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165: Do You Have SIBO?

Transcript of Episode 165: Do You Have SIBO?

With Dr. Daniel Pompa, Meredith Dykstra and Dr. Ken Brown

Meredith:
Hello, everyone, and welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m your host, Meredith Dykstra, and this is episode number 165. I almost said 145. I hope everyone’s doing great today. We have our resident cellular healing specialist, Dr. Dan Pompa on the line, of course, and today we welcome a very special guest, Dr. Kenneth Brown. Today we have a topic that a lot of you have asked for, so we’re bringing it to you. We are delving into the world of SIBO or small intestinal bacterial overgrowth.

Dr. Brown is an expert in this area. Before we jump in, let me tell you a little bit more about Dr. Brown, and then we will get started on the conversation. Dr. Ken Brown received his medical degree from the University of Nebraska Medical School and completed his fellowship in gastroenterology in San Antonio, Texas. He’s a board-certified gastroenterologist and has been in practice for the past 15 years with a clinical focus on inflammatory bowel disease and irritable bowel syndrome.

For the last 10 years, he’s been conducting clinical research for various pharmacologic companies. During this time, he saw the unmet need for something natural that could help his IBS patients find real relief. After working on the development of Atrantil for over six years, Atrantil launched in the summer of 2015. Dr. Brown and his research team developed Atrantil with the intent of helping those suffering from the symptoms of IBS, which we now know are caused by bacterial overgrowth. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV, Dr. Brown.

Dr. Brown:
Thank you so much, Meredith. Dr. Pompa, thank you so much for having me on.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s a pleasure to have you on. It’s rare that someone with your background would understand SIBO. It’s absolutely remarkable, so I have to start there. How in the world do you understand SIBO?

Dr. Brown:
I’ve been doing clinical research, as Meredith mentioned. I’ve been doing clinical research for the last 10 years. There’s a doctor out of California named Dr. Mark Pimentel who really kind of came up with the idea. This is over 10 years ago where I was helping him do some of the research when they were trying to launch the drug Xifaxan. That’s when Salix was doing the first phase 3 study on that.

What was really interesting is that I communicated a lot with some different researchers around the country, and Dr. Pimentel noted something really unique in that his mouse models, he could show that antibiotics would help those people that had bacterial overgrowth and diarrhea, but they really struggled to treat those people that had bacterial overgrowth with constipation. It’s because of methane production. That’s where it all started.

When I was talking to him, he said, “We really need to come up with something for methane.” Then serendipitous, fate, whatever you want to call it, my research manager at the time, Brandy Scott, she has a background in political science, and at one point, she was a policy writer for a senator in Iowa. It was really interesting. I knew that I was working with Dr. Pimentel who had come up with this concept of SIBO, and then I realized that we were missing this huge population of people that had constipation and bloating because that’s due to methane.

I’m writing this on a dry erase board, and that’s when Brandy comes in. She goes, “You know, when I was working with that senator in Iowa years ago in the ‘90s, they were trying to mandate that the farmers put food products for the cattle to decrease methane production for the cattle in an attempt to help the ozone.” That’s when it was the a-ha moment. I went, “Holy cow! You’re saying that we can do this naturally by using food products that have already been sort of researched in the animal world. We can just integrate this and see where we go.” That’s how we ended up coming up with it. That’s where my passion came.

Dr. Pompa:
I see that. Let’s talk about what SIBO is because some people are going, “What? What is SIBO, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, okay.” Give them an idea what that means? From that, you’re referring to – there’s two different types of bacteria. We have these methane producers, and we have these hydrogen producers, and they can both cause different symptoms. We’ll get to that in a minute.

Dr. Brown:
Absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s like -inaudible- Right now we’re losing some people, so let’s talk about it. What the heck is SIBO?

Dr. Brown:
We’ll back up real quick, and let’s talk about it from my perspective or what happens with a lot of my patients. First of all – and you’ve come across this, I’m sure, with your patients – people get labeled as having irritable bowel syndrome or IBS. Now, IBS is what I’m going to call a trashcan term. Basically, if you have abdominal discomfort, change in bowel habits, and you go to your doctor, and the workup is normal, they pat you on the head. They say, “Irritable bowel syndrome.”

Many of my colleagues still will treat that with anti-depressants, or they’ll say that it’s in your head, and you just have to live with it, much like it was 30 years ago when we felt that ulcer disease was caused by stress, as well, or caused by anxiety. Then we learned by the Australian researcher that determined ulcer disease is actually caused by bacteria called H. pylori. This is the same paradigm shift that’s taking place with irritable bowel. When we realize that bacteria can grow where it shouldn’t, that’s bacterial overgrowth.

Basically, what I tell all my patients is, “It’s not that bacteria are good or bad. It’s that they are growing in abundance in the wrong place.” If you get sick -inaudible- if you have a bad infection, or even if you go through a stressful period, it can change the motility of the intestines. You normally have this free-flowing, very clear stream, and then something happens, and it shocks the intestines mostly in the upper intestines, in the small bowel, the duodenum. Then bacteria starts to grow there. When that bacteria grows in there, it starts breaking down the food before you can. That produces the painful gas and then results in these other symptoms.

It isn’t that you just have IBS and have to live with it. I have all these people that said, “I went to Mexico five years ago. I got very ill, and I’ve never been right since,” or, “I had something happen. I went through my divorce, and I’ve just never been right. I’ve got bad bloating, diarrhea, or constipation.” That’s what we now know is it’s bacteria growing where it shouldn’t. If we can get them to go back to where it should, then it becomes part of our normal microbiome, which is really, really important for our well being, as you well know.

Dr. Pompa:
Right. Some of the just common symptoms that people say, “I don’t have irritable bowel. I never had that.” – just bloating after eating fibrous foods, even vegetables. A lot of people I know can’t take probiotics. “I just can’t take probiotics.” A lot of those are symptoms of SIBO that people don’t think about. Are there others?

Dr. Brown:
Yeah, absolutely. The thing that I will encounter in my practice is I will have people that maybe don’t really equate – they’ve lived with the intestinal symptoms so long that they’re tolerant of a lot of things. “Well, it’s just normal for me not to go to the bathroom. I don’t wear a swimsuit because I bloat so much,” this, this, this. Then we start looking at all these other things. “Now I’ve developed a food intolerance. Now I feel like I’ve got brain fog. Now I’ve got some” – they just had these inflammatory things.

What’s really scary is I truly believe that these kind of things are the beginning of the autoimmune process, also. You’re turning your immune system on. I have seen people that have grown into having autoimmune disease after they’ve had GI symptoms for years, and then, wham, show up and have something that we really probably could have prevented by changing diet, or changing lifestyle, or so on.

I see all the time – if IBS is a trashcan term, then there’s a lot of other diseases that actually have codes, E&M codes, that the insurance companies would recognize, but really, we treat as trashcans. Pelvic pain, restless leg, migraines, depression, anxiety, all those things, they all tie in.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s exactly right. This show, believe me, this is really addressing a lot of people. Again, we could also say, “Okay, great. How does this happen, Dr. Ken?” How does someone end up with SIBO? Talk about some of the cause -inaudible- because that leads to, ultimately, some of the solutions.

Dr. Brown:
One of the main things that have been scientifically studied is that if somebody has an infection and they actually develop antibodies to the toxin on the bacteria, then that can actually create an area in the intestine where you have dysmotility. To get a little bit more scientific about it, basically what happens is if you get sick, your body produces antibodies to get rid of the Campylobacter or the Salmonella.

Interestingly, the antibody, which we’re going to call a soldier, goes out and gets rid of the bacteria, but we have a pacemaker cell in our intestines, and it sometimes looks a little bit like a bacterial toxin. That’s called a vinculin antibody. What happens is our body will then hit that toxin, and then create kind of a semi-permanent area where the intestine doesn’t move real well. That is the thought process right now where that may be the first stone to start rolling down the hill, and start the whole process. Your body reacts to an infection, and then ends up actually over-reacting and creating a little area where you’re going to have this dysmotility or an area that doesn’t work as well. That’s one of the primary causes.

Then after that happens, it becomes its own self-serving factory. Bacteria start to grow. They release hydrogen. Other types of bacteria come in, and they can take it. You mentioned in the very beginning, hydrogen can be converted to or can be used to make methane, which slows everything down, or it can actually make hydrogen sulfide, which speeds everything up. Now, we have our model to explain what is irritable bowel with diarrhea, and what is irritable bowel with constipation?

Once this process has started, then every time you eat – and specifically starchy foods that sometimes are hard to digest, like bread, one of them. Then the bacteria produce it. They produce more fuel, and they just keep thriving more. It ends up becoming a recurring problem. That’s really the main thing that starts, and then it keeps going. That’s why it’s a chronic condition. That’s why we say that people have chronic irritable bowel.

Dr. Pompa:
You said something there – based on diarrhea. Some people have constipation. It can go back and forth, and it gets very confusing for people. Talk a little bit about these two bacterias because I know this: People will say, “My doctor put me on X, Y, Z.” Maybe it’s Xifaxan, another antibiotic. They said, “I felt like I was better, and now I’m much worse.” If we kill off one group, we can actually take away something that was actually feeding this bacteria. We take away this group, and now these guys go crazy, and our symptoms change. Explain that.

Dr. Brown:
When we were developing this, that was the issue that we were dealing with with Xifaxan, initially. Let’s look at the type of bacteria that produces methane. It’s known as an archaebacter. Archaebacter are a very primitive organism in their own kingdom. It’s actually Methanobrevibacter smithii. We even know which one does it. Now, normally we’ll have that in our colon, but when it starts growing in the small intestine, it’s where it causes the problems.

What’s interesting about the archaebacter is it’s a very primitive organism, so that our modern-day antibiotics work in a very different way and actually don’t affect the archaea species. That’s how come Dr. Pimentel discovered early on that Xifaxan probably will not help these people that are bloating with that. One of the ingredients in Atrantil is Quebracho. What that is – yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible- This is the product that we use. This is the product that you developed – helped develop, I don’t know, partly. There’s the product you talked about.

Dr. Brown:
Yeah. This is definitely my baby, my passion. One of the reasons why we chose one of the ingredients in there, which is Quebracho, is that that’s actually from the bark of a very, very old tree. It has natural defense against fungus and archaea species, and so that’s why that’s used in there.

The other types of bacteria – many other types of bacteria can actually take the hydrogen and produce hydrogen sulfide, so there’s several other ones out there. Fortunately, those are more of the typical bacteria, which is why Xifaxan got the indication for irritable bowel-D. When you have bacteria that does that, what they need to do is they need to absorb the antibiotic, integrate it into the RNA of it – it’s a RNA transcriptase inhibitor, which is just a fancy way of saying it shuts down the machinery inside the bacteria – and then the bacteria goes back.

What you’re getting at is exactly something that I saw a lot of. I would treat people with Xifaxan early on, and they’d be like, “I had diarrhea, and now I’m profoundly constipated. What happened?” Like, “Oh boy. Now we need to do this.” What I have figured out is that by using something like this where your body’s going to pick and choose what it needs, because the ingredients in Atrantil are polyphenols – the polyphenols are basically the molecules in the Mediterranean diet on the skin of vegetables and so on. These are concentrated polyphenols. You cannot replicate Mother Nature. She just does it so much better than a pharmaceutical agent can.

This allows the body to take it. It gets the bacteria to go back to where it should. We’ve learned that a lot of these polyphenols then get into the colon where your colonic bacteria will convert it to necessary things that your body wants. It’s kind of a win/win. We can get the body back to where it should be, and it can be used daily as sort of a – almost a prebiotic style, allowing your bacteria in your colon to go ahead and use what it needs.

Dr. Pompa:
I think the cool part about this – not to confuse our viewers and listeners – is that, look, if you’re just targeting the hydrogen guys, yeah, the diarrhea goes away, but then there’s these other methane guys that lead to the constipation. You target both in this. Really, I guess it’s part of the magic because you do target both, where Xifaxan was typically targeting the hydrogen. Good for this, but oftentimes making this worse. How long do people typically need to be on this? Does it matter if they change their diet? Does it work if we take away fibrous foods and starchy foods? I just asked a lot of questions there.

Dr. Brown:
Yeah. That’s fine. Let’s start with the whole food thing. I think this is something that I’m evolving a little bit with. Initially, it was always thought that we should probably get people to change their diet so that they can start alleviating some of the symptoms. Then after a little bit, that’s when Dr. Pimentel came out with a new article that basically said, “No, no, no. We need to feed the bacteria so they can absorb this antibiotic, and then they can go away.” That’s a complete 180 on where it was in the beginning.

Atrantil works differently. I don’t really believe that it needs to have – it doesn’t have to be absorbed. The ingredients there are built to get rid of the bacteria. They get the bacteria to go back to where it should, and then they feed the bacteria in the colon. As far as diet changes, in my clinical practice, I see it as an opportunity to discuss diet. I personally like my patients to try and modify their diet and at least to gluten-free. I, myself, am kind of a paleo fan personally in my own lifestyle. I think that it’s an opportunity to do that.

I have seen patients get better not changing their diet at all. I actually have a gluten intolerance, which is how I kind of eventually got to the whole paleo thing. We’ve also seen that if people have a food intolerance or if they have intermittent symptoms, then they can just take it with that, which then comes into the other question, which is how long to take it.

What I’m seeing in my clinical practice is it really comes down to the burden of the bacterial load. We have some people that respond very, very quickly to it, and then they’re done. In the initial studies that we did, those patients took it, and we had a very long, sustained period where they felt great. Then maybe they’d come back a year later, and we’d give them another round. This is before we even actually had it in production. This was all just during the study phase.

I’ve had other patients that have had this for years, and years, and years. I imagine your practice is very similar, that you get a lot of people that show up with a big, thick stack of papers because they’ve seen a bunch of other doctors. They’re frustrated. They show up, and they just say, “Okay, your turn. Let’s see what you can do.” I get a lot of that. In those people, I do think it requires at least 20 days of two capsules three times a day, almost like you would do a round of antibiotics.

Then after that, then it goes to an as needed basis or a daily. The whole daily thing really kind of came about because my patients just felt better taking it. They asked to kind of stay on it. Said, “Even if I did the course, I feel better, but I’d prefer if I just take it every day, I feel better.” For the –

 

-cross talk-

Dr. Brown:
I was going to say for the gluten-intolerant or food sensitivity people, like myself, I can actually cheat a little bit and have a little bit of bread as long as I take it with it, actually with the meal, I don’t have any issues. We know that there’s something going on with that. We don’t exactly have all the science down on that, but there’s a lot of different speculation things, and I’ve talked to people. There’s a lot of polyphenol experts out there. Some people say, “It’s a histamine thing. You’re controlling the histamine,” or, “It’s the eosinophils,” or, “It’s the zonulin. Maybe you’re blocking zonulin.” It’s a moving target. It’s really exciting because we got a lot more work to do.

Dr. Pompa:
This is new area. I find a lot of people that are histamine-sensitive, and their mast cells are producing more – I find this to be a SIBO issue. I find this to be this imbalance, and there’s some type of problems, so just targeting this, I think the SIBO’s a better target. Before we discovered your product, we would put people on what we would call a SIBO diet, literally no fiber, no sugars, no starch, basically meats and fats for 15 to 20 days and sometimes longer. It worked. The problem was many of those people would relapse. It was very difficult to stick to.

