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Gut issues often stem from dysbiosis, an imbalance in the gut microbiome. This microbiome comprises both beneficial and pathogenic microbes. When this balance is disrupted, dysbiosis occurs. Dysbiosis can cause various health problems, ranging from fatigue and weakened immunity to chronic conditions like irritable bowel syndrome, Crohn's disease, or asthma.

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Speaker 0 describes being on the front line in Miami and using vitamin C as a go-to, questioning whether it is taken orally and in what amount. Speaker 1 confirms oral administration and notes taking a lot of vitamin C due to exposure and concern. Speaker 0 explains that a scientist contacted them after testing their sample, asking if they noticed their Bifidobacteria levels had risen fourfold. The speaker reveals they had been taking high dosages of vitamin C, which prompted a shift in approach. While dealing with treating COVID-19 patients and assessing stools in high-risk and severe cases, they decided to consult naturopaths and collect stool samples before and after treatment to evaluate the impact. Speaker 1 recounts that they began making phone calls, offering to pay for stool samples before and after on patients treated with vitamin C. They collected about twenty to twenty-five samples and observed that vitamin C increased Bifidobacteria. This finding led to publishing research showing that vitamin C increases Bifidobacteria in vitro, and they extended this to show an increase in patients as well. Key points: - Vitamin C was used as a primary approach by a frontline clinician in Miami, with emphasis on oral administration. - A scientist noted a fourfold increase in Bifidobacteria, prompting a change in strategy toward investigating vitamin C’s effects. - They initiated a program to collect stool samples before and after vitamin C treatment in COVID-19 patients, collaborating with naturopathic practitioners and funding the stool analyses themselves. - About 20–25 samples were analyzed, revealing that vitamin C increased Bifidobacteria. - They published a paper demonstrating the increase of Bifidobacteria with vitamin C both in vitro and in patient samples.

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Two things to look at with gut health: 'one that your digestion is working properly' and 'you don't have any gut infections.' The speaker cites examples: 'This patient, their fats were not being broken down. Were having some stomach acidity issues and it was actually causing some really, really bad breath.' 'So this patient here had a yeast overgrowth, a Candida overgrowth going on. And this other patient had a bacterial, two actually bacterial infections that were occurring.' 'We can work on this once we actually isolate and figure out for you what's going on inside of your gut.' 'We can actually send this testing to you to get done locally.' Then 'we can sit down and go over it with you.' 'We can also do fifteen minute consults just to make sure that we're a good fit for each other.' 'So go to the link in our bio and schedule that appointment.'

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"You're in the same." "If if, you're depressed, you're not deficient in a serotonin reuptake inhibitor, right?" "You you're deficient generally in serotonin." "And serotonin is made in the gut through this process called methylation." "90% of the serotonin in our bodies resides in our gut." "So if you don't have it here, you can't have it here." "Right." "So depression rarely begins in an outside cluster of symptoms." "It usually begins in the gut."

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Speaker 0 states, "We're not trained to be proactive. We're not trained to be preventive. We're not trained to look at the cause," noting medicine is changing toward function health and deep dives. A "functional health panel" was used to assess risk factors. The caller later faced a heart scare and underwent a cardiovascular workup. "You're 53 now," he says, and explains that at 53 tests begin, including a cardiovascular assessment. Earlier, "the old school traditional MRI" suggested a buildup in the circumflex artery. This prompted a recommendation for a multi-month medication, though he hesitated. He called the doctor, who said: "hold on. Let's not jump to conclusions. I don't want you getting on that right now. There's a couple of steps here I think that we can do."

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The speaker commonly uses an elimination diet, removing problematic foods for 21-28 days before reintroducing them. They don't administer allergy or food sensitivity tests, believing that healing the gut should allow people to eat those foods again. The speaker notes that dairy is a problem for them, and they can only tolerate a small amount of pasture-raised cheese. They avoid whey protein and dairy, and they wonder if this is due to gut issues, as they have very regular bowel movements, going several times a day after meals.

