Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1910: How to Uncover Hidden Hormone Imbalances With Dr. Stephen Cabral
Episode Date: September 26, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Dr. Stephen Cabral and get their hormone profiles analyzed on air. The paradigm around preventative health. (3:00) Humans are meant to do tough things an...d we have gotten soft. (8:57) The benefits of putting your body through temperature changes. (11:51) His thoughts on artificial sweeteners. (13:51) What role does eating too much play in poor health? (16:55) Is there an antioxidant consumption limit? (19:10) Differentiating between blood and saliva tests. (22:36) The stress/gut connection. (31:39) Explaining the gut/brain access. (33:46) Unpacking and understanding the results and findings from the guy’s lab tests. (37:31) Doug. (39:36) Justin. (58:54) Adam. (1:11:07) The importance of looking at the big picture. (1:24:29) The motivation behind their partnership. (1:27:48) What tests does he recommend? (1:29:24) His insight into the MP Holistic Health community. (1:30:45) What you get if you purchase a test through Dr. Cabral. (1:34:29) Related Links/Products Mentioned Equi.life is offering all Mind Pump listeners the Stress, Mood & Metabolism at Home Lab Test for 50% off! Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! September Promotion: Skinny Guy Bundle (MAPS ANABOLIC // MAPS AESTHETIC // NO B.S. 6-PACK FORMULA // INTUITIVE NUTRITION GUIDE // OCCLUSION TRAINING GUIDE.) HALF OFF!! Also, the Fit Mom Bundle (MAPS ANYWHERE // MAPS ANABOLIC // MAPS HIIT // and INTUITIVE NUTRITION GUIDE.) HALF OFF!! **Code SEPT50 at checkout** The Acute Effects of Interrupting Prolonged Sitting Time in Adults with Standing and Light-Intensity Walking on Biomarkers of Cardiometabolic Health in Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us 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 Children with Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis Have Increased Intestinal Permeability: Results of a Pilot Study HeartMath Institute MP Holistic Health Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram Website Podcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind,
there's only one place to go.
Mind, pop, mind, pop 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.
Great episode today.
We have Dr. Cabral on.
He's one of our favorite functional health practitioners.
We talked about a lot of really good stuff here in terms of how you can test for certain
issues, hormone imbalances, and now you can work with them.
In fact, in this episode, he went through Justin, Adam, and Doug's stress tests, stress
and mood tests, I think they're called stress, mood and metabolism.
And he went through their blood work, he went through saliva tests and came up with some cool stuff.
By the way, if you wanna do one of these tests yourself,
you can actually go to stevencobrawl.com,
that's STEPH, EN, C-A-B-R-A-L,
dot com forward slash M-P,
and you'll get a 50% off,
that's only from Mind Pump Listener.
So the tests you hear him going over in this episode, and all the results and all the advice he gives, you can get that same test, 50% off that's only from my pump listener. So the tests you hear them going over in this episode,
and all the results and all the advice he gives,
you can get that same test 50% off if you go to that link.
Once again, at stevencobrawl.com-forge-lash-mp-steven-spelled
with a pH.
Now this episode is brought to you by some sponsors.
L-M-N-T is a product that's an electrolyte powder
with the appropriate levels of sodium.
Most electrolyte powders don't have enough sodium
for athletes or for people who have low carb diets
or who don't eat a lot of heavily processed foods.
Well, this one, it's got the sodium,
so it really works.
It's also not artificially sweetened.
It only uses stevia, so it really works.
It's delicious.
I get better pumps, better performance when I use it.
Go check them out.
Go to drinklment.com forward slash mine pump.
And right now they're offering our listeners a free sample pack
with any order.
So that's eight single serving packets for free
with any order on their website.
Also, we got a sale going on this month.
Two bundles are 50% off.
The first one is a skinny guy bundle.
This bundle includes maps and
a ballic maps aesthetic the no BS six pack formula the intuitive nutrition guide in the occlusion
training guide. So all of that is in that bundle and all of it is 50% off. The second bundle that's
on sale is a fit mom bundle, which includes maps anywhere maps and a ballic maps hit and the intuitive
nutrition guide. So that's also 50% off.
To get the 50% off discount, to get signed up, go to maps fitness products.com
and then use the coupon code, SEPT50, for the 50% off discount.
All right, here comes the show.
All right, Dr.
Gaborl, welcome back.
Thanks so much.
Thank you so much.
Our last episode was awesome.
Got a lot of great feedback.
You went through some of our hair sample tests.
Yes.
In today's episode, we did more tests with you.
We don't know the results.
So we'll get to that in a second.
But before we do,
it sounds very nervous, but I think you're shaking.
Um, you know, you can rank us for a second,
third place, second, last time.
No, but I want to talk about the paradigm around preventative health.
I know it's just something you wanted to kind of talk about a little bit on the show before
we got into testing all that stuff.
So let's start there.
Let's start about the paradigm around preventative health and where it's at and where it probably
needs to go.
Yeah, I actually thought it was going to shift to an even greater degree over the last
two years.
You know, with the pandemic, with COVID, I just thought that would be more of a push
from mainstream society to say, hey, there's a lot we can do in order to improve our overall health.
Like let's start with good quality nutrition first, get people off the standard American
diet, less processed food, less hydrogenated oils, and let's move people to moving their
body.
It just maybe start with 7 to 10,000 steps a day, then maybe get into some body weight
training, then progress up, but it hasn't happened.
And that to me is really discouraging because if it's not going to happen over these past
two years, where we know that the ability to be able to not necessarily prevent sickness,
but to be able to recover faster.
We know that for sure.
I don't think that it's going to happen unless podcasts like yours and other people are
pushing it forward.
So it's my mission even more than ever to be able to say, listen, there's so much
that you can do to improve your overall health that you don't need to have the same level
of worry.
Now, this is concern.
I understand that, but you don't have to have the same level of worry about getting sick
in general.
You could control a lot of these things, even autoimmune issues.
Yeah, you know, I think there's a couple of reasons why I think there's a challenge there.
And I'll start with the first one.
I think a lot of people believe that they need to do a lot more than what their maybe schedule
allows or maybe what they're willing to do in order to reap benefits.
In other words, someone may say, walking 15 minutes a day, what's that going to do even
though they're not doing any of that now?
Oh my God, changing my diet.
I have to over a whole,
everything to notice any results.
I mean, maybe talk about that for a second,
how small changes, you still get some great benefits from,
even just the smallest changes.
Yeah, and a lot of it, so it's nothing extra.
So like the extra in people's day,
because I understand how busy everyone is.
We're talking about like getting 30 minutes back for yourself a day,
like towards your health, towards your fitness.
Everybody still has to eat breakfast lunch at dinner
or even if you're just doing lunch at dinner,
you're still gonna have those meals.
So now it's more of a one-for-one replacement.
And when I talk to a lot of people out,
if you're making your own food,
you think it's difficult.
I have no problem in the beginning.
People are just saying, oh, I'm just gonna have
some frozen broccoli, you know, ready for me in the freezer.
I'm gonna have some frozen foods, whatever I'm gonna be.
You can literally take out a piece of wild frozen salmon,
some frozen broccoli, some,
if you're not looking to do rice or grains or anything,
some frozen cauliflower, put in the oven, frozen at all.
30 minutes later, you have a meal,
you can add a little olive oil,
a little sea salt, it's delicious.
It's like a gourmet meal for no real work.
So what I like to do is just share with people
whether you're going out for food
or you're eating, we have to make that one
for one switch to have it be healthier.
And it also doesn't mean that you can never have
a flex male or cheat male or whatever you want to call it.
You just have to reach your goals first.
Once you reach your goals, I'm sure that you three
probably agree, it's like you can then enjoy yourself.
You reach your goal, so why not have a drink
if you choose to or have pasta and bread
or whatever it is that you'd like.
And then in terms of exercise, that's just, that is part of being a human being.
I really believe that we are meant to be active and that we put a lot of emphasis on nutrition.
But, and I agree with that.
But nutrition cannot make up completely what your body is meant to do in terms of physical
exercise.
I think it is something that people just greatly overlook that the research clearly shows
that simply walking for 7,000, 10,000 steps a day extends life.
Just that.
The longest lived people, I agree with weight training.
Don't get me wrong, but they never did any weight training.
Now, they did physical activity.
They walked up hills.
That was a big thing, you know, with people who live longer life.
So you're taking stairs
Or you're doing these things and they seem like nothing and here's why they seem like nothing eating better for that one meal
Walking 7000 10,000 steps a day that day. It does absolutely nothing next week
It does nothing next month. It does nothing over the course of months and years it adds up
Yeah, it makes a tremendous difference and when you're talking about how we were meant to move
and what we're meant to do,
here's the second reason why I think people
have such trouble with that is that in the past,
it was a part of culture.
It was a part of your life.
Now we're in this strange new world
where you have to schedule exercise
or you have to find time to move.
And then with nutrition, we ate healthy, almost on accident,
because either A, we didn't have a lot of foods,
we didn't overeat.
And B, we had to prepare our own food anyway,
because there wasn't a lot of availability.
And even today, the cultures that seem to do the best
are the ones where exercise is a part of the culture.
Like, there's certain cultures
where walking after a meal is kind of part of the meal.
A study just came out that showed
there's just a little two minutes of walking post,
brandy, a post meal will reduce the impacts of blood sugar.
So I think that's a really big one.
I think it's more, and I guess this is,
I feel this way because I just came off
of a three day fast that I did.
And I'm always fascinated in my own behaviors and cravings
and things that I go through during a process like this.
And it always blows my mind that when I restrict from food
for that extended period of time,
how the most simplest foods sound amazing.
And I feel like we have just oversaturated our bodies
and we're so spoiled that we can have access
to so much all the time,
that what drives us that make our decisions
is these explosions we want in our mouth.
And if we could just pull back a little bit
and restrict for a little bit
and maybe not give ourselves food for a while
and actually truly feel what it feels
like to feel hungry a little bit,
it's amazing actually what sounds good.
Like I remember just being like,
oh my gosh, what a Brussels sprout right now.
I hated Brussels sprouts going up,
but it was just like just something nutritious.
I wanted any piece of chicken sounded so amazing.
Are you from moving any research around that
around the decent, I don't know,
for lack of a better term, desensitizing ourselves
to perceiving flavors because heavily processed foods
are just, they just bombard us with so much.
Is there any evidence?
I mean, I've experienced that a lot of people have, but do you know of any sort of...
Yeah, and there's actually a really good book on it.
These are the three words of the book.
It's basically sugar salt, fat.
Yes, that's not the name.
It's close to that.
Yes.
And it talks about the biochemicals in your body.
So basically, it's called the neurotransmitters that are actually released when we eat these foods.
So we know that one of the biggest reasons
for addiction in general, and that can include alcohol,
is to produce more dopamine.
And that gives you that fix, and it lasts for a little bit,
but then it drops.
And what they found is that maybe when you eat those carbs,
that processed food or whatever it might be,
blood sugar can raise, and then it comes back down
to baseline, and if your body's healthy, it will just stay a baseline.
But dopamine actually dips lower than when you had that sugary food,
previous to that.
So that means that that neurochemical for reward actually goes higher every time you have that cheat,
which is technically why some people do so much better with no cheat meals or flex meals in their diet.
Because once they have that one, it can actually set off their neurotransmitters in a non-balance
way.
Now, some people, it's because of gut health disorders.
So when you put that extra fruit toast from alcohol or processed carbs into your gut,
it's starting to feed the candida.
And it's starting to feed the seabull, the small intestine bacterial overgrowth.
So then you take it away,
and there's a greater craving,
because these are actually living things.
But back to your point,
so I'm actually doing my fall functional medicine detox
right now, and the first two days of that are liquid fasting.
It's almost no calories.
It's just a micronutrients to keep up
liver detoxification, because we live in a more toxic world,
which just means that there's more plastic,
stalates, everything coming into us at all times.
Exhaust fumes, we talked about that on the last show.
So these micronutrients just help to basically
give you that phase one and phase two liver detox.
But by the time day three comes and it's lunchtime,
it's just your interest in food is so great
that you're happy to be eating a salad,
or vegetables, or whatever.