Dr. Brown:
Absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
What it did is just starve them down. If we didn’t fix the motility issue, it would end up with SIBO again, you see.

Dr. Brown: 
One hundred percent.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible- how is this with that? You’re saying, “Great. If we can get rid of both types of bacterias that produce the methane and hydrogen, the motility issue fixes itself.” Do we still have to do anything else? I know that the brain connection is something we always had to address, too, the vagus nerve. We would give people some things that would help that with the motility, and even chiropractic adjustments in the upper cervicals make a different for these people. What’s your feeling on that?

Dr. Brown:
We know that with our clinical studies and what I’m seeing in clinical practice – so this has been out for a little over a year, a year and a half, or so. We’ve treated 70,000 or 80,000 people now, and we get lots of good feedback. I have open lines of communication.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow.

Dr. Brown:
The first things I say is almost like I want to make a commercial. I’ll want to say, “We’re a four star product because we’re not going to fix everybody. I want to fix everybody, but our studies really are pretty indicative. Over 80%, 88% of the people felt better,” but I still get – my whole practice is that 10% where they’ve tried it; they’re not better. I’m working on that. If you can help me with those 10%, I will send you a nice Christmas gift.

The motility issue, when I was talking about the vinculin antibodies, these people that actually have that antibody, you almost have to treat them as if they have an autoimmune disease that is affecting their actual motility. Now, this is something that I also strongly believe in. When you treat anybody, during the day, you’re going to give them something to try and get their intestines back to the way it should be.

What happens with a lot of these people, and the reason why they have motility issues, is because when they go to bed, there’s actually something that’s supposed to take place called the Housekeeper Phenomenon or the phase 3 contraction. Most SIBO patients are very familiar with this because they’ve read about it quite a bit, and they’re trying to learn for themselves. Basically, when you go to sleep at night, when you go into a deep sleep, your body sets this rhythmic pumping of moving everything from the stomach all the way to the colon.

We know in people that have this, that’s actually been affected. They go to bed at night, and the bacteria just thrive. Then you wake up, and we’re right back to square one. Addressing the motility issue, I will sometimes put people on erythromycin at night. From a natural standpoint, Iberogast is something else that I’ll use at night; really, anything to get that phase 3 contraction moving so that it works in conjunction. Then once you get that out, then usually the motility will repair itself.

Dr. Pompa:
We use a product, Bind, at night that – it just has a stimulating effect on the gut even for people who have lack of motility. It binds up a lot of these nasty biotoxins that these bacteria produce. People just go, “Oh, my God. I can’t live without it.” It’s because of the reason you’re saying, not to mention we have a lot of bile dump that occurs at night, too. I think the Chinese used to call it liver time between 2 and 4 a.m. Boom, it just dumped. Now you get the toxic dump and the bacteria thriving. Oh, my gosh. It’s a recipe for disaster.

Dr. Brown:
Isn’t this interesting, though? You’re already integrating multiple organs into this. One of the things you were talking about is a lifestyle deal that really gets completely overlooked, which is proper sleep hygiene. If we can get people into proper sleep hygiene, also, then that plays a role. I’m learning that it’s almost impossible to be a gastroenterologist when we’re dealing with these people. You really do have to start thinking on a more functional level, and looking in, and saying, “Oh, you’re not going to get completely better until we X, Y, Z this. We’ll start with this.”

Your whole philosophy of going back to the cell, I think, is absolutely brilliant. Going to the cell, and then working the brain all the way back, and including all these organs, I think, is pretty novel and pretty interesting.

Dr. Pompa:
One thing I teach is a multi-therapeutic approach, and the gut is part of that. It’s so hard if you’re not working in all of these areas to really get someone lasting well. We do things; “Hey, that helped.” If you’re not really working in all of the areas, you’re not going to get someone to really last in their healing.

I have to have Meredith tell her story. I thank her for finding this. When she did, I started researching it, and I started – and everything that I knew, I was like, “Okay, this actually makes sense to me. [00:23:57] okay, this one actually makes sense.” I said, “Oh, yeah, you need to try it.” I think I told her to try it anyway, and then I started researching it. I said, “Man, I can’t wait to see her results.” Meredith, tell your story because you were a classic case from the Xifaxan all the way through.

Meredith:
Yeah. Gosh, I’ve had some gut issues, and I don’t know – we’ll kind of have to abridge the story. I guess it kind of started around 2010. I began eating a really high-starch diet, a macrobiotic diet. That’s what I was following, so I was eating grains three times a day, and I came down with a Staph infection, as well. This was maybe January, 2011. Got really fearful, so ended up on a course of a lot of different antibiotics for about five months. Ever since then, my gut health was just – I couldn’t get it where I wanted to be. I had issues with digestion. It would flare up on my skin.

It’s been kind of a battle. Since working with Dr. Pompa, so it’s been about three years now, we’ve been working together. I realized, “Okay, this is SIBO, a lot of these issues.” I would eat vegetables, which I wanted to eat, and they were so healthy for me, and they would cause bloating and a feeling of distension. With a lot of the symptoms, I realized that it was SIBO.

I had done a breath test for SIBO not too long ago, and it came up negative. It was a hydrogen breath test. I was so disappointed because I remember thinking, “Oh, I know I have SIBO. How can this be negative?” It was a hydrogen breath test, so I’m thinking, “Okay, well then maybe” – now, in retrospect, that I had this methane form. At that time, I didn’t even know there was the hydrogen and methane bacteria that were different.

This fall, I had been trying for a long time to get rifaximin, Xifaxan, which just as a side note, it can be very challenging to access. It was very expensive. It was so hard to even get an appointment with the gastroenterologist. We had to basically pretend that I had IBS, which I don’t, but -inaudible- to the rifaximin. I made the financial investment. I was, “I know this is right.” It was 10 days, and it was 550 milligrams three times a day, I believe. No, it was 14 days. It was a pretty good course of antibiotics, and I assumed that’s a standard dose. I took it for 14 days at this high dose, and maybe felt a little bit of relief in the beginning.

Dr. Pompa, you had suggested maybe since I had been following a low-carb ketogenic diet for a while with some cyclical feasting with some higher carb here and there, but pretty low-carb for a while, that while I was taking rifaximin to try a higher-carb diet, just to eat starches, really for the bacteria to be able to kind of digest these starch. I did a higher-carbohydrate diet for those two weeks while I was on the rifaximin. For the first few days, felt a little bit of relief, but then just kind of back to square one, not feeling a lot of results, and just feeling discouraged, honestly.

During this point, I came across your work and Atrantil, and I was thinking, “Well, this sounds like an amazing, natural option,” realizing, too, the difference between the hydrogen bacteria and the methane bacteria, and thinking, “Well, maybe I have the methane-producing bacteria for the SIBO. That’s why I had the negative breath test for SIBO.” About a week or so after I finished the course of rifaximin, I tried the Atrantil. I’ve definitely noticed better results with the Atrantil. I’m just kind of wondering, too, what your thoughts are on those of us who have taken rifaximin in the past. Did that do damage? Was that the wrong thing to do?

Dr. Brown:
No. I don’t think it was the wrong thing to do. I think that Dr. Pompa touched on it briefly that it is an antibiotic, and so it’s going to nonselectively kind of take out where – anything that it can actually integrate into the cell. Now, the one thing that separates Xifaxan and why Xifaxan is used over other antibiotics – there’s a lot of other antibiotics that have been used to try and treat bacterial overgrowth, SIBO. Xifaxan is very poorly absorbed. The thought is that it stays in the lumen a little bit longer and affects just those bacteria in the lumen.

What I have seen in my own clinical practice – and I write a lot of Xifaxan. I was certainly doing the original research on it. What I would see is that somebody would have an excellent response the first time. They would have about a 60% response the second time. By the third time we tried to use it, they had nothing. Sometimes I think, “Are we really here for the bacteria, or is the bacteria here for us?” It kind of goes both ways. We carry this bacteria around, and they adapt so quick, and they’re so good at trying to do some of these things.

The antibiotics, it’s a pharmacologic agent. The way that Atrantil works is it’s got three ingredients that work together. Basically, the first ingredient is just a calming agent. That’s got the menthol in it. It’s the peppermint leaf. Chose the leaf, not the oil, for the polyphenol benefit of it. The second ingredient is that Quebracho. What the Quebracho is, that’s the polyphenol. It’s a tannin. It’s an [epigalic] tannin. [Epigalic] tannins are very large, beautiful molecules. It doesn’t get absorbed very well at all, so it stays intraluminal, or it stays in the area where the bacteria is. That actually weakens the archaebacter, and it sets it up for the third ingredient that shuts off the enzymatic production.

All of this was shown eloquently in all those animal models when they were initially looking at it. That’s why it was so cool to go, “Oh. Somebody did all the heavy lifting for us. Nobody’s ever put it together. Let’s put it together.” That’s how we were able to get a patent. We were able to patent Mother Nature, which is kind of hard to do. Fortunately, we’re having success kind of like you’ve had, Meredith. I’m really, really happy that we were able to develop something that can help a lot of people that otherwise had been extremely frustrated.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. Thank you. It’s been a godsend for us. SIBO is known as the most frustrating thing. When we would see SIBO, we’d go, “Ugh!” -inaudible- so many failures, multiple things. These bacteria, man, they start – this starts working, and now it doesn’t. We would combine – literally – very, very archaic. Let’s talk about testing because I think Meredith pointed out something. The breath is a good way to test; however, it’s very difficult to find a test that tests for hydrogen and methane. What if they’re down deeper? If they’re down further in the intestine, sometimes the tests are negative. Talk about that.

Dr. Brown:
Meredith, what you had is you had a hydrogen breath test. The hydrogen breath test, for your listeners, is that you’ll take what we call a substrate, where basically, you’re just going to take some sort of fuel for the bacteria whether it’s a lactulose, or whether it’s glucose, mannitol. There’s a lot of different ones that you can use. Bottom line is you’re going to give some food to the bacteria. Then you breathe into a bag, and it checks your levels of your gases, hydrogen and methane. Then you ingest this substance, and you take your breath tests in set amounts of time, and you wait for a spike in hydrogen or in methane to happen.

That spike is basically the bacteria has broken down the gas, and it gets absorbed into your system, travels all the way back to your lungs, and you exhale it. That’s the actual breath test. Now, it’s a pretty complex thing. It’s kind of interesting. It’s pretty cool science. The problem that you found out right there is that it’s not an infallible test. In fact, the sensitivity and specificity aren’t that great so much so that I really only reserve that test for people that have failed treatment. Then I go, “Okay, if you failed treatment, and you still show up really positive, then I will tailor a little bit of the treatment for that.”

An example of this would be somebody that came to me as a second or third opinion. I treated him, and he’s like, “Yeah, I’m a little better, but still not.” I checked his breath test, and he had a methane spike in 15 minutes. Looking at that, what that told me was, similar to what you just mentioned, where is the bacteria living? In his case, his bacterial overgrowth was so high up that it was right past the stomach, which means, “Oh, my gosh! Maybe we’re not even opening – the capsule’s not even dissolving that high up.” -inaudible- dissolves that high up than, of course, if you’ve got bacteria further down.

It’s the best way to get it to go there, so we had him open up the capsules, and it went away. In his case, it’s like, “Oh.” That was more of an area, of getting the product there. The breath test is not the ideal. It’s not a perfect test, but it’s all we got. A few other things like an endoscopic culture and things, that’s still not perfect. It’s an invasive test. There’s a few people around the country doing that. I reserve the breath test for people that have actually failed everything.

Now, if you’re interested, just this past month in one of my journals, American College of Gastroenterology, Dr. Pimentel and Dr. Satish Rao, who are both experts in SIBO and treat it slightly different, they came with a consensus article or a review article on breath testing. You can read the whole thing, and the bottom line is they’re just kind of saying this: “Well, it’s kind of not that great, but it’s all we got.” It’s kind of funny that the experts that are really kind of into this, they all kind of agree that it’s – clinical diagnosis still goes a long way.

Now, I will say that when you are – the belief with these guys was that if you test positive in methane, that is probably true. It’s a very specific test if you test positive in methane. If you test negative, it doesn’t mean that you don’t have it. Take that for what it’s worth.

Dr. Pompa:
I don’t even use the testing anymore. It’s so easy clinically to spot it, I think. The other problem with many of the tests, most of the tests that people get online are just hydrogen, so they’re missing the methane. It depends on what sugar agent they use. Again, if the bacteria are too far down, then it doesn’t get to it, etcetera. There’s many pitfalls.

Dr. Brown:
Yes, exactly.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay. We’re learning a lot here, I’ll tell you. This is good stuff. I have one more question -inaudible- back over to Meredith. Let’s say someone does the 20 days, and they relapse. Can you do another 20 days follow it up? These are questions that I get a lot. How much can you do it? Can you disrupt your – can the product disrupt your actual microbiome? That was the actual question I had when I did my Facebook Live. Can the product disrupt your good microbiome? Therefore, how often can you treat if you flare up? There was the question I got.

Dr. Brown:
We have not seen any disruption of the natural microbiome. Typically, when we’re talking about medications that do things like that, we’ll know – like if it’s an antibiotic, and somebody develops C diff, Clostridium difficile, then we know they’re really messing with your natural microbiome. That would be the most extreme version of it.

I have had some practitioners that do stool testing, and genomic stool testing, and things, and they say that there is a change, but into more of a change of a broader spectrum of bacteria, which means it’s functioning like the prebiotic. It’s a polyphenol.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible-

Dr. Brown:
Yeah. These are the ingredients. Really, the answer to your question is we have not seen it. I don’t think it would do it. I have been taking it daily for years, ever since we first came up with it. I was the first guinea pig. I’ve taken two, three bottles just to see if a toxicity would happen and so on. I have not had any issues at all. We believe that those molecules – there’s a lot of cool research going on with this. I just read an article recently where [epigalic] tannins – somebody wrote an article that showed that these tannins – I think it was -inaudible- was the one that they were looking at – actually got converted by the bacteria in the colon – because they don’t get absorbed well – and the bacteria then converted it to urolithin though an enzymatic process.

These are all kind of big words, but the bottom line is that it actually helped the mitochondria on the cellular level do something called mitophagy. When we talk about fasting and stuff, autophagy, where your cells do this. This is the same thing, but even at a smaller level in the mitochondria. I just came across this. It was one of those – when people are starting to do research in the molecule that you’re enjoying, and you’re working with, and you realize, “Oh, this is tip of the iceberg. Maybe we’re really getting into a cool area of overall cellular health, where we can start helping people in that end.”

Dr. Pompa:
That’s exciting. Hey, good. Look, I know that you’ve been on it for a couple years. My kids aren’t going to die. They’re my guinea pigs. “Okay, kids. You’re good. -inaudible- on this one. Next.”

Dr. Brown:
Yeah, exactly.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s why you have kids.

Dr. Brown:
People ask me all the time, they’re like, “Can we give it to pregnant women? Can we do it for breastfeeding?” It’s just kind of a canned answer. It wasn’t studied. The -inaudible- says no, we can’t do it, but on a – probably shouldn’t say this on air, but it’s really kind of funny. Brandy, the researcher that helped me develop this, her and I worked years on this. In the process, she ended up getting married, and getting pregnant, and breastfed. She remained on it the whole time, and her baby is beautiful, and gorgeous, and everything. I’m not recommending it, but I’m saying that at least we’re willing to try it. Just like you said, you’re going to test it out on your kids; we do the same thing.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. Actually, you know what? It fixed my son’s girlfriend. She was here. I’m like, “Oh, you have SIBO.” She’s like, “What’s that?” It was like, “Oh, my God.” She’s searching it. I’m like, “No. Here’s the answer.” She took my only bottle. Meredith -inaudible- I’m going to actually just take it for fun because of the whole autophagy conversation there. It’s like, “No. I’m going to test it on me.”