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Biologics for Crohn's disease are 'a great product to stop Crohn's disease, to decrease inflammation, but you have to keep taking it on a monthly basis. For the rest of your life?' The speaker argues, 'So basically you're not fixing the problem, you're just suppressing the inflammation.' The core issue is to 'find the reason why this happened to begin with,' but 'we've kinda stepped away from' the old approach: 'There used to be a time where we would do a whole workup on patients with Crohn's disease. You know is it tuberculosis? Is it, you know, is it a parasite, right, that's causing, Crohn's disease? Is it medications that they're taking?' And now, when symptoms arise, 'let's put them on a biologic.' So 'we're basically putting them on medications' that remind the patient they have Crohn's, affecting mental status, freedom, and travel: 'What does that do to your mental status? ... What does that do to your freedom to go travel?' Biologics are 'great for the moment' to decrease suffering, but when we have something else that could fix the problem once and for all, we need to start looking at that.

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"The public is tired. They're tired of the old science. They're tired you know, antibiotics were great." "I trained in the world of antibiotics where we were giving antibiotics for everything." "then came the biologics, and then it became biologics for everything." "And now we're in the pill poop level, and it's gonna be pill poop for everything, you know." "So science is only good as science is during the moment in time where the research is not advanced." "What me and doctor Barodi do is we're the innovators." "We're the ones that are basically on the frontline challenging the status quo and saying, why not look for this?" "Why isn't Crohn's mycobacterial paratuberculosis? And why shouldn't I look for it?"

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Speaker 1 discusses a published case linking the gut microbiome to cognitive impairment. The paper centers on a patient with Clostridium difficile and a mini-mental state exam (MMSE) of 21, who could not remember much or engage in activities like golfing. The intervention involved transplanting the microbiome from the patient’s wife into the patient, after which the MMSE improved from 21 to 26 to 29, and the patient began remembering his daughter’s date of birth. This case was the first reported instance of using the wife’s fecal matter to implant into the husband. It prompted consideration of connections between Alzheimer's disease and gut problems. Dr. Sheldon Jordan encouraged analyzing the stools of patients with Alzheimer's to examine their microbiomes. Dr. Barodo (Barote), a pioneer of fecal transplant, explained that fecal transplant is the procedure where stools from a healthy donor are put into a patient with C. difficile; it is the only FDA-approved indication in America. While the transplant is used to treat C. difficile, in this case it appeared to improve Alzheimer's symptoms. The speaker contacted Dr. Barodi (Barodi) to publish the case, and it took a long time to publish. This experience contributed to the exploration of a gut–brain connection. The brain is connected to the bowels via blood vessels, nerves, and lymphatics, making it possible for gut contents to influence the brain and vice versa. Microbes secrete substances, including methane gas, which could affect the brain if overproduced by certain gut microbes. The case suggested there is something meaningful going on in the microbiome, leading to the idea that the best way forward is to advance science by studying the microbiome of the brain and the gut together. The speaker notes that microbiome research is in its infancy and much work remains to be done in this space.

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"If you look at kids if you look at patients with anxiety, okay, and you because ADHD, anxiety, similar, pattern in the microbiome anyways. So if you look at patients with anxiety, and now I'm taking my anxious patient, and I see a signature microbiome. Some microbes are overgrown, some microbes are low, and what I'm gonna do is I'm basically gonna give that patient a drug. That drug is blunting here the anxiety. Right?" "But it doesn't fix the microbiome." "You have a signature microbiome for anxiety." "Well, the drugs are great because they're working up here." "They're not working at the gut level. So this the anxiety problem is still there." "Do you think people who have ADHD don't have ADHD and they actually just have anxiety?" "I think people with ADHD are lacking microbes. That's what I think." "And the medication doesn't help at all?" "I I think it probably cuts down the symptoms, but I don't think it fix The root." "which is the the business model of most drugs, by the way."

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The speaker discusses personal experiences with their microbiome and the role of vitamin C in recovering gut bacteria after a disruption. They note that when they killed their microbiome, they had zero, and then saw a reappearance of bacteria with vitamin C. They raise questions about whether remnants or precursor forms of bifidobacteria were missed by testing, and whether there are unknown factors from the microbiome that weren’t captured. They describe this as a future area of study: determining how much vitamin C to administer, for how long, and whether to use it short-term or long-term. The speaker shares their own recovery process after wiping out their microbiome, mentioning that it took a long time and involved tracking bifidobacteria until it stabilized. Once stability was achieved, they felt back to normal and stopped using supplements, returning to their pre-pandemic routine. They describe this as “refloralization,” a term they coined to describe bringing back the flora and microbes to resemble what they were before, acknowledging that no one has their exact pre-pandemic microbiome signature. They express hope that future efforts—ideally in collaboration with a government agency—will make stool assays available to the public so long-haulers can understand their gut health, including the status of bifidobacteria and how dietary factors might affect it. The speaker emphasizes that addressing long-hauler symptoms requires attention to bifidobacteria in the gut and understanding which foods promote or diminish it, including which meats are beneficial or not. They acknowledge that giving practical hints is complex because many factors influence bifidobacteria. They illustrate this with an analogy: a personal conflict the night before could reduce bifidobacteria, underscoring how daily events can impact gut health. The speaker also notes personal changes in temperament, describing themselves as previously a fireball who would engage in conflicts, but who has become calmer as stress responses shift, particularly in light of stressful news or retracted papers. They conclude with a sense of resilience, joking about not being overly affected by setbacks and maintaining confidence in their ongoing adaptation.

