The Dylan Gemelli Podcast - Episode #142 Featuring Kiran Krishnan! The GUT Breakdown Your Health DEPENDS ON!
Episode Date: July 9, 2026I HAVE A VERY SPECIAL OFFER FROM JUST THRIVE FOR EVERYONE Use my link below and receive 90 DAYS OF FREE Digestive Bitters when you sign up for 90 days of the Probiotic!!! https://justthriveheal...th.com/DYLAN Episode #142 Featuring Kiran Krishnan! The GUT Breakdown Your Health DEPENDS ON! The most comprehensive breakdown of the gut you will find!! A few months ago, I was introduced to the brand Just Thrive. Someone who I consider a brother told me they were at the top of the mountain for their well known Spore based probiotic and that they were the one company he trusted for total gut health and alignment. After trying their products I quickly realized and saw the significant difference between them and the many other "top name brands" I had tried. I was able to meet with them and was introduced to Kiran Krishnan, their chief microbiologist. I was told he was the brain behind them launching the first spore-based probiotic guaranteed to arrive 100% alive in your gut. I was enamored within 5 minutes of our initial conversation and knew that I found the person I had been looking for that had all the answers. FAR too often in discussions about the gut, I find myself getting answers that a politician would give, dancing all over the place without ever fully addressing the question. Kiran destroyed that narrative and gave a literal textbook lesson on the gut... I say literal because he actually has written in an actual textbook called "Probiotics, Prebiotics, Synbiotics and Postbiotics" Human Microbiome and Human Health! As you can hear from the start, this was a planned one off episode that was supposed to go the normal hour in length but mid way through I realized that an hour would cover next to nothing with what we needed to get to. I have decided along with Kiran to make this a series in where we tackle ever topic about the gut, IN DETAIL, to help people change their lives! This episode is the foundation that gives a clear overview of all the different aspects of the gut from the gut and brain connection, immune function, A FULL explanation of leaky gut along with aspects of probiotics and how to take care of our gut. We cover the bases on foods that affect our gut, sleep, stress and the broad spectrum of ways the gut controls our minds as well as how it can contribute to disease and illness. Kiran dissects how many factors and roles the gut plays and how the smallest weakness in the gut lining can cause havoc within our bodies. The way that he explains things scientifically yet in a manner of which is easy to understand without causing confusion is a breath of fresh air. MANY people say and discuss "leaky gut" without ever truly breaking it down and Kiran gives a master class on what it is and why it is one of the leading causes of health problems the world faces today. We discuss the exposure to toxins and glyphosate and how drastically this issues are affecting gut health along with how gut health is one of the leading causes of anxiety! We also have a long discussion on fiber and the role of importance it plays on our gut! We conclude with a discussion on the power with a spore based probiotic and what sets it apart from other forms! Words cannot express my gratitude and appreciation for this intricate breakdown and what I have already learned from Kiran and my new family with Just Thrive!! This interview has inspired me to take my studies RELENTLESSLY to the gut, and how to provide as much information and help to everyone! I will be working closely with Kiran and Just Thrive on creating awareness, guidance and plenty of educational content to change the lives of everyone!! STAY TUNED because there is PLENTY MORE TO COME with myself and Kiran! DO NOT MISS THIS EPISODE!!! Follow Kiran on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kiranbiome/?hl=en REMINDER I HAVE A VERY SPECIAL OFFER FROM JUST THRIVE FOR EVERYONE Use my link below and receive 90 DAYS OF FREE Digestive Bitters when you sign up for 90 days of the Probiotic!!! https://justthrivehealth.com/DYLAN ALSO Take 20% off at Just Thrive SITE WIDE with my link below https://justthrivehealth.com/DYLANGEMELLI SAVE $200 OFF THE CAROL BIKE with Code DYLAN https://us.carolbike.com/dylan
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Hey, everyone.
I wanted to make an intro before the intro to explain what was happening here.
So my guest today, Karan Krishna, is far beyond an expert.
He is unlike any that I have ever spoken with.
And midway through the podcast, I quickly realized that it was going to take a lot of time to go
all of the aspects of the gut that we need to talk about.
So this is going to be a long series of topics that Quran and I dive into.
And so this is part one of an extensive series on every single aspect of the gut
that you are going to need to fully enhance your quality of life and your health.
So dig in because the information that's presented here is intricate,
but it's done so in a manner of where your understanding is going to be easy deep.
So stay tuned because there is a lot to learn.
And I am just honored and pleasure to start this series and to deliver the goods on
everything you need to know about your gut.
All right, everybody, welcome back to the Dylan Chamelli podcast.
I am amped for my guest today.
I will keep it very clear as I always do.
I am very, very particular about brands and concepts, ideas, anything that I work with, put on my show.
Everybody out there that follows me knows this.
And I have really taken a deep study into the gut, given all the guests I've had on here, people that want to dive into it, experts, etc.
And I have yet, and this is saying something, because I've had some of the most world-renowned experts on here, run into somebody with as much knowledge as much knowledge as much.
my guest today. He has absolutely blown me away. So you got to sit back and relax and get ready
because we're going to get into a ton. I'm going to grill him. We're going to make it palatable,
easy to understand, but very scientific. Now, he's with Just Thrive. And I bring this up because
I have been around, talked to, taken, damn near every supplement you can take when it comes to the gut.
And with this brand, this company, these people, this group, and especially my guest, I have been far past blown away. I cannot give enough credit, accolade, and appreciation. So we're going to get into everything with Just Thrive today as well and why I came to fall in love with them. But my guest today is a research microbiologist. And he's a health and wellness expert.
He aims to make complex information understandable to everyone,
and you're going to find that relatively quickly throughout this conversation.
Now, he's founded a number of successful health and supplement companies over the last 20 years,
including co-founding and leading microbiome labs, which many of you have heard of.
But he's also been the driving force behind the scientific development of Just Thrives line of products.
And he's conducted and published multiple research studies in scientific journals.
He's published chapters in scientific textbooks, reference books, and he has global patents.
He's a sought after speaker on the health of the microbiome.
He brings his extensive knowledge and practical application of the latest science on the human microbiome to everyone.
So my friends, welcome Karan Krishna.
Hey, Dylan, thank you so much for having me.
That was one of the best introductions, so I really appreciate it.
Well, I mean every word of it, brother.
I can't say enough.
The last conversation we had, I didn't want to get up the phone with you.
And I actually got off and started getting into more.
It took away from my work I was supposed to be doing, but it gave me more knowledge-based.
So thanks for coming, brother.
I think you are just on a whole other level of tremendous, and I'm really looking forward
to taking as much knowledge from you as I can today.
Thank you so much.
It's a pleasure to be here.
And I am very excited to share.
So, yeah, let's do it.
Let's take advantage of this time, my friend.
So, okay, first of all, I want to break some things down, very simply for people before we get a little extensive.
All right.
So can you first explain just simply what is gut microbiome?
Yeah.
So the gut microbiome is defined as the totality of microbes.
So all of the microbes, right?
So we're talking bacteria, viruses, protozoa, amoeba, fungus, all kinds of different microorganisms,
and their genetic elements.
And that is a critical part to keep remembering.
So it's a totality of microbes and their genetic elements as they interact with and live within the host.
So that constitutes our microbiome.
Now, why did I emphasize the genetic elements part of it?
That's because that's where we really find the magic in the power of the microbiome and understanding why it's so important, right?
Actually, when I was at university, one of the labs that I worked in was part of the human genome project.
And this was a very exciting time in scientific research and biochemistry because the thinking was we're going to elucidate the human genome, right?
So we're going to sequence all the genes.
We're going to find the gene for everything that we do and the gene for every disease that we have.
We're going to find the heart disease gene, the Alzheimer's gene and all that.
then one way or the other, we're going to find a way to manipulate genes in order to improve our health.
But what came out of that human genome project was a huge question because when we sequence the human genome,
we come to realize that we have somewhere between 20 to 22,000 functional genes.
Now, that may sound like a lot to someone who's not familiar with genetics,
but keep in mind that a cockroach has about 22,000 functional genes, right?
or an earthworm has roughly 30,000 functional genes.
And so it raised this massive question like, wait a minute,
we are not that sophisticated when it comes to our genetics.
So how in the world are we so sophisticated?
We are at the top of the evolutionary ladder.
We are at the top of the food chain.
We have cognition.
We have all of these capabilities.
How are we doing all of this without the genetic blueprint to do it?
That's when the human microbiome project kicked off
and helped answer that question.
We have two and a half million microbial genes in our system, right?
We have 150 times more microbial genetics in our system than human genetics,
which means that we have this amazing treasure trove of functionality that we house in the microbiome,
and the largest part of that microbiome is in the gut.
And so about 90 of what it means to be human in terms of functionality,
comes from those microbes sitting in your gut.
Then if we're not paying attention to them,
we start to lose function and we create disease, right?
So disease.
Man, so if there is that much going on in the gut,
obviously it plays a massive role on our overall health,
but let me ask you this.
How difficult is it then to keep them healthy and in line?
Wouldn't it be extremely difficult given the amount?
you know, actually, it's not difficult if you know what to do, right?
Now, it has become increasingly difficult in the environment that we're in.
And one of the ways I explain this, right, so if you think about what the human is,
the human is a holobion.
That's a very important term because we have a new reference for how we look at the human system.
So we used to think of ourselves as this collection of organs wrapped in this skin suit,
right, and the organ systems are all connected by veins and nerves and things like
and then the brain is a central command, and it controls everything that happens in the body.
We have a different view now. A holobion is a superorganism. What a superorganism is is essentially a
walking-talking rainforest. We've got microbes that live in virtually every part of our body
that play a role in the functionality of that part of your body. Right? Microbes on our skin
play a very important role in how our skin functions. Microbes in our mouth play a very important role
and how our oral health functions, in our gut, in our joints, even in our, in our cerebral spinal
fluid, we've got microbes in there that control how those areas function, and all of those
microbes work together in order to perpetuate the health of the whole. So when we start thinking
about the holobion, which is a superorganism, a walking, talking rainforest, we are this beautiful
microbial construct that we've now put in an antimicrobial world. Basically,
the world around us we've built is an anti-human world. The toxicity in everything that we have,
right? Everything is designed to kill microbes one way or the other. And we are made up of microbes.
And so we're finally starting to understand that, okay, we've been shooting ourselves in the foot
for the last several decades, not longer, but all of the industrialization and all of the things
that have occurred around us. And as a result, it is becoming harder to maintain this ecosystem,
but it doesn't have to be impossible.
