The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka - 110. Dr. Aseem Malhotra: High Cholesterol Is NOT Killing You & Here's The Science
Episode Date: October 31, 2024The shocking truth about cholesterol and heart disease that Big Pharma doesn't want you to know! In this explosive episode of Ultimate Human podcast, host Gary Brecka sits down with renowned cardiolog...ist Dr. Aseem Malhotra to uncover the startling truth about cholesterol, heart disease, and the pharmaceutical industry's influence on medical research. Whether you're currently taking statins, concerned about your cholesterol, or simply interested in understanding the truth about heart disease prevention, this episode is a must-watch. Don't miss this conversation that challenges everything you thought you knew about cardiovascular health. Connect with Dr. Aseem Malhotra: Get Dr. Aseem Malhotra book, “A Statin-Free Life”: https://theultimatehuman.com/book-recs Watch Dr. Aseem's eye-opening documentary "Do No Pharm" to learn how we can fix our broken healthcare system: https://bit.ly/4gVZ4IK For more information on Dr. Aseem Malhotra visit: https://bit.ly/4dCGKRZ Follow Dr. Aseem Malhotra on Instagram: https://bit.ly/4dFY2gY Follow Dr. Aseem Malhotra on X.com: https://bit.ly/4eXnL5O Follow Dr. Aseem Malhotra on Facebook: https://bit.ly/48ghD6F Follow Dr. Aseem Malhotra on TikTok: https://bit.ly/4eZyHjr 00:00 Intro of Show and Guest 02:34 Why Most Published Research Findings Are False 04:55 LDL Not a Risk Factor For Heart Disease 06:10 Cholesterol, Stress, and Artery Damage 09:15 The Power of Rajyoga Meditation to Reverse Blockages 13:18 Starting a Meditative Journey GET WEEKLY TIPS FROM GARY ON HOW TO OPTIMIZE YOUR HEALTH AND LIFESTYLE ROUTINES: https://bit.ly/4eLDbdU EIGHT SLEEP - USE CODE “GARY” TO GET $350 OFF THE POD 4 ULTRA: https://bit.ly/3WkLd6E ECHO GO PLUS HYDROGEN WATER BOTTLE: https://bit.ly/3xG0Pb8 BODY HEALTH - USE CODE “ULTIMATE20” FOR 20% OFF YOUR ORDER: http://bit.ly/4e5IjsV TAKE YOUR STRENGTH TO THE NEXT LEVEL! SHOP THE ULTIMATE HUMAN STRENGTH TRAINING EQUIPMENT: https://bit.ly/3zYwtSl SUPERCHARGE YOUR RECOVERY AND OPTIMIZE YOUR WELL-BEING WITH THE ULTIMATE HUMAN PLUNGE. CLICK THE LINK TO DIVE INTO OUR LINEUP OF COLD PLUNGES: https://bit.ly/4eULUKp KETTLE AND FIRE PREMIUM & 100% GRASS-FED BONE BROTH - USE CODE “ULTIMATEHUMAN” FOR 20% OFF YOUR ORDER: https://bit.ly/3BaTzW5 Discover top-rated products and exclusive deals. Shop now and elevate your everyday essentials with just a click!: https://theultimatehuman.com/amazon-recs Watch “The Ultimate Human Podcast with Gary Brecka” every Tuesday and Thursday at 9AM ET on YouTube: https://bit.ly/3RPQYX8 Follow Gary Brecka on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3RPpnFs Follow Gary Brecka on TikTok: https://bit.ly/4coJ8fo Follow Gary Brecka on Facebook: https://bit.ly/464VA1H Follow The Ultimate Human on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3VP9JuR Follow The Ultimate Human on TikTok: https://bit.ly/3XIusTX Follow The Ultimate Human on Facebook: https://bit.ly/3Y5pPDJ SUBSCRIBE TO: https://www.youtube.com/@ultimatehumanpodcast https://www.youtube.com/@garybrecka Download “The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka” podcast on all your favorite platforms: https://bit.ly/3RQftU0 The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka 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
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The greater the financial interest in a given field,
the less likely the research findings are to be true.
The most lucrative drug in the history of medicine are statins.
Most of those people taking statins are either low-risk or high-risk primary prevention.
Over a five-year period taking a statin, the benefit is one in a hundred.
Big data proved otherwise that there was no correlation between
elevated LDL cholesterol and events of cardiovascular disease.