And it's a resetting of the system.
And I think that it's absolutely amazing.
But there's one other part to it.
Humans are meant to do hard things.
And our lives have got soft.
They really have.
Mine included.
I can begin air condition all day.
The temperature can always be at 70 degrees all the time.
I can take an uber here instead of having to walk a mile.
You were just talking about the salad.
The exercise, you're right.
We didn't have to think about walking because, well, we walked
or we did manual labor.
And not even 100 years ago, there wasn't refrigeration of the degree that there is now.
So none of these things even existed.
Three generations really previous to us.
And as humans, we have to start actually doing hard things to build up a callus, a hermetic
stressor, so that real stresses in our life,
then they actually feel stressful.
Not the easy things, not the things that maybe
we shouldn't be all stressed out about.
You mentioned the change in temperature,
and I've noticed that just anecdotally,
if there's a dramatic shift in, say, the weather,
or the environment that I'm in,
typically if there's anything floating around,
I'm a little bit more susceptible to catching it.
Is there any, have you gone through any of the studies
or science in that direction?
Yeah, and the best studies of those
are actually on heat or cold-based therapy.
So there's sauna, right?
So if we, I have two different types of sauna.
So I have an infrared sauna,
and then I have a barrel sauna.
My barrel sauna can crank up to 200 degrees. Now, just 200 degrees, it's a six-foot sauna. So if I put infrared sauna and then I have a barrel sauna. My barrel sauna, I can crank up to 200 degrees.
Now, it's 200 degrees, it's a six-foot sauna.
So if I put my head to the ceiling, it's 200 degrees
and it's insanely hot.
But when you're seated, it's somewhere around like 170, 180.
So it's still obviously very, very hot.
And you're not really meant to be in that
for more than 20, 30 minutes.
I know some people try to like make it a competition,
but you have to be careful with things like that.
But you can actually test the blood before and after,
and when you test the blood after you've been in
that sauna for about 30 minutes,
it looks like an absolute war zone, your blood.
It looks terrible.
But what happens is your body is reacting to that stress,
and it's actually getting stronger.
That includes your immune cells,
that includes your, it's called your HPA access,
your hypothalamus pituitary adrenal access.
So you start to produce more amounts of
norapenephrine or normal amounts of norapenephrine,
as well as cortisol.
So a lot of people with depression and anxiety,
low mood-based disorders will say,
actually get tremendous benefit from heat therapy,
as well as cold therapy.
Oh, interesting.
Because they produce oftentimes less dopamine
and less norapenephrine.
Two things that you get a surge of whenever you do
those two modalities.
Yeah, I use that example with exercise
when people talk about, when they take a study
that looked at one metric, like,
oh, these inflammatory markers went up
or this one thing went down.
I'm like, man, if you did a blood test on someone
post workout, it would look terrible.
It's incredible.
Nobody would want to work out
because it looked like this is a pro-inflammatory cancer
causing death, causing activity when in reality what it does is it strengthens and improves our
health.
Back to the perception of taste, we've talked about this on the show.
I've had clients where these were people with terrible diets, they didn't exercise,
they hire me, and they drank diet sodas because they preferred the flavor of diet sodas to
regular sodas.
In fact, regular sodas weren't sweet enough.
And I know that artificial sweeteners are, I mean, gram program far sweeter than sugar.
My observation or my guess is that it changed their perception of all sweetness.
Maybe there was a down regulation of receptors or maybe they don't get the same dopamine hit.
Have you experienced this with any patients?
Without a doubt, I don't know the exact science between, I know what you're talking about
in terms of sweetness. Like even stevia is 300 times sweeter than sugar. And so it's not
that, and I have no problem with people using stevia, people like to say, well, it, you
know, causes this, causes that. I haven't really seen that. Not of only have I not seen
in practice in 15 years, I haven't really seen in the research. If anything, it looks
like the stevia sides actually help with the gut microbiome
and potentially even Lyme disease.
So I don't, you know, monk fruit stevia,
I'm totally fine with those.
But I'm also just as okay with some organic maple syrup
or some raw honey and just a smaller amount
because it is the natural sugar.
It's a natural amount of sweetness that we may get
and I'm much more of an advocate of that than something like Asper-Tame, which people say,
oh, it's no big deal. Studies say it's okay. Well, okay. Studies say it's okay for a fraction
of the dose and in a certain population. But I can show you people who have autism or have
chemical sensitivities that that creates massive issues with what's called glutamate or glutamac acid in their body,
like without a doubt.
It's a cytotoxic, right?
A cytotoxic in the way that for them,
they can't break it down properly.
So some people can literally not metabolize that
as other people.
You even see it in children.
So some kids do totally fine with things
that have artificial flavors, natural flavors.
They don't, it doesn't really change their mood.
You give it to another kid, they're off the wall, they're literally hitting other kids,
and that's why I think we need to look into that more for ADD, ADHD, because their body can't
metabolize that glutamate. And so, like, even taking glutamine, so glutamine is a phenomenal,
nutritional supplement can help with recovery from workouts, muscle mass, it can help with,
it helps with burn with, it helps with
burn victims, it helps with HIV, keeps muscle in the body essentially, makes you more animal.
Most abundant amino acid and skeletal muscle, correct?
100%. It's one of the first ones besides zinc and vitamin C gets depleted during stress.
But some people, when they put a higher amount of glutamine, like 10 grams plus a day, they
can't properly metabolize that glutamine, which does eventually break down a glutamic acid.
So that's why we're always looking
at the bio-individuality of the person.
So I don't know if that answered your question,
but I'm not an advocate whatsoever
of artificial sweeteners,
even if people are saying the study is okay.
I haven't actually heard of that.
Some certain dyes will really trigger some of his,
he's got, he's neurodivergent.
So ADD-ish, ADHD, and I don't remember what color dyes, he's got, he's neurodivergent. So ADD-ish, ADHD.
And I don't remember what color dies,
but I mean, it's a profound effect.
And they've talked about this.
This is not, I'm not, you know, this isn't just him.
This is actually a kind of a known thing.
What role, because I've seen studies,
and there's some scientists that'll do this
to kind of try to prove a point,
although I get what they're saying,
but I also disagree, is they'll show, well, all these negative effects of sugar, all these negative effects of certain point, although I get what they're saying, but I also disagree, is they'll show,
well, all these negative effects of sugar, all these negative effects of certain foods,
when the calories are low enough, then we still see improvements in health.
What role does just eating too much play in poor health?
Without a doubt, that's a factor.
You can look at it a couple other ways.
When I go back to the rainbow-alifact, there's a lot of people who can eat the same exact foods
that they always eat when they typically have a reaction
if they fast for the majority of the day.
And why?
Literally it goes back to the rain barrel effect.
So they're emptying their rain barrel for 16 hours,
18 hours, 20 hours, and then they have that one meal,
which contains gluten or hydrogenated oils or
there are chemicals or whatever they typically have, but their body right now is at a cleaner
slate.
And now it's ready to be able to process inside of the liver, the kidneys, the immune
cells.
So it doesn't overwhelm them.
So it doesn't overwhelm them.
It doesn't overflow that rainbow.
Interesting.
But now, that's conventional medicine in a nutshell.
It's a band-aid-based approach, and it's not looking at the root causes to why and it's also not looking at bioindividuality
It's also not looking at reality who the hell eats in a caloric deficit all the time nobody
I mean and those foods can contribute to behaviors that make you okay and the reality is that even the people that go on great diets and keep
themselves in check like you're gonna over you're gonna over you're not overfill the rain barrel eventually. And eventually you're going to always go back
to what you would consider like a normal or average diet.
So I have no problem with people doing a 21 day reset
or maybe up to six weeks,
but there has to be a plan that takes you from whatever
that really stressful 21 days is,
to then less stressful, call it a phase two,
to then a phase three,
which you're eating all the time every day,
except for your one or two flex meals per week.
That is the way that people are gonna be able
to maintain, and anybody I know who's in great shape,
great health, all of the greats,
mentally as well, mood wise,
they are enjoying themselves once or twice a week, but they're doing the other things
in order to be able to earn that food.
So now that I have you here, I've been wanting to ask you,
this is a little bit of a turn, but I've been reading
about antioxidants, in particular, some of the ones
that are most important for the liver.
I know you could take a supplement, NAC, which will raise raise what's the thing that it raises in the glutathione. You could also
supplement glutathione, which helps deliver. This was because during the pandemic, there
were some studies that showed that low glutathione levels was strongly connected to poor outcomes
with with COVID. But I also read that taking too many or too much of like glutathione, for
example, could cause also an adverse effect. You could have too many adding too much of like glutathione, for example, could cause also an adverse effect.
You can have too many adding oxidants.
You could go in the opposite direction.
What does that look like?
Is there a huge individual variance with that?
So it's almost impossible to create an antioxidant overload on the body if it's coming from food.
Right.
So the body will always be able to process that, use what it needs, and then get rid of
it.
The problem is it's not building up those reserves.
So you have to get it on a daily basis or near daily basis. So if we take a step back, so antioxidants
are needed because oxidation and oxidative stress continue to build up on the body, the more that we do
and the older that we get. So that's why when you do sauna, when you do cold plunge, when you do
hard workouts, when you fast,
these are just some of the things that we're doing,
like as, I don't want to call them biohacks,
but these are things that we're doing,
and we know more about to keep ourselves healthy.
The problem is all of those things,
including breathing, needing,
cause oxidative stress in the body,
which means it creates free radicals.
So we're missing those oxygen-based molecules,
we're missing those electrons-based molecules. We're missing those electrons.
We need antioxidants.
That's the difficult part about saying carnivore only diet,
keto only diet, because we're missing,
unless you are getting all vegetables
to stand to your carb load for the day,
which you could do, you're not gonna get
those antioxidant loads.
So just to go back then to glutathion,
glutathion is what we call the master antioxidant.
That's what we're looking to produce.
The body produces it endogenously.
It just needs the raw material in order to be able to do it.
And so, phase one of lever detoxes,
typically your vitamins and minerals,
so you're looking at zinc and salineium,
which is also used in phase two.
All of your B vitamins, like folate, B12,
the methylated forms, in glutamine.
And then the second phase is from sulfur-based amino acids.
You talked about anacetyl cysteine.
There's touring, there's a bunch of others that also then help to create glutathione.
So there's the first pathway and the second pathway, the second pathway is which people
are typically missing.
Like if you take a good methylated, daily activated multi or something like that, you're
covered on phase one. But very few of them cover you in the sulfur- methylated, daily activated multir, something like that, you're covered in phase one.
But very few of them cover you in the sulfur-based ones, which come from cruciferous vegetables.
So the brussel sprouts, the broccoli, the bok choy, those types of things give you the
sulfur-based and even garlic, items like that.
And then they make glutathione.
Glutathione, unless you're taking it intravenously, which then you can definitely overdo it,
is difficult to be able to absorb in the body right now.
We could take a reduced glutathione or like
pizzoma glutathione, but it's almost better.
We've seen a lot of great results
with using NSEAL-SYSTIN, NAC, as the precursor.
It's funny because I'm pretty sure they know this
because Amazon banned NAC.
I know.
They're now seeming to allow it back potentially.
Well, the FDA said that they were going to take it off the market.
That's right.
Yeah, which was kind of interesting timing.
Yes.
Very interesting.
That's peculiar because it's been out a long time.
Yeah.
Very interesting.
All right.
So what we did with you, the tests that we did with you were blood and saliva tests.
Yes.
And for the audience, this was an at-home test.
So we got a kit.
You take it home. There were some vials that you fill with saliva
or you filled to a certain point with saliva.
And then there was a blood test where you prick your finger
and you, I don't remember how many drops of blood,
it was something like 15 or something like that,
drops of blood.
And then we send it into the lab.
That one took a lot of effort.
Yeah, to melt.
It's a scissor.
It's like milk in my face.
Well, I didn't have the nurse advice until later on.
Yeah.
I want to help you.
No, all the stuff that Justin said, like, you should have done to actually get the blood
out there.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, Courtney told me, like, where are you even pricked?
Oh, interesting.
Yeah, and then I even, like, I notice a huge difference by coming from your elbow and coming
down like that.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah, yeah, so.