And the choices don't have to be really difficult for people either.
When do you think or would you estimate that as a society as a whole,
we started this downward trajectory of making this more difficult and becoming more toxic for
everybody?
And is it just progressively getting worse and worse and worse?
Yeah, it does seem to be progressively getting worse, unfortunately.
But microbes are resilient, right?
So if you take the right steps, you can recover them. You can't rebalance them.
I think as early as the industrial revolution, somewhere around 100 years ago, you know,
things really started to go downhill. Now, with the advent of broad spectrum antibiotics,
and I'm not against antibiotics, there are definitely times when you need them and they will save your life.
But even the CDC, the Center for Disease Control estimates that at least 50% of the antibiotic
prescriptions are written for things that antibiotics don't help, like viral infection.
and so on, right? And then, of course, the use of antibiotics in our food supply with the animals
that we eat and all that. And then all of the pesticides, herbicides that are used in the agricultural
industry, all of those are strong antimicrobials. Take glyphosate, right, roundup, for example.
Not only is it a strong antimicrobial, and we get many doses of it every time we eat and drink
stuff, it's a very sinister antimicrobial because it specifically kills good bacteria. You know,
compare that to like an antibiotic that you might take. It,
kills everything, right, and everything and then things start to try to bounce back. But over time,
you know, glyphosate or a roundup exposure selectively kills good bacteria and selects for the
dysfunctional bacteria. So those kind of chemicals and the prevalence in society today of those
types of chemicals can be very, very, very damaging to the microbiome. And this is a point I try to
make with people when they say, oh, there's only a little bit in this and a little bit in that. But over
time, that little bit accumulates into a lot. And because it's being used more and even
spray over gets into organics, I mean, doesn't it accumulate and continue to accumulate? And I know
you said that we're resilient. But I mean, over time, when you beat the crap out of the resiliency,
it becomes less resilient, right? Yeah, absolutely. And when I say we're resilient, what I mean
is that if we're making the right choices, we can bounce back, right? Yeah. It doesn't have
to be a lost cause, meaning like, let's say you're somebody in your 40s, and you haven't paid
attention to your health at all, your gut health, you've been eating terribly, you're, you know,
eating all the processed foods and all that, you're going to be in trouble in terms of your ecosystem
and all that. But it also doesn't mean that it's too late to reverse it, to bounce back.
That's the beauty of the microbiome and the ecosystem is that the good elements are always there.
they might be at such a low level where they're not functional, but you can bring them back.
And we've seen those changes. And then your point about the small dosing and how that creates dysfunction over time, we actually did a study.
I did a study in and published a paper with King's College at London. And what we were studying is the effect of small doses of those pesticides, you know, and these are EPA allowed levels of the doses that are in foods, right?
in oats and things like that. We were looking at a pediatric microbiome, which is a pristine
pediatric microbiome, undisturbed, beautiful diversity, very healthy, four-year-old microbiome.
And we started adding, you know, cereal level, meaning the amount of exposure that a child would
get from cereals that they're eating every day, cereal level of this pesticides into the microbiome
over a period of time. And in as little as three weeks of that exposure, that microbiome,
started to look like the microbiome of somebody with inflammatory bowel disease.
Wow, right?
Like massive shifts in certain features, right?
And those shifts, we were able to start to reverse it once we put interventions in.
But it was quite alarming to see the shifts in that ecosystem in as little as three weeks, right?
And so it just goes to show you the potency of the dysfunctional elements that we have,
around us and why gut health should be even a bigger focus for people because everything else
around you is working against your gut ecosystem and your holobion, your superorganism.
Can you maybe break down a list of like the biggest culprits that contain glyphosate?
I know there's a lot of things now that contain it, but some that people may not be aware of
and kind of give us an idea of what to be on the lookout for so we can at least be more cautious
on what we're buying?
Yeah.
You know, if you look at the vast majority of agricultural products in the U.S.,
so most of your wheat, your soy, you know, and all of the agricultural grown wheat in
the U.S. basically has it.
And then when you look at oats, for example, oats are another culprit because in
the case of oats, they don't just use the glyphosate as a herbicide, but they actually
use it as a desiccant, which means.
that they soaked the oats quite a bit in the glyphosate to dry it out before harvesting,
right? Most of the corn has glyphosate in it. Most of the cotton products have glyphosate in it.
And most of that cotton has shifted now to India, but then they've created roundup-ready versions
of those so that the cotton that's soaked in glyphosate is coming into the Western world.
And then the water runoff, right? So when you look at the farms that are using glyphosate,
And as you mentioned, the overspray, it's even moving into the cattle and poultry areas and all that.
And then our cattle and poultry are consuming that water.
And as a result, they're getting inundated with glyphosate as well.
And if we consume the meat, we might get exposure there.
So at the end of the day, what I don't want is I don't want people to stress out too much about specifically where they're getting exposure.
Because the stress in itself, we should talk about stress and how potent of a dysfunction driver.
that is, but the stress about that may even do more damage than glyphosate itself,
what I want people to know is that they can be equipped with decisions that they can make
to undo the damage that these things are doing. And that's the critical part, right? That's
where you get empowered, because when you feel like you don't have control, because big ag and
big farm are doing all these things, they're spraying everywhere, they're creating toxicity,
it gives people this sense of lack of control. It gives people the sense of lack of control. It gives people the
sense of hopelessness and it gives them this throw their arms up and I can't do anything about
this anyway. But what they need to understand is it's their ecosystem and what they put in it
absolutely makes a huge difference over what is around it. Right. And that's the empowerment part
that people can really take advantage of. And I'll make a point on that too because I'm glad
you said that because I don't do the fear mongering posts and you can't do anything. We have to
play the cards were dealt, but you have to understand there's a thing called knowledge and a thing
called wisdom. We give all the knowledge here all day long, but the wisdom is how we use it.
And being fearful when you get the knowledge is not the answer. It's how do we take what we know
and use it to better our life? We've got to play the cards for dealt here. This stuff is not
completely unavoidable. But if you know, okay, this has this and this has this. So if I do have it,
I'm going to have to take a little bit of extra precaution or at least realize maybe I don't feel so great and this is the reason.
And you said something I want to ask because I haven't gotten into this personally and I'm curious.
You bring up cotton. I've seen some people talk about clothing, bed sheets, things of that nature.
Is there potential then for if glyphosates and cotton or fabrics or anything like that, can we actually absorb some of that in the clothes that we're wearing?
It is, you can potentially absorb it, yes.
especially depending on what your skin barrier looks like, right?
So we've all heard a leaky gut.
But there is this issue called leaky skin as well.
And in fact, skin barrier dysfunction is one of the best predictors of longevity and aging.
There's a 65-year-long study that is still going on called the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging.
It's the longest longitudinal study of aging where they took people in their late teens, early 20s over 65 years ago,
and they've been following them until they die.
right? And they've gotten over three or four thousand subjects in the study. Hundreds and hundreds
of papers have come out from it. You know, everything we know about the inflammatory aging idea,
that aging is an inflammatory disease. That all has come from this massive study. And what this
study has shown is that skin barrier dysfunction that can often be seen as aged skin is one of
the biggest drivers of mortality and morbidity, which is risk of death and risk of
And part of that is because things like glyphosate and all that can actually penetrate through the skin and enter into circulation and create havoc in the body.
It can create chronic low-grade inflammation.
Wow. Okay. Well, it's everything we do or has to be calculated, it seems. But like we said, it's the awareness and the no.
So then that would bring me the next question about awareness. What is it that all of a sudden, because I
I mean, for you, for somebody that's been studying this for so long, you've known about this problem and people that have been working inside.
But more prevalently, I would say, at least on my end, more on the social side and more influencers and more even doctors talking about it.
And I would say the last three or four years really is when it's just exploded into, okay, this is a big problem.
Why are we just noticing now?
And is some of that to do with people trying to sell different kinds of products and take advantage of that?
Or what has happened more recently?
Is it a COVID thing?
Can you kind of touch on the reason?
Yeah, that's a great question.
And I think you hit the nail a little bit on the head with this with the COVID side of it.
So I think COVID played a very important role in the elevation of the awareness around the microbiome for a couple of different reasons.
Number one, everything around health and wellness just kind of skyrocketed during COVID, right?
We saw that in supplement sales and wellness influencers gaining massive followings and so on.
And I think a lot of that is because, you know, people had time.
They were at home and then they became hypervigilant about health and, you know, their bodies and what's happening and all of this fear that was going on.
So people became hypervigilant and they started researching and studying and trying to,
to understand what is happening with their system. One of the things that became really interesting
with COVID was that your gut microbiome played a very significant role in how your body dealt
with the condition, with the disease, with the virus, right? And in fact, a lot of data came
out because then you started seeing this data around measuring the virus in sewers, in stool,
waste, right? So they were able to, there were lots of groups that were able to look at the
spread of the virus by looking for it in the sewer system because people were shedding so much of
it through stool, which means that the virus is growing in the gut. And then when long COVID came
about, there was a lot of research around the role of the gut microbiome in your risk of long
COVID. So then a certain degree of awareness started increasing. In fact, one group of physicians
I know did a bunch of work around the role of the gut microbiome in long COVID. And then they
started training other physicians on that role of the microbiome and to get them to start thinking
about the microbiome even more. Now, on top of all that, on the back of COVID, you started seeing
articles about how Alzheimer's and Parkinson's even are influenced by the gut microbiome. You started seeing
how the skin is influenced by the gut microbiome, right? And people are becoming hyper aware of these
degenerative conditions. We started seeing the role of the gut microbiome in obesity and metabolic health.
And so a lot of that research started coming out right past COVID. And I think a lot of it is driven
by the fact that we have very few answers for so many of the common ailments that we deal with.
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at those disease processes have started to falter because we're not looking at root cause drivers
in most of these things, right? We're looking at symptoms and we're bandating things and we can
reduce inflammation here, but what is the cause of inflammation, right? You could take, for example,
lots of supplements or steroids and things like that to reduce inflammation in an inflammatory
condition, but then the question is, why is the inflammation there in the first place? And more
often than not, the microbiome is answering that question.
