Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1587: Getting to Root Cause of Low Energy, Skin Issues and a Poor Libido With Dr. Stephen Cabral
Episode Date: July 1, 2021In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak to Dr. Stephen Cabral about gut health, SIBO and how to correct the underlying cause of many common health problems. How misinformation is harming the health ...industry. (1:33) Why everything doesn’t need to be black and white. (5:50) Why gut health is the epicenter of 80% of any health conditions anyone can suffer from. (8:34) What are the symptoms of having poor gut health? (11:13) How does he communicate that you may have an intolerance to “healthy” foods? (14:56) The four main issues with the gut that you have to look for. (18:25) How you may be giving yourself SIBO. (21:54) Does he see common themes with autoimmune diseases? (23:46) Why he believes irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is NOT a disease. (25:47) His take on artificial sweeteners and gut health. (27:39) Conventional medicine NEVER provides a cure. (29:50) Are there natural antifungals one could take? (34:22) Biofilm 101. (37:46) Giveaways that you may have an autoimmune disease. (41:27) Why he would NEVER recommend any antibiotics for SIBO. (45:28) What are his thoughts on red-light therapy? (49:09) Does he believe creatine is the next big health supplement? (50:23) Can you chase aesthetics and longevity at the same time? (57:17) Why you shouldn’t drink cold water. (1:06:12) Featured Guest Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram Website Podcast Related Links/Products Mentioned June Promotion: MAPS Prime, Prime Pro, and the Prime Bundle 50% off! **Promo code “JUNEPRIME” at checkout** Visit Joovv for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! The Rain Barrel Effect: How a 6,000 Year Old Answer Holds the Secret to Finally Getting Well, Losing Weight & Feeling Alive Again! – Book by Stephen Cabral Mind Pump #875: Dr. Stephen Cabral H. Pylori Infection: How Do You Get, Causes, Symptoms 7 Symptoms of Candida Overgrowth (Plus How to Get Rid of It) SIBO- Small Intestine Bacterial Overgrowth Parasites: Types, in humans, worms, and ectoparasites CBO FAQ - Stephen Cabral EquiLife Products Herbal Therapy Is Equivalent to Rifaximin for the Treatment of Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right? In today's episode, we talked to one of our favorite functional medicine doctors,
Dr. Stephen Cabral.
He is the host of the Cabral Concept Podcast.
Very, very good podcast.
Go check that out.
You can find him on stevencabral.com.
He wrote a book called The Rain, Barrel Effect, and of course you can find him on Instagram
at Stephen Cabral, Stephen has spelled S-T-E-P-H-E-N, and then Cabral is C-A-B-R-A-L.
Now, in today's episode, we talked about health, but we placed special focus and emphasis been spelled S-T-E-P-H-E-N, and then Cabralis C-A-B-R-A-L.
Now, in today's episode, we talked about health,
but we placed special focus and emphasis on gut health.
In particular, we talked about SIBO.
So if you have irritable bowel issues,
you won't wanna miss this episode.
Also, this episode is brought to you by one of our sponsors,
Juve.
They make some of the best red light therapy products.
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anywhere. Go check them out head over to juv.com. That's j0ovv.com forward slash mine pump.
Just use the code mine pump and get $50 off your first purchase. One more thing, these are
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Before we started the podcast, Dr. Crabral,
you had mentioned how there's kind of dogma in our space
where people kind of get stuck communicating
a particular way or particular method
and it prevents them from kind of seeing the whole picture particular way or a particular method and it prevents
them from kind of seeing the whole picture.
What did you mean by that?
So one of the reasons why I think a lot of people are attracted to your show and congratulations,
I didn't get to say that on your success.
I mean, it's been absolutely amazing to watch, you know, the three of you and no four of
you really continue to grow as when I was there a couple of years back now.
And it's because people are looking for the real truth.
They kind of, everyone's all the information in the world
is available to everyone 24 hours a day online.
So if you tell someone that this is the only way it is,
they're going to find ways and times
when that's not actually appropriate.
For example, one of the biggest ones is 168 fasting.
So 168 fasting can be absolutely phenomenal
in terms of body transformation, overall health.
But it can also be completely detrimental
for certain groups of people.
And so when you discount that and you say 168 for everyone,
in my opinion, you kind of lose incredible
because there's certain instances.
And it's not just like one-off, one-out-of-a-hundred,
it's more like 25, one out of 100, it's more like 25,
30 out of 100.
Yeah, you know, you know, you're reminding me of a message I got a while ago in DM where
this was during the whole keto craze that happened, I don't know, three or four years ago.
Everybody was talking about keto, how super great.
And I got this message from this lady who's literally the message was something along
the lines of, I've been doing keto now for four months.
I feel, I still have keto flu,
so she labeled it keto flu, so I have really low energy,
I don't feel good, my digestion isn't very good,
I'm constipated, how long until I start to feel good?
This was four months into keto.
Do you run into, do people come to you like this where they come to you and say,
hey, I've been doing this thing for a while, you know, why isn't it working? Is this something
you encounter? Yeah, I always say that we're usually and unfortunately the last stop on the train.
So people have already tried keto and they've tried low carb one meal a day, they've tried
literally everything and they're like, all right, I'll go figure out now what it is.
And the reason why I say that is because there's no guessing.
So what we do is we'll take anyone.
It could be a, we work with elite CrossFit athletes,
we work with professional athletes, celebrities,
but we work with just regular everyday people
that are saying I'm frustrated,
I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired,
I wanna figure this out.
So what we do is we run at home labs
and all these labs are Cle certified labs, you know,
their FDA certified labs.
We look at your hormone levels, we look at your thyroid, we look at all the different
omega-3s, you name it.
And we could just tell you, you're on the right track in these areas and you're off track
here.
So this woman who was fatigued and tired after being on keto for 12 weeks, 16 weeks, whatever
it was, it's not abnormal for us to hear that.
And that's because women are disproportionately more affected by keto than men.
And the older you are, the more disproportionately affected you are.
So, meaning if you have a 20 year old health coach, and we were all 21, 20 year old health
coaches, right?
Like I was a prostitut trainer through college in my early 20s, and you can get away
with almost anything.
And also your blood markers and everything also look fantastic.
But what happens is you're not dealing with carrying on life in your body.
So when you are, when you're responsible for that, you put your body in that type of a
hermetic stressor, that type of stressor, you're going to start to see thyroid levels
go down.
You're going to start to see estrogen dominance, cortisol levels, potentially rising the
short term. And what does that do? Well, it leads to then a slower estrogen dominance, cortisol levels, potentially rising the short term.
And what does that do?
Well, it leads to then a slower and lower metabolic rate, which some people are very proud
of, they're like, oh, I only need to eat 1500 calories a day now.
And I'm just saying like, that's not a good thing.
You want to be able to eat as many calories as you can, because that means that furnace is
always running.
So it's situations like that that I think are really harming this industry.
And I love this industry, health and fitness. So it's just, it's just too bad that I think are really harming this industry and I love this industry health and fitness
So it's just it's just too bad that I see a lot of that out there. Yeah, two things. I want to call it on number one
You mentioned when you were 20 how the hell old are you now because you look way younger than we do and I think we're in the same age group
So what dog are you gonna the same juice? Yeah, what the hell's going on here? Are you a vampire? So answer that question first
I'm not a vampire. That's one. I'm 43. Oh, you're old in the night. What the hell's going on here?
I got to do something about this
The second the second question I have is when people come so you must be getting this kind of self-selection bias then where people like you said
They've gone through the traditional means they've gone. They've tried everything. They finally come to you
Does this mean that they are more willing to do what you tell them
to do because they're at the fight, they're at like, I don't care, just tell me what to
do and I'll do it.
Yeah, that's a big part of it.
And again, it's great to work with clients like that because they're so frustrated.
I mean, that's the thing is like, let's say you have tried what you say is everything
you've seen every practitioner, you probably spent, you know, $10,000 or more dollars and
all these different things. you just want an answer.