Dr. Brown:
The only other thing that’s really interesting that I think that you can kind of appreciate – and this is a hard concept when I speak with other medical doctors, other MDs. The term leaky gut, that’s a very, very common term on the internet. It’s a term that I think most MDs will stick their head in the sand and say, “That doesn’t exist,” because there’s no code for it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, right. It’s true.

Dr. Brown:
What we’re seeing is this big movement now where if we call it epithelial integrity disruption or use any other fancy word you want, but it comes down to leaky gut. There’s a lot of information. Really, what we’re seeing is – I met with a gastroenterologist who, in his mid-fifties, decided to get his PhD in Indianology, which it blows my mind that somebody would do that at that stage of their career, but he’s absolutely brilliant. He did his thesis on the tight junction or how the cells come together.

We were discussing that. There’s a lot of evidence that shows the things that create leaky gut, SIBO, or an infection, diet, meaning whatever you want to call it. You can say that it’s GMO, or it’s lectins that are creating this, and grains, whatever you want to call it – and then zonulin. Of course, zonulin is that protein that is produced when the body sees gliadin or gluten. Zonulin, SIBO, and diet create this leaky gut or intestinal permeability.

Once intestinal permeability happens, you have these security guards that wait right below the cells called dendrites. They sample the outside world, and they don’t really make a decision. They hand it off to another cell like a B cell, and then that B cell makes a decision, friend or foe. “Oh, don’t worry about it. That’s a normal bacteria that we don’t care about. Oh, don’t worry about it. That’s just a normal chunk of hamburger. That’s fine,” and they shut it off.

In these susceptible people, that is the start of the autoimmune process. It hands it off to a cell, and then that cell overreacts and goes, “Oh, no! This is something we have to get rid of,” and then turns on this whole inflammatory cascade. That’s when we get into the complexity of it with – is it these inflammatory cytokines like TNF, interleukins? Is it the histamine? Is it whatever?

What’s funny, when we treat people with Crohn’s and ulcerative colitis, which are diseases where the body attacks its own intestine, maybe the treatment has nothing to do with downstream shutting of these inflammatory cytokines. Maybe we just need to tighten the gate before it even happens.

Dr. Pompa:
I couldn’t agree more. I’ll tell you, after this conversation, I’m going to use this product on people that I wouldn’t diagnose with SIBO, that I wouldn’t say, “Oh, this is a SIBO case.” I’m going to use it on some of my leaky gut cases that we battle. I think there’s more here than meets the eye.

Dr. Brown:
It’s probably standard for you when you evaluate a patient, but it’s very interesting. I’ll catch my patients off-guard where they’ll be talking to me. They want to discuss their GI issues, bowel habits, and things like that, and I’ll go, “Do you ever feel like you’re just tired?” They’re like, “Yeah, why?” I’m like, “Do you ever feel like you’re in a brain fog?” They’re like, “Yes.” Then I’m like, “Okay. This is what’s going on.”

It’s so interesting because these symptoms are so common. In my opinion, all these symptoms are tied to chronic inflammation, some sort of thing that’s revving up your inflammatory response starting in the gut, working its way out, and then you have these other manifestations, depression, fatigue, restless leg, brain fog, all these things that people get frustrated because the blood work’s normal. Scopes are normal, and they get a CAT scan. Then they go to another doctor, and they do the same thing. Then they go to another doctor, and they do the same thing. Hopefully, we’re making a big difference.

Dr. Pompa:
When you look at why people don’t feel well today, you have this brain, and you have this brain down here. Both have a barrier; blood-brain barrier, gut barrier. Both -inaudible- compromised by massive amounts of certain toxins.

Dr. Brown:
Absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
When we look at what glyphosate is doing – and it goes beyond glyphosate. We grew up in the lead and mercury generation. These things open up these barriers. We’re dealing with toxic cells here. This is the problem, and then all these infections that are now crossing into these barriers. This is why we’re seeing an epidemic of autoimmune and unexplainable illnesses.

Dr. Brown:
I have to do a little self-confession here. I listened to your podcast where you were with your buddy. You guys were at a convention, and you were kind of doing simultaneous live podcasts. You guys had dinner the night before.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, I bet -inaudible-

Meredith:
-inaudible-

Dr. Brown:
Yes, yes, yes. I was sitting there, writing down – I’m like, “Man, I got to start doing some of this stuff.” I’m like, “Okay. I got to bring my own water filter there. I got to do this.” I’m like, “Wow. When these guys go on vacation, they’ve got a whole list. They got to make sure.”

Dr. Pompa:
No doubt. We learned early on that if you don’t stop the toxic input into the gut, it’s really difficult to balance the bacteria. It just keeps opening up these junctions, these tight junctions. There’s so many things that can affect them.

Dr. Brown:
Yeah. I have all these people. I have a lot of very high-level executives that’ll fly in to see me, and they’re just – they’re frustrated because they’re mentally not where they normally are. They’ll even admit it. They’re like, “Man, I’ve never been anxious in my life, and now I’m having panic attacks. What is going on here?” We treat the gut, and eventually they get a little bit better. It’s that desperation, like, “What in the world? I get it. I’ll put up with my gut, but this” – just like you said.

A lot of these cytokines and toxins cross the blood-brain barrier. When that happens, the brain reacts to it. You have this enteric nervous system, meaning you got your own nervous system in the gut that does communicate with your central nervous system, which is your brain and your spinal cord, so there’s interaction both ways. You can have the brain doing some stuff to the gut, and you could have the gut doing some stuff to the brain.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely. Now, we’ve seen it with our autistic cases. You have to deal with both. I’ll tell you, therein lies the magic. Meredith, I’ll turn it over to you.

Meredith:
Thanks, Dr. Pompa. I always have lots of questions. You guys had touched a bit on fasting. Dr. Brown, I’m curious as to your thoughts on fasting, whether you implement it clinically. When I met Dr. Pompa – when we’ve been working together, I remember, just kind of getting back to the SIBO topic, the SIBO diet was kind of started off by a four-day bone broth fast, typically, and then you would go into just eating meats and fats for a period of time before bringing in fermented foods and trying to reintroduce some of the foods. I’m wondering what your thoughts are on fasting and if you use it clinically.

Dr. Brown:
I’m fairly new to the whole fasting world. I, myself, have been doing intermittent fasting for about a year now, not so much for any other particular reason other than I’m – I don’t want to say my age, but I’m getting to that point where it’s really hard to still stay in shape. I’ve found that the intermittent fasting really helped me kind of get back to the body that I was trying to maintain a little bit. Personally, that’s where I’m at.

Because of that, I’ve been doing a lot of things, like listening to your podcasts and listening to a lot of other people that are actually much more knowledgeable about fasting. That being said, I’ve been getting a lot of emails from patients that do fast, and they’re like, “You should do a study. You should really see if the fasting makes a big difference.” I’m going to start implementing – I have a hard enough time – it’s just the nature of treating people. It’s very hard to get people to do anything that is not easy.

If I just say, “Why don’t you not eat bread and pasta? Let’s start with that,” and if they actually do that, I’m pretty happy. Then if I can go all the way to – if I can work my way to fasting, I’ll certainly do it, but just the thought of it is a little scary to a lot of people. Then, oh, my gosh, yeah, when you were talking – one of your podcasts recently, you had a fasting expert on, and you were discussing – the magic doesn’t happen until day four. I go out on a run every morning. I stopped, and I was like, “Four? I struggle to make this 18-hour thing. Are you kidding?” It sounds scary.

Dr. Pompa:
Listen, in early May, my seminar in Atlanta, you’d be our guest, and I would – my November seminar or end of October – I don’t know when it is, but we’d love to have you speak on SIBO.

Dr. Brown:
What is the seminar that you’re –

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible-

Dr. Brown:
What is it that you’re going to?

Dr. Pompa:
This seminar is – it’s in Atlanta, and it’s May 5, 6, and 7. Dr. Joe Mercola, myself, and Ben Greenfield, who you saw me -inaudible-

Dr. Brown:
Oh, okay. Yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
They’re all going to be there. They’re all speakers. Yeah, you would absolutely love and enjoy this seminar. If you can get to Atlanta, you’d be our guest, so we’d love to have you.

Dr. Brown:
I’ll have to go ahead and look into that. Yeah, for sure.

Dr. Pompa:
Then in our fall seminar, we would love to have you speak on this if the dates work out for you. Meredith -inaudible-

Dr. Brown:
Oh, I’ll make them work, absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
We carry this, folks, on our site. Meredith can tell you more than that, but very appreciative of this product, Doc, and very behind it.

Dr. Brown:
You know what? I want to thank you for – I know that you found your calling after you struggled with some stuff. There’s a lot of integration – I need to learn a lot is what I’m saying. I’m learning a lot now as I’m diving in, and getting beyond this, and realizing that there’s a lot more to the functional side of all this as I’m meeting a lot more functional doctors.

Dr. Pompa:
We learned a lot from you today. That’s for sure. This area is your expertise. We’re doing it different because of you, so we thank you for that.

Dr. Brown:
Awesome. Absolutely.

Meredith:
There’s always so much to learn. I just have another quick question before we sign off. I get a lot of phone calls and protocol questions. I know with the Atrantil – we mentioned a little bit about some other supplements, but can it be taken in conjunction with probiotics and digestive enzymes?

Dr. Brown:
Short answer, probably yes. Digestive enzymes, for sure. Now, Dr. Pompa did mention briefly in the very beginning that he sees some people that get worse on probiotics. There are certain doctors like Dr. Pimentel at Cedars Sinai where he does a no probiotic protocol because that could actually be fuel to the fire. That being said, I’ve had a lot of practitioners call me up and be like, “Well, I’ve had really good success with this.” I’m like, “Okay. If it works, it works.” There’s no contraindication. I personally have people hold it because I’m scared that we’re actually giving them more fuel to the fire in the area that we don’t want it.

I want those probiotics to make their way down to the colon. That’s the bottom line. By the time they come to see me as a specialist, they’ve already been on probiotics. They’ve already been on six or seven different types of probiotics. It’s easy for me to go, “Why don’t you hold that? Take this. Let’s see what happens.”

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, I just did a Facebook Live on this two days ago. It’s about that everyone’s been on the same probiotic for a year or more, and they’re literally causing dysbiosis. They’re causing competitive issues. I see that all the time. First thing I do is, “How long have you been on it? Let’s get off it. Switch it.”

Dr. Brown:
Yeah.

Meredith:
Yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible-

Meredith:
-inaudible- otherwise that monoculture is created, right? If we’re always taking the same bacteria, it can really do a lot more harm than good.

Dr. Brown:
When we think about that, the thing that’s kind of hard for people to understand is that your true microbiome is – it is huge, huge number and thousands of species, a hundred trillion. When you’re taking a probiotic, we do want it to get it there. We do want it to do some good, but it is always just a little drop in the ocean when it’s all said and done.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely.

Dr. Brown:
If you feed your bacteria, they’ll figure out what they need. If you feed them the right things, they’ll really kind of figure out what they’re doing.

Dr. Pompa:
My brain was spinning, so I didn’t want to mention because I couldn’t come up with it, but it was about polyphenols and zonulin. There was a study that I read about polyphenols’ affect on zonulin and therefore leaky gut, etcetera. Dig for that. That’s in your neck of the woods. My brain just remembers stuff.

Dr. Brown:
Oh, man. If I could get – first of all, this is – it’s really exciting that we were able to get to this. I have a company now, a lot of people have changed their lives, moved down here. I’ve got a CEO, and a director of operations, and all this. Technically, we’re still a start-up. I’ve got all these things, exactly what you’re talking about. I think that there is – we need to look at how do we slow down this histamine? How do we bind up the zonulin?

Clearly, the fact that I’ve got bad gluten intolerance, and I can eat a loaf of bread as long as I have this with me, I’m fine. I’m the first one to admit, “I don’t know. Am I blocking zonulin? Am I binding something? Is it a histamine? I don’t know.” It’s exciting stuff. -inaudible- so I can get back and start looking at these other things.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible-

Dr. Brown:
That’s going to be the fun thing. We’ve opened a new door. We’re like, “Ah, look at this!”

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. I say I can’t wait to use it for a lot of different things. I was a guy who couldn’t eat gluten. Now I can eat it. It’s not just gluten. I wrote an article on that. It’s not just gluten.

Dr. Brown:
I’m going to give you just a little bit of warning because after we launched, I had to do a lot of conferences, and shows, and stuff. Since I could eat gluten, over a year, I insidiously put on about 15 pounds, and went, “What?”

Dr. Pompa:
When I say that, I mean I can, but trust me, Meredith will tell you, I’m down into my diet, man. It’s no problem here. All right, Meredith. Thanks again, Dr. Ken. Again, the product, Meredith? You can make sure that they – Revelation Health carries it, so there you go.

Dr. Brown:
Awesome. Dr. Pompa, Meredith, thank you so much. Meredith, can you just email me the conference dates and that, and then I’ll make sure that we’ll attend. That’s awesome.

Meredith:
Awesome. I will definitely reach out. Thank you for sharing your wealth of information on the gut, and SIBO, and some of the root causes, and then this really exciting solution that we have for all of you, as well. I’m very excited. I’m a little nervous to try gluten again. Maybe I’ll even try it with this product. I don’t know.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible-

Meredith:
-inaudible-

Dr. Pompa:
You know what, Dr. Ken? You might want to have a booth. You might want to have a booth there. We’re going to have 300 doctors there.

Dr. Brown:
Oh, yeah. We actually have a booth. We would be happy to sponsor, absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
You need to do that because I was just thinking that because they need to be introduced to – that way. Absolutely. Anyways, Meredith will handle the rest.

Meredith:
Yep. Awesome. We’ll be in touch. Thanks, everyone, for watching -inaudible-

Dr. Brown:
Thank you, guys.

Meredith:
Yeah, thank you – getting Atrantil. Did I pronounce it correctly?

Dr. Brown:
That’s the other thing. If you want to ask, the biggest problem we had was trying to find a name because pharmaceutical companies have trademarked everything. If it phonetically or visually even gets a little close to it, they’ll sue you. We struggled to find a name. We had to make it up, and we thought, “Trantil” because it gives a sense of tranquility would be cool. Then at the 11th hour, our attorney said, “Oh, no. This pharma company has something similar. Throw an A in the front of it. It’ll work.”

Dr. Pompa:
Atrantil.

Dr. Brown:
It’s Atrantil, like, “Aah, my belly’s better.”

Meredith:
Atrantil.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s French for relief for small intestinal bacteria overgrowth.

Dr. Brown:
As soon as we – it’s going to sell like crazy in the EU in that French accent you just had. I love it.

Meredith:
Atrantil. Awesome. If you’re interested in getting some Atrantil, you can go to RevelationHealth.com – I did study French – and pick up a bottle. Thank you, Dr. Brown. Thank you, Dr. Pompa. As always, amazing information. I know I learned a lot. I hope all of you did, as well. Have a wonderful weekend, and we’ll see you next time. Bye-bye.