Right. And so the amount of research, just to wrap, to be able to wrap your head around it,
is we're seeing around 4 to 5,000 papers a year almost on the microbiome, something
or having to do with the microbiome, right? So if you just go from COVID to now, we're looking
at 40 to 50,000 new research papers that are on the microbiome. And so that is just catching
steam and really expanding the interest level on the microbiome and conventional doctors are
starting to talk about it as well and that kind of starts to bring in the mainstream a little bit,
you know? Okay. So right before I met you and this, the timing is just like perfect on this,
I had one of the best discussions that was this intricately talking about the gut brain
connection and that's when I realized just how big of a role because I hadn't had a discussion this
deep when it came to the gut like I kind of told you before I get a lot of people dancing man like
they act like they know what they're talking about but I never get a straight answer and this was
one of the first times where I got a major correlation and understanding of the massive role that the
gut plays with the connection to the brain the vagus nerve and then I started to put this together like
okay so if it's got that much control on our mind which i feel has the most control over the
overall totality of our health then this is maybe the biggest driver and cause of disease cause of
every single problem we have it could be gut related not just mental related so could you
could you get into that a little bit on a how big of a driving force is the gut on our entire
totality of health. B, I've always been under the impression and belief that all diseases
start with like cellular dysfunction. Is it potentially, is that inaccurate? And is it that
maybe a lot of diseases start with gut problems or dysfunction? So could you touch on both
those and then we'll get into the gut brain connection after that? Yeah, yeah. I mean,
I think you're, you know, you're thinking about it correctly that all disease starts with cellular
dysfunction. But the cell that we're talking about is the bacteria.
cell to begin with, right? So you can very easily and rationally say that all disease, at least
chronic disease, right? So of course, there are these communicable diseases and all that that also
start with microbes, but these are things that we can get from each other, the coals and flus and all
that. Those are considered disease. But let's talk about chronic disease that everyone is concerned
about. The vast majority of chronic diseases can be traced back to some dysfunction within the
microbiome, which is a change in organisms or change in functionality within the microbiome, which means
that, yes, at a cellular level, there is a change happening, but that cell that's changing is a
microbial cell. And then as a result of the microbial cell changing, it's affecting our cells
quite significantly, right? So I think you're right in that thinking, but we want to go all the way
to the root cause and see what's happening with the microbes first, and then how those microbes affect
the changes within our cells.
As an example of that, right,
so we know that there's a lot of disease conditions
that are driven by dysfunctional mitochondria
in our cells, right?
It's the powerhouse of the cell.
We know some cells have thousands of mitochondria,
some have a few,
but overall, we know that as you age,
especially aging-related conditions,
the mitochondria become dysfunctional,
and as a result of that dysfunctional mitochondria,
the cell becomes dysfunctional,
and then the organs that the cell makes up
becomes dysfunctional, right? So it's called a mitochondrial-free radical theory of aging.
It's a very well-thought-out theory showing that the dysfunction starts in the mitochondria.
But then you go, well, okay, why is the mitochondria falling apart, right? Why can't we repair it and
fix it? Well, as it turns out, we're dependent on certain microbial byproducts to fix our mitochondria.
One of those components is urolithin-A, right? Like people are now familiar with urolithin-A,
but where did this thing come from, this magical compound?
Well, urolithin A is naturally produced in your gut by microbes converting polyphenols
from your diet into mitochondrial repair compounds.
And we're dependent on those compounds in order to repair our mitochondria.
This is why things like the Mediterranean diet and, you know, polyphenols and fruits and vegetables
and all are associated with longevity, because you're getting these polyphenols,
they're being converted into urolithins, those urolithins,
are being used by our own cells to fix our dead and dying mitochondria.
Right.
So then that's how you go to the real root cause of that, right?
So yes, mitochondria dysfunction is a driver,
but why are the mitochondria as not being fixed and why they're becoming dysfunctional?
Well, it's because we're missing a component in the microbiome, right?
So that kind of, that's where we need to go to really understand the drivers.
Never once, never once has that been broken down to me that way.
And I've had this discussion.
I don't know how many hundreds of times.
It was brilliant.
And see, I'm a, I've been studying urolithin A for a long time and I have never heard that.
Not once.
We don't have a gene for urethenea, right?
So think about the relationship with our microbes in this case, right?
So here's a compound that's so important that it fixes the engines of our cells, right?
Arguably, the most important part of our cell.
Without those engines, our cell doesn't function.
This compound fixes the engines.
We don't have a gene coding for it.
We can't make it ourselves.
we've outsourced that to the microbes in our gut.
That's how closely we depend on them for that functionality,
which is at the core of our cells,
which are core of the engine of our cells.
So just understanding that component itself,
it's like, wow, that is nuts how much we depend on them.
And then you bring in things like short chain fatty acids, right?
So you look at butyrate.
Bouturate is so important for so many functions in our body,
our natural gLP ones,
that give us satiety signals and allows our gut to tell our brain, hey, enough food.
You know, we've got to turn down the hunger hormones, kick up the satiety hormone so we can burn fat.
Fueling the immune cells that go around to protect you, the macrophages and all that,
they all fuel off of buterate, modulating immune response in the body and dampening all of these
unfavorable immune responses, the list goes on and on and on about what butyrate does.
What is our gene that makes butyrate?
Nothing.
no capacity to make our own buterate, right? So this compound that we are so dependent on that if I
took out of your body, the ability to make any sort of buterate at all from your gut, right,
then you would be sick, dysfunctional, you would not be able to repair the lining of your gut,
your immune system wouldn't work, you would get obese, you would have all these metabolic issues,
you'd become insulin resistant, all within a period of just months, if not just a few short years,
right? And we're so dependent on these compounds, and we cannot.
make them. We need the microbes in our gut to make them for us. Wow. So the amount of role that
gut health plays in all of this is beyond what we most actually understand and think is basically
what you're saying in a nutshell. Yeah, absolutely. You know, if you look at the scariest
of disease conditions, right? So look at Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, right? So these are very scary
neurodegenerative conditions of which the prevalence rates keep increasing.
over time. And then you go, what is happening? Like, why is this happening more and more? Well, then you look at
in Alzheimer's, for example, there was a study, a landmark study that was published in 2017 showing that
gut-related endotoxins. This is something called LPS, right? LPS is an endotoxin that's made by about
half of the bacteria in your gut. But when your gut is leaky and that endotoxin's allowed to leak through,
it can make its way up the vagus nerve and through your circulation and end up in the brain.
And it ends up in these regions of the brain called a perinuclear region.
It's deep inside the nuclear region of the synapses.
And it creates inflammation in that part of the brain, which starts the protein misfolding
and the damage that occurs to the brain tissue.
So they found very high concentrations of gut-associated endotoxins in the perinuclear regions
of the Alzheimer's brain.
Because up to that point, the question was, why is there inflammation in the brain?
Why are these proteins misfolding, right?
Why are they starting to see this degeneration?
They knew that that degenerative process, that misfolding process was part of how the disease progresses.
But again, you go further and you go, why?
Why is that happening?
Well, as that 2017 paper showed, one of the key reasons is because stuff from a dysfunctional gut,
it's making its way to the brain.
right and so and and by that same token every single day you go through life you're going to have
inflammation in the brain and it's going to damage your brain cells to a certain degree right
and what you want is when you go to sleep you want that brain to be able to repair itself so you
wake up the next day with the same brain you had the day before yeah that doesn't happen right
every day you're going to wake up with a little bit more damage to the brain right and as that
progresses you're going to develop dementia and and all of these issues around the brain so how do we
repair our brain? Well, we're dependent on the gut for a compound called BDNF, brain-derived
neurotropic factor, which is the compound that makes its way to the brain when you're sleeping
and starts repairing the damage that occurred that day. So if you think about those two dichotomies,
right, you have a gut that has the capability of repairing and supporting your brain when you go to
sleep. So you wake up the next morning with the same brain you had the day before. Now, take a dysfunctional
gut. Not only is it not doing that repair, it's actually producing a compound that accelerates the
damage in the brain, right? And this is one of the things I really want people to understand about their
relationship with their gut. Your gut and your and its ability to protect or drive diseases on a
spectrum, right? Let's say the left-hand side of the spectrum is an ideal gut that is protecting,
repairing, providing resilience, providing all the nutrients, providing all the compounds to make
your body, your brain, your muscles, all of that function optimally. And on the far right-hand side
is a gut that's not only not doing those things, but actively accelerating damage and dysfunction.
Right. So a dysfunctional gut doesn't just hurt your system by the absence of functions. It
deliberately hurts the system by the presence of toxicogenic functions. So everybody's gut is somewhere
on that spectrum. And what you need to do is make decisions each day that push you,
you more to the left than you are to the right. And that is where the magic happens in terms of
resilience, you know, longevity, all of the things that we're all seeking. So BDNF, how do we get,
is there a way to supplement that or is it just through the microbiome health? I mean, because as you
described it, it is a very, very vital and clearly something that we need to really shed more
light on because this is another thing you don't hear talked about very much and the way you just
broke that down I mean you put a little fear in me I don't get scared I want to make I'm addressing this
so I'm thankful for the information but how do we stabilize that enhance it what do we have to do
yeah so so there's really only two factors that you need to think about when you if you want to get
you want to feel like you're getting accurate amount of or adequate amount of BDNF
number one, you have to make sure your gut is not leaky, right? And we'll talk about what leaky gut is,
because a leaky gut counteracts the functions of things like BD and F and short chain fatty acids
and urolithins and so on, all of those beneficial compounds that we need for our brain health,
cellular health, and so on. So first thing is we want to make sure that the gut's not leaky.
The second part is we want to ensure positive or high diversity in the gut microbiome.
There's a number of microbes within your microbiome that actually can make.
BDNF. And there are some microbes that stimulate a signal to make BDNF. The only way to ensure that you have
all of those microbes working in concert is to have high diversity within your microbiome. The diversity
can be measured. There are stool tests that one can use to measure diversity, but there's certain
behaviors that we have to engage in to ensure diversity is high, right? And so when you increase
diversity in your microbiome, you actually more often than not cover all of these functionalities
that I've been talking about, the urolithin production, the short chain fatty acids of BDNF,
the serotonin production in the gut, the dopamine production in the gut, like all of the neurotransmitters,
all of those get covered if we have adequate diversity in the gut. So one of my recommendations
to people always is leaky gut, we've got to stop the leaky gut and we've got to increase
diversity. If we do these two things, then you're well on your way to having a resilient
gut that's going to be on that left-hand side of the spectrum that's protecting you,
not driving disease. Okay. So BDNF noted it's kind of like fertilizer for your brain type of thing,
I guess, essentially. Absolutely. And it's made by a healthy, diverse gut microbiome when you go to sleep.
It only occurs where it's a diurnal system so that your gut works on a 24 hour clock like your body does.