I learned a lot on that test.
We have all the tips today.
We sent them in.
Now, what are these tests looking at?
What's the saliva test looking for?
And what's the blood test looking for?
Yeah, and it's good to differentiate between the two.
So saliva is the absolute best lab test
to find out your hormone levels.
Now, you can do hormone through blood.
Like you can take your testosterone, estrogen,
progesterone, et cetera, through blood,
and there's nothing wrong with that.
You just always want wanna run the free form
of something like testosterone.
Cause in the blood, about 95 to 99% of hormone
in the blood is bound up by proteins.
And so you don't actually know if that's able to be used or not,
if you're just running total testosterone.
So like, sex hormone binding globulin.
Okay.
So sex hormone binding globulin is increased actually
with oxidative stress.
And that could be from heavy metals.
It could be from gut inflammation.
It could be from mental physical emotional stress, overdoing your workouts without recovery.
Anyone of those things can increase SHGB.
Sex hormone binding globulin BG.
Now, I just recently, you shared with you that I did a three day fast.
This was after we did all the testing.
It was actually just a little over a week and a half ago.
How much would my test be different?
How did I test it right after that?
Do you can, would it be significantly different?
A little bit different or would nothing be different?
If we would have tested me like right after I did it,
I could three day fast.
Yeah, so there's two scenarios based on the constitution
and strength of the person's body when they did that lab.
So if someone has a really strong, healthy, robust body,
your body will boost testosterone,
it will boost the HGA and it will boost cortisol.
So it's putting you in the beginning of like,
adrenal-based stress.
In a post-pap, right after that.
Oh, interesting.
And the reason it is is like,
you're in that alpha state, where you need to go find food,
you need to go out there and whatever's challenging you,
but that only lasts for so long.
Growth hormone and these hormones begin to drop
after about 72 hours.
Okay.
So after that, you're in a much more catabolic state.
That's why in a fast, some people,
I mean, me included, I'm energized.
I feel sharper.
Yeah, no, I'm pretty great.
But I remember one of my concerns,
because I was doing this fast,
I was also fasting from sex.
And right after the fast was when Katrina
would be most likely to get pregnant.
One of my concerns was boy,
maybe I didn't time that food fast very well,
because I'd be low on nutrients.
Maybe my testosterone levels would naturally dip,
but you're saying that it actually probably would have spiked?
It depends on the individual,
because someone who though is already in an exhausted,
burnt out state drives their testosterone lower lower like it depletes you
Yeah, and what effect would that have on his firm?
So not as much
Yeah, yeah, not as much now so that was your libido could decrease though. Yeah, so that so the saliva test was for hormones
Yes, and I noticed we did several of them so you're looking at hormone levels throughout the day
Right, not just That's just a screenshot.
That's the important thing, and you'll see it on all of your labs today, and this is
why it's so important.
When you go and have your blood work run with your PCP, it should always be before 10am.
You really want it fastened before 10am to look at your lipid panel for your cholesterol
on all these numbers.
Your hormones, especially testosterone, are really going to be highest in the morning.
Your estrogen, all these numbers, although that is diurnal as well.
So when we're looking at these, we're looking at all of your hormones for the first tube,
which is a larger tube.
That's the one you take upon waking or within the first 20 minutes.
And we're looking at that for our cortisol, but our testosterone, DHEA, which is a precursor
to testosterone.
It's a port number that we talk about here today, because the better your DHEA, the better
your immune system typically.
So it's a really important number, and it decreases with age, which is why our immune system typically
weakens with age.
And then we look at progesterone and estrogen and that goes for men and women.
And the reason is is that men can start to convert too much testosterone to estrogen and
that has negative effects as well.
And then before lunch you can do a small tube of saliva, then before dinner, small tube
of saliva, and then before bed.
And the reason is that cortisol works almost called the diurnarhythm.
That means it's basically two parts to it.
So it should be a cortisol-awaken response about 20 to 30 minutes after you wake should be
peak cortisol, somewhere between 6 and 8 in the morning, ideally.
But you can change yours, depending on when you wake up.
And then after that, it just starts to drop throughout the day.
And it should have be at its lowest point at around 9.30 or so at night.
And if it's not, then your body is most likely not getting the deep sleep that it requires,
the REM sleep that it requires, you're not getting the recovery,
which then leads to lower testosterone, lower DHE over time.
So when we go through our labs, I want you to challenge each of us
when you get to something that's like off on the charts.
Sure.
Yeah. So when you're doing, let's like off on the charts. Sure. Yeah.
So when you're doing, let's say when you're doing Justin and let's say D H A or something
you're going over, I want you to ask him, do you, do you think you're higher than the
rest of the guys or lower than our guests?
I want to see how well we show ourself.
No, I think, I think that we'll all know each other and ourselves pretty well and I'm,
and I'll be interested in you.
And by the end, you'll, you'll have absolutely be, you'll be able to predict the future.
So my goal with this at home lab testing is that everyone learns how to read their own
labs.
I do case studies twice a month and all my podcasts try to do things that just teaches
people.
I want you to be able to pick up this lab and know how to read it.
Now you don't have to be the expert, but you should absolutely know how to.
I love that.
Like if they've been going through your workouts, guys, girls in this program for years,
they should know how to put together a program.
Now they go to you,
because you're still the best at what you do,
but they should be able to know how to structure for themselves,
at least that's right.
That's what we're talking about.
That's what we're talking about.
That's what we're talking about.
So that's the saliva test.
Now what are the blood tests?
We're looking with the blood drugs.
And it's important too,
because saliva cannot accurately test everything.
And that's why we always look at,
are we looking at here?
Okay, that shows excretion of the body.
saliva shows what's usable. That's the hormones, the's why we always look at, or we look at it here, okay, that shows excretion of the body. So liva shows what's usable.
That's the hormones, the sex hormones we're looking at.
Blood, we're looking at capillary blood.
And so with this, you cannot look at your thyroid
through saliva.
So we have to do the blood spot.
Now, for people at home that have never done this,
like how can you get blood at home,
you're doing the same thing that you would use
for a finger stick for type two diabetes
just to get your glucose.
So you do a small finger prick,
and we could give you the tips today
how to make that super easy.
Standing is one thing, and more with the hands,
all those things.
And then you're putting that on the card,
it's gonna give you, not just your TSH,
which is typically what your PCP is gonna run,
that's thyroid stimulating hormone,
doesn't tell you anything.
Just tells you the amount of stress the thyroid is under
to produce more or less thyroid.
Then just like free testosterone,
we wanna look at T3.
That's the most important one.
That's the most active.
That's the most active.
Exactly.
It will show T4, show T3,
so we can see if there's any breaks in the links.
And then we also look at TPO antibodies.
And then the final part of the test
that has to be done in blood again,
this is the finger prick,
is your hemoglobin A1C.
It's basically a weighted average of the last 90 days
of what your blood sugar looks like.
And then there's insulin, which is that moment in time.
What does your insulin spike look like?
What was that one you said, TPO3?
TPO antibodies?
Antibiot, what are those?
So your body will produce antibodies based on subtype of autoimmune based process.
And unlike, let's say, RA for rheumatoid factor for rheumatoid arthritis, TPO is the
antibodies produced that attack the thyroid.
And so there's a lot of Hashimoto's.
One out of eight women are dealing with low thyroid.
So you could have theoretically normal looking thyroid labs, but then have such high antibodies
that your body's not utilizing it right and you could be having low thyroid symptoms, is that correct?
Yes, but by the time you typically get to,
so we hope to do more preventative-based health.
So when we see that TSH getting above a two,
so TSH should be a 0.5 to a two.
But when you go to your typical lab visit, again,
people might have the best PCP in the world,
and that's fantastic, that that's great.
Just most are not trained in this.
Usually the marker goes to a five.
By the time you get to a five for TSH, your thyroid has been defective and dysfunctional
for years.
So then your TPO antibodies could start reacting from 90% of all autoimmune issues now are tied
to the gut.
They can see that. Stress is related, but gut is a big part of it.
Heavy metals can be at infections viruses.
So there's other factors, but this was actually
a study that I just shared, and it was,
it was either Mayo Clinic or Harvard said
that Hashimoto specifically tied to increased gut permeability.
Now, 30 years ago, not quite 30 years,
when I had my illnesses, you were laughed out of the doctors off the table. Oh yeah, Licky Gutson Drone, you years ago, not quite 30 years, when I had my illnesses, you were left out of the doctor's office.
Oh, yeah.
You talked about the doctor.
You talked about the doctor's syndrome.
You said that, and they were like, oh, God.
Fibromyalgia, licky gut, you know, adrenal fatigue.
You're like, you know, what's wrong with this person?
Now there's a medical term for it.
You said it intestinal hyperpromiability.
Exactly.
Absolutely hilarious.
Okay, so question around gut, the gut.
You said that 90% or so of autoimmune issues connect to the gut.
And you talked about stress. I know that stress can also affect the gut, and the that 90% or so of autoimmune issues connect to the gut, and you talked about stress.
I know that stress can also affect the gut,
and the gut can also affect your stress levels.
So, do we know what, like, what affects what more,
or is it just this two-way street?
And so you can't affect, you can't look at one
without looking at the other.
That's right.
And so that's why people say, like,
if I can only work on one thing,
if you could only do one thing in your practice,
what would it be?
And I always say, well, I can't do one,
but if you give me two, then I could fix,
and help fix 90% of most people.
And that stress, and it's gut.
And we don't always know it comes first.
That's the thing.
So it's called neuroendo immunology.
And it's something that I love to study.
It's how the nervous system,
so our peripheral stress,
so it could be stress from the outside
world or inside world, inside of our brain, affects our hormones.
So you'll see today a rise in cortisol, which is a stress hormone, right?
So good in the short term, it's also a powerful anti-inflammatory, bad in the long term in
terms of chronic stress in the body and causing gut-based permeability.
And then the immunology, people say, well,
I don't have any digestive issues, so what's the issue?
Well, the issue is maybe candied overgrowth,
maybe seabulled, bichylovergrowth, maybe parasites,
maybe HPLori, but what happens is the gut wall
is basically a single cell.
It's hard to imagine, but it's a single cell,
only allowing the good stuff to come into the bloodstream,
your amino acids, your glucose molecules, your fatty acids, et cetera, and the bad stuff to come into the bloodstream, your amino acids, your glucose molecules,
your fatty acids, et cetera, and the bad stuff out.
But what happens is that becomes more permeable.
I know you've talked about this before in the show.
And that is then, if you have 80% of your immune cells
right around the gut lining in and outside of the gut,
well, that's what sets off the immune system.
And then that's when genetics matters.
So, back in the day, I had Addison's disease,
I had rheumatoid arthritis, I had type two diabetes,
I had all these issues.
I don't have any of them now, but I had the same genetics.
So I didn't have it at eight years old,
had it at 17 years old,
don't have it now 25 plus years later.
Well, why is it same genetics?
Because I don't have the gut permeability,
I've worked on my stress to a massive level
to be able to control that.
And so people can heal, I mean, they really can.
All right, so I want to ask you about the blood
brain barrier because when I first started learning about the blood
brain barrier, it was communicated that it was like this
impermeable wall.
Nothing got to the brain.
The gut didn't communicate with the brain.
Then recently, we found that there were some direct
connections between the brain and the gut.
I can't remember what these connections were,
what they found, but how about how the brain is affected
by all of this and how that affects your,
I guess your behavior is a psychology.
It's right, so gut brain access is what it's been termed.
And looking at your gut is actually your second brain.
So a lot of the, some of the, you know,
the buzz quotes that are thrown out there as well, 90% of all the serotonin in your body is made in produced in your gut,
which is true. But like it's also overlooking the manufacturing of vitamin B12 from certain
bacteria in your gut, in the, in the jajunum and other parts of the actual digestive system.
So the problem is when we don't have enough of these neurotransmitters and neurochemicals,
we aren't able to produce the mind and mood that we want.
But at the same time, a lot of people have massive levels of inflammation in their digestive
system.
I mean, if we look at our digestive system, it's about 26 feet.