So the thing is, and I know we talked about this most likely when I was on the show a couple
of years ago, but I empathized with them because I was there.
I mean, I was sick for 10 years from 17 to 27 years old, and I tried what I thought was
everything.
And then I found practitioners who knew about functional medicine lab testing, who knew about macro, not just macros for your calories, but your mineral levels and electrolytes,
it might have condrill health and your HPA access. And once I learned about that, I mean, this is
this is why the industry is so amazing. You could have on an expert a week for the next 15 years,
and you're still not going to learn at all. And that's the thing is, this is such an expansive industry, which is why we do have to keep
our minds open always to new research.
But at the same time, and I always say this, it's kind of like we already know what the
research is going to pan out unless it's something radically new.
You know that there's catabolic people and anabolic people.
I mean, you work with hard gainers and you work with people that it's difficult for
the lose weight.
And those two types of people need a different workout program
and a different diet plan. And because they're going to react differently within their body.
And the more you fast them, well, the more detrimental it is to them and the more weight they
lose, where if you fast someone who's naturally anabolic and has, you know, larger calves,
larger ankles and, you know, they look at a carbohydrate put on weight, it's just a different
individual.
Once you start to learn that not everything has to be black and white.
There can be a lot of area for gray and a lot of bile individuality.
Very well said.
Okay.
So I wanted to talk generally about gut health but more specifically about SIBO, SIBO being
a small intestinal bacterial overgrowth.
Now I wanted to talk to you about this because I'm very interested in gut health.
I've had issues myself with gut health.
And over the last 15 years,
the research has just illuminated so much.
I mean, SIBO wasn't even a word, I think 15 years ago.
I remember when I would say leaky gut syndrome
and doctors would laugh me out of the room.
And now of course they talk about intestinal know, intestinal hyperpermeability.
That's the medical term now for leaky gut syndrome,
which is something that I, you know,
I talked about 15 years ago.
So let's talk, generally this first start with gut health,
what does bad gut health affect in the body?
What are the effects of having gut health
that isn't so great?
So we didn't go over any questions ahead of time,
but you know, you really kind
of teed this one up, meaning that gut health is the epicenter of 90 plus percent, at least 80
plus percent of all health conditions anyone could suffer from. Wow. And the reason is that
you're breaking down. So we always talk about you are what you eat, and it's, then people are now
learning it's more you are what you absorb. And you have about 26 feet of digestive tract. So if you want to think
about the digestive tract, it starts with your mouth, it's about 16 inches or so down
to your stomach, 12 to 16 inches depending on your height. You've got your stomach, then
it moves into your small intestine, your duodenum, which is the first part of the small intestine
where most of the digestion takes place, moves through about 20 feet of small intestine
and then about five to six feet of large intestine
then out of your body.
Now that's meant to be the outside of your body,
believe it or not.
So it's in the inside, but it's meant to be the outside.
So think of a giant tube that stops just for a moment
inside of a pocket, which is your stomach
to break things down for 30 minutes to three, four hours.
And then it allows the partially broken down food
to move into the small intestine
and then kind of be removed as waste and a large intestine.
Well, what happens is there's four ways that we can talk about that people get digestive
issues, but eventually it leads to inflammation in the gut and increased permeability, which
is leaky gut.
So, you know, and it's funny because that was a big part of my health issues a million years ago when I was sick and
I never got better. I didn't get better. No matter how many adrenal-based issues I tried, how many adrenal-based protocols I tried to get well until I fixed my gut.
So because when you have intestinal permeability, your body always allows out your vitamins, your minerals, your amino acids, and all the good stuff that's supposed to come out that your body can then use. What happens is when it's hyperpermeable, and I know you've talked about this in the
show, it allows all sorts of things to come out.
Bacteria, lipopolisaccharides, undigested proteins, and then it sets off the immune system.
The immune system, we just think of it as inflammation, but the immune system is not messing up with
all of these autoimmune issues.
It actually is seen protein move around in your bloodstream or end up in a tissue and
it's looking to clear it from your body.
So intestinal permeability is the greatest single health issue that really our country
is facing.
And the reason is antibiotics, alcohol, birth control, heavy metals, tap water with chlorine in it, artificial sweeteners,
so it's pervasive, and that allows for this intestine test or permeability.
And what are some of the symptoms of having bad gut health?
I've heard, you know, people say, my skin, my energy, of course, constipation diarrhea,
you know, heartburn, that kind of stuff.
Energy, I've heard people say libido, almost like everything.
I mean, am I, is this craziness or can all those things
plus more be affected by your gut health?
Yeah, and the bet you're right, on all of them,
and the reason why it is.
So I'll get to that in just one second.
So in the long term, you get all of your lows.
Low energy, low mood, brain fog, or low cognitive ability, low libido, all the lows, low metabolism.
And the reason is that it's chronic. So it's chronic stress in the bottom. So, and the reason we
can say, yes, in the short term, and then eventually long term as well, you've got skin rashes,
you've got headaches, you've got allergies, you've got asthma, you've got low mood, you
have autoimmune, bloating, gas, distension, et cetera.
So how can it lead to all of those things?
Well, you have to understand is that 90% again, like they will put that in air quotes, they
say all disease is basically 90% inflammation.
And they are correct because inflammation
then just sets off your genetics.
So I am genetically predisposed to rheumatoid arthritis,
to type two diabetes, to addison's disease,
to fibromyalgia, to insomnia, to all these things
that I had before.
Now I no longer have them.
How can that be?
Well, they worked on the root causes
that led to the inflammation that then led to the
dis ease in my body.
So it really comes to inflammation, but inflammation is not a root cause.
If you figure out why you have the inflammation, well, then you can get rid of the dis ease
as we say in the body.
Now when you have gut issues or poor gut health, can they show up in ways that don't involve
digestion?
In other words, I've heard people say, yeah, I don't have all these issues, but my digestion's
fine.
I don't have constipation, bloating, diarrhea, or heartburn.
So it can't be my bad gut health.
Yeah, and that's a great one.
It has to do with fermenting.
So think of it this way.
The gas and the bloating is really a fermentation issue.
And you can have intestinal permeability without the overgrowth.
Now, it's not as common that you don't have any digestive distress.
And what happens is that you have more of what's called an IgG sensitivity.
That means, for example, the number one IgG food sensitivity is cow's milk.
So it's predominantly casing
because casing is 80% of the protein in milk protein
and way being the last 20%.
So typically if someone is taking away protein isolate,
well, it's been so processed that it's gonna be,
it's much more broken down.
It's not typically going to cause the same gastric distress,
but a case scene
protein, they might have serious bloating and gas, et cetera.
But anyway, it comes down to different reactions within the body.
So an IgA or IgE would be more of an immediate response to the body.
You might get hives, you might get brain fog, you might get skin achiness, et cetera.
You're not going to get the bloating right away.
You're going to have the reaction from the actual protein.
But an IgG reaction in the body, which is just an immunoglobulin, so it's a different
type of white blood cell, those react 24 to 72 hours later.
So let's just say we're recording this on a Tuesday.
You know, I would ask you, do you know what you ate Saturday at lunch, Sunday at dinner,
and on a normal Sunday, you might be like, I have no idea.
You know what, a, but you're actually reacting that many days later.
And it doesn't have anything to do with the gastric distress.
It has to do with actually the protein being looked at
as a foreign moral cue inside of the body.
Wow.
How do you communicate to a client
that may actually have an issue with like a health food,
for example, like avocado, you know, sends their
autoimmune issue off, or how do you communicate to them that it's possible that it could
be these foods that we, you know, air quote, it's called healthy. Like how do you say that
to a client?
Yeah, that's a great question because a lot of people come in and like I'll let them
know eggs because eggs is what I've seen and I've run tens of thousands
of these IG food sensitivity tests.
And again, there's back and forth on online data saying, oh, well, you know, we don't
think it's reliable because it has to do with a lot of the foods that you eat.
Well, listen, you test all of the foods.