Yeah. And it's waiting. So BDNF is one of those housekeeping genes that turns on in your gut.
Just like something called the migrating mortar complex, right? This is a neurological
sweeping that occurs in your bowels to clean out your bowels so stuff doesn't stay there and get
putrified and rot in the wrong places and produce gases and, you know, can also produce cancer cells
and all that if it stays there, this is why fiber can actually counteract colorectal cancer risk
is because it's sweeping things away. That same migrating mortar complex, all of those things
occur at night when you're resting. This is another reason why sleep is so important for health. It goes
beyond just the rest that we need, it's actually a way of turning on housekeeping genes and
clean up genes in our gut microbiome. Okay. Let me ask you this because this was, and correct my
numbers here, because I could be a little off, but I'm pretty sure I, because I did a lot of
studying on this after I had this conversation. Is the, the gut and the immune system are extremely
intertwined? Isn't it like 75% of like the body's immune cells are located at?
in the gut, is that sound about right to you?
Yeah, yeah.
It's actually 75% or so of the immune sampling tissue.
So all the immune-related tissue is in the gut, is in the digestive tract, yeah.
So, I mean, the immune system and the gut are extremely intertwined.
Yeah.
So I actually love doing lectures on the immune system and the gut because it is one of the most
fascinating biological connections, right?
And the immune system is very hard for people to understand, especially even people,
who are trained in this in this field. The only way to understand it is through analogies. And so
think about it this way. So imagine the immune system is like the military, right? They've got
soldiers, they've got tanks, they've got equipment, they've got all of the things to fight a war
that they need. They just have no general. They have no plans, right? They don't know who the enemy is.
They don't know what the enemy looks like. And, but they're all sitting there ready to go.
So they need direction. Now, why is the, why is the system built that way, right?
So why wouldn't our immune cells be born out of our bone marrow and our thymus with innate knowledge of who the enemy is?
Well, that's because who the enemy is changes depending on where you are, where you live, you know, what age you are and so on, right?
We want our immune system to be able to recognize a new virus as a problem, even though it's never seen it before, right?
We want our immune system, if I go from my home here in Chicago, go to Europe for a week in the summer, I want my immune system to be able to adapt.
to that changed environment.
And so by nature, our immune system is an adaptive part of our system,
but it has to adapt very quickly to changes in our ecosystem.
How does it do that?
Well, it uses the microbiome as the eyes and the ears.
So think of the microbiome as the general to the army or the intelligence force in the army, right?
So your immune system can respond, but the intelligence it gathers is from the microbiome itself.
Now, how does that work?
Another analogy I'll give you is, and this is the job of the immune cell.
I feel very bad for our immune cells, right?
Because if you think about most of the immune cells are in our, what we call the mucosa layer, right?
So inside our body, we have like 4,000 square feet of mucosa layer, right?
Our gut lining, our lungs, our brain, our Eurogenital tract, everything is this mucous layer.
In that mucous layer is covered with 100 trillion micropefate.
Those are resident microbes that live there.
And then the immune cells are patrolling that area because that's how all of the things
enter into our body is through a mucus layer.
So they're patrolling that mucus layer, but every cell in that mucus layer is a bacteria,
virus, or fungi, or some sort, right?
And they're patrolling for bacterial viruses, fungi, and so on.
The ratio is 200,000 to one.
For every one immune cell you have patrolling your system, you have 200,000.
thousand microbial cells in that area.
So imagine the job of this immune system,
and the way I let people understand it,
is like imagine you're at a music festival
and it's in a huge stadium,
and the stadium's closed off, right?
Then there are 200,000 people in that stadium.
There are five people among the 200,000
that intend to do harm to people, right?
And you are the lone security guard
in that stadium of 200,000 people,
and everyone looks the same, right?
How in the world do you identify the five out of 200,000 that may be a potential problem?
The only way, the only way you can do it is if the other 199,995 people are working with you
and they're radioed into you and they will tell you if they see anything awkward and they tell
you exactly where it is, right?
They'll radio in and be like, hey, I see something at concession stand number four that looks odd.
Maybe you should come over here.
That's the only way you can potentially patrol a stadium of 200,000 people.
And that's exactly what your microbiome does for your immune system.
Anytime you have a virus, a toxin, a bacteria, a fungi, anything that's infectious or toxicogenic that enters into your system,
one of the first things that detects it is the microbes in that area.
Your friendly residential microbes.
And they go, this looks odd, right?
It's not supposed to be here.
they radio to your immune system to recruit your immune system to come here. Now, how do they radio to
your immune system? They shoot off inflammatory flares. And your immune system hones in on where the
inflammation is and comes to that area and then starts attacking whatever is in that space. Now, two
dysfunctions that are extremely common, and this will make people understand why lots of people's
immune systems don't work the way they should, right? So remember that process. Something comes,
in that shouldn't be there, we need to attack it, we need to quarantine it. The first thing that sees
that is the microbes in that area. They shoot off inflammatory flares. Imagine you had inflammation
throughout the body. How is your immune system going to know which flare to go after? Right.
It's going to take it forever because it's going to chase every inflammatory flare it sees.
So that's like a fire truck, you know, going to 50 different smoke alarms when only one actually
breeds fire, right? So if you have a neighborhood with 500 homes and 400 smoke alarms are going
off, that actually only one house is on fire, the fire truck's going to be like, we don't know
where to go, right? They're going to be lost. It's going to take them a while to find the actual
house that's on the fire. So now when you have chronic inflammation throughout your body,
it takes your immune system so much longer to respond because it can't find where it needs
to go because there's alarms all over the place. So that's one very, very common dysfunction.
chronic low-grade inflammation causes immune dysfunction in people because their immune system
doesn't know where to go. The second, very common dysfunction is the dysfunctional microbes.
So if the toxin landed in that area where you had dysfunctional microbes who themselves
don't want to be detected by the immune system, they're not going to sound the alarm, right?
They're going to go, that's fine. I don't want to alert the immune system. Do what you have to do,
virus. Do what you have to do, toxin or bacteria. So they don't alert the immune.
system. And so it takes the immune system a very long time to accidentally find this damage, right? So when we
think about the microbiome and the immune system, we have to know that they're intimately connected. And a
dysfunctional microbiome means your immune system has no intelligence. It has no direction. It doesn't know
where to go. And it doesn't know what to do. And so we have to have a healthy microbiome to have a
healthy functioning immune system. So, and, you know, every time that you're sick or there's a
problem or any sort of disease, generally you're going to go right to a H.SCRP, a high-sensity
C-reactive protein, you're going to see an elevation. I mean, 100% of the time, any problem you've got,
that's going to kind of be the point where it's like, okay, that's high, I know I have a problem.
So do you say then that if that is elevated, that chances are that the core root problem,
that elevation is coming from some kind of gut dysfunction, I don't know, 90-some percent of the time
or more? Do you think that sounds about accurate? It is, yeah. So if you have chronic low-grade
inflammation, meaning things like HSCRP are chronically elevated, it almost certainly is a gut-related
issue. In rare cases, it could be something else. You could have, you know, massive lesions on your
skin. You could have, you know, issues elsewhere in the body. But that's rare. The most common source of
it is a dysfunctional leaky gut. In fact, leaky gut is such a big source of chronic low-grade inflammation,
and chronic low-grade inflammation is the start of most chronic disease processes, right? So that is a
very important connection for people to understand that chronic disease, almost every chronic
disease we can think of, whether it's diabetes, heart disease, Alzheimer's, dementia, autoimmune
conditions, all of these things, they all start with the presence of chronic low-grade inflammation. And the
chronic low-grade information almost always comes from a leaky and dysfunctional gut, right?
So a leaky dysfunctional gut thereby becomes the number one driver of chronic disease.
This was actually very well illustrated in a paper in 2015 in a journal called the Frontiers of Immunology,
where the researchers worked out the pathways and all the connections.
And what they showed was that a leaky gut, a dysfunctional leaky gut,
was the number one cause of mortality and morbidity, so risk of death and risk.
disease worldwide. It's a number one driver of death and disease worldwide because they showed
how a dysfunctional leaky gut causes inflammation, a chronic low-grade inflammation, which is a very
specialized type of inflammation. And then that chronic low-grade inflammation basically sets the
process of disease in the body. It even changes how certain cells behave. I've been doing a lot of work
in joint health because one of my passions is alleviating the biggest drivers of disability worldwide,
right? So the second biggest driver of disability worldwide is osteoarthritis. And osteoarthritis
is a joint degenerative condition. And when you start studying the pathology, what's happening?
Why is it, why is the joint actively degenerating? And it happens in over 90 of adults, right?
It's basically present in every adult over the age 30,
there's some degree of degeneration happening.
Basically, what is happening is the increase in chronic low-grade inflammation in the body
takes these cells called the chondricides,
which are the cells that normally build a cartilage for you.
They help your cartilage, they build it, right?
All your life, they've been doing this for you.
They've been building, repairing your cartilage and maintaining your cartilage.
When chronic low-grade inflammation is high enough,
these cells switch in going to,
from a building cell to a breakdown cell. So they were an anabolic cell, which is a building cell.
Now they become a cannabolic cell where they're not only no longer building cartilage, they are
actively degenerating it. Right. And so you could see when, and those kinds of cells are present
in your muscles, in your brain, in your heart, everywhere you have these building cells that have
been building and repairing things your whole life. But because chronic low-grade inflammation
is high enough, it switches those cells to an active,
degenerating cell, right? So now everything in your body is actively degenerating, including the
lining of your gut in other areas. And so you can start to see why chronic low-grade inflammation
becomes this massive driver of change in your body and physiology that leads to disease, right? And the
gut is most responsible for that. So if one is suffering, and I'm going to get you into the breakdown
of what leaky gut is, but I want to ask you this, if one has a leaky gut issue, are you
Are they going to find it difficult to absorb supplements?
Like, let's say bodybuilders aren't getting the response they're supposed to get.
Or somebody, like I was telling you, I've always had an inability that seems to absorb potassium well and other things I run into.
Is that more than likely some sort of gut issue that's causing that problem?
Yeah, yeah.
It's a gut and a gut liver issue as well.
Uh-huh.
So about 80% or 85% of everything you absorb through the lining of the gut goes to the
the liver first, and then the liver has to process it, right, and send it to the right places.
Or some cases, the liver has to make carriers for it in order to get it to the right tissue.
The problem when you have a leaky gut is not only is the absorption part compromise,
because the lining is inflamed and damaged and so on, but all of the toxins that are being
produced in that leaky gut, 80% of it goes to the liver.