And when we have inflammation in our gut, we can't tell, we're not able to tell ourselves
that there's something wrong on our gut.
So we get signals of irritability, of anxiety, of overwhelm, of not feeling well, not
in that affects all of our life.
And how it affects our life, because then we take different actions.
We don't have the same energy.
So we start to fall behind and everything else that we're looking to do in our life.
Like, if you feel terrible, you don't want to exercise.
If you feel terrible, you just want comfort food.
You don't want to make food.
You don't want to go out of your way to do these things.
So it's really a two-way street.
Yeah.
Now, is it true that the heart is the third,
maybe the third highest serotonin receptor?
Is that a brain, the gut, and then the heart?
Is that true?
I don't know that.
No. I do find it interesting, though, that for thousands of years,
before we knew all this, we would say things like,
listen to your gut, or I feel my gut,
which kind of point leads me in this through it.
Yeah, which kind of points to the fact that,
you know, that it is a second brain, if you will.
And I think it is well beyond serotonin
and these chemicals.
I actually, so the interic nervous system
is essentially what we're talking about around the gut.
And if you look, have you ever looked into heart math institute?
No, very interesting.
Heart really interesting.
The sounds interesting.
They actually study the resonance of the heart.
Like the electric, because your heart is electrical.
That's right.
Now, I have not gone as deep as I would like to with that,
but I find it very interesting.
And then the same with the gut.
I actually think that, well, if you look at traditional Chinese medicine,
you look at all the forms of medicine, and again,
I don't necessarily go down this path,
but they believe every organ has its own,
I don't want to say the word feeling,
but let's just say electrical charge
and feeling inside of the body.
Like the liver can, when something's wrong with it,
there's more anger, there's more irritability.
Again, it's more of a meridian-based thing
in traditional Chinese medicine
rather than the actual organ itself,
but I find it fascinating and I truly believe,
although it's not what I do,
I believe that the future of medicine,
we're talking about maybe hundreds of years from now,
will be more energetic in nature. I don't know what that looks like, I just don't, I just believe that the future of medicine, we're talking about maybe hundreds of years from now will be more energetic in nature.
I don't know what that looks like. I just don't, I just believe that it is.
I agree and the the verbage of the language they use, the language they use is what turns off Western medicine people, right?
Like they say your chi and your energy and all that. I remember I had a doctor, a surgeon client and we were talking about acupressure
or sorry acupuncture and there were studies that were showing it was efficacious for especially for pain and and I'm like how can this be and this and that we're
going back and it's a you know the nervous system is very interesting and they use it were like
like Chi but we know that when you have pain in your left arm or when you feel pain or
particularly it's corresponding to a particular organ and he agreed with me he goes yeah I think
that's probably what they just had different verbiage they didn't say nervousness is said.
Doug can you actually look up heart math and write down some names?
I would love to interview.
That would be such a fun interview though.
Yeah, it sounds cool.
That's really interesting.
All right, so let's get into these tests.
So we all sent you or we sent the labs saliva and blood test.
I know that my saliva test got rejected because I didn't
have enough saliva or something.
We want to tell everybody how what really happened.
Yeah, it's in there, buddy.
What's the truth behind this?
Yeah, so you just have blood for me, but everybody else has
saliva and blood, so maybe we can kind of go through that.
So you automatically lose, but it was certain.
And now, and for the audience, we do not know these results at all.
That's literally you're telling us first time here.
Now we can edit out what we don't want.
And I don't want to take the wind out of your sales, but we
don't have any of your specific numbers.
Okay.
Oh, nothing.
Nothing.
Oh, wow.
Oh, wait a minute.
Big loser today.
Hey, that gives you guys a chance to look healthier.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it.
They get it. They get it. They get it. They get it. They get it. They get it. So yeah, if we can go through it, we'll go through dogs, then Justin's then Adams,
and in the specific order for a reason.
But I also don't-
Oh, that shit talking to him.
I'm having a sandwich here.
Usually we do an intake, I don't have yours,
I actually enjoy doing it like this,
because I don't know necessarily
what any symptoms you might be feeling.
No, I think it's one of the things
that the audience liked it so much
is because we have no idea.
You got very limited information about us.
It's a different data.
Yeah, so that you get to,
people get to hear us, work it out.
And that's why I want you to challenge each of us individually
because I bet I want me to hope we're pretty in tune
with what we've been.
Or maybe ask the other guys about the other guy.
Yeah.
Well, Bob, we can all answer, right?
You can be the judge's cell if you want.
Oh, I'm like, I'm in the position.
So I think a good one would be, yeah, who is the highest levels of stress?
You know, like looking at that, I think that would be great to look at.
Well, last time was Doug.
It still is Doug.
I am the champion.
Yeah.
I am the winner of that for sure.
Stress king.
I would actually say Doug, Justin, myself and Sal,
or Sal and I will be close, but you don't have Sal's,
but I would think it would be that order.
I mean, I got a lot of kids, man.
Yeah.
Oh yeah, I'm going to be a stress.
You don't need to jump me there.
For sure.
All right, so on Doug's first, just for people
who are not maybe seen this in video,
and I can pop this up as well.
Doug, why don't I actually give you this.
Okay, thank you.
How this lab is run is basically goes red, yellow,
green, yellow, red for the bar.
So if you look at a bar graph,
you wanna be within the green ideally.
If you're in the yellow, it says,
okay, you're suboptimal, we can work on that.
And if you're in the red, it means okay,
we've got some work to do.
And of course, they'll give you an H for high or an L for low.
So Doug, when we're looking at yours,
let me just put yours on my laptop here
and we wanna look first at estrogen.
So normal estrogen levels,
we're just gonna talk about men here for today.
Again, the lab will give you the specific range
and again, the labs that we're using
are all what's called CleoSertify.
That means these labs follow things by the book.
There's privacy policies, your lab results are not shared
with health insurance, they're not shared with your PCP
unless you want to, which is really nice
because health insurance is doing some really strange things
now if they know your genetics, if they know other factors.
It's better to keep these things private.
So nobody can see this unless you want them to.
That's right.
So it's just our team, which is HIPAA compliant,
the lab itself, which is HIPAA compliant,
and then the patient or wellness client.
Beautiful.
Okay.
So on our estrogen levels, for men, we want it to be between a 0.5 and a 1.2.
That's our goal.
So when we're looking at dogs, we are looking at a 1.6 for estradiol, which is the main,
excuse me, form of estrogen.
So we have a little higher level of estrogen that we would like.
One of the reasons why men will convert more testosterone, because what happens is it
goes cholesterol to pregnant alone, to dihydroepiandestrone, which is DHA, to testosterone, to estrogen.
That's basically the flow chart.
Okay.
Could having a little white puddle dog play into that at all?
Stupid you.
Not a puddle.
I'm going to go back and research that. Get it right. a little white poodle dog playing to that at all. Stupid you. Not a poodle.
I'm gonna go back and say,
I'm gonna say,
get it right.
It's a multi.
I'm a multi.
I'm a refrain from coming to New York.
You got your tester last, bro.
I know.
That's why I gotta talk shit down,
man.
I already know the way he's setting up.
I'm gonna get it.
So let me have my minute, bro.
That's funny.
So a little higher than we want.
And we'll talk about that with different symptoms that can be.
Pregestrone, we want that under a 50.
You're at a 37, so that looks great.
Testosterone is on the lower side.
It's a 42.
I have a question on that.
Because I've done labs, blood labs, and every quarter.
And I actually have my lab results pulled up.
And last time was at 9.39, which is your total testosterone.
Total testosterone.
And the one prior to that was 1086.
What was your free, Doug?
Because I'll measure your free.
Well, it was 10.
It was 10 out of a 7.2 to 24 range.
So it was low.
And I know my sex binding hormone,
hormone, or sex hormone binding,
globulin is elevated.
So I'm very curious why these different numbers seem so different.
They actually say the same exact thing.
Oh, do they?
Yeah, this is the pre-cistoster.
Yeah, he just said 10.
Yeah, you said 10.
He said 9.
So live a different measure.
Like, that's why I like to do these.
Because so what I do with every lab that I run is I actually have my blood work done.
And then I run this lab while I'm having my blood work.
Compared to the two.
Oh, beautiful.
And so, and this is, I mean, this is the premier at Home Lab.
But what you're saying is a really good question.
So basically, this is a really good case study of your testosterone levels, total testosterone
is okay.
We'd like it a little bit higher, but not bad at all.
But what's happening is your testosterone is being bound up, okay, because of what I'm about
to show you in a second.
And then it's also converting the estrogen.
Okay.
So it's not staying where it should as free testosterone.
Okay.
So my goal, so when we look at age wise,
I want you at an 85, so basically double where you are
to 100, and that would be totally normal and natural
And so we would we need to do things in order to get you there
But though things that we do are not necessarily
Supplemental in nature we can do some of that but actually to reduce this next thing which we're gonna talk about
Which is cortisol, okay, but it's a good question and they actually say the same exact thing now
I'll get to the DHE. The interesting thing is this,
you do have a strong body
because your DHA is a 7.9.
Typically, when I see testosterone this low,
DHA is below a four.
And so your DHA is still a 7.9, almost eight.
And that should not be holding as strong as it is
unless you were healthy and taking care of yourself
because your cortisol now, so all four, if I can just give a quick synopsis, are
in the red.
So that means they're all high all day long.
So you're producing high cortisol upon waking, high at noon, high at evening, and the worst
one's actually before bed.
Wow.
That's just when you're working the most, right?
That's affecting then your, when you go up the phone with Adam probably.
Yeah.
Yeah. When you're working the most, when you go out the phone with Adam probably
At the right a little doctor's note to data
So what this is though because this is the
Yeah, talking about revenue at midnight
I lose a revenue's been awfully low this last week. Is it me?
It's a midnight.
Hey, I was up though.
I know you were, it's only my signal.
I know you're up to you because you're 1.5 for your cortisol,
which means your mind is not able to shut off.
And that's the big thing.
So the problem is though,
so we can do, we can try to do all sorts of things
to raise your testosterone,
but the number one thing that lowers testosterone is stress.
Environmental toxins, fatlates, plastics,
cadmium, arsenic, sure, all of those things,
and not getting the nutrients we'll talk about,
vitamin C, vitamin D, zinc, et cetera,
but cortisol and these levels of cortisol,
your cortisol levels for the day,
if we add them all up, they should be between
about a 10 and a 13.
Yours is about an 18, 19.
Oh, wow.
And so you're at least 50% higher than you should.
I'm an overachiever.
Yes, lots.
Even though your body's holding up now,
there is that sign that it's starting to become more catabolic,
which means you're gonna have more difficulty keeping muscle mass on,
building muscle mass.
You'll start to add potentially a little bit of body fat.
You'll have more irritability, more brain fog, more, you know,
lower mood, groginess, those types of things.
Right.
And so what we want to do is we're going to lower this through lifestyle,
food and nutritional supplementation.
And then we're going to track your sleep overnight to make sure you're getting
1.5 hours of deep and two hours of REM.
Okay. And that'll be a really great sign that your testosterone is going to rebound. Now the nice thing sure you're getting 1.5 hours of deep and 2 hours of REM. Okay.
And that'll be a really great sign that your testosterone is going to rebound.
Now the nice thing is you don't have to run this whole lab again if you don't want.
You can just run your testosterone DHA number.
Okay.
And just with one tuba slyver in the morning.
So it's super simple.
That's awesome.
Could there be any nutrient deficiencies that can cause SBHG to be too high like boron?
I heard a boron deficiency can cause that.
All of the ones that would raise testosterone naturally, a deficiency would also, not all
them, but would also affect sexual hormone binding globular.
Got it.
Got it.
And so testosterone can basically convert over to DHT and DHT actually has two pathways.
Right.
It can convert over to estrogen or it can convert over to what did I just say?
You said DHT and you said estrogen or be bound up by sexual mumbinding. So those are three ways.
And we wanted to pool as free testosterone that it can be used or dihydrotestosterone which
can be used. Okay. So what stress relieving techniques have you seen have the most success
besides total lifestyle change was obviously
sometimes you just got to change your lifestyle whatever. But have you seen like great results
from things like meditation from you know maybe not having electronics on two hours before
bed like what were you seeing some of the best success?