Actually, there is a correlation between LDL cholesterol and longevity. So the higher LDL,
the longer you're going to live because it has a vital role in the immune system.
So just because cholesterol is at the scene of the crime doesn't mean it's a perpetrator.
What causes this to become inflamed? How does stress directly impact that?
Chronic stress is a risk factor for heart disease,
proven to be equivalent to the risk of smoking having high blood pressure or having type 2
diabetes and that is another one of those modifiable risk factors most
chronic disease happens within us not happens to us so you recommend focusing
on meditative therapies indirectly reduce your risk of cardiovascular
disease this is really the root you know a part, if not the main part of the solution to... Hey guys, welcome back to the Ultimate Human Podcast. Today's short is with
British cardiologist, Dr. Asim Malhotra.ra we just shot a full podcast you've got to go check
out the full podcast you also have to check out his documentary do no farm p-h-a-r-m fascinating
it's about two hours long it's worth the watch get your family around and uh some popcorn and
watch this documentary but um uh his work is just fascinating to me because he has gone from full-blown cardiologist,
well, he's still a cardiologist, to really being an advocate for lifestyle intervention
and lifestyle modification as a way to really impact the health and longevity of humanity.
And as soon as the podcast ended, we started talking about, you know, statin therapy.
And, you know, we covered all kinds of
things on the full-length podcast. And there's so many of you that have elevated levels of LDL
cholesterol and the rest of your panel is normal. And I get so many questions about why do I try to
vilify pharmaceutical intervention in statins?
Well, I'm not a physician. Dr. Malhotra is.
So I'd love to just open up a quick conversation with him about the history of statins and some of the work that he's published exposing the research into statin therapy for LDL cholesterol and how it may not be linked, may not be the villain for cardiovascular disease that
it's been vilified to be. Does that sound accurate? Yeah, yeah. I mean, actually, if you take a step
back before I explain that, John Ioannidis is, I call him the Stephen Hawking of medicine. He's
professor of medicine at Stanford, most cited medical researcher in the world, statistical
genius. And he published a paper, which is the
most downloaded paper in the history of medicine, Gary, in 2006 in PLOS One, why most published
research findings are false. And he gives risk factors for false research. And one of them,
he says, is the greater the financial interests in a given field, the less likely the research findings are to be true.
No way.
Now that's relevant because the most lucrative drug in the history of medicine, and one of the
most lucrative, trillion dollar industry, are statins prescribed to between 200 million and
maybe a billion people worldwide. Right? So can we apply that to statins, that concept?
Absolutely.
Most of those people taking statins are what we call haven't had a heart attack or been diagnosed with severe blockage.
They are either low risk or what we call high risk primary prevention before having an event and they've been prescribed a statin.
What they are not told, Gary, is, and this is absolute fact, this is not me selecting data.
Right. By the way, I'm going to pull some of this and put the links in the show notes so people can
reference this. So over a five-year period, taking a statin based upon industry-sponsored trials,
which have never been independently verified, so likely best case scenario. This is the exact
conversation I have with patients, by the way, what I'm telling you, that the benefit is one in a hundred. So in preventing a non-fatal heart
attack or stroke and not prolonging your life by one day. Now I tell the patients that information
to help them make a decision. And most patients understand me, Gary say, well, to be honest,
doc, I don't think that's very good odds. Right. And then there's anything else I can do. And of
course we then talk about other lifestyle changes. when it comes to ldl lowering that is absolutely not part of what
i do as a cardiologist because the data tells us and you know this for many years right probably
years before i i said it without scientific data behind us just because the statistics proved
otherwise the big data proved otherwise that there was no correlation between
elevated ldl cholesterol on its own yes and events of cardiovascular absolutely as an independent
risk factor when you correct for what we call triglycerides and hdl right which are all linked
to insulin resistance can be rapidly improved with diet ldl is not an independent risk factor
for heart disease and the ones that were um uh independent risk
factors or had an impact on independent risk factors like lipo little a didn't even have
you know pharmaceutical uh options at the time absolutely to lower in fact i think as as we sit
here today i'm not sure that there is any no there isn't a pharmaceutical there isn't they still they
try and get people on statins or other cholesterol-lowering drugs, and that's the very single-minded bad science approach, if you like.
But the other side of it isn't just about the fact that lowering LDL has no harm.
We know, certainly in older populations, that actually there is a correlation between LDL, cholesterol, and longevity.