And then the liver is undergoing massive amounts of toxicity and can't do the work that it's
supposed to do.
this is actually why we have such a crazy prevalence of fatty liver disease in the Western world, right?
So the number one, right? The number one reason for cirrhosis of the liver used to be either hepatitis or alcohol, right? Just five decades ago.
Now those two are so low in their prevalence because our cirrhosis is coming from fatty liver disease, which is a metabolic issue that starts with leakingness in the gut.
So yeah, absolutely. The absorption of nutrients is heavily comprehensive.
when your gut lining is compromised.
I'll give you a little bit of a deeper explanation for that because this system is super
elegant in how it works, right?
So in the small bowel, which is where you absorb all your nutrients, you've got these
beautiful finger-like projections called the glycopalics, right?
So the glycopalics, so you've probably seen pictures of the kelp forest, right?
What the kelp forest looks like, right?
So it's got these beautiful vines.
These are these mucosal vines that are all.
tangled up together and all that, and at the edge of them, they have something called
the brush border enzymes. That's where enzymes sit to help you break down and bring in nutrients
through the lining of the gut. Now, this is an important checkpoint because your body doesn't want
you to just actively absorb anything that's coming through, right? Because there could be some bad
stuff in there. So this glycopalics, this kelp-like forest, acts as a checkpoint for all of the
nutrients and food and all that that you're supposed to be absorbing. And the production and the structure of
this glyco-calyx kelp forest is governed by microbes in your gut.
So then when microbes in your gut are dysfunctional or dying off or you have bad microbes,
instead of good microbes, this kelp forest breaks down and no longer exists.
And your body's ability to discern what to absorb and how to absorb it starts to shut down.
So you absolutely become nutrient deficient even though you're eating adequately.
So we're just going down the list here of everything.
So cellular dysfunction could be coming from the gut.
brain issues and even mental health issues could be coming from the gut, immune system problems
coming from the gut, liver problems coming from the gut. So essentially every damn thing that we operate on
could probably be caused by some sort of gut issue. Yeah, that is the most common driver,
I would say. And I don't think that's hyperbolic to say it. Yeah. I think the research supports it
very well, especially among the population. If you just look at the biggest commonalities of
of all of these issues, it is a dysfunctional gut in most people.
This is also why even basic gut symptoms are still the top symptoms that people go to hospitals
with or go to see their doctor, basic digestive issues.
Yeah, because all of these things that we're talking about with the guts connection to the brain
and immune system and all that, those are even deeper dysfunctions.
But prior to those dysfunctions happening, people are feeling it as bloating.
They're feeling it as indigestion, as loose stool, as irregular bowel movement.
right? Those are the early canary in the coal mines that people tend to ignore or maybe they use
band-aids, right? They might use pepto or they might use some other over-the-counter digestive thing
to try to reduce the symptoms. But what they're not understanding is that those are the canary
in the coal mines saying, hey, your gut is moving into a severe state of dysfunction. It's going from
the left-hand side of that spectrum towards the right-hand side. And at some point, they're going to
experience of deeper dysfunctions like we talked about, the immune, the brain, the joint,
the liver, all of that stuff. Okay, well, an hour later, we're finally going to get to leaky gut
because I told you what was going to happen beforehand. I knew this. There's too much that you know.
So let's break this down adequately for people to actually understand. I know you will.
I have asked this question so many times, and you know how hard it is for me to get a straight,
easy, sufficient answer. Could you just please break it down? What is exactly leaky gut and maybe give some
real signs and symptoms where we know that that is the exact problem that we have?
Leaky gut is one of the most important things to understand. And in fact, you've got the right
person here because I kind of wrote the textbook on it. This is a Springer Health reference book
that researchers, doctors, and all that use. Springer Health is one of the most well-known in textbooks.
and all that. Everyone went to university has Spring Outtack's book. Endotoxemia is the clinical
definition of leaky gut. And I wrote the chapter on it. So here's what's happening, right? Here's
important to understand. So your lining of your gut where you're supposed to absorb stuff,
so your small intestine is a semi-permeable barrier, right? That's what makes it a little bit difficult
because it's designed to be able to absorb certain things and ward off other things, right? It's not like
our skin, which is supposed to be a complete barrier. We're not supposed to be absorbing too many
things to the skin or our skull, for example, right? And those barrier systems are much more hardened
barriers. But the lining of your gut is a very dynamic semi-permeable barrier, which means that food comes in,
you break down food, it starts to break it down to the tips of that kelp forest that I mentioned.
And then you've got all of this surface area where those nutrients are supposed to be able to come through,
enter into circulation, go to the liver, and then the liver sends it around the rest of the body.
But with that food comes bacteria, viruses, fungi, toxins and all that. And this dynamic
absorbable system is supposed to be able to ward off anything that's negative. So how does it actually
do that? Well, there are a number of checkpoints in the lining of the gut that have to be working
appropriately in order for the selective permeability to function, right? So the first checkpoint is
this mucus layer. So all your intestinal cells are sitting kind of shoulder to shoulder. It's a one
cell thick layer. Your skin, for example, is like hundreds of cells thick, but your gut lining is only
one cell thick. And these cells are sitting next to each other, shoulder to shoulder, and the
space in between them is called a tight junction. Right. So imagine these soldiers standing shoulder to
shoulder on top of them, or let's say in the case, we're looking at a fort, and you've got
soldiers protecting the fort in front of them is a giant pit of slime, right? Why is there a giant
pit of slime? Because as things are attacking the soldiers, the slime grabs those things and slows them
down. And it allows for the soldiers the time to evaluate which of those things are good and which
of those things are bad and then make decisions, right? If the thing that's coming through is bad,
they can shoot an arrow at it and take it out. Right? If the thing is good, they'll allow
it to come through. So that a slime pit is really, really important to slow down the transit
of things coming through the lining of the gut. And those soldiers, when they see something
that they do want to allow, the space in between them opens up. That tight junction,
they release these proteins. There's about 40 proteins in between them. They open up. The stuff
comes through, and then they cinch up clothes again, right? So you have to have these few things
functioning. You have to have that slime pit, which we call the mucus layer that slows everything down. It traps
things and slows everything down. And then you've got these antibodies in the mucus layer that neutralize
bad things. You've got your immune cells that can make their way there. And you've got the soldiers that have
weaponry that can actually target things that are coming through that mucus layer that they detect is not good.
Right. And then the things that should get through when they make it to the soldiers, they can step aside,
open up the gap and allow things to go through.
That's how the system is supposed to work.
That's how we can act as a semi-permeable membrane.
Now, where things start to fall apart, right,
is because all of those things I just described,
the slime pit, the mucous layer, right, which is the slime pit,
the proteins in between the soldiers,
the immune antibodies and cells that are there
kind of hovering and governing everything,
all of those are dependent on your microbiome, right?
All of the signals, the development,
and management of these structures, these checkpoints, if you will, are determined by the microbiome.
So when you have a dysfunctional microbiome, your mucus layer is super thin, right?
If not, in some areas, it's completely gone.
That means that pit of slime that slows things down is not there.
Things can bum rush the system.
It doesn't give the immune system.
It doesn't give the soldier cells enough time to see what's coming through and make decisions.
So the default mode, then, they attack everything.
everything that comes through, including your own food particles and all that.
And as it's attacking everything, it's creating inflammation in that area.
You might feel it as indigestion.
You might feel it as food sensitivities when you eat certain foods.
And then eventually that attack, that inflammation will damage those soldier cells enough,
where then big gaps appear in between them and anything can just leak through without any sort of checkpoint.
So we need that slime layer, that mucous layer.
We need those soldier cells and the proteins in between them to,
open and close. We need the functioning immune system in that area, surveying things. All of those
things are dependent on the microbiome. When your microbiome was unhealthy, all of those things fall apart.
You don't have a semi-permeable membrane anymore. You have a fully permeable membrane that leaks through.
And here's a crazy thing about it, right? Remember, the small intestine is like 20 feet long.
So you can have this leakiness in your gut for, say, six inches of your gut, and the rest of it is okay.
Or it can be six feet and it can be very profound in terms of its impact or it can be 16 feet.
And it can be extremely profound.
So how impactful leaky gut is to your health is determined by how much of your gut is leaky.
And it's a progressive issue unless you stop it and reverse it.
I would like to discuss several facets of this.
Now, there's a lot of influencers and people that I actually hold in high regards.
that like to get into different foods that cause this.
And actually, foods that I think are quite good for you.
And I think they're fearmongering.
And I'm curious as to, I want to get into some of those with you first.
But before we get into that, I have a couple questions that I think a lot of people are going to wonder.
One, is there a way to test for a leaky gut issue?
And if not, how would one really know if they have it or don't?
And then we'll get into like factors of foods that we should eat to prevent it.
it, lifestyle things that we could do to avoid it, things of that nature.
But when you make a comment like, man, it could be six inches or six feet, obviously,
I think if you have higher symptoms, you'll know there's a bigger issue there.
But like, I'm looking for measurables or data ways to understand as opposed to just guessing.
Yeah, yeah, no, that's really important.
And I've done and published a few studies on leaky gut.
We can test it in the laboratory.
There are some really good assays that you can use in the laboratory.
But unfortunately, there isn't a commercial test that's accurate at all for leaky gut.
Okay.
Part of the reason is because it's a very dynamic process.
You need a much more controlled environment to take samples of certain things and then measure it in the lab.
The best way to measure it is actually the leaking through of something called LPS, which is an endotoxin, right?
So that LPS is made by the microbes in that slime pit, if you will.
And normally, if your gut is healthy and you have a healthy slime pit, that the,
that LPS is just stuck in there, doesn't create any problems.
But when your gut is leaky, that LPS is allowed to leak through and ends up in circulation
and you can measure it in the blood.
And when you see high levels of this LPS in the blood, it's very indicative that your gut is leaky.
And it's directly proportional to how leaky your gut is, right?
Okay.
Whether you have a basal layer, a level of it, or you're very high level.
And in fact, the best way to test for that is when you're eating a meal.
because when you eat a meal, there's all kinds of havoc that goes on in your gut,
right? Lots of hydrochloric acid is being released, enzymes, all these bacteria dying,
the food is tumbling through, and then it's bicarbonate and bile and all of this crazy chemical churning.
If your gut is leaky, when all of that stuff is happening throughout your bowel,
you get a lot of leaking through of that endotoxin.