We test 200 foods that all that people eat and they're healthy foods and people are
reacting to the ones that their body is the most sensitive to as an actual reaction. And from a, like the third most sensitive is actually egg whites. It's not yolks,
but it's the whites. The whites have twice as many antigens or proteins that the egg yolk has.
Now, same amount of macro, macro grams of protein, different amount of actual antigens in the white,
because if you think about it, the white is actually becoming the flesh itself.
So what we do is we say,
we start out with a foundational nutrition plan.
So if you're not going to do a food sensitivity test,
we say we understand these are the ones
that are typically the most sensitive.
We're just gonna remove them for six weeks
and then we're gonna reintroduce them one at a time
and we're gonna look for that reaction over a period
of about 48 hours to maybe 72 hours.
So that's what we do, but the truth is that we do a lot of at-home lab testing anywhere in the world.
So we prefer to just let the data speak and then there it doesn't have to be any like best diet
or any kind of back and forth. We just let their data speak.
Well, how do you explain though that it's from this healthy food? I would get that from a client,
right? That would say, Adam, I don't get it.
This is considered healthy.
How could that be causing an issue in me?
Well, why is that?
Yeah, and that's where it comes back to bio-individuality.
You know, it's, so everyone has one random
typically food sensitivity.
So for a good example, when I first got into learning
about functional medicine, I mean, I went two years from 17 years old to 19 years old to about two dozen specialists
around boss messages.
I mean, these are brilliant MDs, but the problem was that this was really outside of their
scope.
I mean, they're looking at my blood work, they're probing my body, they're, you know, testing
it for all different things there.
And they're like, oh, we have no idea.
So they either told me it was all in my head head or they said, listen, there's something wrong,
but we just don't know what, we can't find it out. You might get worse and then we'll know what to do
then. I'm like, okay, it doesn't seem like a very good plan. So then just by chance, I mean,
this is in what the mid late 90s, I find out about alternative, you know, practitioners,
alternative health. And so I run these labs and I find out I'm sensitive
to almonds and I'm sensitive to chicken.
These are random ones.
You don't see those come up on a lot of food sensitivity.
Well, I had tons of intestinal permeability
and I was eating chicken because I was trying to basically
transform my body since I can transform the outside.
I wanted to do more natural bodybuilding
and I was very sensitive on those
and I actually felt an immediate difference
when I did eliminate them.
So it really comes back to bioindividuality.
And if there's not in test or permeability,
it might be one they're sensitive to.
However, we found that about 16 weeks
by eliminating most foods and then a slow reintroduction,
most people can overcome most food sensitivities,
except for cow's milk dairy.
Wow, it's just speaking specifically to bacterial overgrowth.
First of all, how do you even identify that?
That may be an issue for you, and then also what's the steps to address it, and then is
it possible to keep it from happening?
So there's four main things that can go wrong with the gut, but the nice thing is there's only four.
So when we look at that, we kind of reassure clients,
listen, we don't know exactly what's wrong with you yet.
However, when you look at most issues like high cholesterol
or autoimmune issues like Hashimoto's,
rheumatoid arthritis, or MS, or lupus, or whatever it might be,
there's typically never more than like 10 to 12 factors.
So as an integrative health practitioner, or whatever it might be, there's typically never more than like 10 to 12 factors.
So as an integrative health practitioner, your job is to play process of elimination, not
to guess ahead of time.
In an ideal world, again, I know everyone can't lab test, but if you can't and you go to
a practitioner and they've done this for a long time, they're going to be able to see
patterns.
And the four main issues with the gut that you have to look for is age pylori.
So helicobacter pylori, which is typically a bacterial infection in the stomach, that
about one out of four people have.
And this is a huge issue because you're now not absorbing a lot of calcium, magnesium,
zinc, B12, and you're not breaking down your protein.
So if someone's like, oh, I'm going to go on a higher protein diet, if you're on a higher
protein diet and you have H. Pylori and you don't have enough stomach
acid, it's a disaster.
I mean, it really is because that protein is going to putrify, it's going to cause all
sorts of other issues.
So age pylori is a big one.
And then when we move just further downstream, we're looking at parasites.
So parasites, again, if you look at world's population, it's about one in three people.
But when you look at that, it's more
towards South America and other places. Well, however, in the United States,
it's still about one in five. And that's because you can pick it up at a salad bar for
unwashed produce. You can pick it up and undercooked fish, sushi, very, very easy. I mean, like
parasites and salmon. I mean, I'm an advocate of wild salmon, but there's a ton of parasites.
So I stopped eating sushi. I love sushi. I stopped eating I'm an advocate of wild salmon, but there's a ton of parasites. So I
stopped eating sushi. I love sushi. I stopped eating raw sushi a little while ago because
you guys just got me into it. Thanks a lot. I mean, I'm talking for long ropeworms like that I work
with clients on. And so I said, okay, you know, this is a, this is a small price to pay to not have a
ropeworm. So then downstream from there, you have Candida Overgrowth,
which is a yeast to overgrowth, naturally turned yeast.
And then you have Seabo, small and Tesla
back to your overgrowth.
And the interesting thing about Seabo
is it's typically your own bacteria
that should be there, but overgrown.
And the reason it's overgrown is upstream.
You were on antacids.
So again, we know from the medical literature
that nobody should be on Prylasek
or an antacid for more than two weeks.
The companies state that.
However, if your MD tells you to come off your antacid
after two weeks, your heartburn's still there.
So they're kind of in a catch-22.
What are they supposed to do?
Because they don't know how to look for that underlying root cause.
And so, and again, medical doctors are brilliant.
Many of my colleagues are medical
doctors, so I'm not putting them down. It's just everybody should have a natural health practitioner
and a medical doctor, like there's a time and place for both or everybody should have both.
So the CBO that we see is one of the most pervasive. It is a lot of times just from naturally
curing bacteria and it's from low parasital type movement. It is from being on antacids
or stomach blockers or it's from being on being-tick movement. It is from being on antacids or stomach blockers,
or it's from being on birth control or antibiotics.
And it can even just be one course
of antibiotics cost it.
Yeah, so you mentioned,
I remember exactly the terminologies,
but essentially low motility could cause it.
In other words, things are not moving through quick enough
and that allows the bacteria to build back up.
Is that what that means?
Yeah, and that's perfect because the only time
we see people relapse, oh, I mean, of course,
if you go back to antibiotics or you go back to
a lot of these things that caused it in the first place,
you can definitely relapse.
But the only people we see back on a healthy protocol
and a healthy living plan, you don't need to be perfect.
I mean, literally, I tell people,
be, you know, stand your plan nine out of 10 meals. You're gonna be fine. You know, once you get to your goals, nine out of 10
meals, one or two flex meals a week, not an issue for most people. And you can do whatever
you want really for those meals. But the only time we see people relapse is in higher levels
of stress where there's an illiosecule valve issue and mobile motility. So what that means is that, and I wish I had my mannequin,
my little model here with me,
but at the end where you're small intestine,
your ilium moves into your secum,
which is the first part of your large intestine.
There's a little flap and it's supposed to be a one-way street,
but under stress that illiosecule valve,
the valve can stay open.
And what happens is the colon bacteria that should never be in your small intestine because
it comes after your small intestine can actually start to backfill the small intestine.
So people give them self-cebo all the time from higher levels of stress and again low-ball
motility, which means some people hold their stress in like their traps and neck and they
get all tense or they get a headache, some people hold it in
their gut.
And when they hold it in their gut, that means there's this inter-succession, which is like
this slinky movement, um, your intestines to move all of the fecal matter downstream.
And that doesn't happen.
So again, it leads to constipation or it leads to partial-ball movements.
And that can actually allow a se-bow to build up as well.
Now, do you see common themes with like specific autoimmune issues, like say, for example,
psoriasis or endometriosis, like when you see it, are there common things that you know
to go after or look at, or is it there's such a wide individual variance that it's a
crap shoot?
Well, again, it's usually goes back to,
and I like the pun there as well.
So 10 to 12, you know, 10 to 12 maximum that you're looking at
for, like I said, for a thyroid.
So for thyroid, you know, what are we really looking at?