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In December 2020, the speaker began collecting stool samples from colleagues before and after their COVID vaccination to study the vaccine's impact on the microbiome. The speaker discovered that mRNA vaccines killed bifidobacteria but believed these findings were unpublishable due to the prevailing narrative. The speaker presented this research as an abstract at the American College of Gastroenterology in October 2022, where it won a research award, beating 6,000 other abstracts. This abstract drew the attention of 18,000 GI doctors, who began to consider that the loss of bifidobacteria may explain why they contracted COVID after vaccination. Further research indicated persistent damage to bifidobacteria from the vaccine. The speaker's presentation also linked the loss of bifidobacteria to Crohn's disease, Lyme disease, and invasive cancer.

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Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 describe findings from studying COVID and the gut microbiome, focusing on bifidobacteria. They state that their lab was the one to detect COVID in stool samples. Their central questions were what COVID does to the microbiome and how long the virus remains in the gut. They observed that one patient had COVID for up to 45 days after respiratory symptoms resolved, and another case showed the virus detectable for up to a year and a half after respiratory symptoms ended. This led them to investigate differences between people who do and do not get COVID, including households with similar exposures. A key observation was linked to bifidobacteria. They note that a difference between individuals who stayed healthy and those who contracted COVID was the level of bifidobacteria. They point out that bifidobacteria are the bacteria commonly advertised as probiotics, present in newborns and that aging is associated with its decline. They emphasize bifidobacteria as an important microbe for the microbiome and its potential role in health outcomes. The discussion includes an example: a farmer who kissed his COVID-positive wife and did not get COVID himself had high microbial diversity and a good amount of bifidobacteria, suggesting resilience due to microbial composition, including bifidobacteria. They extend the implication to mental health, noting that loss of bifidobacteria has been observed in anxiety and bipolar disorder, while acknowledging this is not the only microbe involved in those conditions. Another function attributed to bifidobacteria is aiding digestion: they help break down food to release sugars that enter cells, and assist in releasing calcium. The speakers contrast this with the broader focus on mitochondria and mitochondrial function, arguing that gut microbes initiate the process by breaking down food in the bowels to supply sugars and calcium for cellular processes. In summary, their findings indicate that people with higher bifidobacteria are more resilient to COVID and healthier, whereas those with lower bifidobacteria correlate with greater vulnerability; bifidobacteria play a role in sugar absorption, calcium release, and overall metabolic and potentially mental health outcomes. Speaker 1 and Speaker 0 confirm: people with more bifidobacteria were more resilient and did not get sick from COVID, while those who got very sick did not have enough bifidobacteria or had low levels.

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Speaker 0: You ask whether there has been any success or attribution of improvement to addressing SIBO, which has become a chronic condition that is usually treated with antibiotics. Speaker 1: This is like a band-aid approach. I always think that science serves best with the tools available at any given time. When a new technology arrives that provides another tool, science advances, and what we believed to be true yesterday may no longer hold. At this juncture, what gastroenterology knows is antibiotics, because the focus is on killing the microbe. I am coming from a more controversial angle in the sense that I’m proposing a shift: stop killing, start building. What we have noticed when testing patients with SIBO is that if you fix the dysbiosis, the colonic dysbiosis, you’re fixing the SIBO. In my humble opinion, SIBO starts with gut dysbiosis and leaky gut. For those who aren’t familiar with the term, gut dysbiosis in layman’s terms is essentially the balance, or rather the imbalance, between the good and the bad microbes as far as we know. Speaker 0: So the key idea being discussed is that the current standard approach to SIBO—antibiotics aimed at eliminating the microbial population—may be limited because it treats the symptom (microbial overgrowth) rather than addressing the underlying ecosystem imbalance in the gut. The speaker emphasizes that improvements in SIBO may be achieved by first correcting the gut’s microbial balance (dysbiosis) and the integrity of the gut lining (leaky gut), rather than solely aiming to kill microbes. Speaker 1: The implication is that the treatment paradigm could shift from a primary emphasis on antimicrobial eradication to strategies that restore a healthy microbiome and gut barrier function, with the assertion that such restoration could reduce or resolve SIBO. This view frames dysbiosis as the starting point for SIBO, suggesting that addressing microbial balance and gut permeability could have a direct impact on the condition. Speaker 0: In summary, the dialogue contrasts the conventional antibiotic-focused approach with a proposed one that prioritizes rebuilding the gut’s microbial ecosystem and improving gut barrier health as a means to address SIBO at its roots.