164: Should Kids Fast?

Transcript of Episode 164: Should Kids Fast?

With Dr. Daniel Pompa, Meredith Dykstra and Simon Pompa

Meredith:
Hello, hello, everyone, and welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m your host, Meredith Dykstra, and this is episode number 164. We’ve got our resident cellular healing specialist, Dr. Dan Pompa, on the line, and today we have a very special guest welcoming us. He isn’t quite in your office yet, Dr. Pompa, but your son Simon is going to be joining us for Cellular Healing TV today. He’s had a really special experience recently with fasting, and you wanted to bring him on to share that. Do you want to talk a little bit about that before he joins us?

Dr. Pompa:
He had to go somewhere. He’ll be coming in, hopefully, shortly. This has been quite the display on Facebook. I starting doing on my Facebook Live a series on fasting, and it just so happened that Simon decided to do a fast. It was just the irony of it. Here’s how the story went: He was looking over – I was getting ready for a talk on skin, as you remember, down in Ogden.

He -inaudible- one of my clients. He looked over my shoulder, saw the picture, and said, “Whoa. Go back to that. What’s up with that girl?” I said, “Oh, that’s eczema.” He’s like, “Really?” Simon had these spots for the last almost a year on his head – one spot, big spot – and then also on his chest. I was explaining to him, “That’s a reason to change your diet. Eczema is autoimmune. When it starts younger, it’s harder to get rid of.” These were conversations that we’ve had over the last year.

As you know, I never force my kids. Our kids were raised on a certain diet. Then we let them go, and they’ve come back around. All my kids have come back around except Simon. Here’s the time. He saw that picture. He left the room. He came back and said, “What did she do? What does she look like now?” I’m like, “Yeah, she’s fine now. She doesn’t have any of that stuff.” “What did she do?” I said, “A few things, and fasting, and cellular detox, etcetera,” and then he left the room again, and came back in the room.

He said, “Okay, I want to fast.” He had just recently started doing some cellular detox again, and so he said, “I want to do a fast.” I said, “Okay. All right. You can do a fast.” I said, “We’re going to do one as a family in the spring.” He said, “No. I want to start right now. I want to start today.” I was like, “All right. Okay.” I didn’t know how serious he was, but didn’t eat that day, didn’t eat the next, didn’t eat the next. He went for 11 days without eating, just about 11. He thinks 11 ½. I don’t know. It’s somewhere in there.

Point being is he just started eating the other day. I wanted to bring him on Cellular Healing TV, and do this show, and have him share his experience. We had so many questions. Everybody was following him. I’ll tell you this: What happened was he literally drove a following of people that decided to fast. They all started fasting. He has all these people doing block fasts. I’m telling you, multiple days right now. I can’t even count, that’s how many. It was remarkable. Anyways, so that’s the story. Here he comes now, so let’s bring him in. There you go, my man.

Meredith:
Hey, Simon.

Simon:
How’s it going?

Meredith:
Great. Good to have you here.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. I know you have a lot of questions, just like many people did. Just for the people watching, Simon didn’t do anything but water. He did no fats, no broth, nothing. It was just purely water. No supplements during the fast. That’s always a question. A water fast is just water. Broth fasting and other fasts, you can do some supplements, but water, I like -inaudible- water. Simon, the first – we were measuring his glucose and ketones throughout.

By day two, Simon had elevated ketones, 2.6. His glucose was in the forties already. Boom. Glucose down; ketones up. That’s what we want to see. However, he didn’t have energy yet, and there’s a reason for that. Although his ketones were going up, which typically would create energy, his body wasn’t fat-adapted yet. It wasn’t using the ketones yet. By end of day four, he started using those ketones, and then he felt amazing. At that point, he said, “I’m going beyond four. I’m going a week.” Then he went beyond a week. You have questions for him, I bet.

Meredith:
I do. Simon, for our viewers, how old are you? We want to know.

Simon:
Thirteen.

Meredith:
Thirteen, wow. What are some of the symptoms you kind of experienced? I know you went 10 ½ days on just water. What was it like day to day, if you can kind of walk us through some of the symptoms you experienced, the good things, the bad things? What did it feel like?

Simon:
Dizziness, kind of nauseous, light-headed, and kind of achy, and really hungry, and headache, and some welts.

Dr. Pompa:
That was days one, two, three, four. Yeah, he did. He had welts around his knees. Things were coming out.

Simon:
BO.

Dr. Pompa:
Yup. He got really bad body odor, horrible breath. All of this was –

Simon:
Urine smelled –

Dr. Pompa:
The first three days were absolutely the worst. Yeah, his urine smelled. His tongue started turning white around day three, I would say. It didn’t happen right away, which some people it happens day one, just a one-day fast. When did you start feeling normal – well, better?

Simon:
Day four, not day three. Day four is when it started getting better.

Dr. Pompa:
He said online to Facebook Live. “Don’t anyone ever tell you you start feeling good on day three.” It was really, I would say, halfway through day four that he started feeling good. Then you started feeling so good that you wanted to fast on.

Simon:
Yeah.

Meredith:
You were just going to originally start with four days? Had you intended to go as long as you did?

Simon:
No. No, not really. I just kind of went for it.

Dr. Pompa:
You decided to go longer. You were definitely thinking maybe breaking it at four. I remember that conversation. You didn’t know, though. He didn’t know. As it got easier, he definitely got inspired. I didn’t start his fast. It was up to him when to break the fast. However, our deal was, “You’re going to make sure you break it right.” We’ll talk a little bit more about that because people ruin fasts by breaking fasts incorrectly. It’s even dangerous. It’s very important to break the fast right.

Now Simon has broken the fast, and that was a few days ago. Now he and I both are in kind of a partial diet. I’m doing it just to do it with him, taking in between 500 and 1,000 calories a day. Simon was doing that more in the afternoon. Now today he decided to try a morning window of eating and stop eating a little bit sooner in the day.

Simon:
Early in the day.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.

Meredith:
I’ve done that, too. Instead of eating just in the evening, just eating in the morning. I did that yesterday. I just had a bunch of the algae bits that we love. It’s good to have that variation, as well, with our timing. Now Simon, were you going to school this entire time you were fasting?

Simon:
Yes.

Meredith:
Wow. Now, what was that like at school without eating? How were your friends reacting?

Dr. Pompa:
He does school here.

Meredith:
Oh, okay. All right. Then I guess it’s a little bit different.

Dr. Pompa:
We homeschool him, but we have a teacher. God forbid it was me homeschooling him. I could teach health. There you go. I could do that, and I do that.

Simon:
My brain was working good, just a little hungry.

Dr. Pompa:
His brother – we actually, unfortunately – maybe fortunately – spent day four with Simon. He came down to the seminar that I was teaching. She’s freezing up. Hey, go run and tell Isaac to make sure he’s off his computer. I’m going to make sure my other son’s computer’s off because you keep freezing up. That probably means I’m freezing up. I told Simon to go make sure that his computer is off.

Anyway, Simon came down. I spent day four with Simon, and then the next day I had to leave and teach a seminar – or actually be at a seminar in New York. I didn’t get to spend days five, six, seven, eight, nine. My wife and I were both gone. My son, Daniel, was here, so we were getting reports. Daniel was like, “Look. He’s like a different kid, Dad. He’s completely different, attitude, you name it.” He had constant ongoing energy, so much so that he just wanted to do too much. I was saying, “Look, Simon. Chill. Take it easy.” People tend to, once they feel good – remember Dr. [Dempsey] when he was saying that? He felt so dang good he was up wanting to paint the house at 4 a.m. He was up every day at 4 a.m.

When Simon was breaking through before he was fat-adapted, before his brain was using ketones, he wasn’t sleeping good. Then when his brain started using the ketones around day four, then that’s when he was then sleeping good. Anyways, yeah, you probably have other questions. I don’t want to keep talking.

Meredith:
Yeah. Simon, were there any foods that you missed when you were on the fast? Was there anything you were thinking like, “Oh, gosh. I really miss eating that food, in particular?”

Simon:
Yeah, cheese.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, cheese. That was one of the first things he wanted, and I was like, “No, not day one. Not day one.” I’ll tell you a little bit about that, too, but go ahead.

Simon:
Beef jerky, cheese, just that kind of stuff.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s a remarkable fact: Simon, no doubt – he’d be the first to say this – was my food-addicted child, more specifically carb-addicted child. Honestly, since he’s broken the fast – how many days has it been?

Simon:
Thirteen.

Dr. Pompa:
No, no, no. I mean since you broke the fast. It was, let’s see, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday – so it’s been three days. He hasn’t had one craving -inaudible- it’s been even easier than I thought for him. He made this one smoothie that he unknowingly, mistakenly put too many blueberries in it. It was a thing of spinach, and some berries, and water. That was all we did, and it was day two, but it was berry. It was definitely really sweet, especially because his taste buds were not used to that. Besides that, he has had no cravings. It’s been no problem. Matter of fact, honestly, you haven’t even been that hungry.

Simon:
No.

Dr. Pompa:
This was a kid who had a lot of food in a day. He just ate through the day. Really, you haven’t had much hunger.

Simon:
No.

Dr. Pompa:
Going through it, he said he would have appetite, but he definitely lost his hunger. He knows the difference of that. Like any of us, we would see or smell food, we would go, “Oh, man!” You almost have a habit – you have appetite, like, “Boy, that looks good,” but hunger is just an absolutely different feeling.

Meredith:
Wow. What’s going on there, Dr. Pompa, physiologically with the cravings shutting off? Is that because our hormones are getting fixed at the cellular level, so those cravings, they’re decreased and kind of normalized after a fast?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. The body instinctively knows what to do. It’s shutting down certain mechanisms, hormone. Ghrelin is a hormone that tells you to eat, makes you hungry or not. Leptin is part of that process. That’s all really dictated from your microbiome in your gut. When that starts to change in a fast, it literally shuts off hunger. The hypothalamus gets the message, and you lose your hunger.

Your body goes in – I was reading some studies this morning. I’m preparing for a lecture I’m doing on fasting. I found three or four studies showing the myth. You don’t lose muscle during fast. It is a myth. Your body protects itself, whereas someone on a low-carb diet or low-carb – I’m sorry – low-calorie diet, they’ll tap into their muscle. When someone actually stops eating, you actually protect your muscle the most. Remarkable what the body does to cherish what it needs to survive, and that’s muscle.

It will burn its – not just its fat; it burns out all of the bad cells in the body. It’s called autophagy or “autophagy” if you want to spell it correctly. Autophagy happens where the body just gets rid of the bad cells. Simon had – like you can see, he’s saying it’s slightly red. Undo your shirt. That was a psoriasis mark there. That one on his head, it just has a little dryness. That’s it. It all went away.

Meredith:
Wow.

Dr. Pompa:
Anyway, so he had – -inaudible-. No, go somewhere else, buddy. We got the dog. Come on. Go somewhere else. Yeah, so just a little bit of red, but that spot, it was dried out. There was a couple of them, actually. They’re gone. Anyways, so it’s remarkable. Breaking the fast, I said, is really important. Really, just getting him – he ate no vegetables. He was a non-vegetable eater. He ate broccoli last night and liked it.

Meredith:
Wow!

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. He did. He said it was good. He’s like, “I could do that.” Spinach shake, okay? If it was green, this boy was not eating it. The nice thing about fasting is it changes our palate. That’s what I was explaining to him. “This is an opportunity to change your palate.” I said, “Okay, you can have some cheese by day three.” She froze again. You froze again. He had a little cheese. I noticed he started this cough thing that had went away during the fast. By later in the day, he had another piece of cheese, just a small piece of cheese, and he started coughing again.

I said, “I think you have a dairy intolerance.” He says, “You’re right. I cough after I eat the cheese,” so we’ve taken dairy out, which stinks for him because he loves cheese. So do I. Ironically enough, as you know this, Meredith, we often crave the things we’re most allergic to. What did he say when you asked him what you missed? He said he wanted cheese, the very thing that he seems to react to, oddly enough. Someone rang our doorbell. Go ahead.

Meredith:
With different autoimmune challenges, as well, dairy’s -inaudible- reactions and gut -inaudible- because of the inflammation that it can kind of create in the gut for many with autoimmune issues, right?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no doubt. I’m sure that the dairy was creating some chronic gut issues. Simon, surprisingly, he eats – 98% of his food is all organic unless he’s out and about. His brothers tease him, and they’ll say, “Simon’s the healthiest fat kid in the world.” Honestly, I’m going to say he has lasting energy. Simon gets sick less than them. He really is healthy in some regards, but then his gut in some of these things – but he had no digestive issues. He goes to the bathroom every day. When I say, “His gut,” he really didn’t express any symptoms.

The only symptoms he expressed was what we noticed outwardly. That was it – and the cough, and that was really it for Simon. The weight gain, which was obviously going to end -inaudible- at some point. We know our kids figure it out on their own, and Simon’s obviously figuring it out.

Meredith:
That’s awesome. How much weight did you lose, Simon, on the fast??

Simon:
Twenty pounds.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.

Meredith:
Forty!

Dr. Pompa:
No, 20. Twenty pounds. You froze.

Meredith:
Twenty pounds, okay. It cut out a little bit. I was like, “Holy cow!” Twenty pounds, wow. Have you put any on since then? How do you expect that to level out?

Dr. Pompa:
He probably put, just like most people, three or four pounds on since, but that’s normal. That’s glycogen storage, water that comes back. He’s completely stabilized. He might be actually starting to lose again.

Simon:
Yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Yep, so we’ll see. Just like most people, his ketones went – what was the high? What did your ketones go up to?

Simon:
Six point five.

Dr. Pompa:
Six point five.

Meredith:
Wow! Impressive.

Dr. Pompa:
His glucose, I would say, fifties on average.

Simon:
My lowest was a 40.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, 40, but on average, I’m saying. Perfect target range, massive autophagy. Bad cells are dying. The body’s get rid of all those bad proteins and toxins. Throughout it, his tongue definitely turned more white, and then –

Simon:
A little yellow.

Dr. Pompa:
Let me see it now. We were doing a Facebook Live, and I said, “Show me your tongue.” He didn’t know what I meant, so he was like this. I’m like, “No, open your mouth.” He was like – it was hilarious.

Meredith:
Really stick it out there.

Dr. Pompa:
I know he wants to go play with his car that he broke, but that’s another story.

Meredith:
Can I just ask one more question of Simon before he -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. Fire away.

Meredith:
-inaudible- fast. I know you broke it with the bone broth. You’ve eased back in. What have been your realizations since you did this fast? What did you learn from it? What are the take-aways, and how has it changed your life?

Simon:
It’s pretty easy to get healthy, I guess.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. He saw a change really fast. That’s what he said. It wasn’t as hard as he thought. What else did you learn?

Simon:
Let’s see here. That I don’t really want to do that again.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s what he said. He’s like, “Okay, I did it one time.” I said, “You’re going to fast with our family at least two – four days.” “Oh, okay, four days. That’s easy.” His perspective changed, that’s for sure.

Meredith:
So true. I love that you’re going to fast as a family. That’s so cool. What a great idea. What inspiration to everyone who’s watching, and Simon, how many people you inspired out there to fast because hey, if you can do it, anybody can do it, right?