Okay, certainly could be, um,
intestinal permeability.
It could be, uh, what's called molecular mimicry.
So proteins are seeping through this protein,
like gluten or casing
looks similar to this particular molecule.
That molecule may or may not be attaching itself
to the thyroid.
The immune system goes after it.
That's only one particular instance.
It could be a lack of a saline,
it could be a lack of zane,
it could be a lack of B6,
it could be a lack of iodine,
to actually make thyroid molecule.
It could be higher levels of cortisol
and norupinephrine,
which begin to on purpose block T4 from converting to T3 in the liver or
Actually making it unusable reverse T3. So like thyroid is always fixable. I mean, I know that
people will you know say that it's not but it really is like there's always an underlying reason now if we're talking about psoriasis though in
every case that I've ever seen
and a very similar in alopecia,
which is not totally dissimilar,
we're looking at two different autoimmune processes,
it's gut and stress,
and you can't just work in one.
So stress can trigger psoriasis,
however, typically there's one more factor, which is gut-based issues,
and in my, and what I've seen is SIBO, with all of them have to do with intestopermiability,
because you're allowing the bacteria or the proteins to go through, and then they're
trying to push themselves through the skin, like something's moving through the skin,
or parasites, and parasites has been a big one too for psoriasis or adult acne.
Oh, that's crazy. Okay, so back to see, I'm old enough to remember when you had, if you had gut issues and you
went to your doctor and they figured you don't have a major disease or a virus, they would
say irritable bowel syndrome, which is basically, we don't know what the health wrong with you,
but your bowel's are inflamed and you have lots of issues.
I've read that a majority of IBS situations are the result of SIBO.
Now they're saying SIBO probably accounts for, last time I read, it was like 70 or 80 percent.
Is that true?
100 percent, and that's because IBS isn't a disease.
I mean, that's the wildest thing about conventional medicine.
Is they get to come up with any term that they want and label a disease?
And it means absolutely nothing.
Okay, so I go in and I'm like, oh, doctor, my stomach really is killing me a couple
after hours after a meal.
I feel bloated, it feels like the food's not moving through.
And like, oh, you have IBS.
And the patient leaves, they're so relieved
because they have a diagnosis of IBS.
They go home, they look it up on Google
and it says irritable bowel syndrome.
And they're like, did I just spend a half hour at my doctor
for him to tell me my bottles are irritable?
Of course they're irritable, right?
So it's like, how did that help anybody?
It doesn't.
So you say, okay, well, why are the bottles irritable? And it's those four main reasons. It's age
pylori parasites. Typically not parasites for IBS. I just want to put that out there that leads
to other issues, inflammatory issues, autoimmune issues, etc. Can definitely lead to loose stool.
That's for sure. But it's typically Candida Overgrowth and Seabot. they usually go hand in hand. We see very few people with only Candida or only sebo.
It's about 80% have both, but the nice thing is you fix both at the same exact time.
You don't do one thing for yeast overgrowth and one thing for sebo.
Interesting.
Okay, so you mentioned also earlier artificial sweeteners and it affecting gut health. Now, I've heard and read that it doesn't have an effect.
Personally, artificial sweeteners bother my gut.
I stay away from them because they tend to bother my gut.
I've also read studies that show that,
oh, it affects the bacteria in the gut
and then the other ones that say, oh,
it's not that big of an effect.
What's your take on it?
What's your take on artificial sweeteners and gut health?
Well, so there's all different types of artificial sweeteners now and it depends if we classify
Sugar alcohols as an artificial sweetener which I would I wouldn't consider sugar alcohol as natural and we don't use sugar
alcohols in our
Plans that doesn't mean you can't once you're well you could choose to if it works fine for you
You can make a really good case for using zyylitol in toothpaste or a mouthwash or something like that,
since it has been proven really effective against, you know, naturally to fight against cavities,
instead of using fluoride. But so sugar alcohols, if you already have SIBO and or yeast overgrowth,
they're fermentable.
So, you know, we look at a certain class of foods, the fodbaps, the fructo, oligo, dymonone, polysaccharides, and they fall in my category. It ends in all. If it ends in all,
it's going to be basically acting like a fermentable sugar. So, that can exacerbate yeast and SIBO.
There's no doubt about it. But when we're looking at the clinical studies of which ones affect the gut health the most, it's sucralose, so it's splendor. And again, back in the day, 20 years ago,
we would recommend splendor as personal trainers, because it's like, okay, zero calories, it makes
things sweet. It's this brand new thing. Science made it. We're all excited. But again, we're in
early 20s, and we haven't lived enough life yet. And again, we're just going by whatever the media tells us.
And sucrose is basically sugar, right?
sucrose.
The difference is they exchange one molecule for chlorine.
And we know chlorine actually kills bacteria in the gut.
Okay, so eating a lot of sucrose could cause bacterial, I guess, dysbiosis?
Dysbiosis, which means basically imbalance gut bacteria. That's correct. Now you mentioned like earlier
antibiotics and heavy metals and then also alcohol is being big contributors.
Can you go further into like why alcohol is something to be you know concerned with?
Yeah, so two things there. One antibiotic is the worst and the reason why it's the worst is that it's not preferential
for what it kills.
So it goes in usually using a broad spectrum antibiotic like is it through my sin or
a moxacillin and one of the reasons why I got so sick we later realized is from ages from
my age 14 years old, the 17 years old. I was on three
years of antibiotics and I took over 3,000 capsules of a moxacillin before the age of 17,
which is pretty insane, but a dermatologist believed that, hey, you know, if we give you antibiotics,
which is true, it'll probably get rid of your acne if it's bacterial-based and it did. It worked,
but it also destroyed my entire immune system in the process by taking two amoxicillin a day for three years plus all the ones
I took during childhood
I mean literally I grew up with a zit or mice and z-packs in my closet that my pediatrician would give my mother because it was four kids
Like under the age of five in my house
And then we would just take them for the common cold
So I mean that led to science infections all sorts of issues of five in my house and then we would just take them for the common cold.
So I mean that led to science infections, all sorts of issues, but it wipes out your
good bacteria as well in your gut.
Now when it's doing that, it doesn't affect yeast because you're not taking an antifungal,
you're taking an antibiotic antibacterial.
So then you start to get candida overgrowth.
I had such massive candida overgrowth that I grew into my stomach and up my esophagus.
So when they did a GI, they did a scope on me, they can actually see yeast overgrowth,
candida overgrowth in my esophagus, which is absurd. But that's what happens when you take antibiotics over and over.
So that's why antibiotics should only be used in life-saving conditions.
And by the way, I just want to state, like, I believe in conventional medicine,
I believe in life-saving medicine, I'm very happy that we have it. And it should be used in acute
base instances to save your life. That's a great time to use antibiotics. And then in terms of alcohol,
alcohol, well, one, it's fermentable. So it's going to exacerbate yeast or and or
bacterial overgrowth in the gut and can't lead to intestinal permeability and inflammation.
So it inflames your gut as well.
Interesting. Okay. So you're talking about antibiotics,
but isn't the cure for SIBO,
aside from probably some lifestyle changes?
Isn't the cure antibiotics?
Don't they give you antibiotics in order to solve it?
So conventional medicine never provides a cure.
And I know that that's going to seem inflammatory, but they don't.
Okay.
There's never a very few instances.
Is there a cure unless it's an acute life-saving, like you have an accident,
you have a heart attack, you have a stroke, you have pneumonia,
then they're providing the cure.
But for all chronic-based health conditions, there is no cure.
They mask the symptoms.
So you're taking a specific antibiotic.
There are a couple different names for them.
I don't want people to run out and ask their doctor for them, but they could look them
up for sure.
And they work.
Here's the thing, though.
They typically relapse three months later to four months later.
So then they go on it again.
And again, unless they did a protocol which helped to rebuild the gut, so which would still
be natural health-based, so we always keep people the option.
You can take an antibiotic if you choose to with your MD, but we still have to rebuild
your gut and we have to take an antifungal, or we can do it the natural way.