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Speaker 0 explains that in the probiotic market, one out of 17 probiotics on the market has real bacteria in there, meaning 16 out of 17 say Bifidobacteria on the label but don’t actually have it. He adds that three out of 26 yogurts or drinks that say bifidobacteria on the market have bifidobacteria; the rest do not. He then asks about verification and testing. Speaker 1 asks if there is any way to know by looking at the label, and whether testing exists. Speaker 0 says you can call the lab Progena Biome to test, and there are other labs that do spot checks. He notes another problem: whether the microbe is alive or dead. Bifidobacteria in the gut are anaerobic, so exposing capsules to air may kill them, and stomach acid could also kill them before they reach the gut. He reframes the question: what does dead bacteria do to a live microbiome? He compares it to sleeping with corpses and suggests eventual effects on the microbiome and potential diseases, reflecting his viewpoint. Speaker 0 then raises another issue: by taking probiotics, are you suppressing your own gut production, similar to taking pancreatic enzymes which helps digestion but may shut down the pancreas’s own secretion? He questions whether taking oral enzymes could cause damage by reducing the body's own production. He explains that their approach is research-focused: they test patients with a stool test in the research world, then determine what the probiotic is doing, and implement a protocol with the right probiotic, the right prebiotic, the right bovine, and the right vitamins to see if the patient improves. If it works, great; if not, they reassess why the probiotic didn’t work—whether the probiotic was killed in the gut or interacted with certain bowel areas and became inactivated or transformed. Speaker 0 notes that he doesn’t talk about which probiotics upfront because they are still testing. He mentions several probiotics he is testing and acknowledges that not everybody responds similarly. They must understand why a probiotic works in some patients but not in others. Overall, the discussion centers on probiotic quality, viability, and personalized testing to determine effectiveness, along with concerns about dead bacteria, potential suppression of natural gut processes, and the need for ongoing research to explain variable patient responses.

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During the conversation on nutrition and supplements, I was amazed by how we started focusing on gut health. You said, 'let's look at what you're eating.' I responded, 'you're gonna laugh at what I'm eating because I ate the same thing every day for years.'

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The traditional view of the gastrointestinal tract as a barrier to large molecules is inaccurate. Microbes in the colon break down substances like sugar, enabling them to enter cells where mitochondria and the Krebs cycle utilize them. If these microbes are lacking due to dysbiosis, sugar may not enter cells. Leaky gut, where large molecules and bacteria parts enter the blood, is a concept linked to dysbiosis. Dr. Sahil Khanna's work showed restoring the gut microbiome improved chronic UTIs, suggesting a connection between lost microbes and such conditions. Overemphasis on killing microbes, as seen during the pandemic and in Lyme disease treatment, can harm the microbiome. It's crucial to focus on replenishing the gut after antimicrobial treatments, similar to C. diff treatment where vancomycin is followed by microbiome restoration.

