The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka - 06. Depression | Ultimate Human Short
Episode Date: November 2, 2023Get weekly tips on how to optimize your health and lifestyle routines - go to https://www.theultimatehuman.com/ Get more resources + information from Gary here: https://linktr.ee/thegarybrecka ECHO GO... PLUS HYDROGEN WATER BOTTLE https://echoh2o.com/?oid=19&affid=236 BODY HEALTH - USE CODE ULTIMATE10 for 10% OFF YOUR ORDER bodyhealth.com/ultimate In this short episode of The Ultimate Human, we’re going to discuss the intriguing relationship between depression and neurotransmitters. Discover how the brain creates emotional states through a specific combination of neurotransmitters, and how an imbalance in these crucial chemicals can affect our moods. Listen in as we unravel the complexities of depression, from its definition as an inadequate supply of serotonin to the limitations of SSRIs in effectively treating this mental health condition. We’ll also uncover how certain nutrient deficiencies and overall gut health can impair our body's ability to synthesize serotonin, leading to anxiety and depression. We discuss the importance of supplementing with methylated nutrients and how genetic testing can help identify these deficiencies. Statistics from Johns Hopkins: https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness-and-prevention/mental-health-disorder-statistics#:~:text=An%20estimated%2026%25%20of%20Americans,substance%20use%20and%20anxiety%20disorders. (0:00:00) - Depression and the Role of Neurotransmitters (0:07:51) - Genetic Testing and Nutritional Supplements The Ultimate Human podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey guys, welcome to the Ultimate Human Podcast.
I'm Gary Brekka, the human biologist.
I'm your host, where we just go down the road of everything longevity, biohacking, anti-aging
and wellness.
Everything that takes regular human beings and turns them into ultimate
humans. And today I'm just doing a quick short on depression because as I read the statistics
about depression across the country, and you know, there's, uh, Johns Hopkins recently put out
a, uh, a report that about 26% of all Americans, which is one in four Americans, suffer from a diagnosable medical
mental disorder, meaning 26% of Americans, one in four Americans, has a diagnosable mental disorder.
And I certainly don't believe that, you know, a quarter of the population has gone crazy.
In fact, I don't believe that even a fraction of the population has the level of mental disorder
that we're being told.
When we talk about mental disorders, moods, emotional states, what are we really talking
about?
Well, we're talking about mood and emotion being affected by chemicals called neurotransmitters.
Remember that if you ask me, Gary, what is a mood?
What is an emotional state?
I would say that it's a collection of neurotransmitters, very often bound to other molecules like oxygen. And when you have a deficiency in certain
neurotransmitters, it becomes very difficult to manufacture certain moods. Every mood that a human
being can experience, every emotional state that you can experience is nothing more than a recipe,
a collection of neurotransmitters put
together, stirred up, entering the brain and creating an emotional state. Now it's a little
more complicated than that, but to understand the physiology of mood and emotion, we have to
understand what ingredients go into the recipe of creating healthy emotional states. So if you think about elevated emotional states,
things like passion, elation, joy, arousal, libido, all the sort of hell yeah, I won the
lottery emotions. These emotions at the upper tier, the upper end of the spectrum,
these euphoric type of emotions generally have a large component of serotonin. At the lower end of the spectrum, things like fear,
anger, jealousy, resentment, despair, depression, what I would call lower end emotional states,
number one, do not contain oxygen as a part of their molecular structure. And secondly,
they do not contain the same neurotransmitters that elevated emotional
states contain.
So what if you were a bakery chef and someone came up to you and said, listen, you can bake
whatever you want.
You just can't use butter.
Well, it doesn't sound like a big deal.
It's just one ingredient.
But if I took butter out of a baking recipe, just imagine how many different recipes, just
how many different recipes that that would affect.
Cookies, pastries, pies, brownies, cakes, all kinds of things would be affected just by taking
one ingredient out. Now imagine inside of a human being that we just deplete one neurotransmitter.
I say, well, you can manufacture any emotional state that you want, you just can't use serotonin. Well, now you've only taken serotonin out of the recipe, but any emotional state that requires
that neurotransmitter, you cannot assemble, which means that it's very hard to reach elevated
emotional states when you have low production and low bioavailability of the neurotransmitter
serotonin. In fact, in the United States, one of the ways that we define depression is an inadequate supply of serotonin.