And so the best way we measure leakiness in the lab, and we use it in published studies,
is we take individuals, they come in fasted, we give them a high caloric meal, like a 2,000-calorie
meal, and then we measure the rise in endotoxins, right? And if we see a 5x increase in circulating
endotoxins within three or four hours of the meal, we know that they have profound leaky gut.
But they may still be asymptomatic, right? So you can't test it at home. But I would say this.
It would be very smart for virtually everyone to assume they have leaky gut, because they likely
do. And even if they're asymptomatic, which most people are for a long period of time,
until you start seeing immune dysfunctions and metabolic issues and brain issues and anxiety and all that,
until you start seeing those and those start becoming apparent, you may be asymptomatic.
In our first study that we did, we did a healthy young college students, if there is such a thing,
but, you know, by the FDA definition, right? So healthy normals by FDA definition in a clinical trial
are people that don't have any disease conditions and are on any medication, their normal body weight,
they know normal body mass index and all that. So they're 22, 23 years old, physically in the
prime of their lives, no conditions at all, no complaints. About 55 to 60 percent of those people
had very severe leaky gut. And so if those people have severe leaky gut, if you have any gut symptoms,
if you have any immune symptoms, if you are anxious, if you have issues sleeping at night,
if you have any skin conditions like eczema, psoriasis, acne,
if you have any autoimmune conditions,
all of those things are related to a significant leaky gut,
so you probably have leaky gut.
Wow, okay, see it.
That's another thing I wasn't aware of,
especially with things like psoriasis and eczema,
because there's a million different people
that seem to know how that happens or occurs,
and I'm always just confounded by that one.
So that's a good one.
So the LPS test, is that something that if I,
got on Quest labs that I could order, or how would one go about getting that?
They don't have it on Quest, unfortunately, yeah.
Because the reason is because when you measure LPS in circulation and you pull blood or serum out,
LPS starts to degrade very quickly.
Within four hours, it loses about half of its concentration.
So what we do in the lab instead is we pull the syrup sample out and then we have to freeze it
at minus 80 degrees Fahrenheit to preserve it.
Right. And that's just not practical to do in a commercial lab because they shape the samples and all that.
So it's very hard to test it commercially, but just know that everyone has it to a certain degree.
And you can resolve it in a relatively short amount of time as well.
So I would just encourage everyone to do the things that are needed to stop the leakiness of the guy because virtually everybody has some degree of leakiness.
So what about somebody that is, let's say right after they eat or within five or 10 minutes, they're just having to go to the bathroom?
you know, having the excretion and it becomes like something that happens every time they eat.
Is that indicative of leaky gut?
Because I've seen that with a lot of people.
Yeah, it can be.
So that is often a condition called visceral hypersensitivity, right?
So your gut is laced with this really, really dense neurological system called the interic nervous system.
It has the second highest nerve endings next to your brain.
It's even more so than our spinal cord itself.
So it's thought of as like the other brain.
well. If your gut is leaky, you've got a dysbiotic and dysfunctional gut. What happens is when food
starts to hit the system, it creates these havoc, this type of neurological havoc, if you
will. And then that causes spasmodic activity in your bowels instead of a very smooth, rhythmic
contraction that moves the food along, right? You get the spasmodic activity, and that spasmodic
activity accelerates the food through the small bowel. And then the large bowel, you
is likely inflamed, and so the large bowel cannot absorb water.
So most of your water absorption occurs in the large bowel.
And as a result of the large bowel not absorbing water
and the food being accelerated through a small bowel,
you end up getting loose stool that's just coming out
whether you want it or not, right?
And that is visceral hypersensitivity.
That's also the people that when they eat the first bites of food,
they get bloated, right?
And I hear that from people all the time.
They're like, no matter what I eat,
even if I drink water, I get bloated, right?
And that's not gas because there's not enough time for the food to get there and ferment and create gas.
That is an immunological, neurological response to inflammation and a dysfunctional gut lining.
Okay.
So that's, again, related to a gut issue.
Yeah.
And if you look at anxiety, for example, right?
So anxiety is so prevalent these days.
There was a nine-year-long study in Netherlands called a Netherlands study on anxiety and depression.
And it was basically government-funded study to understand what are the drivers of this high prevalence of anxiety, especially in younger people.
We're seeing it in younger and younger individuals.
And so they were following all of these biomarkers in individuals for nine years and to correlate different biomarkers and risk factors for the presence and the development of anxiety and depression.
What they found was that there was one biomarker that was the most predictive and even over a nine-year follow-up period,
If that biomarker was prevalent in that individual, that individual always had anxiety.
And depending on the severity of the concentration of the biomarker, it predicted how severe the
anxiety was.
And that one biomarker was that LPS, lipopolysaccharide, that endotoxin in circulation.
And LPS in circulation only comes from a leaky gut.
So basically what they showed over nine-year-long study across their country was that the
presence of leaky gut and the resulting LPS in circulation was the number one determining factor
of whether or not you developed anxiety. And for the people that over the nine-year period
continued to have elevation of LPS, they continued to have anxiety for the people that LPS
came down for one reason or the other. Maybe they changed their diet. They did something. They didn't
control for that stuff. Anxiety went away, right? So it just shows you just how impactful the presence of
this LPS and the leakiness of the gut is in all of these disease pathologies. In fact, my,
my chapter in this textbook is all about all of the disease connections between increased LPS
circulation and all of the common disease pathologies associated with it.
Okay, so I'm piecing some things together here now that you say this. All right, so let me ask you
this. We've got the relation to anxiety.
A lot of people will tell you, doctors included, that and because you brought up the skin conditions earlier, that psoriasis is caused by stress and anxiety.
So the correlation here could be that the leaky gut is then releasing the LPS, which is causing higher anxiety, which is then also leading to the eczema or the psoriasis.
Am I onto something here?
That's exactly right.
Yeah.
And this is true of acne as well, right?
So people with acne have, I think it's three and a half to four times higher likelihood of having anxiety.
Now, part of that is, of course, because they're unhappy with the way they look.
Sure.
But the anxiety part of it, which is different than depression, is related to the amount of LPS because then the studies that show that elevated LPS is a driving force behind acne lesions.
And that same LPS is a driving force behind anxiety.
And so that's why these conditions correlate to one another.
There's also, you know, a dramatically increased risk of type 2 diabetes with having elevated
LPS, right?
So, in fact, there's a study called a Cordial Preb study.
This is a 2021 study that published.
490 patients.
They were following pre-diabetics to see and until if and until they became diabetics, right?
And they were looking at all of the biomarkers that were predictive of an increase in insulin
resistance until the point they became diabetics.
And there was only one biomarker, only one that was predictive over 98% of the time.
And that was the serum LPS lipopolysaccharide levels, right?
The same lipopolysaccharide that creates anxiety, the same thing that creates psoriasis,
that creates acne, the same LPS that creates the inflammation in the brain
we talked about earlier that starts the process of Alzheimer's, right?
And the same lipopolysaccharide that creates the dysfunction in the interic nervous system
that starts the process of Parkinson's.
They found that to be true in Parkinson's as well, right?
And so you look at this common cause among all of these seemingly unrelated conditions,
and you start to understand where the root driver of all of this is, right?
And why all of these conditions are concurrently increasing in prevalence, right?
Because we're doing medications and this, that, and the other for each of them,
but all of them have a common root cause that we're not addressing.
addressing effectively enough.
Okay.
So, man, this is insane.
You're turning me into Sherlock Holmes here because I'm following, you're leaving
me all these clues.
So let me ask you this.
You know, there's a lot of discussion around fiber.
There's a lot of fiber supplements, a lot of powders, a lot of different things.
I've tried, too, and I find that a lot of them, it might be overdoing it,
or it could be actually exacerbating or creating a bigger problem that it's supposed to
intended to be fixing. Are these supplements causing leaky gut, these powders? Is that there
too much fiber? Is that going to cause like, you know, I mean, too much of anything isn't good?
Is that becoming a problem by trying to overcompensate? Can you correlate that together for me?
Yeah, yeah. The fiber is probably one of the most important nutrients foods that we need to consume,
right? But there's a way to do it. And that's the really important part. Like you see the fiber maxing
and things that people are doing on on TikTok and social media, that's not.
necessarily the way to do it because fiber, the magic of fiber comes from your microbes
utilizing it properly. And there's a very stepwise manner to increase the types, certain types
of fiber within your diet, either as a supplement or through food sources, to improve the
utilization so that your body, not your body, but your microbes are converting it into the right
compounds, right? So just a double click on the importance of fiber, there's been a couple of large
scale meta-analysis. And to me, this is one of the best biohacks there is, right? We talk about
all of these longevity biohacks. Listen to this about fiber, right? So the latest one at 2028
meta-analysis, and then there's been a very recent one just this year, looking at very specific
conditions, and these are involved over a million patients, over a million subjects in this meta-analysis
study. What they showed was that for every 10 grams of fiber you add to your daily diet,
you reduce your all-cause mortality.
That means dying from any disease by 10% for every 10 grams.
And that's all the way up to almost 40 to 45%.
So if you can get yourself to 40 to 45 grams per day of the right kinds of fiber,
you will reduce your risk of dying from anything by almost 45%.
Right?
There's nothing else that will do that.
And we're talking about studies that are 10 years long,
million subjects, massive amount of data, but there's a right way and a wrong way to do it.
Right.
And that's the thing we really have to talk about.
Break that down for me then in terms of right and wrong ways, like fiber-rich food,
supplements to maybe take like, I don't know, Cillium Husk, for example, things to avoid.
Is there too, is there getting too high that could cause an adverse reaction?
Break that down, please, because this is like, this is one of the most confusing and polarizing
topics diet related right now.
It is. For sure. For sure, yeah. I think step one, we have to understand that fiber is essential, right? So if people are saying you don't need fiber, that's completely wrong, fiber is absolutely essential. I agree. Right? And I like a combination of food and supplementation because I want to really dial in my fiber intake to make sure I'm maximizing my benefit. But how do you do that? Right. So what you want to do is that most people in the Western world, most people listening to this, probably cannot utilize.
the fiber effectively because their microbiome's not diverse enough, right? So they need to start
stepping up the diversity. And one of the ways you do that is by stepping up your fiber intake
incrementally, right? So let's break down fiber in itself. There's two, really kind of two types
of fiber. Let's throw in a third so that people have a variety to think about. So first one is
soluble fiber. Soluble fiber is going to be things like cilium hus. It's going to be
partially hydrolyzed guar gum. It's going to be inulin. You know, so shikeri,
root and things like that. Basically what soluble fiber means is that it's a type of fiber that'll bind
water and it'll form a gel in your system as it's moving through. Then there's insoluble fiber,
right? So insoluble fiber is fiber that does not bind water. And so it just moves through it's
like roughage. So it's like the kinds of fibers you get from seeds and nuts and things like that.