And it's not like we don't use antibacterial antimicrobials we do.
We use certain herbs, but we're using biofilm disruptors.
There's a whole protocol to use. We called our
CBO protocol, and it's three steps. You break down the biofilm, which allows you to then actually
access the parasites yeast and bacteria, and again, all of this you can look up. And then we
repopulate. We don't repopulate with good probiotics in the beginning. We actually do it towards
the end because there's already overgrowth. So you don't need to add more when there's already overgrowth.
And so that's how we do it.
So people are welcome to take the antibiotic, but they still should be taking the antifungal.
And if they want to do a conventional medicine base, then at least ask for diflucan or
what's the other one?
Nice statin, which is not a statin, it's antifungal.
And then at least you're doing both.
And then you still have to heal and seal the gut, which is typically using weak collars, healthy gut support, but
it's essentially anocetal deoclucosamine, it's aloe, it is glutamine, and it zinc, which
have all been proven to help really seal up that gut wall.
Wow. Okay. So, okay. So this is interesting. All right. So you're on antibiotics for the
SIBO, but you got to to go on antifungals
also to prevent that from, are there natural antifungals that someone could also take besides
the prescription ones?
100%.
So, one thing that I've done with my podcast and with our company Equal Life is we open
source everything.
We give all the information away.
So, you can literally source whatever you'd like
from any company, but we tell you the exact steps to do and exactly what to take. So ours is a 12-week
product call that use biofilm disruptors. So these are basically proteases that help break down
biofilm that grow over as a protective mechanism. Because we have to understand bacteria and parasites and yeast
are living things. Just like we're living on this planet, we protect ourselves from nature, right?
We put houses over our head, roofs over our head, they do the same exact thing. And a lot of those
are made from heavy metals and they're made from fibrin. And so what you can do is you can take
all natural enzymes that help to break down the biofilm. Now you can actually access, and that's what was one of the big breakthroughs
that we were doing a bunch of years ago,
and I learned it from other mentors as well.
And we just put it together into a protocol
after a decade of essentially,
I wouldn't say trial and error, it worked,
but it can work better,
and that's what we've done and really settled on that.
And then you're using antimicrobials.
So we know that oregano, all of leaf,
cappurlic acid, cloves, there's so many of them.
What we do is we rotate them
because I realized, again, through conventional medicine.
So my job is an integrative health practitioner.
I'm a doctor of naturopathy by schooling,
but I'm an integrative health practitioner
because I believe in everything.
There's a time and place.
So I said, oh, in conventional medicine, antibiotics
stop working until you switch to a different type of antibiotic. So that was kind of a breakthrough
in thinking for me and the research. So I actually went from using certain herbs in month
one to different herbs in month two and then different in month three. And then we make
sure we get everything because now there's actually stool tests that show you what your
body reacts the best to in terms of killing it, but not everybody's going to run a $500 stool test.
So now we just say, okay, we've got you covered, we're going to do that across all three
months.
And then this is one of the keys.
So again, I'll give all the information away because we've got 8 billion people in the
planet, we can get more of this information out there.
And you don't use probiotics month one.
We use sacramisus
Boulardi. Sacramisus Boulardi is a non-pathogenic yeast, and what it does is because your intestines
can't be sterile. So you need a placeholder as you're killing all these things off. So we put
in Sacramisus Boulardi for the first three months. It's a transient non-pathogenic yeast. Again,
all these are clinically studied. We put all the research on the website, and it populates the gut.
But then it leaves after two weeks.
It doesn't hang around.
And then at month two, we're adding only a non-dairy lactobacillus acidophilus.
And here's the reason we do that.
The majority of the population of bacterial overgrowth and yeast overgrowth is in the small intestine.
And the main reason for that is the actual pH of
the intestines have changed. So if you acidify the small intestine to a normal pH of around seven,
which is slightly acid, it actually doesn't allow for overgrowth and it helps a bowel motility.
And then on month three, then we add in a much larger amount of probiotics, more additional
strains that are low histamine and no dairy. That's exactly what we do.
You talked about biofilm a couple times.
So let's, I want to get into that a little bit more because I learned about that about
a year ago and I found that fascinating.
So, you know, I would love for, for you to help me here, but in my understanding, essentially
biofilm is when bacteria create a barrier between themselves
and what's on the outside.
So let's say you're taking an antibiotic,
it can't touch the bacteria
because the bacteria has created this biofilm
to protect itself from the,
so it's essentially hiding behind this biofilm.
And if you don't kill or destroy,
I should say the biofilm,
then you can take all the antibiotics you want,
but it's not gonna do anything.
Is that accurate?
It is.
The antibiotics will still work
with what they're able to access,
but they will not be able to kill
what's underneath that biofilm.
And that biofilm,
so if you've really built up a lot of biofilm,
you can actually see it come out in your bio movements
as almost like a gel-like
substance. And you might be looking at that like what is that? That's the actual biofilm.
Some of it is just mucus that comes along with it. But that is a fiber-in-based structure. And
again, a lot of heavy metals are used in that. It metals are just a great structure for that biofilm
as well. Molds can be part of that. yeast, fungus mold are all part of the same family.
So when people like, oh, I mold based issues,
you very well may, but you better work on the gut first,
which then helps you balance the immune system,
and then you can work on the mold,
because the mold, more pervasive around the whole body,
where yeast is typically centered in same placebo
inside of the intestines.
So yeah, your job is to remove that. And that's why also, let's say someone runs up yeast is typically centered in same placebo inside of the intestines.
So your job is to remove that.
That's why also, let's say someone runs a bacteria and parasites dual test, which is a great
one to run if you have any digestive issues or autoimmune issues or skin issues or migraines
or headaches or allergies.
So let's say that you run that lab, but you have all the symptoms of high parasites.
But that stool test shows that you don't have parasites.
It's still not a bad idea to run a parasite protocol. There's so little downside. Again,
you're using proven antimicrobials like Artemisia, wormwood, sweet wormwood. You're using cloves,
you're using biofilm disruptors. And then you can move on to this like a CBO protocol after that.
So that's definitely what I recommend.
Again, if you're in your 30s and you took antibiotics as a child, it's not uncommon to have
all of this built up inside it.
I read that the active ingredient in Pepto Bismol was bismuth, and I don't remember the
other side of that word there, but the active ingredient in pepto is actually a mild biofilm disruptor
and potential antibiotic, or it could kill the bacteria that causes seaboules.
Is that true?
Two degree.
Bismuth is actually a very powerful product.
Now, the problem with pepto, a pepto bismol, is that it has all sorts of dyes in it.
I mean, that is like, it's really toxic.
It's pink, exactly.
That color pink does not exist in nature.
So, you know, that's not healthy for you.
However, knowing that it works again, everything we do,
that's why a lot of times conventional medicine, you know,
when they don't, when they want to try to put down natural
health, they're like, oh, well, there's no science behind it.
Well, there's science behind everything that we're doing.
And we actually use bismuth in our healthy belly.
And it's actually potentially being outlawed by the FDA because it was first used in products
like Peptivismal.
But we use that not necessarily to kill a lot of bacteria, but it's great at soothing the
stomach mucosa and test them mucosa and may help with bacteria like H. Pylori.
Oh, interesting. Now, what is the spectrum look like for something like SIBO?
Would you say there's a large percentage of people that actually have it going on and have
no idea whatsoever? Are there people that don't see a lot of symptoms, but maybe things like
their metabolism is slower because of it, like, what's that spectrum look like?
Well, I would say with all health issues
and the majority are yeast and seabull,
they really go hand in hand,
that if you are not well,
if there's a health-based issue
or you have difficulty losing weight,
I would always lean towards that first.
Now, it doesn't mean it's that, but you do
it to rule it out first.
So that's always my go-to.
And then another giveaway is like, let's say you don't,
you believe your disease-free, there's no issues.
You know, great.
One thing you really have to look at is,
can you eat carbohydrates?