So according to some definitions, if you are low on serotonin, you are by definition depressed.
So you would think that if the definition is low serotonin, that the fix would be to raise
serotonin. But that's not what we do. We take people that are depressed
and we put them on SSRIs,
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
And basically what these do
is they ration what little serotonin you have.
So by definition, they never raise serotonin.
So by definition, they don't really end depression.
This is why people that are meant to be on antidepressants
for 90 days or or six months or on antidepressants for 12 or 14 or 16 years because the issue in
many cases is a deficiency in neurotransmitters now remember with regard to serotonin which is
how many of us um and and in the medical community depression. If you have low serotonin, then
the question is, where is serotonin made? Where do we get serotonin? You can't just eat a serotonin
sandwich. There are not serotonin capsules that you can take to magically raise your serotonin.
Serotonin is a neurotransmitter that is actually methylated in the gut. Remember, 90% of the
serotonin in your body is here. So if you don't have it here,
you can't have it here, which is often why depression does not begin in our outside
environment through a cluster of symptoms. It actually begins right here in our gut
through a process called methylation. There are genetic tests you can do to see if your
methylation is working properly, or you can look to supplement for some of the key nutrients that are very often linked to depressive symptoms. I'm going to put a couple
clinical studies in the link below that show that certain deficiencies in things like methylfolate,
SAMe, and certain B vitamins, what's called methylated B vitamins, the bioavailable form
of B vitamins, can actually be the physiologic link between your body being able to methylate neurotransmitters,
create neurotransmitters, and have adequate levels of them to support healthy mood,
and actually being depressed on and off throughout your entire lifetime.
If you've ever been depressed or you know somebody that's suffered from depression,
very often there's not a specific trigger that's causing it. There's not a specific life event that
you can point to that says this person or I am depressed because of this specific event. And if
that's something that you're suffering from or a loved one is suffering from, you're going to want
to read the clinical studies below because it may very well be a nutrient deficiency and not something coming from a cluster of
symptoms so back to serotonin for a second if we understand that serotonin is methylated in the gut
we take a neurotransmitter called tryptophan the one that's famous for making you sleepy
after thanksgiving dinner and we take tryptophan and we methylate it into the neurotransmitter serotonin.
Imagine if this methylation process is impaired
because you have a deficiency in certain B vitamins.
You have a deficiency in methyl B12.
You have a deficiency in methylfolate or acidenosylmethionine.
These are just fancy names for vitamins, minerals, and amino acids that are
naturally found in the human body. But several of these are actually converted by the body
into their usable form. And 44% of the population has a gene mutation that does not allow them to
properly convert these types of vitamins. So it's not just that you need to supplement, because I find that a lot of people just supplement for the sake of supplementing.
We need to supplement with the methylated forms of vitamins, meaning the most bioavailable,
already broken down form of a vitamin. For example, you've probably heard of folic acid or folate.
Well, folic acid and folate are methylated,
broken down by the body into something called methylfolate, 5-methylfolate. If you can't make
this conversion and you have a deficiency, it may be this deficiency that is impairing your ability
to synthesize serotonin and causing depression that you've had on and off throughout your entire
lifetime that doesn't really have a specific trigger that you can point to or traumatic event
that you can point to that's causing your depression. So two things I would encourage
you to do. Number one, if you are supplementing with multivitamins or other amino acids, minerals,
nutrients of any kind, look to see that these supplements
are methylated. See if it says the methylated form of this supplement. That's the first thing.
And the second thing, if you really want to take a deep dive, you can have a genetic test done
and you can look at what genetic abnormalities you might have that are causing certain nutrients in
your body not to be able to convert into the
usable form. The nice thing about genetic testing is that you only do these tests once in your
entire lifetime. You'll never repeat these tests. It's your genes. We don't really fix genes. We can
turn them on and off and we can actually supplement for their function or for their deficiency. But there are four of five participants
in a recent clinical study that did report
a significant reduction up to an 85% reduction
in the incidence of anxiety and depression
just by supplementing with methylated nutrients.
So I hope you found this video helpful
because it's just science.