So the higher your LDL, if you're over 60, the longer you're going to live statistically.
Absolutely.
Because it has a vital role in the immune system.
Yes.
So talk a little bit about the role of cholesterol
in plaquing, scarring, narrowing of the arteries.
And how this mechanism, you know, I think earlier,
I used the analogy that, you know,
when there's a fire, the firemen show up.
It's called to that site. So cholesterol is kind of like the firemen show up. It's called to that site.
So cholesterol is kind of like the fireman, right?
It shows up to the site of damage.
So is it the damage that is the risk factor or is it the cholesterol that is the risk factor?
Can you expand upon that?
So just because cholesterol is at the scene of the crime doesn't mean it's a perpetrator.
Right.
It didn't pull the trigger.
Absolutely not.
And cholesterol really is a response.
So we find cholesterol in these deposits,
what we call these fatty deposits
in the inner lining of the artery,
we call these plaques.
In layman's terms, that's furring of the arteries.
But they're also there with lots of immune cells as well.
So there's been a damage to the lining of the inner artery,
which is caused by things like smoking or high sugar diets, for example.
Insulin resistance.
Stress, right?
And then the response to that damage to try and heal the artery
is when you get these deposits and cholesterol is there.
So cholesterol is not the driver.
It just happens to be at the scene of the crime.
And when you say there's damage to the artery, I think people are like, what causes damage to the artery? I mean, like glasses not
floating around your bloodstream, nicking your arteries. So what causes this arterial wall to
become inflamed? How does stress directly impact that? Because that was another fascinating part
of our discussion on the podcast and in my kitchen
before the podcast um but can you touch on that the impact of stress on cardiovascular disease
because i don't think many of us are realizing it's absolutely fascinating so the mechanism and
that's been shown in in one very interesting study published in the lancet is that when you have high levels of stress, your body produces more inflammatory
cytokines, inflammatory markers, and more clotting factors. And that's the likely mechanism,
the primary likely mechanism of how heart disease can be caused by chronic stress.
And most of us are not dealing with it. And the level at which why that's a problem,
Gary, is that chronic stress as a risk factor for heart disease
is now being proven to be equivalent to the risk of smoking 20 cigarettes a day,
having high blood pressure, or having type 2 diabetes.
Wow, that is incredible.
And that is another one of those modifiable risk factors.
Absolutely.
In mortality, we used to call these modifiable risk factors. Absolutely. In mortality, we used to call these modifiable risk factors,
and they would be things like diet, lifestyle, exercise, sleep,
the things that the patient could control.
And I think that there's a vast majority of people
that really just feel like disease is something that happens to me.
You know, I woke up one day and I caught this disease.
And the truth is that it happens within you, right? I mean,
most chronic disease happens within us, not happens to us. Trauma happens to us, but rarely
does disease just happen upon us. And so you recommend whole food diets, exercise, but there
was a very specific form of meditation that you told me was um in this
published study where they looked at the um excitement uh of the amygdala the emotional
area of the brain and how it correlated to the release of certain uh inflammatory factors and how
you know focusing on meditative therapies could actually reduce these inflammatory factors
and therefore indirectly reduce your risk of cardiovascular disease.
Yeah.
To understand this as well,
I think we have to start from understanding that
or acknowledging that heart disease is not fixed.
Again, we were taught in medical school,
high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes is a chronic progressive disease. The same thing, artery clogs up over time, gets bigger and bigger.
You may have a heart attack at some point, you may have a complete blockage.
But the reality is because heart disease is a chronic inflammatory process, it means potentially
it can be reversed. And the best data I've seen, the most extraordinary data I've seen,
which comes out in the documentary, is from India, where this cardiologist for two decades has been adopting a lifestyle approach with his patients. But when he
did a study looking at those patients' coronary arteries, where they had blockages that were at
least 50 to 70%, so we'd say moderate to severe blockages, he found after a couple of years
repeating their coronary angiograms that their blockages had reduced by an average of 20% in the people that edited to the lifestyle program. But then he asked himself
the question, what was it? Was it the high fiber vegetarian diet in this particular case,
because they were devout Hindus? Was it the exercise, two 30 minute brisk walks a day?
No.
Or was it the third intervention, something called Raj Yog meditation for 40 minutes a day?