Sonna, infrared sauna.
Basically all of those things and this is so when I first was in my practice, I was saying, okay, bineral beats, those are phenomenal.
Meditation, fantastic.
Chi-gong, Tai Chi, yoga, sauna,
not necessarily cold plunge, which is more stimulating.
Brut breath work.
But then I say to the individual,
what are you actually willing to do?
And because that's the thing that matters.
Well, Doug's the bad guy.
He'll do it all.
He's a great client. And that actually is for some people too. So I say, okay, we don't wanna do it all because then that's the thing that matters. Well, Doug's the bad guy. He'll do it all. Yeah, he's a great client.
And that actually is for some people too.
So I say, okay, we don't want to do it all
because then that's more stressful, too.
So what are the one or two things
that you would actually enjoy doing?
Because the goal here is to take Doug out of fighter flight
and to put you more in what's called
the rest of the relax or parasympathetic nervous system.
So what to you would allow you to calm down the fastest?
My goal is always to be able to help people catch themselves
in fight or flight.
So we use HRV testing, or we do just biofeedback on the hour
which just takes you back to your breath.
So there's a lot of biofeedback based devices.
Hanyu Health has one leaf has one,
and or just a phone app that you would literally just entrain your breath
work.
Breathwork is the number one way to get in the person.
Now I'm assuming because he's he's high throughout the entire day that if there was like
an order of operation of what which where would I attack first, I would think it would be
before bed like get correct that like organized right.
Absolutely.
So put a routine or start really trying to get that fixed and then hopefully it'll something
else you said that was, I mean, I want to go back to you,
because I think it's so important for people to hear.
As I said, you know, Doug's a great, you know, I used to train Doug
way back in the day.
He was one of my favorite clients, because he would literally apply,
you know, whatever I recommended.
And you made a great point.
You said, no, some people do everything and that's just more stress.
And that, for Doug, that's perfect because I remember he did,
he did one of those sleep rings that measures his sleep and made him sleep terrible
Because he was thinking about it constantly and trying to beat his score, so he had to take it off
So such and this isn't just for Doug this for anybody listening right now where sometimes doing everything is more stressful
Than just doing one or two things and you're actually gonna give yourself worse
Well, I imagine the advice you give is very similar to what we give with string training exercises
You probably would say listen. Let, let's pick one of these.
Let's crush it.
Let's be consistent with it and then we'll add on it and then we'll add on it and we'll do it that way.
100% and I always go with the 80-20 rule.
So the 80-20 rule, and again, I'm sure you've chat about this,
but it's 20% of your actions.
So it's like the few things that you do that give you 80% of the results.
So I could do a lot of things to get 100% of the results.
I'd rather one or two things that give you 80%
for the whole consistent.
More like very big consistent stuff.
Consistent with what you believe you'll do.
So I think meditation is great.
However, when most people are done with meditation,
it's done, and that's not beneficial.
You need to be able to bring it with you throughout the day.
So it's like, what can you do that keeps you
at more of a sense of calm?
And a lot of times in the beginning, it's just setting alarms every hour to just check back in,
do a little buy, feedback, breathe, because you're trying to get your body back,
and it's really your nervous system to a more even resonance.
Something I do, Dr. Crabral, this just worked really well for me.
It was really hard for me to be present and have space to do so, especially if I have my phone near me or
business is media based and it's so easy for me to get on there. But when I go to the gym and I go in the sauna or
steam room, I can't bring my phone because it's too hot. So I've combined the two. So I'll go in the sauna and then I'll
meditate or pray, which is my form meditation. So now I don't have my phone. I'm in the sauna, and I'm already here, so now I can sit here and do this,
and just a tip for people watching right now,
if they find that it's really tough.
Sometimes putting yourself in a place
where hiking for some people works real great too,
because they're hiking and they get no reception anyway.
So it's like, cool, I'm already off my phone now as well.
That's 100% agree.
I call it three anchors, so I have three anchors
throughout my day, because I'm much more prone
to overproducing now that my body's healthier.
So in the morning, I have basically a half hour to an hour before my family's up.
That's my time. It's not like in my phone, not doing work.
Nobody's up yet. I don't need to be texting or emailing whatever it is.
So that's my time to just kind of ease into the day, enjoy the day,
do something inspirational, meaning like listen to something inspirational,
read something inspirational.
And then after lunch, not only is it healthy for my body,
but I go for a walk.
I have my phone, but I'm not looking at it
because I put on binaril beats.
And then that mid afternoon, before I get home,
I like to just do a workout.
That's my time.
It's like afternoon, and then like,
okay, the stress is eased away.
And then try to pick one more before bed.
These things are short.
Like you don't have to do a lot of these things. Maybe it's a sauna, maybe it's a relaxing shower.
Do something to just calm things down. Okay, excellent. Alright, so that, so any more on his
saliva or do we move on to the blood now? Move on to the blood. Yeah. So the good thing
is that, well, we'll do one at a time. When we're looking at your free tea for, you want
it between a two and a three. Okay. Sorry, you want it between a two and a three.
Okay. Sorry, you want that between a one and a two and you're a 1.5.
So that's excellent. For your free T3, that was T4.
So basically it goes from TSH to T4 to T3.
And then if your T3 doesn't look good,
it can be actually converted over to something called reverse T3.
And the same reasons for a sexual mind-binding globulin being high,
reverse T3 would be high.
Now, Doug, though yours looks good and most,
I'll tell you this, women are much more prone
to thyroid-based issues than men.
And you resumble the amount.
And you reason why?
Because I knew that fact, but I don't know why.
Is it have to do with their hormone profile?
Or my hypothesis is the same reason as to why
they're not able to do as long of a fast
So their body under stress begins to lower metabolism like so this the scientific part is there bearing That's right. So there are metabolism drops way faster than men and they do terrible
Unextended skipping of breakfast typically for a long period of time
I'm not saying everyone in the world
But if you put a woman's
period of time. I'm not saying everyone in the world, but if you put a woman's under-consystem under greater stress, her CSH will go up showing lower thyroid,
her cortisol levels, especially before bed will go up, her estrogen levels
remain normal, her progesterone levels will just drop and it causes estrogen
dominance and cause infertility. It's one of the number one things we see in our
practice. Men not to the same degree. I had a female client that was fasting
till three o'clock
every day, loved it at first.
Then she started, her hair started falling out.
She started all these symptoms of stress.
So it's exactly what we're saying.
And that's right, they feel,
everyone feels better in the beginning
because one, 30% of the energy you typically use per day
is going towards food.
So if you're not putting food in your stomach,
okay, well, we got a little bit more energy back.
And then also a lot of people have gut-based issues. So when they put food in their stomach, okay, well, we got a little bit more energy back. And then also a lot of people have gut-based issues.
So when they put food in their stomach,
well, there's the slow, parasital tic movement.
Food sits there for longer.
It begins to ferment that causes bloating and gas.
Nobody feels good from that.
So, you know, there's different reasons for that.
But in the beginning, people can feel better.
And then, yes, you start to get depleted
in more catabolic.
Interesting.
Men just takes much longer.
Okay.
Very interesting.
So overall thyroid, your free T3 was between a three and a four is a three point one that looks good.
Your TSH levels thyroid, stimulating hormone should be between a point five and a two for optimal.
Yours is a point nine. So it's excellent. Your TPO antibodies should be below a 50. Yours are eight and they look great.
So no issues there. Your insulin the morning should be between a two and a six. Yours is totally normal.
Himoglobin A1 C should be below a 5.7.
Yours is a 4.9.
Perfect.
Your vitamin D though is low at a 38.
So conventional medicine will tell you that the normal range is between 30 and 100.
It's an insane range, which is why again, people do not have the proper immune system that
they should have.
And the optimal range is between 50 and 70.
Okay.
Not above because that's pushing your immune system too much.
And maybe even a little bit of what's called hypercalcemia.
So it's pulling more calcium into your arteries, which we don't know what.
And yours is a 38.
So it's not going to take a lot more.
But if you're not using any vitamin D right now, are you using any vitamin D?
I am.
Which is again interesting because I did the blood test back in July.
It came as a 66.6 and then prior to that in February, it was 65.3.
So I find it interesting. I'm so low on this.
Are you using the same exact dosage of vitamin D?
Yeah, about 5,000 I use a day.
And it's not, so it's how many months removed?
Two months removed, maybe month and a of removed from when you're doing it,
where you're getting less sun towards the end of August.
Or towards the mid-end of August?
Probably, I had more, we were in Mexico in the end of June.
So, and that's the way to, again,
this is all to bio-individuality.
So my goal for you is like, when you're in Mexico
or you're getting a lot of sun,
you don't need to supplement vitamin D.
But when you're not, and something like you,
you're, you're, you're, you're ever pretty good base,
you may only need 2,000 IUs a day.
Yeah.
Like you don't need 4,000 IUs, which a lot of people do.
I supplement with vitamin D in the winter months,
much more than I do in the summer months.
It's sometimes or not at all, winter months, I bump it.
But so this, so this highlights that it's important,
or that it could be very important to test yourself,
maybe two or three times a year.
That's right, especially for vitamin D. Yeah, absolutely. And that can be a single
vial as well. Okay. Actually, that's a blood spot. Sorry, vitamin D is always tested with blood.
As a sample there. Interesting. So overall, your results when we're looking at these, we want to
lower the conversion to estrogen. So typically, we always recommend, well, one is we're going to
recommend reducing stress.
That's first and foremost,
because then that will help with testosterone,
not converting to more estrogen.
The second is increasing cruciferous vegetable intake,
which will then help process the estrogen
and remove it from the body faster.
So that's a big thing.
Is that from DIM, that's in?
That's right.
So then you can take a supplement, which is DIM,
as well as I3C.
We call that estrogen balance.
It combines both of those together.
And these don't have to be long term.
So once we get the stress levels,
namely cortisol lower, testosterone will begin to rebound.
Estrogen will begin to naturally lower.
Your thyroid is already good.
We're going to add a little bit more vitamin D
if you're not maintaining a tan.
And that's going to help with the testosterone.
And then, three of the things that I just want to say are great for
test australian which I think are already put in here vitamin C zinc vitamin D
which we just chatted about and that if you're not using any magnesium a
little bit of magnesium and ashwagandha we use a product called well you can
use two one's called the dreanol su the others called daily test australian
support which would have vitamin C, zinc, et cetera
in it.
But again, I don't want people to supplement their way out of high levels of cortisol, right?
Your goal is to lower the cortisol.
Use the adrenal suit in the beginning, which is ashwagandha, althenein, fossilocerine,
so people can get these anywhere to be able to lower those levels and then reset the
diurnal rhythm.
So diurnal rhythm means, up during the day from,
let's say, seven in the morning to seven at night,
then turn it off from seven at night
to seven in the morning as best you can.
A question for you,
because last time we did the hair test
and my magnesium was high when I did that.
But when I got the vitamin stack from you,
you included magnesium.
I was curious why that was included.
Yeah, so if I'm remembering correctly
on your minerals and metals test, you had a four high,
which was all of your electrolytes were elevated,
calcium, magnesium, sodium, ampetassium.
Okay.
Now, the interesting thing is,
these are two completely different labs.
They don't share data at all.
Yeah.
You had a four high on that lab showing high levels of stress.
You're all four of your quarters all elevated today as well. The same two different labs saying the same exact thing. Yeah.
So the way that we calm fighter flight is with we don't supplement potassium, but we can supplement magnesium. Okay, especially the latter half of the day.
Excellent. Yep. Okay. Yeah. And a little right. Yeah. No, I took a while with me.
Well, that explains the overall test, too.
So the first one, you kind of always get the most,
and then we'll be able to, you kind of know all the
different parameters.
All right, so for Justin's, same thing,
estrogen should be below 1.2, 0.5 to 1.2,
yours was a 1.9.
So again, a little bit stronger conversion of testosterone to estrogen.
We'll get to that in a moment.
Progesterone was really great at a 24.
Testosterone, so typical testosterone
for your age range would be 90 to about 120.