Because a lot of people like, no, I'm going on carnivore
because now my joint pain went away,
my autoimmune issues went away. Listen, that's the worst reason to go on carnivore because now my joint pain went away. My autoimmune issues went away.
Listen, that's the worst reason to go on carnivore.
I mean, or keto.
Again, you could do it for a certain period of time, but really what you did was a conventional
medicine-based approach to diet.
You said, oh, well, these foods, healthy or not, are causing me joint pain.
And we'll blame it on the lectins.
We'll blame it on the fightic acid.
We'll blame it on their nightchades
But the truth is this you're eating those foods
They are fermenting inside of your gut. They're causing inflammation. It's exacerbating your
Intestinal permeability and it's leading to inflammation which then affects your weak genetic point
Which might be rheumatoid arthritis or joint pain or it might be migraines or it might be skin issues or psoriasis, which might be rheumatoid thread is or joint pain, or it might be migraines,
or it might be skin issues, or psoriasis, whatever it might be. So, you know, that's why when I hear
people say, oh, I did this and it helped me get so much better, I said, listen, you're on the right
path. You just didn't work on the true underlying root cause. You just stopped feeding the things that
are causing more inflammation. I just read that. I was a, I think there was like a SIBO convention.
I don't remember why I read this,
but there was an article and they were highlighting
some of the latest research.
And what you said about carbohydrates,
I've known that, like,
carb intolerances tend to mean
that you have some kind of bacterial overgrowth
or other issues in the gut.
But I read that they are finding,
and I don't remember if it was the hydrogen predominant bacteria
or the methane one,
or I don't even know if I'm picking the right ones,
but that a high fat, high protein diet
could be exacerbating other forms of seabulls.
So people go low carb thinking,
oh, I've got issues, low carbs gonna help me.
A lot of fat and a lot of protein,
but then it makes them worse.
Is this the case with some people?
In the long run, it does.
And with most people.
So you lose carbohydrate tolerance, but also what you did was by doing a high fat, high
protein diet, you're shrinking your microbiome.
And that's why you feel better symptomatically for autoimmune issues or bloating or inflammation.
And that's because you basically took everything and you dropped it, I mean, again, this
isn't clinical, but you dropped it by like 50%.
Okay.
So now you have 50% less bacteria or yeast that was overgrown.
So maybe that took you back to baseline.
But the only way you can ever maintain that is to keep going with the high fat, high protein
diet.
And even if you do one cheat meal, you'll probably, you, well, you might not actually feel terrible off the first one,
because it's shrunk, but then it will start to grow. And the second one will really get you.
And that's like a food sensitivity. That's what happens all the time. It basically the first one
primes the immune system. And the second one is the real issue. So in the short term, again,
in the short term, people can get away with anything and they oftentimes feel better. And then what
happens is they start to slide back down about six months later, maybe nine months later.
And they'd never correlate the six or nine months later with what they changed six months before.
But that's the main variable because they're like, no, I felt so great.
How could it be this thing?
Well, what happens is your body is great at compensating the short term
and that eventually breaks down in the long term. It just can't keep up. Wow. Okay. Now, another thing, and this was kind of a breakthrough
study I would say for the wellness space. I don't know how old this study was. I want to say it was
maybe two or three years ago, but they compared natural antimicrobial. So these are herbs basically
things like garlic. You actually name quite a bit of them oregano oil and so forth
There was actually a specific product
They compared it to the antibiotics the common there's two common antibiotics used to treat CBO and they found in this study
There was a legit medical study that the herbal anti-microbials were just as effective
They were just as effective as the antibiotics to the where, if you go to a medical doctor now
who's proficient in working with SIBO,
at least to that extent,
they'll even give you the option of taking
the antibiotic or the herbal antimicrobial.
Is there a preference for you?
Like, do you prefer working with the herbal
or with the antibiotic and why?
Why do you pick one over the other?
So there's a couple deep parts to this.
So one, if you're a medical doctor, you're never recommending.
If you have a conventional medicine practice that takes health insurance.
Now, if you're a concierge practice and you take cash, different story.
But if you're a conventional medicine doctor and you take insurance,
you have to prescribe the antibiotic.
And that's because, if anything ever happened
on that patient, and you prescribed herbs
instead of a drug, you're liable.
Insurance wives.
So, but if you're a functional medicine doctor
and you've learned this post-doctoral education
because it's not taught medical school,
and you're not insurance-based,
and they're coming to you for more health
than they are as a primary care
Then you might prescribe the actual herbs now. I'm a doctor of naturopathies
So I just want to state that I'm not a medical doctor. I can't prescribe
any pharmaceuticals nor would I I if I if there was a time and place I would actually refer
Someone that works with me or in our practice to their medical doctor and there are times and places for that
There's no doubt about it.
And that's again for more acute life-saving based conditions.
And we work with people with cancer and all sorts of issues.
So it's not like this is your everyday person, but in certain instances.
So, but here's this is where it gets deeper.
I would never recommend antibiotics for any type of SIBO or gut-based issue.
And the reason is the relapse rate is going to be so high unless you do the other natural things anyways,
which is healing and sealing the gut and doing the anti-fungals.
Now, if you do an anti-fungals, natural anti-fungals for yeast,
well, they're going to kill the bacteria because they work on both.
And the second part, though, this is what really destroyed my health,
and I didn't figure it out for about eight to 10 years.
When people take antibiotics,
whether it's from Lyme disease or gut issues
or infections or sinus infections, whatever it might be,
those antibiotics are broad spectrum.
They kill bacteria, that's their job.
They'll kill bacteria any part of your body.
If you had a cut on your elbow,
you put the antibiotic in your mouth.
It knows to go to your elbow. It does not differentiate between your mitochondria
as well. My mitochondria got wiped out. They are single cell bacteria. I work with people
with lime all the time that still believe they have lime or the symptoms of lime. They
don't. They took two months of doxocycling a very powerful antibiotic that has also been shown to destroy your mitochondria as well.
And now they're dealing with low energy, exercise intolerance, low mood, fatigue, insomnia, dysfunctional diurnal rhythm.
They can't fall asleep at night, they can't wake up in the morning, and that's because their mitochondria have literally been wiped out.
Of course, not all of them, but they've been really decimated.
Speaking of mitochondria, what's your take on, like, red light therapy?
Are you a fan?
Do you know much about it?
Yeah, I mean, I really, I do do too much else besides hang out with my family and then
read and research and work on my practice.
And I love, because that's why I love all these things. So it's like, I get to do what my passion
is anyways. So I review a lot of these practice, a lot of these products every Friday. I do show this
basically going through them. And I love, I mean, I love the industry. I really do. Like I've got,
I've got an aura ring on in an Apple watch on at the same time. I've got a leaf therapeutic
space device. I've got all these things. And yes, they're on airplane mode and Bluetooth is off.
People always ask.
And red light therapy can be fantastic as well.
So I am someone though who doesn't believe in panaceas.
I like sauna.
I like cold therapy for some people, not all.
I like red light for almost anybody.
And I like it always in conjunction with exercise,
with nutrition, so I have something called
a distress protocol, so it's like eight different parts.
And you don't need to be perfect at one of them.
So yes, I like red light.
I like most of these modalities, to be honest with you.
I think there's a time and place for pretty much
all of them, binaural beats, neurofeedback, biofeedback.
Yeah, they're fantastic.
Staying on the topic of mitochondria,
I keep reading amazing studies on creatine,
creatine being a supplement.
I mean, when you and I were kids working out,
it first came out into the market
and it was only about building muscle and getting stronger,
it was controversy around it.
Now studies are showing it's good for your heart
and your brain and it's good for mitochondrial
health.
I read an even read a study that might help people with arthritis and it's pretty very
interesting.
What are your thoughts on creatine?
Are there, because I predicted, I do this often on the show and I say, I believe creatine
to be the next big wellness supplement.
I think it's going to move out of the fitness space and move into the wellness space because
of some of its wellness applications.
What are your thoughts around creating?
What are its benefits?
Are there benefits that you would recommend it for aside from the traditional,
it makes you stronger and allows you to do a few more reps in the gym?