And the only independent factor in reversal
of the blockages was the Rajyog meditation. That is fascinating to me, the reversal of the
blockages, because I think most people that are watching this right now think that you can not
continue to narrow an artery if you have a blockage, but there's no way that you could reverse that. And again,
I'm not aware of any pharmaceutical interventions that target dissolving fibrinogen clotting or
fibrinogen clotting or what have you. So the thought that we could actually intervene and
maybe reverse some of that. Yeah, it's extraordinary. I had to see it to believe it,
right? And you can see, now people can. I had to see it to believe it, right?
And you can see,
now people can argue
if you're being a good scientist,
okay, this wasn't a randomized study,
et cetera, et cetera.
But most cardiologists,
in fact, I would say all cardiologists
and doctors won't even believe
it's possible to reverse it.
So I'm going there to India.
I'm looking at these angiograms pre and post.
You physically went there and-
To see them myself.
And the patients came with their stories. there were scores of patients who turned up who wanted
to tell their stories of their transformation of their lifestyle but what they emphasize gary
which i think it takes things to another level um and i think we can give a plausible explanation
for this even biologically is it was a spiritual transformation for them they introduced this sort
of breath work meditation practice but it went beyond that you know he would get the the families
in with the cardiac patients for seven days in this ashram of talk about what's causing the manga
and stress their relationships their work and it was all of that really treating all of that and
these people you know became more spiritual if you like broke addictions and i think all of that together you know everything comes back
ultimately to the mind in my view and where we're going wrong in society is our loss of connection
with what it means to be human loss of connection to nature loss of connection to each other
this is really the root um is you know is a big part, if not the main part of the solution to saving humanity from the current trajectory we're going in, which is very, very bleak at the moment.
And it gives us hope that there is something where can someone find out, where could they start
a journey towards meditation? Because, you know, as a full confession, I've tried many, many times
to meditate. I've had guided meditation. My wife and I went to a nine-day Ayurvedic retreat in
the Boone Mountains in the Carolinas, which was amazing. And I got a lot out of it. You know,
we did some chanting at the end of the day. We ate all, you know, Ayurvedic foods for the week.
And I did some guided meditation sessions. I do breath work every morning and I do horizon
gazing and I allow sunlight in my eyes. And immediately when I'm done that session,
which cost me zero, I feel demonstratively better. And a part of it is I just try to focus on my
breath. I horizon gaze and try actually not to allow thoughts to enter into my mind. And I do,
you know, three rounds of 30 breaths, I would say of all the things that
I have in my routine, that's not only the most consistent, but it's, it's the one that is the
most portable, I can take it anywhere that I go, you know, when you have red light therapy beds,
or, you know, PMF mats in your bed, they're hard to take with you when you when you travel,
but the breathwork you can travel with.
Where could somebody find out how to practice this style of meditation
and how long does it take for someone to do this?
And do you do it?
Yeah, I try to follow my own advice.
Absolutely, Gary.
I do.
That's good to hear.
Especially when people like us,
when we're sticking our head above the parapet,
there are obviously lots of external, you know, obstacles that come our way.
And yeah, I do about 40 minutes, 30 to 40 minutes of breath work first thing in the morning and do a diaphragmatic breathing.
I personally, I learned this from a cardiac nurse who's in my documentary, who, you know, individualizes a bit of psychotherapy and breath work for my patients.
So she taught me how to do this. But, you know, I've, I've, I think if people, if they want a very easy, simple way,
I think if they just go to YouTube and, you know, and look at, um, doing breathwork properly,
and it's a form of diaphragmatic breathing specifically, they can at least start from
that perspective. Diaphragmatic breathing. And what was the form of meditation that you referred
to? It's called Raj Yoga. Raj Yoga. R-A-J. R-A-J, which means king. Uh-huh.
Yoga.
Yoga.
Raj Yoga.
Raj Yoga Meditation.
Okay, Raj Yoga Meditation.
Yeah.
So, guys, I just wanted to run a quick podcast short with Dr. Malhotra.
Please check out the full-length podcast.
But what we've been saying for so many years, the big data is going to set us free.
We knew years ago that big data was pointing to this fallacy that LDL cholesterol is linked to cardiovascular disease and that the lower the better, the higher the worse, even though in the data that we were looking at, LDL cholesterol as it rose was a marker for longevity, not cardiovascular disease.
So it's so nice to be vindicated by practicing cardiologists like yourself that have the data to back it up.
And thank you again for taking the extra time to do this podcast short.
And as always, guys, that's just science.