Now, that does not mean, so the range actually
for healthy goes up to 148,
let's call it 150. You can be at the top end of that range. So there's nothing wrong with that,
at any age. Like you can be 60 years old and be 141.50. Nothing wrong with that all. And you can do
it. It took me a long time. I used to have low testosterone, high level of estrogen as well,
as a teenager. Like it was awful was awful and then again get body healthy my
Testosterone on average is the high one 30s or low one 40s and that's just using all natural-based
Solutions but mainly it's from calming that sympathetic nervous system at night and sleep like that's that's one of the biggest things
So Justin your testosterone was a 163 so it was a little high out of range. Now, you're using some
testosterone replacement therapy or treatment, TRT. So why you bring this up is if you're
going to use TRT, you want to use it exactly like Justin's using it. It's the perfect
amount of TRT for your body. It's just at the high end of normal, which means that it's
not going to have any of the, which means that it's not going
to have any of the potential ramifications that can happen with using too much test
australian.
So back in the day, when, let's say, even 10 years ago, when doctors were using TRT and
actually a lot of doctors are still doing this, unfortunately, they are not retesting
free test australian and they're just doing it and just giving anything based on symptoms.
And the problem is that not today, not tomorrow, not even next year, in your later 50s and
early 60s, you can end up with heart disease or heart attack.
You can end up with higher blood pressure.
You can end up with the large prostate.
You can end up with low sperm count.
You can end up with higher levels of estrogen,
and potentially sleep apnea as well.
And so it's important just to be cognizant of that,
because TRT is just very, very common now,
and so you just wanna make sure
that you're using the appropriate dosage
in order to get you to optimal levels.
So you said it's converting now, though,
on the higher end of estrogen.
That's correct.
So then you just need something to block that estrogen.
Address that.
That's right.
So my goal, and it's not too high, so I can go up to a 2.2, but for me, I'm always about
optimal.
What's optimal?
Well, optimal is 1.2 or less.
So first, I'm using a product called estrogen balance, which contains dim and I3C.
I'm also going to make sure liver function is good.
And I'm going to get those cruciferous vegetables in your diet every day, at least two cups to three cups.
Now can you do that in conjunction with running TRT?
Yes, absolutely.
Yeah, absolutely.
So question I have around that.
So with testosterone replacement therapy,
typically usually it's done through,
well, it can be done through injection
and they do what's, they use what's called
long acting ester, meaning you inject testosterone
and the highest peak is the day after, two days after,
and then it slowly declines to your next dose.
Yes.
Could the timing of this test be affected
by the timing of your testosterone injection?
100%.
Okay.
So if you did it the day before, you may see
a much higher range versus if you do it the day before,
you're supposed to do your next injection.
And if you're going to do it, I just say always do it right.
So the easiest way to do it is you'll just get like how often would you do it?
Five or a week.
Usually once a week.
Okay.
So there are some people who are doing tiny amounts daily, they're doing the same for
growth hormone, and there are some people that are doing two to three times a week, and
there's some people who are doing weekly.
So it really depends.
Now what I would say is, okay, get three tubes that you're gonna do the day after, two
days later and two days after that.
Because what do you do to the right?
Really low, six days later.
Okay, well, let's do a little less, but let's do it twice.
So again, you'd have to use a different type because there's a long lasting and so it wouldn't
work, you wouldn't want to, but you would know when you drop. And it helps your doctorate,
because your doctor's not gonna be running
these labs most likely, some will.
And for you to run a venous blood draw
is not only a pain and it's painful,
but you're spending a lot out of pocket.
Yeah, and it's just inconvenient,
but I actually divide mine into two doses.
So instead of taking one dose once a week,
are you still doing that?
And I feel better.
Oh, I know you experiment with that, I know for sure. I feel better, but I mean, they say, you know, they'll say it doesn't week, are you still doing that? And I feel better. Oh, I know you experiment with that.
I don't know if you're...
I feel better, but I mean, they say, you know,
they'll say it doesn't make a difference.
It does for me. I feel better.
I don't get the highest peak, but I also don't feel like
I go down as well.
If people are going to do it, the smaller, more often dosage
is going to be mimicking more naturally
with the body, would naturally do any of these.
Makes sense.
Some people not do sub-Q with the oil.
They actually do these tiny little doses throughout the week,
sub-Q, which is really weird, but that's a new thing.
Yeah, I don't know as much about that.
Going on to, so basically what I'm saying
is the amount that you're using, at least yours was the day before,
is the proper amount, no doubt about it.
Now, does it drop two low six days later,
or five days later, or maybe?
Because remember, it's impossible to say, does it last a week?
It depends on liver clearance.
How quickly are you going to bind up and clear this testosterone for your body?
That's different from for every individual.
That's a genetic thing.
We had to manipulate that.
So the doctors and I had to go back and forth a couple of times where I started at every
seven days, then six days, and then five days because of that, it was dropped.
I would get, I would look great the day or two after,
and then I would actually drop even lower
than what I did coming into my testosterone test.
That's right, and that's the worst part
because your highs feel amazing,
but your lows are depressive, they're awful.
So yes, you have to, well, it can be not just depression,
but it can be irritability, mood swings.
You have all the symptoms of low blood sugar,
but you're not low blood sugar.
Right, it is, I don't know.
It's mood swings.
I guess you're...
Well, look at the atoms.
So your DHEA though, Justin's perfect, it's 12.4.
So super strong, a DHEA.
Your cortisol in the morning should be between a six and nine,
yours is 7.6.
So excellent.
Your cortisol at lunch is elevated, between a six and nine. Yours is 7.6. So excellent. Your cortisol at lunch is elevated.
So it's a 3.8.
Okay.
Cortisol is not massively elevated, but it's certainly elevated.
Cortisol in the evening is almost double.
So it is high around dinner time.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I figured my in the morning was going to be the lowest, which you want
that to be the highest.
You do.
Yes.
Yes.
Yours is normal in the morning, but the problem is,
it's going to feel low to you.
So this is the beginning of more of a,
it's not getting burnt out, but it's moving to suboptimal.
And the reason is that your evening is also high normal.
So everything in your day is high, high, high normal,
and then morning's going to feel like low.
Because if it's not high normal as well,
for you, it's going to feel like a low well, for you it's gonna feel like a low.
And so you're gonna feel like maybe a brain fog in the morning,
tough to get going, a little slower,
those types of things.
That's all I've been through.
I just say, I explain slower.
Probably way worse even, it's getting a lot better.
What if, what if effects does caffeine
have on the stress hormones?
Because I know caffeine is a stimulant, it's energized,
does it, let's say your cortisol's a little out of whack,
is that one of the first things you wanna try
to lower or remove?
So caffeine for someone with lower cortisol
and lower dopamine,
because there are people more of an endomorphic body type,
they don't produce as much cortisol,
they don't produce as much noraponephrine,
they're slower than going.
For them, a cup of coffee in the morning
could be fantastic.
Like it's not, and you can actually measure these results.
I would have no problem.
I always, again, I like to use, first and foremost,
that I'm gonna use shoes with coffee at all.
If someone had high cortisol in the morning,
like I wouldn't recommend coffee for a dog,
caffeinated coffee, you could do a Swiss water process
decaf organic, like that's totally fine.
You get all the antioxidant from it.
Coffee is super high in the milk.
That's what you're supposed to do.
That's what it does.
I avoid caffeine for the most part.
Excellent.
And we're gonna use a product for you that has, again,
Ashwagandha El Thinine, some phospholouscerin
to get these levels down while you're getting
the lifestyle things to stick.
Because lifestyle takes six, 12 weeks
to really like get it to stick.
It's different, so.
The supplements can help right away.
Right, yeah, okay.
And the meditation, the breath work.
So what we're gonna to do for you is
lower the second half of the day cortisol and then give you a little boost in the morning. Now,
a boost in the morning would be something like rodeola, licorice, root, all of those things
herbalized or you can do a couple coffee. Like it's not that you can't. I just don't want that to
extend through the day and I don't know how that would look. So if you do use coffee in the morning.
Oh, yeah. Okay. Alright. Then forget it do use coffee in the morning. Oh yeah. Okay, all right.
And we already see that.
She does coffee on the V's from the day.
They make fun of me.
Yeah, frequent it is.
So for you then, if you're saying it's coffee throughout the day, I would do coffee before
noon because you're caffeine has a half life of at least six hours.
Okay.
And so if you're having another one at, you know, two, three in the afternoon.
I feel that too, by the way, if I go past 12, it's, yeah, it goes too far into my sleep.
I know it's a huge difference on that too.
So we'll certainly want to work on that.
We'll keep that.
You can do decaf to help wean yourself off, and that would work as well.
So your overall thyroid levels, again, your thyroid T4 should be a 1 and a 2, between
a 1 and a 2, your 1.2, it's great.
Your T3 should be between a 3 and a 4, your 3.8.
Your TSH should be a 0.5 to a 2, you're a 1.2, it's great. Your T3 should be between a 3 and a 4, you're a 3.8, your TSH should be a 0.5 to a 2,
you're a 1.5, so even though it seems like it's climbing,
no, no problem at all.
Again, this is also a snapshot in time.
So anytime you do blood work, it's a snapshot in time.
And that's kind of what I was saying to you, Doug, as well,
is like, when you test blood work,
that's what it was that day.
Now, vitamin D should be pretty steady
if you're getting same levels of vitamin D
and it's also a fat soluble vitamin. But hormones could change from was that day. Now, vitamin D should be pretty steady if you're getting same levels of vitamin D, and it's also a fat soluble vitamin.
But hormones could change from day to day.
That's important to look at that.
So it's always be done on a normal day.
And that ends usually within your range as well.
Your TPO antibodies are below a 50.
There are 22.
So that's great.
Your insulin in the morning is a 7.7,
which is certainly showing a little bit more
of what's called a stressor in the the morning sometimes is called the cortisol awakening response.
Sometimes it's dipping into low blood sugar, or sometimes it's just the mind's racing right
when we get up.
There's some type of stressor there.
And you're hearing me a little bit, and A1C is great at a 5.0.
It should be below 5.7.
And your vitamin D is a 31.
So you're within the conventional medicine normal range,
but again, I would like to bump you up.
Yeah, and that's probably just recently gone up
because I've been getting a lot more sun
being out at practice and whatnot.
Like before that, I was feeling the effects
of low vitamin D for sure.
And I think it's really important that most people,
and again, this is my opinion,
but it's also backed up by tens of thousands of labs we run.
Most people do well with a lower dose,
like 2,000 I use as an adult daily.
And the reason is, is that vitamin D affects
almost everything in the body, like every hormone,
all of your metabolism, your skin turnover,
your immune system.
So I would rather earn the side of,
use 2,000 I use a day,
unless you're literally going to beach that day
or getting a lot of sun.
Because if you think about it,
I mean, well, actually you go in a practice,
you might be wearing shorts and a t-shirt,
so it's almost full body exposure.
But a lot of people like, oh, well,
I'm outside for like 20 minutes a day.
Yeah, but like their entire body's covered,
like my body's covered.
So I can't really get vitamin D exposure
just in my face, it's not gonna be enough.
Don't some scientists call consider vitamin D
almost like a hormone?
That's right, okay.
Yeah, absolutely.
And because it affects the hormone pathways in the body.
So thyroid and testosterone.
Now you're a testosterone.
It's good, but we wanna look at that.
Yeah, I barely ever supplement with vitamin D.
So that would be something I would like to see the effects.
You know, if I start doing that.
And then you, so you always wanna take vitamin D
with something like a daily activated multi
or we use the daily nutritional support.
And the reason is, vitamin D needs all the cofactors.
So a lot of people take vitamin D and their levels still low.
You need K2, you need magnesium, you need calcium,
you need these things that help shuttle it into the cells.
Okay, all right.
So overall, it was good.
And again, what I'm saying too is
monitor your testosterone replacement therapy. Just always make sure that it's the level it should be. Now, the thing is, once
you dial all of this in, let's say you reduce your stress levels, it may actually boost your
testosterone, it will boost your testosterone potentially naturally. So you might even
need a little bit less of a dose, but you don't know that until you start testing. And
you can really optimize your health that way.
Very cool.
All right, Adam is up.
Oh boy.
Here we go.