Dr. Pompa:
That’s what it is. Dr. Mindy’s one of our doctors we coach. She saw him day four because she was –

Simon:
Day two, actually.

Dr. Pompa:
Was it? I thought it was – okay. Anyways, so she got – she was inspired. She was so inspired. He inspired everyone at the seminar and hundreds more on Facebook. She got a fasting group together. She got a whole – she showed them his videos on Facebook Live. Go to my Facebook. Dr. Daniel Pompa is how you get to my fan page Facebook, and you can see Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4. Anyways, she got a whole group fasting. It was remarkable how many people he inspired with that thing: “If he can do it, I can do it.” Believe me, it’s not just 13. He was 13, addicted to carbs. If Simon can do it, you can do it. Now he’s in ketosis.

Simon:
Just 13.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, just 13. Yeah. He just turned 13, so yeah, technically 12. It is remarkable. I’m so proud of him because that was the first thing that ever – desire he had to do something. I kept telling him, “Hey, I’m not going to change you. You know what to do. You know what to do.” Listen, his brothers fasted. His sister water fasted twice for four days, Olivia, who’s been on the show. Mom fasted. I fasted. He went the longest. In defense, Mom went about the same. Put it this way, none of his brothers that tease him ever went even close to beating him.

When I was texting Olivia, I said, “Simon’s fasting.” Then she texted me back, “Water only?” I said, “Yeah. Water only.” “Really? What?” They just couldn’t believe it. I think he stunned everybody including his brothers and sister.

Simon:
Yup.

Dr. Pompa:
You did it, man. You did it. Simon’s really strong-minded. He really is. When he puts his mind to something, it’s game over. He’s transforming. He is. He’s transforming. All right. Do you have any more questions for him?

Meredith:
No. Simon, you’re an inspiration. I just want to thank you. You’ve inspired me, as well. I do not know another 13-year-old who has done an 11-day water fast. I think you are very unique and special. Thanks for inspiring so many people.

Simon:
All right. See you.

Dr. Pompa:
See you. Thanks, Simon. He was in there testing his – like most kids, he was afraid to prick his finger. How he’s pricking it all the time. I’m going broke in ketone strips. Trust me.

Meredith:
What a fast can do. Those ketone strips aren’t cheap, that’s for sure. Wow.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no doubt. Right now, I’m in a partial fast, doing – breaking his fast. You don’t want to just load up on all these calories. People make that mistake. I’m trying to raise my chair up here a little bit. People make that mistake, and you really can blow a fast. Between 500 and 1,000 calories, which we call a partial fast – a new study came out just recently talking about – I was just going to find it on my phone, but I know it enough to speak it. They were fasting five days. They did mice three days, which -inaudible- into a five-day fast into humans. The findings were remarkable.

What really defines, according to studies, a partial fast is 750 calories to 1,100, but anywhere between 500 and 1,000 to keep it simple, really, is – the magic lies. In the fast -inaudible- focusing on more raw and fats. This partial fast is remarkable. Now, in the study, they fasted the five days equivalent in the month, and then they went back to their regular diet. Call it a standard American diet if you will. Because of that, they put the weight back on that they lost in the five days, which I would assume they would. The remarkable part was the inflammation markers still stayed decreased. All of the markers that would show what – positive for anti-aging and all these positive effects stayed the same.

Then when they repeated it three months in a row, they kept getting healthier even though they would go back to their regular diet. Number one, it shows diet variation, just the switch in diet. Number two, it just shows you the powerful – how powerful fasting is. They call that a diet that mimics fasting because they were getting so much of the same results. Coming off a fast – one of the things I’ve learned with my clients is if you come off your fast, there’s a few ways to tell if you should end a fast. We had many people who were fasting a long time. I have to say this: If you have a serious health condition, get a coach. Get someone who’s experienced with fasting. Don’t do this alone.

We’ve had healthier people who want to be healthier doing longer fasts. They said, “How do you know when to break a fast?” There’s a few ways that would surprise, I think, some of our viewers. Number one, the color of your tongue. Your tongue can go white, yellow. I’ve seen black tongues. When the tongue starts to turn back to pink despite how you feel, it’s time to break your fast. It’s one of the first indicators.

Oftentimes people in a fast would get so weak, and that’s another thing, a weakness that goes beyond one day. One day, Simon – we’d played Monopoly one night, and he got all revved up, and it raised his cortisol, which then is – I said, “Your glucose is going to be up.” Sure enough, he tested his glucose. It was up. It was in the eighties. Ketones down. He didn’t feel good the next day. Then the following day, he felt fine. If fatigue or weakness goes beyond a day – severe, where it’s declining, it’s starting to go this way, time to break the fast.

If your weight loss stops – you typically are going to lose ½ pound to a pound. Simon was losing about a pound and a half a day. Then all of a sudden, it may slow, but it continue – then just stops, time to break a fast. Oftentimes people get – their hunger simply returns. It’s a very big difference of appetite and hunger; time to break a fast. Those are all signals. The body odor changes. The tongue turns clear again. A lot of those indicators that they body’s done detoxing, shut it down.

Here’s the interesting thing: If we put someone into a partial fast, that 500 to 1,000 calories a day, raw and fats, then we notice that it can actually – the tongue can start turning again, meaning that the body now felt like it had enough stores to actually start the detox again. It’s really remarkable how intelligent the body is. It really is remarkable when we rely on the body. Again, fasting in itself is just one modality that we use in a multi-therapeutic approach with cellular detox and all the things we teach. That’s how we see the results that we see. Anyways, that’s kind of been some of my learnings about this fasting.

Meredith:
We -inaudible- questions, too, about the different types of fasts. We’ve talked a lot about water fasting in this episode, but can you speak to bone broth fasting and maybe some of the differences, too, and some of the benefits of that, and maybe why Simon did a water fast and not a broth fast -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. I was getting tired of sitting. I’ve been sitting all day. There are multiple fasts. We just talked about a partial fast. That’s one way where you’re just doing some raw – I say raw. You can lightly steam veggies. It’s actually easier to digest, truthfully, but vegetables –

Meredith:
I do a lot of that, as well, the partial fasting. It’s so convenient, too, with life and just -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
It is. Yeah, you -inaudible-. You have energy all day. You can go on. Just throwing a couple tablespoons of either olive oil, coconut oil in – and avocado. It’s 200 calories for an avocado, approximately, 150, 200 depending on the size. Just one of there, a couple tablespoons of oil, that’s enough to sustain you right there. Then have some broccoli. You have a perfect nutrition-dense meal. Like you said, the ENERGYbits, amazing. That’s a way to fast right there.

Then the bone stock, loaded with type II collagen. That’s one of the things we use to break the fast with, too. Just the bone stock and all that marrow, and – oh, man! I was consuming it, as well. The type II collagen, the minerals that you get, there’s so much in those bones that are just amazing to fast on and break a fast.

Whey water, we’ve talked about. Whey water is unique bacteria. For thousands of years, back in the days of Hippocrates, they did whey water fasting. Those are different fasts right there, but water is unique. Water relies 100% on the innate intelligence. It gives the body nothing. I think you oftentimes get the best healing just from a water fast. If someone’s going to break into fasting, one of the other ones may be easier. I think the first three days, those other fasts are easier. I think after three days, maybe four, water fasting is easier.

Meredith:
I agree. Water fasting is definitely the most challenging for me. I’ve only done one water fast. It went about five days or so. The broth and the other types of fasts – I’ve done whey water, too – are much easier because I think for me, for the water, a lot of it is just mental. You’re just having water, so that deprivation mindset can come into play where it’s just like, “Wow. This is all I get? Water?”

I wanted to ask you, too, though, when I’ve done some water fasting in the past, I’ve kind of treated myself to the sparkling mineral water. Now, is that okay instead of just drinking the flat, still water on a fast? Would those bubbles have any impact on the gut?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. Herbert Shelton, who is one of the early fathers of the modern-day fasting, he would say, “Don’t ever do that. It’s irritating.” The Europeans say, “It dehydrates you.” I don’t know if that’s true. It’s water. Come on. Your body has the ability to separate the CO2. There’s an argument to stick to the most basic thing, and that’s the cleanest water possible, whether it’s distilled – some people are big distilled water fasting people -inaudible-. I think you’re going to benefit. The bottom line is where you get the benefit from isn’t the water you drink as much it is just going without food and letting your innate intelligence do what it does best. It is remarkable when we look at the healing, the hormone optimization.

Here’s another thing: When we look at studies now – and of course so many – we’ve interviewed Seyfried and other scientists and how they’re using ketosis and fasting for cancer. If it works for cancer, think about what it can do for anything. We know that the bad cells are starving down, but here’s what people don’t realize: You get this massive rise in stem cells because here’s what happens: Notice that your white blood cells, they start dropping. Your body’s getting rid of bad ones, autophagy. Here’s the cool part: It increases your stem cells to reproduce the good cells and white blood cells. You end up with all these new, incredibly healthy white blood cells.

It’s happening beyond white blood cells. You have all these new created cells because of the rise in stem cells. Come on. What better way to get a new body than periodic fasting? I’m always asked this question on Facebook: “How many fasts can I do?” Look, we have clients who fast once a month, even just a four-day fast once a month, maybe four-day fasts every other month. They’re trying to redo these cells. You have to be attentive to be perfect nutrition in between the fasts, building back up those nutrition stores, but yeah. It’s different for everybody.

Here’s the other question I get, Meredith: “Look how thin you are. You fast.” I have clients 80, 90 pounds with different autoimmune, and they fast. You know how much weight they lose? Either zero, at the most five pounds. Just five pounds of glycogen and water. They lose no flesh. The body’s that smart. Guess what happens when they start to eat again. They gain good fat. They actually gain weight. Fasting can be used to actually gain muscle, to gain actually good weight.

Meredith:
We hear that all the time. I actually lose very little weight when I’m fasting, as well. It’s very, very true. I can definitely personally attest to that.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. You just came off a fast, didn’t you?

Meredith:
I’ve been kind of experimenting a little bit this week. I did a water fast on Monday, and then yesterday and today I’ve just been doing a lot of ENERGYbits, which are the little algae bits we talk a lot about. I believe that was episode 130. We interviewed Catharine Arnston of ENERGYbits, and we talked all about algae and the benefits of that. These little algae bits can be wonderful for balancing blood sugar and keeping you going through a fast. I’ve been taking those yesterday and today. I might have a meal tomorrow -inaudible- socially, with life. We have these things that come up, too. That’s always kind of a question and something that can be a challenge, as well.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible-.

Meredith:
It’s life, and eating is social, so dealing and incorporating fasting within a happy, normal, social lifestyle can be a challenge. You have to be very strategic about it, and maybe, when you fast, really fast, too. When you’re doing the fasting with the water, it’s even more powerful, maybe, than just some partial fasting here and there around the meals, even though that has benefit, too. It’s going to be different for everyone, but that’s the beauty of diet variation, as well, and why that concept is so powerful, and why it works so well.

Dr. Pompa:
Again, the last two days, I’ve been partial fasting, so it’s what I was just explaining. Yesterday I had an avocado. I had my spinach shake in water. I added a few blueberries. That was it. Then what else did I have? I had a tablespoon of olive oil, and I had about a tablespoon of butter because I had a thing of broccoli. That’s all I had yesterday. What was that, probably 800, maybe 850 calorie-wise? Today I’m going to duplicate the same thing. Like I said, I have no appetite for food. It’s 1:20 my time, and I haven’t eaten anything yet. I’ll start eating a little bit, but I’m not going to go over that 1,000 calorie mark.

I’ll do this until Friday. Again, just threw in a little fast, helping Simon break his fast, but also I have another reason. You know this. They just did some dental work and dug out a cavitation down here. I had some inflammation I wanted to deal with, so it was easy just to do this. In the spring, as a family we will do at least a four-day water fast, probably five. My thing is people do three days. Why just three days? You start to benefit from the high ketones at day four. I want to ride that out. I want to feel good. Those high ketones, they change the brain. They turn off bad genes. They downregulate inflammation.

They literally turn off genes and upregulate genes that make us live longer. That’s another benefit of fasting, when you keep talking about these things because you get ridiculously high ketone levels. I, and you, and many of our viewers, I should say, we get ourselves so fat-adapted that the moment our ketones go up, we start using them. It took Simon three days to start using his ketones even though they were high. That’s why he didn’t have energy. Even though his ketones were up, he wasn’t using them yet. He had to adapt.

Meredith:
Right. Once you get in that fat-adapted state, it’s just so much easier to shift in and out of it. I wanted to go back, though. I did have a question when we were talking about the partial fasting. Do you think that it would be better for those who suffer from adrenal fatigue to maybe ease into that versus going into a stricter fast?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely. I start those people even intermittent fasting daily, going 12, 13, 14 hours just from the night before, doing that daily, working up, making sure their glucose isn’t rising. That’s a sign, people have adrenal fatigues. Their glucose will rise because of cortisol. We start intermittent fasting. Yeah, of course. A partial fast is a great way. You do intermittent fasting daily, then a partial fast for maybe three months in a row, and then move into a water fast. Listen, I’ve seen people with adrenal fatigue succeed with water fasting, too. Everyone’s a little different. I think, why not break in with another fast first? I think a partial fast would be the way.

Meredith:
Partial fasting is different from intermittent fasting in that partial fasting is only about 500 to 1,000 calories, whereas the intermittent fasting, you could eat up to 4,000 calories within your time window. It’s more focused on the compressed time window instead of the amount of calories you’re consuming.

Dr. Pompa:
Right, exactly. Intermittent fasting is eating within a four-, six-, maybe eight-hour window, whatever you choose. Eat what you want. That’s the point. Yes, correct. A partial fast is – I still like to eat in that small window.

Meredith:
You’re doing a double whammy there. Partial intermittent.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly, but staying between 500 and 1,000 calories is the key with a partial fast. Then I think the key is eating those simple to eat foods. I keep the protein real low. I take the meats out, everything, whereas I’m eating just veggies, some fats. Avocado’s technically a fruit, but – some berries, there’s a fruit. Actually, I have Daniel working on this now.

Think about it this way: You have a fruit category. Pick one or two of those. Maybe it’s a serving of berries, three ounces, something like that, and an avocado or a half of an avocado. There’s a good fiber there. There’s all types of good fats there. The berries offer some [croanthocyanin] and all these amazing antioxidants. Then you have another category, your vegetable category. Pick two different vegetables to eat in a day. Yesterday I only at one. No, I ate two. I had spinach and then the broccoli. There’s two vegetable sources to add to that caloric intake.

Then I would say there’s a third category, fats. Pick a tablespoon of coconut oil, or olive oil, or another healthy fat. That way, you’re – it’s easy to hit that. Daniel’s kind of building that out to where people can – here’s an example of 500 calories, 800 calories based on these three categories of foods that I kind of want you to choose from, keeping things really natural and simple.

Meredith:
Fiber, veggies, fat; I love that. Just piggybacking on the smoothies, as well, I did this a few weeks ago. I just did four days just liquids. It’s really helped me because I’ve had a lot of gut challenges in the past, and I’m still kind of working through healing my gut in different ways. Just having the liquid nutrition that’s super nutrient-dense is really helpful because it’s so easy to digest. You’re still getting calories, and you’re feeling great. I had incredible energy, but my body wasn’t going through all of that effort it takes to break down solid food. My energy was incredible.