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Speaker 1 discusses probiotics and the current state of microbiome science: taking random probiotics may be questionable because the technology of the microbiome is not FDA-approved yet. The reason is that there are many bacteria in the microbiome and we don’t know what they are, what they do, whether they’re good or bad. For example, blotia and Rosaburia are poorly understood; 90% of GI colleagues don’t know blotia is a microbe, and 90% don’t know there’s such a thing as Rosaburia. Historically trained on Klebsiella pneumoniae, E. coli, Salmonella, C. difficile, Clostridium perfringens, but not on nonpathogenic microbes. The question remains: is blotia a good bug or a bad bug, and who has too high or too low levels? This represents the abyss of the microbiome and is still research, not consumer product or standard medical practice. Speaker 1 explains that doctors cannot be told to use a new stool test or to start using microbiome data broadly until researchers reproduce findings and doctors see the data for themselves. The idea is that oncologists may notice correlations, such as loss of bifidobacteria in invasive cancer, and observe improvements in cancer alongside bifidobacteria, which could influence acceptance of the gut-brain or microbiome link. However, such observations need replication to move from incidental findings to established conclusions. An example given is Colleen Kelly at Brown University, who published two cases of alopecia areata with C. difficile where hair grew back after fecal transplant. The question is whether fecal transplant for alopecia areata is valid; however, an academic center trying to reproduce the data could not. The speaker suggests uncertainty about whether a specific microbe caused hair regrowth or if exposure during treatment led to it. Until data are reproduced, no one can claim alopecia areata is improved by fecal transplant or microbiota transplant. Concluding guidance: if you’re healthy, keep doing what you’re doing and do nothing else; if you’re not healthy and have multiple diseases and you’ve tried a probiotic, if it works, continue, but if it doesn’t work, then it’s probably not a great probiotic. The overarching theme is careful interpretation, replication, and recognition that microbiome science is still evolving and not yet ready for universal clinical application.

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The speaker states that for most autistic children they work with, including their own son, autism symptoms have multiple causes, but when a single cause is identified, the child often improves significantly. Gut health is presented as a key factor, with parents frequently reporting constipation or diarrhea in their children. The speaker attributes this to dietary changes over the last 80-100 years, citing the introduction of processed foods like Weetabix and cereal. They claim that these foods alter the gut microbiome, which communicates with the brain. Therefore, healing the gut and improving the gut microbiome can decrease a child's autism symptoms.

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- "a great product to stop Crohn's disease, to decrease inflammation, but you have to keep taking it on a monthly basis." - "So basically you're not fixing the problem, you're just suppressing the inflammation." - "The problem is find the reason why this happened to begin with." - "There used to be a time where we would do a whole workup on patients with Crohn's disease." - "And now we've kinda stepped away from that." - "We're not fixing the problem that stops these people from having Crohn's to begin with. We're basically putting them on medications." - "The problem with the medication is that now the kid is being reminded that he has Crohn's disease every single month." - "So he's identified."

Mind Pump Show

THIS Supplement Improves Strength & Muscle Mass, Here's HOW | Mind Pump 2306
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The discussion centers around muscle-building supplements, highlighting that most fall short except for creatine, with probiotics emerging as a surprising contender. Studies indicate that probiotics can enhance strength and muscle mass, particularly in older adults and young men, by reducing sarcopenia and improving grip strength, which serves as a proxy for overall strength. The hosts speculate on the gut-brain-muscle connection, suggesting that a healthy gut may prime the body for better adaptations to stress, including strength training. They note that many people may have unreported gut issues that could affect their strength gains. The conversation shifts to the importance of beneficial bacteria in modern diets, with references to studies showing that children raised with pets or in farm environments have lower rates of autoimmune issues. The hosts discuss the impact of antibiotics on gut health and the decline in bacterial diversity across generations, linking this to rising food allergies and autoimmune conditions. The hosts also touch on the effectiveness of probiotics beyond gut health, mentioning their potential benefits for mental health, including depression and anxiety. They emphasize the need for a healthier overall body to improve performance and caution against relying solely on anabolic enhancers while neglecting gut health. In a lighter segment, one host shares a personal injury story involving a kitchen accident, while another discusses a conspiracy theory about Kate Middleton, highlighting the public's fascination with celebrity narratives. The conversation then shifts to financial regrets, with hosts sharing missed opportunities in investments like Bitcoin and stocks, illustrating the common experience of hindsight in financial decisions. The final part of the transcript features callers seeking advice on fitness and training. One caller discusses managing a back injury while balancing various training modalities, seeking guidance on programming without overtraining. The hosts recommend focusing on structured phases of training, emphasizing the importance of monitoring intensity and recovery to prevent injury. They suggest using established programs like MAPS Performance Advanced while integrating personal preferences and experiences to optimize training outcomes.