We go.
And the big winner today.
We'll see you on the next one.
So on here.
Goezy on me, Doc.
Goezy on me.
There weren't any bets here.
Everybody got real quiet once the laps.
Boy, you can sell, got disqualify, it's lame.
It would be good, but it's okay.
Part two.
That would be easily.
Estrogen, again, should be that 0.5 to 2.2, but ideally below
1.2, yours was the lowest at 1.4, so it's close,
and I know you're doing things to actually go to the best.
I would have guessed that for sure.
And I wish I would have thought to remember to bring this
to today's interview, because when I took the test, I did write it down in my bathroom
and I don't remember what it was because I wanted to know when I got my labs
that I could tell you, oh, this is four days after my shot or five days
so we could actually be a little bit.
So I have that.
So for the audience, I'll go back and look.
But I think it was towards the end.
I think it was like on day, I want to say like five.
So right before I was supposed to take another shot.
As an aromatase inhibitor or for testosterone.
Just testosterone.
Well, both actually, because the way it goes,
it goes, I take my shot, then the next day,
I take one milligram of aromatics,
and then 48 hours later, I take another,
or for, and then the next day, I go aromatics,
and then I'm off until I take my next shot again.
Okay.
That's kind of the order.
And we've had to tweak that a lot
because my estrogen levels have been up and down
and up and down.
So that's been one of the most challenging things
for us to balance.
Okay, and so your progesterone was a higher
at a 55 that meant typically,
I'm gonna explain that in just a moment.
But when was your last injection of the TRT?
Well, I was in before the lab test.
That's what I have written down, I don't know.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, so I think it was, I think,
I have a written down at home, I'll tell you.
Because it says one day on this lab.
Oh, did I write it?
Oh, okay, then what's what did it do?
Okay, I knew I wrote it down.
I didn't know if I wrote it down on the, okay, great.
So the lab actually asks you,
what pharmaceuticals you're taking
and what natural therapy is.
Oh, good, so I did write it good. So I did write it down.
I know. Okay, good.
And that helps me read the lab too.
Because sometimes they're like, why is this?
I have women come in that are not going to, like, you're all seeing good, whoever the
doctor is, is good.
Yeah, they're very good.
There are people that call themselves functional medicine doctor and prescribe these hormones
and the levels are awful.
Like they're ridiculously high off the chart for women as well.
Like, this was my experience.
I went through a different clinic before
and they just were terrible.
People, they have to be specifically trained in this.
Yeah, I knew they were as to kids.
I'd ask, I know I'm not very knowledgeable
and I'd ask questions that I knew more of the answer
than they would have, I'll let this is the case, can't be good.
That's always a dead giveaway.
All right, so looking at your test austro,
and though, again, normal range, 44 to 148,
but really, we want you around 100, okay?
So for your age range, you're at a 223.
Okay.
Now the upper limit, we would say is 150.
Okay.
Now, if you're using TRT, you can of course be a little bit higher.
What I would say is this is a higher level
than I would like to see.
Okay. Now, there's two things we have to think about.
You're also one right after this.
Yeah, I just...
Right, so now, what does it look like six days out, seven days out?
It does a drop then to that low level still, or not.
Yeah, actually really drops.
That was part of why we actually increased the dose was because I did...
I forgot how he described it, but a faster rise and drop
for days.
You're a tablet lover.
Yeah.
So let's say you're used, let's say though that once you're on it, this is the plan for
most people.
You're not typically coming out.
Right, right.
Okay, so let's say you're using this, you're living to a hundred years old.
Let's say you're using this for the next 60 years.
It's worth experimenting right now and this will only get better and better.
Is it better for you to use a shorter acting
every other day?
I'm going to now.
After hearing, I didn't know Sal actually went through
and stuck with it, but I have an experiment with that.
We're actually broke.
Just more doses, yes, more doses.
Or you might keep you more level.
Yeah, no, I don't.
You could also do a propione,
but then you'd have to inject every day,
or it's kind of a pain in the butt, or.
I think you're simply breaking it up in two
will make a big difference.
Talk with your function medicine doctor about that,
whether they want to look at that.
And here's why I wanted to share a little bit more.
So it's not just affecting your testosterone that day.
So it's a little on the higher side that I would like to see,
meaning like, because I want you to find something
that you can then just do forever.
And it works with your body, and everybody's body's
a little bit different.
But your DHEA, it should be between idli of six and an 18.
Yours is almost a 40 to 39.
So, but you might say, well, why is that?
Well, it's the same reason progesterones of 55.
So, if you look at the hormonal pathway, again, it goes cholesterol,
pregnant alone, and then it goes DHEA, testosterone, estrogen.
But then on the other pathway, it goes progesterone cortisol.
You have so much hormone in your body
that it's totally satisfying testosterone.
But then it's raising progesterone
and it's raising DHA.
And if you see in your lab now, it's raising cortisol as well.
Your AM cortisol should be between a six and a nine,
you're a 17.4.
So high levels of cortisol. You're a three at noon,, you're a 17.4. So high level of cortisol.
You're a three at noon, so you're just out of range.
You're a 3.3 in the evening, so you're almost double the range.
And at night, you are a 0.8.
We want you at a 0.4 or less.
So you have, when you look at the bucket of hormone,
your bucket's overflowing.
You have so much hormone in your body
that it has to go somewhere.
So he's hormonal.
He's hormonal.
There's a lot of hormone in his body.
So when we're looking to optimize,
we're saying like,
you may feel well,
but it's too much.
Question.
I got a question for you because we're also,
and same for me,
like my wife,
we're gonna have a baby in the next couple months, okay?
So along with my testosterone replacement therapy,
I was also put on HCG to maintain sperm production.
Yes, right.
HCG mimics luteinizing hormone, which drives the production
of all these other hormones, taking testosterone,
that can't get converted back to DHA, right?
But the HCG could boost the DHA, know you're using HCG as well. Could the HCG be more
responsible for the elevation of the other hormones?
Potentially. But if we look at it, once testosterone needs are satisfied and your body, so your
body's essentially shifting it to say, how many total places can this hormone shift to?
Can shift to all dost around,
which we haven't talked today, which could cause high blood pressure.
Right, right?
Why don't we turn and show you all that stuff, right?
That's ending that goes with estrogen and all dost around.
That's correct.
So, what we wanted to say, other any symptoms.
So, symptoms, again, I don't have your question or anything,
but you can start to feel like you're burning out,
because like everything is just being pushed to the max.
Hard to turn your mind off, more aggressive, more anger, more competitive, more irritable,
forgetful or trouble focusing, trouble sleeping, and then for men, when they start to have
more estrogen and higher levels of cortisol, they can start to put on belly fat, fat underneath
the armpits, like right around the pecs muscles, and that's kind of like a giveaway that there's too much of a high stress-based process going on in the body.
Okay, so we're right away already know I'll probably, because here's a challenge, because
again, this is taken a day after, and this is some of the stuff that Dr. Ran and I have
talked about, and why I had moved up the dose, and we were pushing these things, was because
by come day five and six I really go the
opposite direction and so you know he they started me off at a lower dose and and it wasn't and it
was I would and I would probably would have tested much better after the day or two days you know
afterwards to this test but then if you got me four days later I was really low so I definitely
think splitting it would be something that will help. What are some other natural things that I can do to improve this?
That's that's actually what's going to recommend because
There's only so much that you can do in terms of a pharmacological intervention
But you would feel better towards even the end of this if we reduce some of the higher cortisol stress-based production
Mm-hmm
And so then you wouldn't be zapping your testosterone naturally as much,
like lowering it. This would hold, and you're, well, again, at some point your own natural
testosterone is going to start to shut down if it's at a higher level. So we just want
to be cognizant of that. So then you'll be dependent on that, which again is okay,
but we just don't want to believe then we can kick start our own until you were lower
dosage or off of it, right?
But the cortisol will absolutely make you feel better about that.
Less estrogen version will make you feel much better.
Your DHEA is already fantastic, which will help you feel well.
But then, and I don't know that I'd necessarily recommend the daily testosterone support for
you.
I don't think it would have the same effect.
However, I would recommend something like
the adrenal soothe, a magnesium,
which I believe you're already taking right now,
optimizing your vitamin D so not to cut to the chase,
but your vitamin D was a 26.
So we want to optimize your vitamin D as well.
And all of these things in conjunction
with working with your doctor to find the right dosage
or timing for you is what's going to find this sweet spot
that you always feel level. Because you actually just want to feel level. to find the right dosage or timing for you is what's gonna find the sweet spot that
you always feel level.
Cause you actually just wanna feel level.
You wanna feel like, go, go, go,
can't turn it off or then you're burning up.
Yeah, well complete transparency for the audience.
And I just wanna admit this so you know too.
Laughter we saw you last time, I was really good
and consistent for about a month or a month and a half
of taking the supplements when it ran out. now I've missed my adrenal soothe.
I've definitely had some days I've missed my vitamin D.
So I've been inconsistent with the supplementation
that you had already put me on before.
So, you know, just another reminder for me to get back
to being consistent with those things, for sure,
in addition to maybe splitting the dose up.
And I'm like, because I actually feel really good right now.
I do feel really good.
I do feel my sleep is not the best right now.
I think I'm a heavier than I normally am.
I've woke myself up a few times.
Katrina has mentioned that she's heard me snoring, which is not normal for me.
And so I do, I think that can be improved.
And so hopefully leaning out in the next month or so will improve that, splitting my
dose up and then making sure I'm taking it, which you had already prescribed me.
I mean, you've told me that adrenal soothe was on my list.
And so was the vitamin D.
Anything else?
Yeah, absolutely.
We want to make sure that your whatever you're doing, because it sounds like there's
a little extra inflammation as well, that we're, so we've talked about your autoimmune based issues in the past.
So if we're going back to the beginning of our conversation and we're looking at stress,
cortisol, and we're looking at gut, we just want to make sure your gut functions good.
And I don't know if we've ever run a gut lab.
We have them, but that's the next thing I want to do with you.
Okay.
Yeah.
So we want to look at that and we want to do a true holistic picture.
So we can fix stress, but if there's to gut issues, okay, it's going to be causing more
inflammation, more likely for sleep apnea, more likely.
So your testosterone placement therapy will work better if everything else in your body
is working better.
And you'll be less reliant on it for how you feel highs and lows.
Garden.
Yeah.
And it will work even better.
Yeah.
Okay.
Excellent.
So thyroid for you, again, free T4 should be between a one and a two, you're a 1.7,
it's excellent.
Your free T3 should be between a three and a four, and you're a 2.8, so you might say,
oh, that's a little bit low.
We'll get to that in just one second.
Your TSH should be between a 0.5 and a two, you're a 1.3, and your TPO antibodies are super
low, they're a six.
So then you go to your free T3 and you're like, oh, that seems a little bit low.
You should not make a big deal
out of one specific number
if your TSH is still below it too.
And the reason is that there isn't necessarily
a need or a call,
most likely in your body, for more thyroid,
because if there was,
thyroid stimulating hormone would typically be higher
to call for it.
So if TSH was like a 2.8 and your free T4 was a, or your free T3, which it is 2.8, I'd
say, okay, we're not getting enough of that thyroid made.
First reason, higher levels of stress.
Higher levels, if, again, I hate to say it, but women's hormones have a much more difficult
time staying balanced than men. This scenario, again, 70% of our practice is typically women, 30% men.
You'll see these thyroid numbers all, like literally so dysfunctional because of high levels
of cortisol.
So, yours are strong, they look good, I wouldn't necessarily do anything there.
Your insulin in the morning's a little high, it's a 7.8, it should be between two and
six.
Again, that can be higher levels of cortisol.
It's called the cortisol awakening response.
It's highest upon waking.
When cortisol spikes, remember, it's a glucose corticoid.
It can actually be increasing your own glucose levels
without you even eating anything.
And all this could be caused by what I was saying
about having bad sleep and maybe even snoring.
Yeah.
Yeah, sleep apnea is a tough one or just, you know, wakes you're at the night.
Your hemoglobin A1C is great though.
It's below four and your vitamin D we want to optimize.
It's a 26.