I just did four days of smoothies, and good fats, and different liquids, like fatty liquids for breakfast and things. It feels great, and it’s so easy, but you’re still getting the calories and the nutrient-dense nutrition. I added different powders, and shake mixes, and things like that to make sure the nutritional bases are covered. I think that can be kind of a good modified way of fasting, as well, if you’re – you still want to maintain energy, and you have things to do, but you’re okay with just doing liquids, then doing that for a number of consecutive days could be effective, as well.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s perfect. For a partial fast, I think it’s the perfect thing. As soon as we’re done here, I’m going to do my spinach – I might add some Romaine lettuce in there. Who knows? Maybe even a half of an avocado and water. Boom. I’ll throw a little berries in there. There’s my meal. Super low in calories to fit a form here that we’re trying to do. High in fats, and fiber, and nutrients, that’s the point. The blender makes it –

You’re the queen of smoothies. Forget about it. You know what I mean? This is going to be about four days. I’m also doing true cellular detox. I’m doing a brain phase. I need to take my ALA and my Cyto. I saunaed today, and I did a coffee enema today. When I do these -inaudible-.

Meredith:
Oh, boom!

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. My Facebook Live today, this will be pre-recorded, so go back a few weeks – I don’t know how long it’ll take this show – and you’ll see it. We did it on the coffee enema and how to do it with -inaudible-. We had 70 people on live watching it. It was fantastic. I showed that, and then I did my sauna, and then that –

Meredith:
You didn’t actually do the coffee enema on the Facebook Live, did you?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I did. Oh, no! We did not enter the orifice. No, that did not happen. Daniel was ready to go. He’s like, “I’m going to go get a towel.” I’m like, “Whoa, whoa, whoa.” I said, “We’re just going to pretend.” We actually did them. We both did it. We just didn’t do it there. We showed everything else. In the video, too, I showed how we correlate that in with true cellular detox. It was a really good video. Go to Facebook Live. You can go back. Believe me, all the videos are there, so watch it. It’s good.

Meredith:
Awesome. That’s a great way to just – we got to keep those detox pathways open. As we fast and do true cellular detox, and do all these other things to support our health, those downstream pathways are so important to keep open, as well. The coffee enema is a great tool to keep things moving out, as –

Dr. Pompa:
It indirectly affects the cell. True detox has to happen itself, but when that liver back up, we got to get that moving. We have to get that stuff out of there. Powerful tool.

Meredith:
Awesome. I’ll definitely check out that video. Thank Simon again for joining us. What a powerful story! That guy is an inspiration. I am very inspired, as well, and it’s always just fun to talk about fasting and all the new things that you’re learning about it constantly, Dr. Pompa, as well. More and more research is validating all of these strategies. If you’re out there, and you’re thinking about fasting, it’s a no-brainer. Just give it a try, especially the partial fast, the intermittent fast, just kind of taking baby steps, and doing it slowly is a great way to ease into it.

Dr. Pompa:
I’ll keep learning. Hey, I don’t just sit in that sauna. I sat there and read studies all morning.

Meredith:
That’s a good thing to do in the sauna.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely. Hopefully I see you on Facebook. Go to my Facebook, Dr. Daniel Pompa. That’s my fan page. All right.

Meredith:
Awesome. Thanks, Dr. Pompa. Check it out, guys, online, and we’ll see you next time. Have a great weekend. Bye-bye.

Dr. Pompa:
Bye-bye.

163: Tripping Over the Truth

Transcript of Episode 163: Tripping Over the Truth

With Dr. Daniel Pompa, Meredith Dykstra and Travis Christofferson

Meredith:
Hello, everyone, and welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m your host, Meredith Dykstra, and this is Episode 163. Today we have, of course, Dr. Dan Pompa, our resident cellular healing specialist, on the line. We’re welcoming a very special guest today: Travis Christofferson.

We have a really exciting topic. We’ve delved into this a lot. Travis wrote an incredible book. It’s all about the truth about cancer. We’re going to really dig into this a little bit more, and the myths surrounding it, and what he discovered in this really incredible book that he wrote.

Before we jump in, let me tell you a little more about Travis. Travis Christofferson is a science writer and a graduate of the Montana State Honors Program in molecular biology. He received the Nelson Fellowship for outstanding undergraduate research and continued graduate research in bioremediation and cancer theory, culminating in an MS in material engineering and science from the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.

He’s the author of the best-selling book Tripping Over the Truth: The Metabolic Theory of Cancer. The book offers a historical perspective on the reemerging metabolic theory of cancer, a theory that contends cancer is precipitated and driven by damage to mitochondria.

Very exciting topic. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV, Travis. So excited to have you here.

Travis:
Thanks for having me. Glad to be here.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, Travis, welcome. We’ve had a lot of your friends on the show, Thomas Seyfried. You are actually at the conference right now down in Tampa, correct?

Travis:
That’s right, yep. Tom’s speaking in about an hour-and-a-half, so I’m excited about that. He’s going to present new data that everyone’s on the edge of their seat to hear.

Dr. Pompa:
Thomas is no doubt a friend of this show. We’ve interviewed him. I have to say, though, Thomas, I love you, but his book was over most people’s head. I enjoyed it. I dug in deep as you did, I’m sure. However, your book, Tripping Over the Truth, that I think brought the message I think more clearly for most people. It was a needed book, so thank you for that, honestly.

I love to get into this. How did you get it? What’s your story, man? How did you end up writing a book or a desire to write the book?

Travis:
I was in the middle of graduate school in a cancer theory class and had learned all about the genetic theory, that cancer was through and through a genetic disease. That’s what everybody’s taught. I stumbled on Tom’s book Cancer as a Metabolic Disease and read through it, and was just blown away that there was this body of evidence as comprehensive as it was espousing this alternative theory of cancer. His book was really the trigger for me, and it kicked off this journey where I was so curious to find out more about it.

Tom had written the science book. That was there like you said, but inside that was this beautiful, rich story that goes all the way back to Otto Warburg, these -inaudible-. Throughout the century while this theory was one of the most dominant theories at the beginning of this century, it then just fell into complete void. It was almost ridiculed, and now it’s made this incredible comeback. I wanted to bridge that gap between the science and the narrative of this wonderful story.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re right. The history’s there. Warburg back in 1924, he said hey look, this is a damaged mitochondria. The cell’s not able to use normal oxygen for energy, just to keep it simple. Therefore, it’s relying on this primitive form of taking glucose and fermenting it for energy, right? We know it’s this defective mitochondria. To survive, the DNA changes. Then all the sudden, it starts this glucose fermentation process that we know leads to other problems.

I think if you go back to 2006—I know that this is something that you talked about somewhere in your book. It was the Cancer Genome Atlas Project, right? Is that right? Somewhere around that line where they set out—this reminds me of the Human Genome Project where they set out in the project to -inaudible- there must be hundreds of thousands of genes in the human species because of all this amazing function that we have. The scientists, the greatest in the world, walked away going holy cow, we have about the same as a mouse, about 24, 25,000 genes, right? It was devastating to the scientific community. The same thing happened. Tell our viewers about that.

Travis:
The same number of genes as a 936-celled worm.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly. It stunned, right? It led to epigenetics as we know it today. What happened in 2006 with the Cancer Project?

Travis:
Beautiful explanation. In my mind, all of this research since Watson and Crick discovered DNA in 1953 focused on the genetic code, right? That was going to be—when they announced the Human Genome Project, this was going to the end-all of medicine. We were going to finally know the script of life, -inaudible-. We’d know every nook and cranny.

Low and behold, there’s another layer of information above the genome called epigenetics that turns out this may be very much more important. It turns out there’s very little variation from person to person in genes. There are a few devastating gene mutations, but those are pretty rare. Most of us operate with the same genomes. What makes us so different and unique typically is the different expression of genes, so epigenetics, this new layer of discovery.

That goes back to cancer. Cancer was always thought to be a disease of DNA, of fixed mutations. Throughout the 80s and 90s, clinicians who looked at cervical cancer and colon cancer, they noticed the cancer proceeded in these graded series of steps. The theory was that each one of these defined steps was underpinned by a specific genetic mutation. The idea was we thought each type of cancer would have its own unique signature that would define it.

This led to the Cancer Genome Atlas Project where sequencing technology had gotten so good on the heels of the Human Genome Project that it became feasible to actually sequence the genome of cancer cells. That’s what the project was.

Dr. Pompa:
Basically, in the project, they thought they were going to be able to find certain DNA mutations and then say that’s this cancer. Here’s a mutation. Here’s that cancer. That’s what they set out to do. What happened?

Travis:
Right. According to the somatic mutation theory, the dogmatic theory, what cancer is is mutations to specific genes called oncogenes that rewire the cellular circuitry towards uncontrolled growth. They thought each type of cancer would have its own defined signature. The project began in 2006.

Right away in 2007, what they found was just strikingly random. The degree of heterogeneity from one type, from one patient’s tumor to the next, was huge. That tidy little signature was not there. There was even samples with one driving mutation or zero driving mutations.

This has caused this wholesale rethink about what cancer is, that it cannot just exclusively be a genetic disease. It has caused cancer researchers to look at this new level of epigenetics as a cause of cancer because, let’s face it, cancer does not appear as a chaotic disease. It appears as a deterministic, systemic disease that’s operating under certain rules.

We use that buzz word epigenetics a lot. What does that mean? I’ll just give you one example of that in a cancer cell.

This reversion to the Warburg effect—we’re all born with what’s called isozymes of certain genes. There’s one gene called hexokinase, and that catalyzes the first step of glycolysis, the utilization of sugar. There’s 11 steps, and that catalyzes the first step. We are all born with four types of this gene called isozymes 1 through 4. As adults, we express isozyme 1.

However, the cancer cell will revert to hexokinase 2. This is so important because hexokinase 2 does not subject to this phenomenon called product inhibition. It’s not under any regulation. It just shoves sugar down this pathway. This is responsible for the Warburg effect.

Also, that enzyme will bind to the mitochondria and close this channel that’s responsible for cell death. This is called apoptosis. This is another hallmarked feature of cancer, the immortalization of the cell.

This one genetic shift from an enzyme we have within our bodies—it’s expressed during embryonic development, and then shut off, and then reexpressed in cancer. This epigenetic shift is responsible for two hallmarked features of cancer. These turning on and turning off of genes now is the hot topic in everything.

Dr. Pompa:
Let me just for our viewers sake because billions of dollars has gone in to trying to find the gene and drugs to manipulate genes. Epigenetics, we’ve talked about this on the show before, is basically any environmental stressor can turn on a gene. We all have genes of cancer. Trust me, we do and other genes of susceptibility. Certain factors, toxins included, that we talk a lot about can trigger a gene. Now, the gene gets turned on. Now, this process in the mitochondria changes. Now, it’s relying on sugar as its primary fuel, fermenting glucose even in the presence of oxygen.

By the way, folks, you don’t have to understand that. Just know it’s not normal. It comes from a mitochondria that was changed by some stressor, turned on a gene, and now the cell is adapting to live longer and, matter of fact, becomes immortal, meaning that—guys, when you have bad cells, the body tends to get rid of them. It can change something in the mitochondria, believe or not, the little fat called cardiolipin. Bam, cell dies. That’s great. You lost a bad cell. These cells, that’s not happening. All this is from a stressor changing the genome, and now all these bad things happen. Is that a good summary for our viewers?

Travis:
You look at the body, and that’s what we—this process you were talking about of cell death. If you do have mutations, your body’s extremely efficient of getting rid of those cells through a process. Every day, billions of cells die, and then billions of cells divide via stem cells to replace those cells in our bodies. We’re this dynamic equilibrium of death and renewal that happens all the time. It’s through the exposure of toxins, all these things that happen on a day-to-day level that cause damaged cells to slough off. Occasionally, one of these cells does not die, and then this predisposes us towards cancer.

Dr. Pompa:
My belief is—when I read Warburg’s stuff, he talked about the damaged mitochondria. He alluded to certain stressors starting the damage, right? Today, when we look at the amount of toxins that we’re exposed to, what we’re injecting in ourselves, for goodness sakes, what we’re using in our bodies, the food that’s sprayed with these chemicals—it’s unavoidable. I think that what people have to understand is that’s what’s turning on these genes. That’s what’s changing these genomes in the mitochondria.

Travis, nobody in the science is really looking upstream to those causes. Everyone’s just talking about trying to find that miracle drug to change genome. Really, we know the cause is this.

Travis:
This goes back to the 80s and when—if you look at the history of our tenure with cancer and how we’ve chosen to treat it, in the late 70s, we really started pushing chemotherapy. We had a few successes with Hodgkin’s disease, testicular cancer. Then, Nixon declared the war on the cancer in 71. We had landed on the moon. There’s this hubris at the time that we can cure cancer with this handful of systemic toxins. We pushed, and pushed, and pushed. We did make a little progress, but then we hit a wall.

Then, the biostatisticians took over in the 80s and go okay, how successful has this war on cancer been? They started counting. What they realized is when you counted even all the preventative measures, pap smears, everything we do, all of our new treatments at that point, the cancer rate had increased 9%. Definitely, we’re losing the war on cancer. We still are.

Dr. Pompa:
Despite billions.

Travis:
Right. The reason was is this terrible focus on trying to treat somebody when they come in where the disease has progressed so far versus the prevention which is clearly the best protocol for treatment. The focus has been on, you’re right, exactly, it’s been on trying to come up with these drugs that will treat end-stage disease instead of prevention. For cervical cancer, the vaccine, I believe, is a complete preventative cure, but it gets incredibly little attention.

Dr. Pompa:
Interesting. Tell me, what’s going on at the conference? You have, I think Dominic D’ Agostino, who we’ve interviewed on the show, is down there. What’s going on? Bring us some of the latest.

Travis:
There’s been a lot of fascinating talks. The ones that come to mind are treatment—tons of stuff about ketones and ketone bodies. It’s the Metabolic Therapeutics Conference. There’s been a lot of stuff on Alzheimer’s. There was a wonderful talk about the use of MCT oil in mitigating Alzheimer’s, and it looks like it’s efficacious. Anytime we can raise ketone bodies, it’s bypassing the pathology in many diseases, including Alzheimer’s. The miracle of these little compounds has continued to come in, and that’s what we see.

Another talk on beta-hydroxybutyrate that prevents the assembly of what they call the inflammasome.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, that’s a ketone, beta-hydroxybutyrate, for our viewers.

Travis:
Right. They’re probably familiar with the ketogenic diet?

Dr. Pompa:
Oh yeah.

Travis:
Okay, good. Another astonishing thing with ketosis is the prevention of systemic inflammation.We need it for infection, but it can get out of control and precipitate many disease processes. Those two stuck in my mind.

Today, Tom’s going to present, Tom Seyfried, on cancer. There’s exogenous ketones are coming online. There’s a lot of talk about those. Lots of interesting stuff.

Dr. Pompa:
We train a growing group of practitioners around the country. We do a multi-therapeutic approach with my cellular detox. We utilize ketosis as a tool, intermittent fasting, and even block fasts, like Tom does. Tom and I have been able to share a lot of thoughts because we have a large group to work with. Tom is really doing some amazing work with fasting.

For our viewers, it’s just forcing—bad cells don’t adapt. I love to say that because it’s really simple. Autophagy, where the cells are—the body’s getting rid of the bad cells. That happens in fasting. It forces ketones really high, which, as you just pointed out, drives inflammation down and changes DNA. A lot of Dominic’s work is showing that. It’s changing these bad genes, turn off. We’ve talked about genes being turned on. Ketones have the ability to turn off some of these genes.