The Diary of a CEO

No.1 Herbal Medicine Expert: This Over The Counter Drug Is Quietly Killing You!
Guests: Simon Mills
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Simon Mills, a pioneering herbal practitioner with more than fifty years in natural medicine, argues that conventional medicines have saved lives but carry long‑term risks and that we overuse antibiotics, fueling resistance. He emphasizes that many people could benefit from plant‑based medicines that act quickly and diversely, sometimes alongside standard care. Mills frames his mission as helping people become stronger by using plants within a scientific framework that complements conventional healthcare. He notes that traditional plant knowledge was displaced by modern pharmaceuticals as urban living reduced practical knowledge of herbs, and he describes how different cultures still rely on plants as medicine, including in Europe, China, and parts of Asia. Mills stresses that the body’s biology is accessible through the gut. He explains that digestion, the microbiome, and the liver connect to virtually all health outcomes, including brain health, immune function, and inflammation. He cautions that inflammation is a natural defense, not the enemy, and that chronic inflammation often has upstream causes in the gut and microbiome. Antibiotics not only wipe out pathogens but also disrupt gut diversity, contributing to resistance and longer healing times. He cites WHO figures and recent prescribing stats to underscore urgency. In practice, Mills sees thousands of patients with chronic conditions, including cancer, autoimmune disease, gut disorders, and hormonal problems. His approach is to fine-tune health by addressing root function—digestion, liver and kidney function, and circulation—rather than merely treating symptoms. He shares case examples: Heather, a 65-year-old with a severe skin condition linked to infections and gut-lung interplay, who improved rapidly after gut and lung support; and Karen, 37, with panic and anxiety whose liver function and sugar cravings were targeted, yielding cycle stabilization and mood benefits. Both illustrate that plant remedies often work through the gut-liver-brain axis. Mills demonstrates practical remedies: ginger and cinnamon teas warm and clear airway congestion; cayenne plasters and mustard baths can relieve joint pain by increasing local blood flow; garlic as a prebiotic with potent antiseptic properties; echinacea for upper respiratory infections; resins like frankincense and myrrh for mucous membranes. He discusses turmeric’s curcumin, its microbiome-mediated effects, and its potential in arthritis and brain health; green tea and rosemary as neurovascular protectors; cacao and dark chocolate as brain and heart supporters. He promotes dietary richness—eating the rainbow, prioritizing color-rich polyphenols, root vegetables, greens, and diverse plant foods—to nourish the microbiome and health. He cautions about long-term uses of acid-suppressants like omeprazole, proposing the raft method with slippery elm or seaweed-based products to protect the gut while wean off acid suppression. He also notes that lifestyle changes and intermittent fasting have context-dependent value. The discussion closes with practical advice on cost-effective, plant-forward eating, and the need for more reliable, evidence-based herbal resources. He also touches on the tastiness and versatility of foods and spices, including ginger, cinnamon, garlic, echinacea, rosemary, green tea, cacao, and matcha, highlighting how these can support heart, brain, gut, and immune health through polyphenols, prebiotics, and microbiome interactions. He emphasizes that there is no one-size-fits-all diet and that plants function as medicines best when personalized to the individual.

Mind Pump Show

How to Find The ROOT CAUSE of Your Problems & Prevent Them From Happening | Mind Pump 1878
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The discussion focuses on the importance of addressing root causes of health issues rather than just treating symptoms. The hosts emphasize that individuals should be able to perform basic physical activities like running, squatting, and lifting, and maintain good energy levels and digestion. They criticize the medical industry for often focusing on symptomatic care, citing examples like chronic skin conditions where treatments target symptoms rather than underlying causes. Personal anecdotes illustrate the frustration with conventional medical approaches, highlighting the need for more thorough investigations into health issues. The conversation shifts to the challenges of finding effective solutions for health problems, with the hosts advocating for a more detective-like approach to health. They note that many people are aware of the behaviors leading to obesity but still seek quick fixes, such as pills for weight loss. The hosts share experiences of their children facing health issues and the importance of seeking root causes rather than relying solely on medications. They discuss the role of consumer responsibility in health, emphasizing that individuals must take charge of their well-being and not just rely on healthcare providers. The hosts also touch on the limitations of Western medicine, which can be overly focused on immediate solutions rather than comprehensive care. They argue for a more integrated approach to health that considers various factors affecting an individual's well-being. The conversation then transitions to the importance of skill acquisition in fitness, noting that focusing on improving movement skills can yield better results than merely pushing through workouts for soreness or fatigue. They discuss the significance of maintaining physical abilities as one ages and the rapid loss of skills when not practiced regularly. Finally, the hosts address the topic of supplements and the influence of the fitness industry on consumer perceptions. They highlight the need for consumers to be critical of the narratives surrounding health products and to prioritize behaviors over quick fixes. The discussion concludes with insights into the use of peptides like MK677, emphasizing the necessity of medical supervision when considering such substances.

