problem is we smoke two packs of cigarettes.
And this is the excess that we're prone to.
I did all the coaching all the time.
I did like a four or five-year run of steroid use and stopped.
And my cardiologist now thinks that that could be part of what caused the lower rejection fraction, potentially.
And I got it up from 44 to 50 in just a couple months.
Mind you, I had to stop taking the Chardians that was helping me.
I started some more natural things.
But, and I don't know if that's the full cause or not.
There's no way to really know at this point.
Couple that with cocaine use and eating disorder and all that.
It is also directly toxic.
And that combination seems to be a particularly malignant species of cardiomyopathy.
When you mix agents like Coke and steroids and crystal.
Yeah.
I had this, you know, you remember the saddest cases.
I had a 15-year-old girl who was doing Coke and crystal methamphetamine after school.
She was, I think, she was like a latchkey child.
or some, she was by herself. Parents both worked. And she and her friends smoking cigarettes and doing
Coke and doing crystal. And she came in with a heart attack, 15 years old. Because her blood vessels
spasmed so incredibly that a blood vessel and spasm is like a block targeting. She just, she had an
awful ejection fraction by the time this was done. Really a lot of de irreversible damage to her
heart muscle. Those are the ones you remember. I mean, I think where mine was sitting at 45 and now 50s,
not end up world by any stretches. No, let's explain that there. Ejection fraction is what percentage
of blood that goes into the heart is squeezed out with every contraction of the heart? Well, it's not
100%. It's about 55 or 60. Yeah. 55 or 60% of the blood that enters the heart leaves the heart
with each contraction.
So if it drops down to 30 or 35, that's pretty serious.
Yeah.
If you're at 45 or 50, you should live a normal life expectancy providing,
you're doing all the other right things.
What about overtraining in terms of damage to the heart?
How significantly bad can that be?
Controversio.
Yeah.
Controversio.
You know, it's hard for me to say that overtraining is bad for the heart.
I, some people say it is.
We don't, we're not, um,
We're not armed with convincing scientific data that over-training is bad.
Probably worse for your joints than for your heart.
I want to touch on one more thing that we missed.
And that was on the blood panel side.
So I understand the importance of LDL, HDL, triglycerides, and total cholesterol.
Totally.
You have to know those numbers.
I personally argue, and if I'm wrong, you correct me.
That you need to look at that cardio IQ panel and look at your APOB and look at your LPLL
and these markers that I feel like I don't understand why we don't need to have someone knowledgeable.
And then you also have to recognize that we don't completely understand the entire panel
and what each one of those individual numbers. We think we understand it. This very smart
cholesterol specialist, one of the smartest in the country, I was trying to impress him with
my knowledge of that. And he said, you know, that's great. He said, but we don't completely
understand all those numbers.
And you have to put that in the context of the whole,
and that is your entire blood test.
So I caution people to just be a little bit careful
about all of those other markers,
because in a lot of ways,
the treatment for it is the same as
if you just have an elevated LDL and you have coroner disease.
You should look at your numbers,
and you should have a target for those numbers.
Always know what the number
is, but what's the target that you're shooting for? And you have to be careful. Like the LDL of
110 or 100 and a person with no risk factors, you know, I'm not sure we completely understand
everything we need to understand. So before we wrap things up, and I go, you know, and I,
and I hate this because these conversations go by so quickly. I could talk about this all day,
unless you have found out. I will invite you back to do a part two with me. All right. So we
And I will accept.
Absolutely.
So before we go, you'd worked on a new supplement line that you've had coming out.
You sent me a hat and a sweatshirt, but nobody really filled me in on the supplement at all.
Just kind of gave me the swag.
So why don't you talk about real quickly what your product is?
You know, people don't listen to doctors like they should.
But I have a young man that I have partnered with, Ashley Prylton.
Parker Angel, you know him from O-Town.
And he and I have been working on a supplement called Heart, Body, and Mind.
And it is a supplement that the cardiovascular supplement is CO-10.
It's omega-3s, and it's also vitamin E.
And I wanted to team up with someone to do this that people would actually listen to.
And when you look at Ashley Parker Angel, I mean, he's an influencer.
He's an iconic figure from when he was with him.
O-Town and people look at me and they're not going to listen to me, but when you look at him and when
you look at his body and you look at what he has done and you see the sort of cultural influence
that he has, I knew I had met the right person. Inpatients, especially heart patients who are looking
for a good supplement, I think heart body and mind is a great supplement. KU10 has been shown
to have great benefit from the mitochondria level, from the cellular level to the production
of energy for those who are on statins, you know, your co-Q10 is depleted by statins.
And sometimes you have muscle aches and whatnot when you're on a stent drug.
And the co-Q-10 improves all of those parameters.
In fact, very often when we have someone who has, who's on statins and they have muscle aches,
we say take co-Q-10.
Well, heartbody and mind, one of the things it has in it is co-Q-10.
One of the other things it has is omega-3s.
The same thing that is in Vesipa.
And Vesipa was shown in the famous New England journal study in 19 to lower cardiovascular events.
And it also has vitamin E, which has been shown in at least one study to reduce cardiovascular events.
So if you are looking at a supplement, okay, if you are thinking,
gee, should I be on a supplement?
I think looking at a truly science-based supplement,
like heart, body, and mind, I think is this extremely important.
Don't just take a supplement because someone told you to take a supplement,
but look at the ingredients and make sure there is science and experience behind that.
And so I've teamed up with Ash and he has just done a terrific job.
of creating, you know, I create the science, he creates the culture, he creates the message.
And we've had a fun, fun, fun time with this. And, you know, it's available now at GNC.
And when you talk about, you know, a place where supplements are, are, have great credibility,
GNC is, they're fantastic. They're really in my mind without peer. So we're very pleased that
GNC is, is carrying heart, body, and mind. We're excited about where we're going to go with this.
Well, yeah, I mean, that's my whole world, man.
And the company of that size, when they carry something,
they have to be very careful.
Right. They are very difficult to get into that store.
I can tell everybody firsthand, I hope.
And they're right.
We're in every G&C store.
It's really been a remarkable run.
It's been fun.
And getting to know him, you know, you're walking down the street.
And I used to think that I was a cardiologist of some note,
and people run past me to get to Ashley Parker Angels.
It's a lot of fun.
Well, we'll link that in the description.
for everybody to check it out and buy it and we'll link where to come and see you and follow you,
which would be where?
Well, I'm at Banner University.
Our clinic, this is a great clinic, is over on the 101 and Dobson in Scotts,
right in front of Top Golf and Talking Stick.
You see our, it says Banner Physical Therapy, but we take up the second floor of the cardiology,
and we got a great practice and a great group of clinicians and physicians that have all
been handpicked because they subscribe to this individualizing health care that's so important to me.
Well, man, I really appreciate the time and the conversation.
I've enjoyed this.
Yes.
Can we do this again?
We are going to do it again for sure.
We'll get working on that and get us scheduled again because it was great and we didn't
get through a fraction of what I wanted to get through.
So as information filled as this was, we got plenty for another one or even two.
So we'll do it again.
I appreciate the time.
And since you're local here, we'll make it happen.
That sounds great.
I appreciate it. Congratulations on you being local. You shed the winner and your overcoat, huh?
Yeah, we're trying. We're trying. So it's a blessing, man, just like all of this and these conversations.
And so I really appreciate the time. And I hope everybody learned a lot about the heart, improving your health.
And we are going to cover more of this. So stay tuned for plenty more to come. Dylan Jameli, signing off.