Yeah, for sure.
And it takes me way back to my senior of high school with my little bottle of EAS going to the bathroom
to my loading phase, popping a scoop little bottle of EAS going to the bathroom
to my loading phase popping a scoop in my mouth and swashing it down with tap water.
And it worked.
I mean, the first time I took creating, I was a really thin, what, 16, 17 year old, whatever
it was.
And I put on 14 pounds in about 10 days.
It was the most absurd thing.
It was unbelievable.
So I'm like, this is the greatest thing ever.
I was investing in, and then of course, you're gained stop after that. But it was a great, it was a great 30 days.
And so it's great. Yes, it's great for ATP production. But one of the reasons why that they're
finding that creatine can help for so many different things is because of its ability to improve
adenosine triphosphate. So if it can turn it over faster and it can improve mydocondrial, not just
energy I'll put in an anaerobic environment.
So like, let's say that you're trying to get that extra rep or you're trying it, whatever
it might be, you're trying to last that full 30 seconds for the set 60 seconds.
They've actually shown that it improves aerobic endurance as well.
They've shown that it's helped with burn victims.
They've used it in hospital settings as well.
So I think it's a product that has a ton of upside.
It's very inexpensive.
I don't know if you've looked into different forms.
I've looked into different forms of creatine.
The one that I keep going back to is the inexpensive one,
creatine monohydrate.
I think that people get great results just with that.
They don't need to do a loading phase,
especially if there's any GI, gastrointestinal-based issues.
You can mix it with other, like with your smoothie,
or for better absorption, take it on its own,
with a little sodium, with a little bit of dextrose,
if you want for even better absorption.
The only drawback, and this is kind of a big drawback
for guys I work within their 30s, 40s, 50s, and 60s,
that really want to do a lot of anti-aging
and build boost
their testosterone naturally.
Creatine can cause hair loss.
There's really good correlations with that.
Is this from the increased conversion of testosterone to DHT?
100%.
Okay, okay.
Yeah, explain that.
Sorry to interrupt.
No, no, you're 100% right.
So basically, it can actually thin the hair follicle itself,
or it can cause a speed up in male pattern baldness,
just endogenic based hair loss.
So it doesn't seem to affect women,
but it certainly can.
Women with PCOS can absolutely be affected
if they take creatine,
because they have higher levels of testosterone,
typically, higher levels of insulin,
causing higher levels of testosterone,
but of course, all that can be fixed for women easily, not as easy to fix it for men, but here's
with the work around that we found. What is the product that we use? It's called Advanced
prostate support. So I know it says for your prostate, but what works for your prostate actually works
for your hair. So it has salt pomato, it has stinging nettles, it has pyjeeam, and that actually helps
to block testosterone from DHT.
However, if you're looking for the most muscle gain, you actually want testosterone to
DHT, it actually helps boost muscle.
Yeah, DHT is very angiogenic, right?
So it gives you that aggression, that strength in the gym.
I even read a study that creatine improves sperm motility because of the ATP, which is, you know, really really fascinating
But you're saying if you're somebody that's predisposed to hair loss
That you may notice an acceleration of that. What about for every day average people who probably don't aren't predisposed
Is this something that they should be concerned with?
No, and I think you know, let's just say
You started taking care of your team and in the shower in the morning
or combing your hair, doing your hair,
you started to see more here in your hand,
then you would stop creatine and it should stop.
You know, so that's the nice thing is it shouldn't be,
like once you take the creatine out, it might take a week,
but it should stop after that
because it's not like, it's water soluble,
it's not gonna stay in your body for a long period of time.
And the other thing I'll say about creatine is that, because I mean, I've used this a lot
in my life.
I've used it with a lot of clients, and I could just tell you anecdotally, I'd love to know
if you've seen any studies on it.
I really think that you've maxed out your benefits in about eight to ten weeks.
I think that you can cycle on and off of it if you're just looking for the overall health benefits.
Like take six weeks off, go back on if you want.
Yeah, and there's that.
And also, I've noticed with clients
that my vegan clients had tremendous upside
from taking creatine,
whereas my heavy meat eating clients
would have a much smaller upside
because obviously vegans aren't getting any creatine in their diet. And then I read a study that showed that vegans who take
creatine get a boost in IQ. They actually get cognitive boost from it probably
because they lack it in their diet. Am I on track with that?
Yes. And not even because they don't get creatine as much in their diet and
you're completely right on that aspect. Like if we go back and we think about
like the mid 1900s body builder heyday and we think about the mid-1900s,
Body Builder, Hay Day, and then into the 70s with Arnold
and Franco and all those guys, we have to look at.
They already knew.
They didn't have all the supplements,
but they're eating red meat multiple times per day sometimes.
They're eating very anabolic foods.
When you are on a vegan-based diet,
and I work with a ton of vegan-based
bodybuilders and vegan-based athletes, and we can still get you there, there's no doubt
about it.
However, you are on a naturally catabolic diet.
It's just naturally more catabolic.
You're eating more plant food, which is not as anabolic as eating flesh food.
And again, we've known this from an aerocratic medicine
over 6,000 years ago that if you really want to put on muscle,
you're taking in essentially dairy and meat,
like these foods that are just very anabolic.
And I remember back in the day when I was in my teenage years,
they would tell you to mix heavy cream with your shake
with your protein powder.
And that's because you'd get a ton of cholesterol and IGF,
like insulin growth factor,
and that would help boost muscle.
And so, creatine is anabolic.
Just like branch chienamine acids are.
So if you're giving those to someone that's vegan,
they're going to get better gains.
Yeah, do you, are there common things you see with people
who are, I don't wanna say bodybuilders,
because if I say bodybuilders,
I think people think of like competitive bodybuilders,
but rather, you know, we have a large percentage
of our audience are people who like to do resistance training.
They're trying to build a stronger, leaner physique.
When you see people like this,
are there common issues that you tend to run into
because of that lifestyle?
If they're following a vegan diet.
No, forget vegan, Just like if you get somebody
it's like, Oh, I lift weights, I'm trying to build muscles. So they follow that lifestyle.
Are there common issues that like someone listening right now who follows that lifestyle
that they should kind of watch out for? Yeah, and I'm kind of laughing because I mean,
I grew up a meathead until about 26, 27 years old and I loved it. And that part of me is like
still there. Every day I'm only 5, 8, but every day I it. And that part of me is like still there. Every day, I'm only five eight,
but every day I want to get back to 200 pounds.
So basically I was almost 200 pounds at five eight
and I don't have the frame to be 200 pounds.
I had no business being 200 pounds,
but I did it through a lot of eating,
a lot of, I was taking in 300 grams of protein a day.
I worked at a gym so I worked out.
Anyway, it depends on how long you want to live.
Like that's the thing because you can either have the most amazing body and body transformation
or you can kind of live a long life. The two don't usually go together. And the reason
I say that is that what you need to do in order to create a big physique, we'll say big,
or even very lean is that you need to sway the body
in one direction, pretty strong.
Again, I go back to the 16-eight fasting.
Again, I have some people on 16-eight,
I have some people on 12-12,
that really depends on the individual.
But they found that people doing a 16-eight diet,
they did this study, I can always get the links
if you want them. And then they did a non-people-kitty, whatever they wanted, okay, I can always get the links if you want them.
And then they did a non-people-kid eat whatever they wanted, okay, anytime of the day.
So they found that the restricting 16-8 from 12-8 at night, they lost 2.4 pounds, and
the other group lost 0.67, okay.
Now when they did a dexascando, it revealed that they lost two pounds of muscle mass,
which means they actually gained a half a pound of fat.
And then they had a, the other group which just was about the same, a half a pound.
So they really didn't lose or gain anything.
Now this is people though.
So this is why again, we have to look at studies and we had to look at all the science.
They did almost the same exact study,
but this time they did it with resistance training three times a week, just normal bodybuilding exercises, normal circuit bench press, like press, etc. And this time the group didn't really gain or lose too much muscle mass. This was over eight weeks.
It was about 0.5 pounds, but they lost.