The Dhru Purohit Show

The ROOT CAUSES Of Allergies, Why They Get WORSE & How To Get Rid Of Them | Dr. Elroy Vojdani
Guests: Elroy Vojdani, Terry Wahls, Alessio Fasano
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In this discussion, the hosts and guests explore the complexities of allergies, food sensitivities, and autoimmune conditions. They emphasize that many patients seeking treatment for issues like IBS or autoimmune diseases often have concurrent allergies, which can improve as gut health is restored. The conversation begins with a clarification of terms: food allergies involve an immediate immune response (IgE), while food intolerances are due to the body's inability to digest certain substances, like lactose. Food sensitivities, often mediated by IgG or IgA, are increasingly common and can lead to chronic inflammation. The guests note a significant rise in conditions like celiac disease, which has tripled in prevalence over the past 15 years, attributed to environmental changes rather than genetics. They discuss how modern lifestyles may lead to a loss of immune tolerance, resulting in heightened reactivity to foods and allergens. Traditional allergy tests, such as blood panels and skin prick tests, often fall short in diagnosing food sensitivities, as they primarily detect IgE-mediated reactions. The conversation shifts to the importance of gut health in managing allergies and sensitivities. The guests highlight that repairing gut permeability and addressing immune reactions can lead to symptom improvement. They stress that while allergy tests can provide some insight, they may not capture the full spectrum of immune responses, particularly in cases of food sensitivities. The discussion also covers the role of the immune system, particularly T regulatory cells, in maintaining balance and preventing overreactions to food. The guests explain that chronic exposure to inflammatory foods can lead to a state of heightened immune response, resulting in symptoms like fatigue, headaches, and digestive issues. They emphasize the importance of identifying and removing trigger foods, followed by a repair phase that includes dietary changes and supplements to support gut health. The guests advocate for an elimination diet, starting with gluten and dairy, to assess individual reactions and promote healing. The conversation concludes with a call to action for individuals to explore how their diet impacts their health, encouraging them to seek out knowledgeable practitioners for guidance. They highlight the significance of personalized approaches to health and the potential for recovery from food sensitivities and allergies through targeted interventions. The guests also mention resources like their book "When Food Bites Back" and the work of Cyrex Labs in providing advanced testing for food sensitivities and autoimmune conditions.

The Dhru Purohit Show

"Big Triggers Of Autoimmune Disease & Inflammation!" - Best Way To Reverse It ASAP | Elroy Vojdani
Guests: Elroy Vojdani
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In this discussion, Dhru Purohit and Elroy Vojdani explore the impact of food additives on gut health, particularly focusing on leaky gut and autoimmune diseases. Vojdani explains that certain food additives, such as artificial dyes, sweeteners, and gums, can directly damage the gut lining, leading to increased permeability and immune system disruption. Gums, used as emulsifiers and thickening agents in many food products, are highlighted as significant culprits that can open the gut barrier and potentially cause immune responses in sensitive individuals. The conversation shifts to the prevalence of autoimmune diseases, particularly among women, with Vojdani noting that 10-15% of the U.S. population has a diagnosed autoimmune condition. He emphasizes that environmental factors, including food and chemicals, play a significant role in the development of these diseases, which disproportionately affect women due to hormonal influences and exposure to cosmetics. Vojdani discusses the connection between leaky gut and various health issues, including frequent infections, diminished metabolic reserves, and cognitive decline. He explains that leaky gut can lead to systemic inflammation, affecting overall health and potentially contributing to neurodegenerative diseases. The hosts also address the challenges of food sensitivity testing, emphasizing the importance of understanding broader patterns rather than focusing solely on individual foods. Vojdani suggests an elimination diet as a method to identify problematic foods, recommending a gradual removal of gluten, dairy, and other common allergens. They conclude by discussing the importance of repairing gut health through dietary changes and supplements, highlighting the need for a holistic approach to health that considers both physical and emotional factors. The conversation underscores the complexity of gut health and its far-reaching implications for overall well-being.
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