Putting all this together, I think we’re at an exciting time, Travis. What do you think about that?

Travis:
Oh yeah. Just as you were talking about that, I was thinking Valter Longo gave a talk, too, about intermittent fasting. When you do that, your organs—when you fast for a long period of time, your organs actually will become smaller in size. Your immune system, the number of immune cells, decreases. Then you repopulate those tissues with fresh stem cells. It’s like you get this fresh, renewed organ almost or immune system at that point, incredible things. -inaudible- that he talked about was astonishing is the importance of IGF-1 which is -inaudible- are familiar with human growth hormone. Human growth hormone really doesn’t do anything, but it docks to the receptor which produces IGF-1, and that’s the anabolic hormone that promotes growth. It’s always been known that IGF-1 is a promoter of aging disease and cancer, but nobody really knew to what degree.

They found this group of people living in Ecuador that had a mutation for the receptor for growth hormones, so they were unable to manufacture IGF-1. As a consequence, they’re dwarves. They’re extremely short in stature. They do have some developmental problems, but they are virtually immune to cancer and diabetes. They have a terrible lifestyle. They eat a terrible diet, high rates of alcoholism and smoking. Despite that, they followed 300 of these people for 50 years and only found one case of cancer and almost zero diabetes.

The importance of IGF-1 and the ketogenic diet or intermittent fasting tamps down IGF-1 levels typically to almost imperceptible levels.

Dr. Pompa:
Listen for this when you hear Tom talk in an hour or so because I think there’s magic behind being in ketosis and intermittent fasting. Tom talks about you don’t get the benefit of the ketones until your glucose drops. One of the things we look at and we want to see in our patients when they’re intermittent fasting dropping glucose and rising ketones as a signal that this process that you just described is happening. Autophagy’s happening. Stem cells are being produced.

The dropping glucose, we often find that you need the restriction to create the glucose drop. I always say don’t eat less, eat less often because when people think of restriction they think of just eating less like I’m going to eat less, and we know that doesn’t work long term. Intermittent fasting, eating less often, creates that restriction, a drop in glucose, a rise in ketones. I think it puts the body in the perfect scenario for all that magic that you just described: increasing stem cells, everything, the decrease in inflammation, and the utilization of ketones for the brain, etc. That’s the magic is intermittent fasting with ketones. At least, that’s what we found in clinical.

Travis:
Yeah. The next layer, even beyond the energy of ketone bodies, which that was the initial focus of the research was they were so energy dense. Per unit of oxygen, the ketones generate, I think, twice as much energy as sugar. -inaudible- initial focus. The biochemistry is just beautiful. The energetic gap and the electron-transfer chain pacts your cells with ATP, which is the energy molecule of the cell.

That was the initial focus, but now it’s going beyond that. Tom was really very simple to understand. It’s very intuitively pleasing for most people. They understand cancer loves sugar. You look at a PET scan, that’s what you see. When you switch to ketosis and drop blood sugar, you’re starving the cancer cell. That’s seductive in its line of reasoning.

Now, we know irrespective of the glucose concentration, ketones are doing something else. As you alluded to earlier, they’re operating on a genetic level. They’re histone deacetylase inhibitors.

For your listeners, if you pull all your chromosomes out of a single cell and put them end to end, they’re about three feet in length. You have a ton of DNA. You’re made up of about 50 trillion cells. That DNA is wrapped up incredibly tight, and it’s wrapped up in these proteins called histones. Beta-hydroxybutyrate, the ketone body, is affecting the modification of these histones, which is how epigenetics operates, how genes get turned on and turned off.

I have no idea how this evolved or how this happens, but it does it in a way that completely tamps down all the important transcription factors that are active in cancer -inaudible- the important healthiness of healthy cells. It’s the golden—it’s the holy grail of cancer therapies. It makes healthy cells more robust while at the same time weakened cancer cells. It creates this beautiful environment for other therapies to come in and work even better.

Dr. Pompa:
I think what you said is perfect because you just brought—we talked all about the science and what happens to the cell and the mitochondria. The bottom line is cancer loves sugar. That adaptation that’s made possibly the damage from toxins in the mitochondria, it’s relying on sugar. It’s fermenting sugar even in the presence of oxygen. We thought okay, that is huge with cancer.

However, we’ve learned now that by putting people in ketosis yes, it starves—we’re switching the energy of the cell to be majority of fat. If cancer cells love sugar, that’s a problem for a cancer cell. That’s one benefit of ketosis.

The other benefit is what you just said. Now, we’re realizing that these ketones are actually turning off these genes and switching them over. I think it’s amazing.

When we look at the history—I love studying history. I get so much from ancient cultures. Every ancient culture on the planet has always had to go into ketosis at least once or twice through a year’s time for multiple reasons, whether it’s lack of food, food shifts, who knows. Our DNA is set up to go into these ketotic states, which I believe, simply put, during these states, cleans up our DNA. It’s part of our genome. We’re meant to go into ketosis.

However, today because we have carbohydrates surrounding us in every fashion all the time 24/7, we aren’t going into ketotic states. Therefore, we’re building up a lot of bad genomes, triggering by the toxins that are—bad cell makes bad cell. By going into ketosis periodically, not even staying in it, we’re at least turning off a lot of these bad genes. This is missing in today. That’s my feeling.

Travis:
I couldn’t agree more. I think you perfectly characterized that. I think our bodies are completely adapted to do that periodically as a cleaning-house mechanism, and we’ve lost that. When the agriculture -inaudible- came around 10,000 years ago, we became flushed with food, especially carbohydrates. Most people probably don’t enter ketosis in their lifetime in the Western world, anyway. That’s why we have this inexorable diabetes epidemic that’s just getting worse and worse. You can show this now on the epigenetic level why this is happening.

Going into ketosis reverses that. It reverses -inaudible-. All of these diseases of degeneration seem to funnel down to the same point of energy dysregulation that going into periodic ketosis concentrates its therapeutic effect.

You stated that beautifully. That’s the thrust of this whole conference. The questions are okay, this is incredibly beneficial. How do we get the most out of this? Do you need to be in ketosis all the time? I think the answer to that is probably not. Probably just entering it occasionally is good enough.

Dr. Pompa:
I’ve come up with a theory I call diet variation, a.k.a. feast/famine cycles. If you mention it to Joe, he’ll come out of his skin because I actually helped Joe. I put that in his book. I was one of the content editors for his new book Fat for Fuel. We talked about feast/famine cycling because—my love for looking at ancient cultures, they were always forced into feast and famine cycles. The change, the adaptation, there’s magic that happens in it. When you move from ketosis out of ketosis, magic happens.

We have found this clinically that with people -inaudible- move into ketosis are struggling for one reason or another, just not able to make the transition even though they’re getting ten grams of carbs a day, they’re just not getting into ketosis in months of trying. We move them out of ketosis, in a few months move them back in, and all of the sudden they’re successful. It’s just remarkable what happens in the change.

I’ve got to read you this study. I found this study right here in—I found it fascinating. I have to send it to you. It says, “A diet mimicking,”—no, that wasn’t it. I did this last time I tried to find the darn study. Here it is. Here it is right here.

This was actually on cancer prevention, diet individual responsiveness for cancer prevention. In the study in the abstract, it said, “…the last half century has brought stark changes in lifestyle that depart from normal diurnal cycling and periodic fluctuations in food availability.” It says, “Thus, modern times may be characterized by being constantly in a “feast” environment. The cellular consequences may be an increase in the risk for several diseases including cancer.”

The study is saying that look, we’re not getting these times of starvation. We’re not getting times of ketosis production. We’re not even varying our diet, and they’re realizing it led to disease.

I was up in Wyoming. I was researching the American Indians. They realized that it’s this not being in ketosis and then this other diet in the summer that is part of why they’re triggering this gene of diabetes and heart disease. Anyways, just stuff that no one else is talking about, Travis.

Travis:
Yeah, absolutely. I’ll just tell you one thing, too, that was fascinating to me is—this is the second year of this conference. When I wrote the book, a lot of this stuff was clearly theoretical. There was preclinical data in support, especially with cancer research. What we always have needed are just clinical—we need to get the ball rolling on clinical trials.

I was in London at a talk a while back, and I met this young MD from Turkey. Turkey has a much more permissive environment for treating cancer patients, end-stage cancer patients. The doctors are basically given permission to just do what they think is in the best benefit of the patient. This young doctor got really enamored with Seyfried’s work. It made sense to him. He’s employed many of these therapies.

He puts his patients on a ketogenic diet. He has them fast before—he has to give them chemotherapy. It’s part of the standard of care. They’re given a dose range, and so he uses the lowest dose he can. Then, he does what’s called 2-deoxyglucose, which, if you read Tom’s book, that’s one of the drugs he looks at. It’s a glycolic inhibitor, so it stops glucose from being utilized in the cell. He uses DCA, which is another metabolically acting small molecule. Then, he gives extensive hyperbaric oxygen throughout this treatment and hyperthermia.

He showed me his results. They did 50 patients with lung cancer. The standard of care and the median survival with Stage III, IV lung cancer is 8.6 months. These guys are bringing their patients up to 41 months. Their patient population is brutal. It’s a Stage IV, so they get some of the worst cases coming in.

He was showing Tom and I these pictures of PET scans with these people just littered, just lit up with cancer. After this protocol—they call it metabolically supported chemotherapy. It’s just gone. In some of these patients, these remissions are just so incredibly dramatic.

To me, this is exactly what we need. We need these guys that can do this and can show this to the world because these therapies don’t have the backing of pharmaceutical companies, and they never will. It takes a billion dollars to get to the burden of proof for most oncologists, which is a double-blind, Phase III, placebo-controlled trial. There’s no money to take these through those. It’s going to take these selfless, bold oncologists to prove it in these trials on their own and then show the rest of the world.

Dr. Pompa:
I hate to say this. The need to pull the drug companies in is almost needed because the funding, the backing, even just in the marketplace, getting this message out there. If we can -inaudible- thinking different like you said, more glucose-blocking drugs, which there’s been some of these. They just haven’t gained traction.

What about gluconeogenesis because Tom talks a lot about the metastatic cancers utilizing glutamine acid for energy. They adapt to that. I know that he -inaudible- experimenting with certain drugs that can limit glutamine reactions. What are your thoughts on that?

Travis:
Exactly. He was just bubbling last night. My foundation has supported research where he’s looking at a cocktail of therapies, right? The missing piece to him was always glutamine because, as much as cancer cells love sugar, they perhaps love glutamine even more. They can utilize glutamine as an energy substrate. Blocking glutamine is more problematic because our immune systems need glutamine.

He’s experimenting with this drug called DON, which is a very, very powerful glutamine inhibitor. If you cycle it, you can use way lower doses when these mice are on a ketogenic diet. It’s way more efficacious, like most drugs, when these mice are in a state of ketosis. He’s finding this is just devastating the cancer cells. He uses this brutally tough metastatic mouse model. It’s notorious. They’ve never been able to cure it. -inaudible- getting so close to being able to almost cure this extremely hard mouse model.

I’ve introduced him to this Turkish doctor, so I hope that his protocol can go from preclinical to translational. In his clinic in Turkey, we can show what this combination of stuff can do.

Dr. Pompa:
Travis, what are you working on right now? There’s a lot happening. That’s great that you connected Tom to him, and that’s going to take this to the next level. What are you working on?

Travis:
These kind of things. This has just taken on a life of its own. This conference went from a hundred and some people last year to over 400 this year. It just exploded. Many MDs are here that are progressive in their thinking, and are using these therapies. They’re just blown away by how well they’re working. This is taking on a life of its own.

I’m working on a book now about epigenetics, which to me is—I didn’t realize how fascinating it was until I dug into it. I think that’s the next frontier of medicine, so that’s where my focus is right now.

Dr. Pompa:
Travis, even our thoughts can change that genome: toxic thoughts, toxins period.

Travis:
-inaudible- that. If you just look at a book called Beyond something Telomeres. It just came out. It’s a wonderful book. Telomeres’ length at the end of chromosomes is related to cellular health. It’s like an aging clock. It’s a wonderful series of studies about just stress, and how we respond to stress, how positive we think circles back to telomere length. It’s incredible. Your mental state day to day affects your cellular health on a level I wasn’t even aware of.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. We get a lot of very challenged people, my doctors and myself. We know that physical, chemical, and emotional stress turns on these bad genes. It’s a problem.

I think you’ll appreciate this. I talk about why people are getting sick today, and the solution lies in this analogy, as well. Think of a three-legged stool. Every leg has to be there for it to stand up.

You have one leg that’s the DNA, the epigenetic. Genes are getting turned on because of these stressors, right? That’s the middle leg: the stressors that are turning on the genes. This is a problem today, from an emotional standpoint and a chemical standpoint. The last leg is the microbiome that’s just being decimated right now. We know now this microbiome plays a big role in epigenetics. We’re doing some new tests that show that, that we can literally measure the microbiome and realize then from that, from certain metabolites, what genes are actually being expressed.

What we’re doing in our multi-therapeutic approach is we’re doing everything that we know to turn off these bad genes. We’re removing the stressors, which is key: physical, chemical, and emotional. If you’re doing all of it, you have a chance to turn these genes off.

Lastly, we’re affecting the microbiome with a lot of these ancient healing strategies: the fasting, the ketosis. There’s going to be new research coming out on ketones effect on the microbiome. We end with these fasting states where you starve down all bacteria. We talked about stem cells coming back. Same thing is happening in the microbiome. When we starve down the microbiome, we’re seeing these genetic changes within the bacteria.

The point is is that when we put all of this together, we create disease, but when we put all these treatments together, we’re getting astounding results. The key is putting it all together. That might excite you, but that’s what we’re doing. We have a larger group of doctors.

Travis:
I think the -inaudible- are catching up to what you really astute, observational clinicians have known for a long time. When you were saying that in these ancient cultures, like you say, that have been on to this for a long time, I was thinking of a story where somewhere in the desert where they get dysentery, a severe form of diarrhea, and the cure was to eat camel poop because it had—the basic scientists caught up to it like yeah, there’s some beneficial probiotics in this that they were clearly—that’s why it could cure this state. They knew this hundreds of years ago. We just figured out why they were doing it.

The art of medicine, what you guys notice in your patients, the basic science seems like sometimes it’s catching up to that.

Dr. Pompa:
Travis, think about this for a second. We know that the toxic exposures we’re getting is turning on these genes epigenetically, right? Then, the microbiome is being decimated. We’re just learning this connection of our microbiome and turning good genes on and bad genes off. You think about this complete assault to our microbiome, the chemicals, and the genes that are being triggered. This is what’s happening, honestly. This is why autoimmune conditions are just running rampant right now. It’s scary.

Travis:
It’s scary. It’s scary now because the science is showing that this begins in utero, as you’re forming. -inaudible- exposed to certain toxins, we now know it affects methylation patterns in DNA which directly correlates to your propensity for obesity and all these problems later on. Even the vitamins your mom is exposed to, if she was vitamin deficient in her first trimester or last trimester. They follow these people later, and they have certain disease patterns. Everything along those lines as we’re now finding out is extraordinarily important.