So even if you were to get sun over the next two,
three weeks, I would still supplement vitamin D
to get it right back up.
Yeah.
Excellent.
So who got the most green?
Okay, so it wasn't out of it.
Yeah, we don't want to be there.
Let's see here.
Oh, I didn't even handle your labs to you.
It was Justin.
Yeah, the big winner.
Gold star, he's the most nourished.
So healthy.
So, so optimized.
But the nice thing is, as I said before,
so Adam, for you, what I would do is
get your lifestyle, tier T, your supplements where you is get your lifestyle, TRT, your supplements
where you want them to be, then retest this again.
And that would be great.
I think this really highlights the importance of looking at the big picture.
I mean, you, for example, you said, look, if your T3 is a little low, we also have to see
that your TSH is high to say, okay, this is an issue.
Otherwise, whatever your T3 number is so long as it's not super low, it's what your body
needs and your body's utilizing it well.
So it does highlight, and that's just one example.
It highlights that one test, one thing, one metric.
I mean, it doesn't really tell you the whole story unless it's in a danger level, it doesn't
tell you much, you've got to look at the whole picture, and that's a lot of what you guys
do. Absolutely. And even if it is in the danger level,
well, what are the underlying root causes,
rather than prescribing something in order to fix that,
like a pharmaceutical drug or whatever it might be?
So I think that this is accessible, though.
The thing I'm trying to share with people is,
I learned about this because I was sick many years ago,
two years without a diagnosis,
going to the best specialist around Boston.
So just for people that know that,
hey, I don't know if you're gonna do this or not,
but you can run this with an integrative health practitioner,
with a natu-pathic doctor, with our team,
and you can get your results whenever you want them.
You can do it right at home, which is great.
This is about as individualized of an approach
as I can imagine, because you're doing,
and when you're looking at the gamut of testers hair, blood, saliva, and then gut testing,
did I hit them all? Yeah, so we look at, just to say, here for what's been
excreted in the heavy metals, the minerals and metals, the gut testing can be done in three ways,
blood spot for your food sensitivities, you're in to look at candy to overgrowth as well as vitamin markers permeability and then you can look at stool for parasites and bacterial overgrowth as well as H
Pylori. So are we all good? I think we should all do that one too
We'll do the whole game like to look at the overgrowth one
Yeah, yeah, I want to do that because I feel like we'll have the complete picture after that right absolutely because I mean
I mean, I wouldn't even think to ask you that.
Like, all the things that were kind of off on me,
what if I had something like SIBO,
could that be dramatically affecting a lot of those things too?
Well, it could be absolutely affecting your inflammation
to a great degree, which would potentially affect
something like lowering testosterone, lowering these things.
But that's why I think it's so important too that
To me, I have no problem people using TRT, but don't use it to mask other symptoms that might be going on because you're gonna feel great of course
Like it's difficult not to feel great when you're boosting those testosterone levels
Yeah, what the audience knows that maybe you don't because I don don't think I've communicated this. It was almost two years that I went trying to do this
all 100% natural.
So I was constantly, now I didn't have access,
I didn't have you, I didn't go through you.
I wish I would have done that early on to see,
it really dial, try to dial some things,
and I try to do with my level of education on it
with every natural way possible.
And I saw some improvements,
but I didn't get it into like the optimal range.
That's my highest recommendation.
So again, I have again no issues
with testosterone-stron placement therapy.
What I want people to do is optimize all of the numbers.
I want them to be able to get the nutrients
their body needs in order to produce
the levels of testosterone they need to produce.
And if it's still not working,
after let's say a four to six month period of time, okay.
Yes.
This was a lot of our motivation for this partnership was we knew that we would be working
too with a TRT clinic.
We also were concerned about our met.
We did not want our community to think like we want to push people into just taking test
austro because all of us on the podcast have always said
that we always recommend going the holistic way first
and doing everything you can in your possible naturally
before you go that way.
Look, it doesn't make any sense if you're tired all the time
because you're not sleeping and so you're just gonna take
more stimulants or your head hurts
because you're banging against the wall.
So let me just take some painkillers.
It doesn't make any sense.
So it's most important that you look at all
of your lifestyle factors.
And then if that doesn't work,
Western medicine does a great job
when it comes to certain hormone deficiencies or whatever.
But up until that point,
is it your lifestyle?
Is it something you're missing?
Look at those things.
Otherwise, what will happen is if you feel bad
because your testosterone is low
because of something in your lifestyle,
then you raise your testosterone. You may feel better, but whatever was causing
that to be low in the first place is still there, causing other problems in your body.
So it's very important.
Exactly.
And that's the thing.
So focus on your nutrition, focus on your supplements, focus on your weight training,
two, three times a week minimum, not overdoing that.
If you're someone that's more of a hard gainer or high nervous system output.
And then if I haven't said sleep, focus on your sleep.
And if you can do those things,
you're going to be able to boost your testosterone levels
to your greatest ability possible.
And then after that, you say,
hey, did everything I can, my body is healthy,
yet I'm at the age now, or particular point in my life,
where I need to supplement a little bit.
Dr. Cabral, do you recommend,
when people, I'm assuming there's already a selection bias
when people come see you, but do you recommend
to people testing based off of symptoms right out the gates
or is there like a,
like these are the ones I recommend everybody
to get started with?
So we always recommend something called
the big five lab tests.
Like if you can run those,
everyone should run it once a year.
Because if you go by symptoms alone, it's not going to be fast enough to feed you to
catch what the underlying causes are that eventually lead to disease.
Some people feel totally fine, and they go to their PCP, and they're like, oh, white blood
cells are a 300.
Like, that's a problem.
You know, what was going on there?
So the Big Five are looking at your heavy metals and minerals, your gut function, vitamin
levels.
So you just know, like, do you need these?
Yes or no?
Your omega-6, omega-3 levels.
We should run that lab.
If we haven't run that lab yet, just to know, like, hey, if you're not using any omega-3
supplementation, great.
Well, you may not need it.
But do you know, yes or no?
Most people, they have no idea.
And they do need it.
And like, that's the thing is, I don't, I like to just take the ego out of it
and just say, I don't know either.
Let's go lab test.
Let's check these things out.
You check your food sensitivities
and you can check your hormones.
And then the nice thing is, not everything is gonna be off.
So you only need to optimize the one, two, or three areas
that need to be optimized.
Then you can retest if you choose to,
12 to 16 weeks later.
Now it's optimized, you're good to go.
You'll feel the difference.
So we've been partnered up for almost a quarter and a half, two quarters now.
And you have, we have this great community that we're building.
I believe we're over 10,000 people in the form are approaching 7,000.
Some are around there in the, in the private form, which by the way,
at the audience doesn't know, it's absolutely free for you to join.
MP holistic health, right?
That's an interesting question.
Right.
Tell me a little bit about what you're seeing with our community.
I mean, are there common themes that you're seeing,
or are there things you wish to people would ask,
or tell you more, like, give me a little bit of insight
on our community and what you're seeing.
So one of the great things is your community is more educated
than your average consumer or client.
They know more about nutrition,
they know more about exercise,
they're more into biohacking, and they're more open to doing. They're also better-looking than most people.
It is online, so I haven't seen as many of them. So that is the nice thing. So we have,
we can have, well, people can enter at any level, so they shouldn't feel bad about coming in and
asking a question, but we have some high-level discussions in there. There are at least 7,000
people in that group, which is pretty amazing,
because it's only been like 10 or 12 weeks.
And that our coaches and myself get in once a week,
we get on their live,
we're also answering questions daily.
And we're trying to just be more approachable
and able to steer people in the right direction.
Through lifestyle, what is called my de-stress protocol.
So diet, exercise, stress reduction,
talks removal, rest, emotional balance,
which is such a big part of it, scientifically back supplements,
and then a success mindset, like being able to do it.
One thing I want to add, Dr. Cabral, is two things.
One, and I've seen this so many times with clients,
is someone says, I'm fine, I feel okay.
But the problem is that they felt bad for so long,
that their context of what good is
or whatever's totally warped.
So then we start changing the diet and exercising
like oh my God, I had no idea how bad I felt before.
And then too, maybe you are doing everything right.
I think it's important to do tests, to get a baseline,
to know when I felt good, these are what my levels looked like
because as you said, there's a range.
And there is an individual variance with the ranges
Maybe a little higher, maybe a little lower for you
So even if you feel those symptoms and you are health and you are good and you exercise you're right
It is nice to get a nice baseline. This is where I'm at right now when I was doing all these things
I was consistent with exercise. I was sleeping good that way later on if you start to feel off
You've got a great reference point that you could point to 100% and there is no I'm doing everything right
It's only are you doing everything right for you?
Like, so if you're following someone else's plan,
it may or may not be right for you,
but until you, and again, run the lab
that you feel comfortable with,
but until your numbers say, yeah, you are doing everything right,
I think that's a hard one,
because you can say, I'll meet all the right foods.
Okay, I'll use, I'll literally go down
and I'll look at people's micronutrients, forget macros,
and I'll put in all the foods they're eating,
everything to the last morsel,
and I can tell you, and including myself,
it's really hard to get 100% in every area
of every vitamin and mineral you need per day.
Yeah, I mean, look at all of us.
I mean, we've been doing this for a very long time. We're surrounded by experts like yourself.
I like to think we know what the hell we're doing.
I mean, none of us are perfect.
And there's tweaks that all of us can make.
Oh, my test of care was about.
I wish they were.
You would have been last place for sure.
Last time I wasn't.
I think that was second or first, why not?
Anyway, well, this has been awesome.
Very, very educational. And again, I recommend this has been awesome, very, very educational.
And again, I recommend I implore audience,
whether you feel good or not,
especially if you don't feel good
and you just can't figure out what's going on,
your doctor can't figure out what's going on.
Like you want to find the root cause.
But even if you feel good, I think it's important
to get a good baseline.
Have that at your disposal, so that if and when something goes
wrong, you can refer back and be like,
this is where I was at that moment, and you know, kind of where you need to go.
This might be an ignorant question, because I do have lucky I have access to in a different
way that I can literally just text you. Do you have you structured it with like different
types of packages where you have like, you know, we recommend these tests. And if you do,
and you should do it, do your stuff, and then retest again, like, oh, if someone actually
scheduled out like their year of testing or something like that,
you already just do it by, okay, you do.
Well, no, it really depends on where the person's at
and obviously there are price ranges that people want to be in.
So what we try to do is all the things that would be fairly expensive,
like all of your consultations, all of those things,
we include them with the lab. So this lab you just ran here today, this is called the Stress Mo would be fairly expensive, like all of your consultations, all those things, we include them with the lab.
So like this lab you just ran here today,
this is called the stress mood and metabolism lab.
So it literally looks at stress mood
and overall my metabolism.
So when you run this lab, you get a 30 minute call
with one of my team members that's going to read your results
just like I did, make sure that you understand them,
they're gonna listen to your story,
and they're gonna help you put together a plan
just basically like we did here today.
And then you can choose to then run additional labs if you want.
They're basically all our cards.
So all of my labs are at stevecobra.com.forge-labs.
But this lab is at stevecobra.com.forge-mp.
And what we want to do is because we've done this before is something just special for
your community.
And so this lab though, is going to be one
that you're gonna be able to do with basically a cell set.
You're gonna be able to run this once a year
or when you're filling off
or even follow up with just your testosterone is needed.
So the big five is everything,
but if you wanna pull them out, you can.
Maybe you just wanna look at gut function
or maybe you just wanna look at food sensitivities
or you wanna look at the heavy metals
or you just wanna look at hormones. You can do any particular lab you want
without having to go to your doctor and request this.
And the nice thing is we sign off on this lab
for you to be able to run it.
The lab gets shipped to your house.
You ship it back to the little lab,
so it's an outside lab.
They run it, we get the results, we go through it,
and that's that.
That's StephenCobral.com-forcelash-mp.
Stephen spelled with the pH. Correct. Thanks. Thanks again. Yeah, that's great.
That's a great, great time. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to
build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy and maximize your
overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, maps performance and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically
transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having You can get it now plus other valuable free resources at MindPumpMedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five star rating and review
on iTunes and by introducing Mind Pump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mind Pump!