So it's going to move through your system and it's going to move and improve your bowel movements.
And then the third kind are resistant starches.
Resistant starches are really interesting and dynamic because they are starches,
but they come from like sweet potato, for example, or kiwi fruit and things like that,
where they are fibers that we cannot digest and break down.
So they don't increase insulin response or glucose response.
They basically move to the large bowel where our microbes are going to break them down, right?
So generally, the way you want to think about fibers, you want to get about 70% soluble,
fiber and resistant starches and about 30% insoluble fiber. Now, what I would encourage everyone to do is just go on Google and say, give me a list of soluble fiber foods and give me a list of insoluble fiber foods. And you'll see, you'll see your regular vegetables in one column around soluble fiber. And then you'll see nuts and seeds and things like that in the insoluble fiber. Then resistant starches you'll get from sweet potato and roots and tubers. So cassava and, you know, sweet potato and, and, you know,
You know, other kinds of roots that you might utilize.
So those are the, that's the food side.
And then what you want to do is start trying to add some of those foods into your daily diet
incrementally, right?
You don't have to be super measured about it.
You don't have to be weighing stuff.
You can ask Chad Chippy T and say, hey, you know, how do I get five grams of soluble fiber
from food?
It'll tell you exactly what food to eat to get about five grams.
My goal for everybody with every meal is to get about five grams of soluble fiber.
fiber, about five as food, five grams of soluble fiber as a supplement, and then a gram
or two of insoluble fiber, right? So that can be as easy as taking a scoop of a fiber supplement.
So look at something like a cillium husk or partially hydroized guargum or inulin. These are all
soluble fibers, right? So you can look up soluble fiber supplements, get about five grams
with that meal and then add about, add a food that will give you.
you about five grams of soluble fiber, and then add some food that'll give you about two or three
grams of insoluble fiber to that meal, and that could be just a sprinkling of nuts and seeds,
right, or a handful of nuts and seeds with the meal. Now, if you make that your goal and you work
your way to that, then you'll be in really, really good shape. What you don't want to do is go to
15 to 20 grams of fiber tomorrow when you haven't been eating fiber at all, right? So add in about
five grams per meal between supplementation and food. So you can get between five grams of each.
So you get around 10 grams per meal each day. And then keep up with that for the first two to three
weeks. And then after that two to three weeks, bump that up by another five grams per meal.
Right. You want to get yourself to around 30 to 40 grams per meal and try to do that with as
much diversity as you can. Right. So when you look up the foods that give you fiber, try to
add in different types of foods, you'll be doing broccoli and carrot shavings and, you know,
things like that that tend to have fiber in it. Just diversify the fiber as much as you can,
but go slowly and incrementally adding five to 10 grams per day each week, right? And work yourself
up to around 45, 50 grams per day. Then you're doing well. Now, on top of the fiber,
you want to add polyphenols. And polyphenols come from colored fruits and vegetables, right?
So berries are the best sources of polyphenols that feed the microbiome, right?
blueberries, blackberries,
raspberries,
eat about a pound of berries a day if you can, right?
If you can afford it,
if you have access to it,
frozen berries are fantastic, right?
Because they pick them at the height of,
of ripeness,
and then they freeze them,
so they remain in that higher nutrient status,
and then just thaw them out
and just eat it,
a handful of it after every meal.
You'll be feeding your microbiome significantly.
And then here's another really important trick with all of this.
You need to put a microbe in there
to help utilize the fiber better, especially if you haven't been consuming fiber, right?
Okay.
So you want to add a probiotic that helps you utilize the fiber better.
This is where the spore-based bacteria come from.
We did a study where we added the probiotic with fiber and prebiotic,
and we saw about a 50 to 70 percent increase in the beneficial compounds
that your microbes produce when they ferment the fiber, right?
So adding a spore-based probiotic can dramatically inhibit.
your body's ability to utilize the fiber itself.
Got it.
We're going to get into that in a minute,
but I got to tell you,
my friend,
you're pissing a lot of people off,
the people that are anti-fruit,
the oatmeal mafia.
I mean,
everybody's going to be coming left and right
with these facts.
They love it.
I'm a big proponent of fruit.
I absolutely despise it
when people act like you shouldn't eat fruit.
I will never regret that concept.
It is horrible.
I appreciate the fiber breakdown
because I swear to you,
brother like I see that is probably that and potassium to me are the two things that people lack
the most in their diet you know that they struggle the most with and don't even realize it and
I think a lot of people are extremely unhealthy because they don't eat fiber and don't know and
so thank you for the breakdown of the importance there because these things that people
they just don't understand and a lot of people think they do I before I ask you about the
spore just a couple questions on certain foods so
So, you know, I mentioned earlier about people that provide a little bit of fear about foods that cause these problems.
One thing I wanted to ask you about, well, two things.
One is oxalids like spinach, peanuts, things like that, causing holes in the gut and issues like that.
Almonds.
Those are things that I've seen people of, you know, higher level of following in supposed intelligence.
I don't want to take shots, but is this true?
Do they really, those, because there's a lot of benefits to something like spinach,
especially, and I understand everything should be done in moderation. So could you touch on that
a little bit and clear that up? Yeah, it's a, it's a very, very rare risk. Basically, they're
kind of picking one compound in there that in a very, very small population could create an issue
and then making it a sweeping assumption, right? So our body deals, our microbiome actually deals with
oxalates beautifully. In fact, we have a microbe in there called oxalabacter formogenes. It's entire
job is to just break down oxalates into very useful compounds that the rest of the microbes can
use. In fact, Basilis does that as well. So the ecosystem is very well geared towards dealing with
oxalates. There's rare conditions where some people may have oxalate issues and sensitivities.
They will typically have very apparent problems, like a lot of crystallization and severe gout
and things like that, right? And they'll know already. But for the average person, it is not at all
they should not at all risk.
And to avoid those kind of foods because of this unverified fear of oxalates is really
damaging.
It's the same as avoiding fruits because you're fearing sugar, you know?
And it's not equivalent at all, right?
And I think at the end of the day, people just need to be eating higher diversity of
these good foods and not worrying about all these minute compounds that are within them.
And I feel like some people do it just for content.
and some people, I think they actually say it so much, they start to believe it.
And that's easy to do.
I used to do that way back, you know, and I don't now, but I mean, it's easy to do.
And, you know, things like spinach, especially when you cook them, don't you, isn't it even less of a problem if you're cooking it?
It is.
Yeah.
Right.
Okay.
Same look like the lectins, right?
So you hear a lot about lectins and anti-nutrients and plants.
Yeah.
That's such a common thing, like phytic acid and, and, um, okay.
so on. The thing is, cooking basically, you know, neutralizes all of that stuff, especially
slow and low cooking like you're supposed to, right, with, with clients. So I actually looked into
this because when there was somebody that, you know, I thought knows what they're talking about.
They were talking about, a doctor, I don't want to name names, but talking so much about these,
the anti-nutrients in tomatoes, right? So the lectins in tomatoes and how all the tomatoes are,
because they're so full of lectins.
And I kept scratching my mind going, you know, listen,
one of the most well-studied diets in terms of its health benefits is like the Mediterranean
diet, right?
Yeah.
There's just so much data out there on how beneficial it is.
In fact, there are cancer hospitals that switch people to a Mediterranean diet and they get
better outcomes than when they're eating a conventional diet and so on.
Now, I was like, tomatoes are such a foundational part of the Mediterranean diet, right?
And so I started digging into, if tomatoes are so awful for you, how is it in the Mediterranean diet?
It's not a problem at all.
Well, number one, most people are unsensitive to lectins, right?
They're not necessarily causing problems most people.
But the way they cook tomatoes in Italy and so on is a long, slow simmer, right, in healthy olive oil.
And they have these amazing polyphenols and all that in the olive oil that neutralize the pro-oxidants.
And then they also mill the tomato afterwards.
get the sauce out, all of those lectins and all that are left in the seeds and so on that are not
milled out. And so, you know, there's so many ways around it and cooking is a very foundational
way to do it. So I really encourage people not to be fearful of these kind of foods because
the fear around it itself can create more dysfunction than anything in the food. And we need to
eat a diverse diet, right? That is so clear in the literature that high diversity is going to,
in your diet supports high diversity in your microbiome and high diversity in the microbiome
is the healthiest kind of microbiome you can have. Totally. I'm Italian brothers, so I've been eating
tomatoes my whole life. So I know, and I know when you eat them properly, the benefit. And one thing
I will say, and I won't get into this too far, but when you become a character, so the anti-lectin
guy, it becomes, well, you're getting all this attention, you get all these comments. It gets
polarizing. You get all these views. I don't operate that way, but sometimes.
Some people do.
And then like I said, they start to believe their own bullshit.
But I think it's important to really break down the actual facts and the non-facts because
what you just said is the key.
You create confusion, which then leads to stress and anxiety.
And that is one of the, if not the biggest killer, stress kills.
And that will create every other sort of problem.
So I want to point that out.
I want to finish here with going into the spore probiotic.
Now, you know what's crazy is my mentor brought up sport probiotics to me.
I want to say at least over 10 years ago.
And I didn't know anything about probiotics at all.
And he said, don't get any of the regular probiotics.
This is the one.
I had no idea why I just blindly listened, which I don't do to anything now, but I'm being
honest.
But what I've learned now over time is there's several differentiating factors.
And we're doing a series here, obviously.
So we're going to break this fully down in our next episode.
But give us a little teaser here.
Just quickly explain the why spore probiotics and what it does here that's different.
Yeah.
And when it comes to probiotics, strain specificity is so important, right?
So people lump probiotics in these big categories, but they're all very different.
And what strain you pick and what kind of strain you pick is extremely important in terms of the functionality you get.
Now, you know, I did some pioneering work on the spore.
probiotics about 15 to 16 years ago. And in fact, we brought the very first multisporal probiotic to the
marketplace. And the reason I honed in on the spore-based probiotic was because it is the closest
resemblance to how we interact with microbes in the natural environment. Right. So when you look at,
you know, our engagement with microbes in the in the natural environment, the way our ancestors
did. They're consuming dirt and they drank waters out of rivers and streams and they're digging for
roots and tubers. They're plucking fruits. They're hunting animals and eating their gut intestines.