It was like 16x the amount
when they did the intermittent fasting.
So when we're looking at the whole story,
we need to say, when we're saying 16a,
this is, I'm only bringing this up
because I know your audience does a lot of nutrition,
all these different things.
If you are not weight training,
you probably shouldn't be skipping breakfast.
And that's because the weight loss,
the leanness that you might be getting,
is probably body fat and some muscle.
So then we typically compensate and we say,
well, we're gonna add more protein in.
And almost all accounts,
the higher that we increase our protein,
potentially the greater risk for cardiovascular,
cancer, other issues, simply because it is anabolic,
and it raises IGF1.
Now, only one out of two people are gonna get cancer in their lifetime. issues simply because it is anabolic and it raises IGF1.
Now only one out of two people are going to get cancer in their lifetime.
How do you know it's you or not?
That's the kind of coin flip that I look at and I deal with every day.
So now I just say, listen, I just want to be lean.
I want to be 167 pounds, 165 of the lowest and that's it.
And I'm happy.
I feel like I'm good enough there.
Yeah. So the way that I've heard it explained is essentially that you're increasing all these
growth factors, M-Tor and IGF-1 and these are things that are great for building muscle,
but in a pro-cancer environment, they'll actually drive the growth of cancer as well. Is that
kind of an accurate way of saying?
That's the best way to state it is that you're in an anabolic environment, which is why
fasting is catabolic and it helps to alleviate all the causes of mortality to a degree.
And then eventually you go too far and it actually becomes very detrimental.
So it's really knowing your body type.
So for me, if I really wanted to push it, I could eat a little bit more. No doubt about it because I'm not a more
of a hard gainer than someone that can gain weight easily. It's more the people that are
already in a box. And then they start taking it to that next level, but you just never know
who it is. You just, you don't know yet. Again, who is going to affect. But yes, so the
good news is more protein and all of these things puts you
in an environment that will allow you to grow, but it also puts you in an environment that
everything grows. And the last point I will say to that though is it does seem that if you
exercise, not over exercise, but exercise, it also has a protective effect. And also,
if you add some omega-3s and some veggies to that, it may also have a protective
effect.
So, you know, it's difficult to say, I can't say there's an exact answer, but eat your
veggies, brightly colored, a rainbow, and definitely exercise three to four days a week.
Well, okay, so here's something I used to do back in the day, and I felt really good
doing it.
So, you know, the audience is privy to the fact that I've, most of my life,
tried to just build muscle. I was a hard gainer, I was totally obsessed with it all the time. Even
today, I can definitely move in that direction. It's just my nature. I love doing it. But back in the
days to do this thing, and I used to feel really good doing it where I would eat my typical high
protein, higher calorie type diet. I tend to lean more towards fat than carbohydrates.
I just feel better that way.
I'm lifting weights.
I'm trying to get stronger.
And then every week, I would do a vegan day.
So Fridays, for example, I would eat low calorie, all vegetables, low protein.
And I felt very good doing this.
Is this because I'm kind of balancing out the anabolic that I'm doing all week long?
So I'm throwing in one of those kind of catabolic anti-inflammatory days. Is that
is that what's happening? What was your diet like? Was it whole food? Was it more green juices?
Like easy to digest. What did it look like? Potato chips and candy. No, I'm just kidding. It was
no, it was it was whole. It was well cooked. Vegetables. It was low-cal. I wasn't like trying.
My goal wasn't to eat as many calories or many grams of protein as I was on my my normal vegetables. It was low calorie, I wasn't like trying, my goal wasn't to eat as many calories
or many grams of protein as I was on my normal days.
It was literally like salads and well cooked broccoli
and asparagus and I would have some legumes in there,
not a ton.
It was just a low calorie vegan day whole food based.
So just one part to it is if it's lower calorie and it's easier to digest, which it typically
is, with more plant-based foods, because meat is going to be meat and raw vegetables
are going to be the hardest to digest, they take the longest.
So, they take the most energy.
So, if you cut down on your non-thermogenic foods, more of your anabolic foods, like your
meats, then you'll have more energy.
Because about a third of our energy
goes to our digestion every day,
which is why when people fast,
they're like, oh, I feel fantastic.
Well, yeah, it's because you basically aren't allocating
any of your precious energy towards digestion.
So that's why typically I am a big,
again, not everybody likes this, that's okay.
I'm a big smoothie oatmeal person in the morning.
They're mush foods, they're easy to digest,
you can get a lot of nutrition.
And most people don't drink anything,
past like six o'clock, eight o'clock at night.
So if you're going to late in the morning,
12 hours with only a liquid,
and the first thing they do is grab coffee,
and that's not very hydrating.
So that's why I lean that way,
and then you still have plenty of energy.
You don't need to skip breakfast, you can still go,
I go 14 hours, I go six at night to eat in the morning.
That works well for my body.
Some people need to eat a little closer to waking up
for blood sugar issues.
You know, that's fine too.
So, but what I really recommend is every Monday,
I fast 24 hours.
So essentially, I really, I have a blow out cheat meal,
flex meal, Friday night.
And like I eat my dinner, then I eat both of my daughters,
dinners, whatever's left, probably get some dessert,
just really enjoy myself because that's part of life.
I don't take it to that extreme every time,
but I just want people to know, like listen,
I act like a normal human being and I enjoy good food,
but I'm eating well the rest of the time.
So then I just kind of recalibrate,
and then Sunday night I have dinner with my family,
like we typically would, and then on Monday night, I have dinner with my family, like we typically would.
And then on Monday night, I have dinner again.
So I'm not going to full day, but I am going the entire work day
every single week, or at least three to three
on a four Mondays a month, that I'm fasting.
And so it allows me to get all of those benefits
of longer termotophagy, because it's not really 16 hours.
It's more like 18 to 23, you know,
as you start to move deeper into it. But honestly, it's more like 18 to 23, you know, as you start to move deeper into
it, but honestly it's different for every individual and a lot of it is based on glucose reserves
in your body.
Now I've heard aeravetic medicine and Chinese medicine say not to drink cold beverages,
why is that?
It slows digestion, so it cools digestion.
If you're trying to create heat in the stomach, which would be your hydrochloric acid, your pepsin, and if you think about it, when you cook soup, if you cooked it on low
heat, it would take a long time to cook and be ready. But if you cook it on high heat,
it's going to be ready faster. And so basically, you want high heat in your stomach. You don't
want to put cold water in there, which would dilute that fire.
Oh, very, very interesting. Well, cool. It's always a blast talking to you, Dr. Where you like a wealth of knowledge. And I swear, I can ask you a question and then
you'll just go off and I'll just learn a bunch of new stuff. I really appreciate you coming
the podcast and I appreciate everything that you do. What's the best way to get a hold of you?
Because I guarantee people are going to want to find you and get a hold of you just to hear more
your stuff. My, my website is stevencobrawl.com.
You can find my podcast there, the Cobrawl Concepts, my book, The Rainbow Effect.
And then if people are looking for all the protocols we use and all the labs that they
can do right at home, again, it's all open source.
And that's at EQUI.LIIFE.
That's equal.life.
And that's basically it.
And so people will be able to just, essentially, what I do is I try to just create just a little bit of content each day. So it's in bytes and then you kind of absorb it and then
move on to the next because even though we talked about so much today, there's like okay,
but what about this? And then when what this happens? And so there's always levels to it. And so we
just try to peel back the onion every day on the podcast. And you still treat people, right? So if
somebody wanted to hire you personally, I'm sure you're probably a premium,
but you still work with patients, correct?
I do, but I oversee now a very large practice
of certified health coaches,
and we train them actually through the Institute,
the Integrative Health Practitioner Institute.
But so basically, my best ability to serve
is to oversee 1 thousand, two thousand,
three thousand labs a month, rather than work individually with people, but I still do.
Sometimes work individually with people, yes.
Very cool.
All right, man.
Well, thank you for coming on the show.
Really appreciate it.
It's my pleasure.
It was great.
Thanks for having me.
Thank you.
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