And through all of those engagements, they're getting these large amounts of spore-based bacteria
that tend to be ubiquitous in the environment. And they're also differentiated. They're not
soil-based organisms. They're specifically spore-based organisms. Now, what's unique about the
spore-based organisms is that they have a natural coating that they put on themselves that
allows them to survive through the gastric system and enter into the intestines alive, right?
And that's a very important key because most probiotics in order to be able to function
have to get to the gastric, has to get to the intestines alive.
And the gastric system is very good at killing microbes.
That's one of its job.
It's called the gastric barrier because the pH is so low, it decimates microbes, right?
And hence, you know, different companies have added special capsules and all that to try to get it to survive.
But the reality is there are, there's one category of microbes that have been given the capability by nature to survive through the gastric system.
Now, that was really interesting to me.
I said, why is there this microbe that has this natural capability of surviving through the gastric system when 99.9.9% of all other microbes get killed off?
What is it doing in the gut that's unique?
then once it gets into the gut, we discovered that it also does something called quorum sensing.
Corum sensing is the ability of this microbe to read the microbial environment,
and it can actually pick up chemical signatures of all the different bacteria that are in that environment
and identify dysfunctional bacteria and beneficial bacteria.
When it identifies dysfunctional bacteria, it can bring down the level of dysfunctional bacteria
by either directly competing against it, producing antimicrobials,
or alerting the immune system to the presence of the dysfunctional bacteria.
That's called competitive exclusion.
And then it produces compounds to bring back the growth of the beneficial bacteria.
On top of that, it's creating signals that repair all of those structures we talked about
that are dysfunctional in a leaky gut, that mucous layer, the tight junction proteins,
even the replacement of the intestinal cells themselves, right?
So it's doing all of this amazing housekeeping work in your gut for you.
It was baffling that this microbes can do this naturally, right?
So that's what we started studying, and we were published a first study in a major
gastroenterology journal showing that when you administer these spore-based probiotics at the right dose,
you can actually stop that leaky gut by 75 to 80 percent in as little as little as 30 days
without doing anything else, right?
Really?
Adding in the spore-based probiotics.
Yeah, this was published as a frontier paper in the World Journal of Gastrointestinal
Pathophysiology.
That's the journal.
And they published our paper as a frontier paper because it was the first time that
anyone has showed that you can actually stop endotoxemia, which if you remember,
is the clinical name for leaky gut, right?
That was actually the impetus then for me to write the chapter in this book, because from
that paper, we showed that we can.
actually stop leaky gut, which we talked about is, you know, at the foundation of all of the
disorders.
Will you show that book again and read the title so that people know, and I'm going to link it?
Yeah, this is, it's a fantastic book.
It's called probiotics, prebiotics, symbiotics, and postbiotics.
It's a reference textbook.
It's got, I don't know, like 50 chapters in it.
My chapter is somewhere in here.
So it's very well referenced.
It's a textbook that, you know, people who are very, very, you know, people who are very,
curious, want to learn more about any of this, but then also mostly purchased by researchers and
professors and doctors and all that. They use it as a reference textbook, you know, for
looking up things related to probiotics and all that. But that endotoxemia, that leaky gut,
is a very prominent chapter in here. And the spore-based probiotics were the ones that were
able to resolve it. Let me actually tell you a really interesting story about spore-based
probiotics that we did a study with at Cleveland Clinic.
Right.
So as you know, C. diff, right?
Clostridium difficile is a big issue.
Yeah.
You know, somewhere around 30,000 people a year die from C. diff.
It's a massive diarrhea, bloody diarrhea, and so on.
And it's hard to treat and it comes back very often for people that have it because of
this presence of this type of pathogen called Clostridium Deficil.
Now, Clostridium Deficil lives almost naturally in most of us.
The time it becomes a problem is when we.
take big horses of antibiotics and it knocks out all the competition for the clostridium.
So then it starts to take over, right?
Normally it's treated by antibiotics.
And so antibiotics, you try to knock it down.
But then antibiotics, of course, knock everything else down and makes it even more favorable
for the clostridia.
So we did a study with a top researcher at Cleveland Clinic on the microbiome.
And we were looking at the spores to see if the spores could go after the claustridia, right?
And as it turns out in the study, she found.
found out that the spores did reduce the claustridia as well as as as as as as powerfully as
any antibiotic she had tested, right? So the, so the rate of diminishing of the claustridia was
very powerful. But how it did it was so interesting, right? So, so the spores will identify
the presence of the claustridia, will surround it, will physically surround that
claustridia. And then it started producing keyleting agents to starve the claustridia of iron.
So clostridia and other pathogens,
They need iron for their genetics, right?
This is why they dig and look for the blood.
And so it starved the claustridia in a manner that even we couldn't think of
and then killed it off in that respect.
It just, you know, shows you the intelligence of nature that we can't replicate.
We just have to be smart enough to know what's happening and identify it and utilize it, right?
And so that was such an elegant thing to see.
It just baffle me that these microbes know how to do that.
That's amazing, man.
Jeez.
I am blown away, literally, by some of this information that you've given.
So what we're going to do, and we kind of decided this midway through, but this is the plan now is this is just going to be a full-blown series.
So next we're going to get into the full breakdown of how we really treat full-blown leaky gut, how the differences between all of the difference probiotics we see.
Maybe we'll get into strains, explanations on the.
makeups of these products because it is so damn like confusing. There's so many terms and names that you
just look at a bottle and go, what the hell is this? I mean, unless you know like an expert like you,
you just look at that and blindly go, oh, great, it's going to fix my gut. And it could be probably
actually causing more problem. Yes. That's an important to note. It can, yes. Yeah. So we're going to
get into a whole thing there. And then I think after that we'll get more and focus just on gut brain. We have so many
things that we're going to get into on this. This was the like just full blown synopsis on gut
health and awareness and I think really just so factual and so in detail, but you broke it down
so nicely. And I just appreciate that attention to detail, but making it so understandable,
man, you really do it better than anybody that I've ever met. And I've talked to supposedly some of
the most brilliant, but you've topped them all, my friend. Thank you so much. It's one talent I figured out.
And, you know, I actually figured it out in college.
One of my jobs in college was I was a tutor for science and math, right?
And I would tutor all these athletes and even med students in microbiology and so on.
And one of the things they always said to me is like, oh, why can't my professor explain it this way?
Because I totally get it.
And I was like, I got to make a career out of explaining stuff somehow or the other.
So here I am living the dream of being able to explain all this crazy nerdy stuff that's in my brain.
But hopefully in a way that it empowers people so that they understand what's happening in their system.
I want people to have a visual understanding of the leakiness of their gut.
What's happening there, the things that are leaking through, how that connects to the things that they're feeling, right?
The anxiety they're feeling, the skin issues they're feeling, the metabolic issues, the insulin resistance, like how all that's connected.
And then, of course, what you can do about it, right?
Because the beauty of all of this is you can absolutely reverse all of it.
stuff that we talked about today, right? You have so much more power than you think in order to be
able to fix the issues that you're experiencing. Amazing. I can't wait till the next one, man,
and I got to tell you, this has been so enlightening that I'm going to listen back to this
multiple times. And while you were talking, I looked that book up and I found a way to get it
a little bit discounted. So I'm adding that to my bookshelf. Amazing. I did. I looked it up immediately.
I'll tell you how I found it when we're done here.
But I know we went long today, but this has been so fun for me.
And I know the audience is just going to love this top to bottom.
So thank you not just for taking the time, but for the way that I can tell,
it's easy to see that you've really spent your life working on this.
You don't get this wise and this smart by just throwing together a few years of work here.
I can tell how much time that you put into this.
this seems like your life's work and it is just what you're doing for others is it hits home for me
man so it's just really appreciated thank you so much for saying that that's that's that's my whole
joy in all of this you know is just being able to convey this information in a way that makes
sense to people so they can take action and and it has been what I've been dedicated to doing over
the last 20 years in one way or the other developing this level of understanding keeping it all
in here and then being able to share it and that
that sharing is my way of giving to the world, to the community.
And I'm always extremely grateful for platforms like yours where I can do that, right?
Because without it, I'm just sitting here with all the stuff in my head and it's not helping anyone.
So eternally grateful for the opportunity to be able to do this with you.
Honored to present this information and get you out there, my friend.
Thank you.
And I do want to give a quick offer for all my listeners out there from,
Just Thrive, who is now family to me, by the way, and I stand by them beyond a million percent.
So you check the description.
I'll have links down there and explanation.
But in short, if you do a 90-day Just Thrive probiotic subscription, then you're going to also get a 90-day supply of the digestive bitters.
So that's basically $90 free for you right there.
I'm taking all of these right now, and I know that I've had gut issues and taken all of the wrong stuff.
So I started these about three weeks ago, already can tell a significant difference.
So make sure that you check below and take advantage of that because that's a steel to say the least.
And Karan, maybe real quick, the digestive bitters, what, can you just give a quick synopsis of that?
And then we're going to get into that more on the next episode.
Yeah, bitters are absolutely fascinating.
So all throughout your digestive tract starting in your mouth and then all the way down your intestines on your liver, on your pancreas, even on your heart, you have some.
something called bitter taste receptors. These bitter taste receptors need to bind bitter compounds
that come from things like dandelion and so on. And then when they bind these bitter compounds,
it turns on a switch to activate that part of your digestion. So upwards of 50 of your digestive
signals or switches are turned on by bitters. And nobody consumes bitters in their diet.
Right. This is part of the reason why we are so poorer at digesting and breaking
things down because we've turned off half of our digestive signaling. And no wonder you get
bloating and indigestion and constipation and all of that stuff because all of these digestive switches
are activated by bitter receptors. And without activating bitter receptors, you have incomplete
digestion and it leads to all kinds of issues down the road. So we got to get the bitters
into the diet. I've been using bitters very diligently for six, seven years now.
You know, and it's hard.
Most people don't like bitter tasting food.
So being able to take it as a capsule with your meal takes care of the problem, right?
So it's amazing that our team at Just Thrive is giving that away because that is like a, it's a rescue for your digestion and you should take it with every meal.
I'd take it with my biggest meal.
I take two with my biggest meal and the spore probiotic after every big meal that I have.
So it's perfect.
It's working.
All right.
So, man, thank you.
you I can't wait to put this out and then record the next one so super stoked pumped
everybody I know that you're going to enjoy this listen to this wholeheartedly
you're probably going to need to listen to it multiple times but stay tuned for
plenty more to come because we are going to fix the world's gut together Dylan
Jameli sign it off