In the -inaudible-, there’s another layer of complexity on top of that that is scary things. There’s some people that say we’ve probably wiped out or caused an extinction of important gut bugs that we’ll never get back. It’s far time we start paying more attention to that stuff.

Dr. Pompa:
No doubt. The only solution -inaudible- put all of it together. That’s my passion is just getting a growing group of doctors doing this that’s on the cutting edge.

Meredith, I was so interested in this conversation that I’ve left you out of it. I apologize. I’d better open it up to you for some questions.

Meredith:
Oh my gosh, this has been an amazing interview, too. Travis, what a wealth of knowledge. I’m so excited to learn more about your research on epigenetics. I’m wondering if you could maybe share or tease us with any of the specifics you’re working on with that book.

Travis:
Oh man, I’m right in the middle of it. For me, the broadness of it is—what I would say is all these epigenetic changes that we see in DNA, there’s certain levels. There’s transcription factor levels. If you walk outside, you manufacture vitamin D. Vitamin D, then, is a transcription factor. It binds to a receptor in your nucleus and then binds to what’s called vitamin D response elements sprinkled throughout your genome. That flickers about 913 genes to life. Just walking outside changes your epigenome. These genes are involved in innate immunity.

It also flickers to life—it grossly upregulates a gene that turns tryptophan into serotonin. That’s why you feel good when you go out in the sun. Your thoughts soften. The edges of stress soften. It’s directly correlated to your mental state. That’s just walking outside. That’s one layer of the epigenome.

The next is the way your DNA gets wrapped up. As we talked about, beta-hydroxybutyrate can affect that, the packaging of DNA. Then, DNA itself gets tagged with little groups called methyl groups, and this affects genes. When you are conceived, all these methyl groups are wiped off. You’re a clean slate. Then, they get attached as you grow in utero. Then, you’re born tuned up. Your epigenome is tuned up to express the right genes.

As we age and as we’re exposed to certain environmental toxins and so forth, these tags get drifted. We start -inaudible- regulation of genetic expression.

Now to me, where this all goes is can you reverse that. That science is leading us to believe that it can be reversed. That to me is—this is where we could possibly intervene on aging. We parse diseases up into distinct processes when really these are all converge on aging itself. By far, the highest risk factor for cancer is aging. It’s not smoking. If we can intervene on this process, we could single-handedly wipe out the whole spectrum of degeneration from cancer to neuro degeneration and all these things.

That’s where our focus should be, not parsing up diseases and trying to understand the pathology of each one. It should be intervening on this epigenetic level. It’s so broad, this topic, and it’s so meaningful that it’s overwhelming.

Dr. Pompa:
I just had a thought when you said about just being in the sun and ultimately how that can turn off bad genes and upregulate good ones. That’s just amazing.

Travis:
You’re friends with Joe, right? You’ll know him. He’s one -inaudible- conference. I think he was -inaudible-. He’s got these glasses on. He’s living the—he’s walking outside to get sun every five minutes.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh yeah. He drags me on those walks. All the sudden, I’m sweating. It’s like we’ve got to get the sun, right? He’s funny. He lives what he preaches, no doubt about it.

Think about this for a second. Part of my research with the American Indians was that thing of going into ketosis in the winter, but in the summer, just like the Hunza people, they thought they were vegetarians. They weren’t eating as much meat as people would have thought. They were relying on all these different root vegetables, which arguably would be a higher carbohydrate diet. The sun had a huge effect on why they were able to tolerate that higher carbohydrate diet.

Think about this. When we go into winter when there’s less sun, what’s protecting our genome? The ketones. The ketones, right? The sun can protect the genome more in the better times which could tolerate us being out of ketosis, but in the winter the ketones protect us. Just a thought of seasonal ketosis. Anyways, that will take us down a whole other route. Meredith, I’d better turn it back to you or him and I may go all day.

Meredith:
I know. We might have to do a part two. It’s such a fascinating conversation. Just in closing, Travis, thank you so much. I’m just wondering what would you say if someone is watching this or listening and got a recent cancer diagnosis or has a loved one who did, what would you tell them?

Travis:
I think the most proactive people do the best. If you can empower yourself through just learning about treatments like this, about using this dietary therapy, and hopefully your oncologist is onboard. Valter Longo just gave a talk. If you can get into ketosis or fast before chemotherapy, potentially this is going to greatly increase the efficacy of it and mitigate side effects. He’s done a wonderful clinical where they’ve shown that even objective side effects like vomiting or hair loss are incredibly diminished when you’re in ketosis.

Empowered patients, I think, do the best. I’m sure you can attest to that. That’s where I’d say start is just get as much information you can and try to use it with your oncologist if it’s possible.

Dr. Pompa:
Great advice. Thank you, Travis.

Meredith:
Yeah, thank you. Thank you so much, Dr. Pompa. Thank you, Travis, for sharing your knowledge. This is just such exciting information. Hopefully maybe we can have you back and delve into epigenetics a little bit more once that book’s out.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely. Let’s jump into epigenetics. Tell our friends over there hello. I’m glad you’re there.

Travis:
Alright, I sure will. Thank you. Take care.

Meredith:
Awesome. Thanks, Travis. Thanks, Dr. Pompa. Thanks, everybody, for watching. Have an awesome weekend and we’ll see you next time. Bye-bye.

162: Essential Oils, Worth the Hype?

Transcript of Episode 162: Essential Oils, Worth the Hype?

With Dr. Daniel Pompa, Meredith Dykstra and Dr. Eric Zielinski

Meredith:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m your host, Meredith Dykstra, and this is episode number 162. We have our resident cellular healing specialist, Dr. Dan Pompa on the line, of course, and today we welcome special guest, Dr. Eric Zielinski. We have a really exciting topic for you today. We have not bridged this yet on Cellular Healing TV. We’re going to be talking about all of the benefits and the therapeutic use of essential oils. Dr. Eric is an expert on this topic, so we’re going to delve into oils, and their different benefits, and a lot of different connections they have to other aspects of our health.

Before we jump in, let me tell you a little bit more about Dr. Eric. Founder of the Essential Oils Revolution Summits that have reached more than 265,000 people across the globe, Dr. Eric Zielinski is a formally trained public health researcher and aromatherapist that has created the most extensive biblical health database on the internet. His website, DrEricZ.com is visited by hundreds of thousands of natural health-seekers every month, and he has rapidly become the go-to resource for essential oils education and spiritual inspiration through social media. Welcome, Dr. Eric, to Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Eric:
Thank you much for having me. It really is an honor. I’ve been following your work for quite a while, and I’m just excited. I’m excited to share the message with you all.

Dr. Pompa:
Something we have in common is our faith. I love your message, no doubt about it, so I was really excited to interview you today. I got to hear a little bit – the bio doesn’t do it justice. How did you even get into healthcare? Kind of tell us your journey there, and then, of course, how did you get into essential oils? Just kind of start here and give us a little bit.

Dr. Eric:
You know, Dr. Pompa, it’s a transformation, and it’s just been a beautiful journey. I’m 37 years old. When I look back, I’m like, “Wow, God! You did all that,” and I could see how it played out, but at the time, I didn’t know it was happening. The crux of the story is I was sick. I was a sick child. When I say that, I wasn’t at the Ronald McDonald House. I didn’t have lupus. I didn’t have cancer. I was just chronically not well, had aches and pains. I had cystic acne, chronic GI issues, bloating gas. We’re talking things that would plague a teenager. Not only that, but when I was younger, chronic ear infections and sore throats. My parents elected to have my adenoids and my tonsils taken out, vital parts of your lymphatic system.

It all started just living on the standard American diet. I was not breastfed. My mother elected not to for various reasons, and I think that’s a very critical part. I just had poor gut health. Also, I didn’t have a very strong spiritual background, as well, emotionally and mentally drained. As a late teen, early adult, I fell hard in alcoholism, narcotic drugs, depression. I even was suicidal and suicide ideation.

Here I was, 22, 23 years old. On the outside, I looked pretty good. I had the MTB six-pack body, but on the inside, I was rotting, drinking a pot of coffee a day just to get through the day to pass my classes. When I graduated school, I had no real purpose. I had no vision. I had no real guidance on what to do, and I was ripe. I was at that rock bottom moment, and that’s when I met Christ. It was one of those spiritual transformations. I kid you not, immediately freed from my nicotine addiction. I was smoking a pack a day. I stopped drugs. I stopped drinking. I stopped my pot of coffee. I stopped cussing. I used to swear like a sailor. My whole life changed. I had a dramatic transformation.

Here’s the key, Dr. Pompa: My mentor at the time was 60 years old and the healthiest person I knew, and still is. He said, “Eric, your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit. You have to take care of it.” Being a Christian doesn’t mean you just read your Bible and go to church; it’s a whole lifestyle. He started praying with me, and that right there, as a 23-year-old man, imparted something on my spirit that took me here now 14 years later. My journey took me through Life University Chiropractic College, took me to Emery University to study public health, and here I am today. Essential oils, I got to say, it’s a part of the puzzle.

I noticed that when I hosted my online summit a couple years ago that there was so much misinformation out there, especially regarding the biblical health piece. I’m like, “You know what? I got to learn more about this,” so I’m studying aromatherapy. I really dove into it, and that’s what people want. It’s unbelievable. Hundreds of thousands of people online, on my website, they just want me to teach them about oils.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow. That’s quite a story. Honestly, I didn’t know. I had no idea that you went through that. I talk about my from pain to purpose. Man, you’ve got your pain to purpose. That’s for darn sure. With that said, obviously today’s topic is pulling in essential oils, and with a biblical background that you have, essential oils fits that. Essential oils go back into biblical times all the way from frankincense to myrrh. We talk about it all the time. These are some of God’s healing tools. Is that kind of what struck you into the thing of essential oils? Were you reading some of this biblically and applied it? How did that transition occur?

Dr. Eric:
It’s a good question. During school, as I’m sure you remember many moons ago, I was supporting the family during chiropractic college, and the -inaudible- so I really got myself in a position where I was writing. I was a medical writer just to pay the bills. One of my clients asked me –during school, asked me to write a series of public health reports on essential oils. That was the first time I was introduced to that side of essential oils.

Pre-date back to that, my wife’s been using essential oils since we’ve been married. She has her routine. I don’t know what she does. I kind of do now, but she puts them here, there, everywhere. We delivered four babies at home, and the first homebirth, it really blew my mind how prepared she was with aromatherapy through all the stages of labor. Her story’s profound. Her skin was miraculously healed through essential oils. If we have a moment, I could tell you about that. At the end of the day, I didn’t think anything of them because several years ago I had tried to use essential oils, and it didn’t work for me.

I got to say, I was disenchanted because here I am, all about natural health. I saw online, “Hey, natural solutions” for certain health conditions I was trying to battle. It didn’t do anything for me. I’m like, “You know, this stuff’s just smelly stuff. I’ll leave it to Sabrina. I’ll leave it to the ladies.” I was that guy that marginalized it. Who wants to go play basketball smelling like ylang ylang? The dudes are going take away my man card. You know what I mean? I put it away.

When I hit that research – and then that’s what really brought me to Christ. I didn’t have one of those, like, “Oh, I went to church, had a altar call.” No. I’d studied biblical study. I studied archeology. For months, I studied. I read books. I’m just that kind of guy. God knows that’s how you reach me. It has to go through my head first; it goes to my heart -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
Me, too, man! Me, too. I’m the same way. Believe me, I was the same way. I was like, “Okay.” I had to disprove the whole evolutionary process, or prove it to myself, or whatever process God had to take me through. Yeah, He’ll reach us where we are. In that, though, you started finding out more about essential oils.

Dr. Eric:
Yeah. This is the key: I started researching. I started looking at the literature and then the question, just like how it was when I became a Christian. The question when I became a Christian was, “Okay, it was about the Bible. Either the Bible really is the Word of God, or it’s just a really cool book.” That’s what proved to me – and I looked at all the prophecies that were fulfilled.

When it came to essential oils, very similar. I’m like, “Okay. This stuff is either hocus pocus, or I didn’t do it right when I tried.” What was going on? I found out I wasn’t really using essential oils. Flashlight, everyone. Light bulb. Dr. Robert Pappas, foremost chemist in this area, I had the privilege of interviewing him twice for my summits.

According to Dr. Pappas, who has tested virtually every essential oil on the market, 75% of the oils on the market are adulterated, which means one of two things, really. They’re either fake/synthetic, or they’re highly diluted to the point where you don’t even know what you’re getting. I bought junk knock-off stuff at the health food store that wasn’t even real therapeutic-grade essential oils.

Then when I started looking into the brands, I was like, “Whoa! This is what frankincense really should smell like. This is how lemon should taste. This is how I use tea tree to battle, let’s say, whatever, toe fungus or whatever it might be.” That is when my world changed because I got the real deal. Most people out there, they don’t get the real deal. They don’t know where to find it, and they don’t know how. I’m transforming that, and now it’s part of my – if you look at my medicine cabinet, most of it’s essential oils now. To me, it was the missing piece of the pie. Up until the last few years, they just weren’t part of my protocol.

Dr. Pompa:
Why do they work? Let’s say you’re getting the good oils, and we can talk a little bit about that, some of your favorite brands, perhaps, but what do they do? Why do they work? Why are they so effective?

Dr. Eric:
Revelation, Chapter 22, the leaves of the trees of the healing of the nations. Why? How? The essential oil. The essential oil is what God gave the plant to protect the plant from vectors, from flies, from microorganisms that attack it, from fungal infections, you name it. It heals the plant, protects the plant, nourishes, so many different aspects. When we extract those healing properties of the plant, its essential – we all know herbs are good. We all know roots. Look at native medicine around the world. If you extract them, if you get them in a concentrated form, you just made medicine.

A lot of medicines are based off the chemical compounds in plants, like aspirin, perfect example, birch. You could use lavender. You could get a pound of lavender, make an incense of it or do whatever you want with a tea, but if you use the lavender oil, you basically just 10X, 20X the power. We need to remember one thing: The essential oils that we have today are really nothing what people used to use centuries and millennium ago. They didn’t have distillation like we do. They didn’t have cold pressing extraction. They couldn’t get what we have. What we have today is unbelievably strong, and the ancients never experienced it.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow.

Dr. Eric:
Yeah. When you look at Jesus, gold, frankincense, and myrrh, Jesus didn’t have essential oils.

Dr. Pompa:
Can I make a – I have a question for you. Now I’m playing Devil’s Advocate here. Would being a part of building out a lot of products and supplements – it’s oftentimes hard for us to find, let’s say, ginseng. We look at the -inaudible- the chromography, and we look at the power of the plant, and it’s very difficult because even the organic ones that come in, they’re grown in such terrible soils, or they’re grown in soils that, really, ginseng wasn’t meant to be grown in.

Finding where ginseng originally grew, the mineral substrates in the ground, etcetera, makes that plant thrive and be strong. I get it. You’re right, man. The extraction processes, no doubt, would be better than it was back then, but what about finding frankincense from a good soil and where the plant comes from that we extract it from? Is that a factor?

Dr. Eric:
One hundred percent. We have found indigenous sourcing is the key. My father-in-law is a retired agri-scientist from Dow Chemical. I haven’t shared this on another podcast yet, but it’s time for me to come out. He actually helped develop GMOs. He worked with Monsanto. I married the enemy. I seriously should have had my wife checked by a private investigator. We laugh about it.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible- better, man.

Dr. Eric:
I know. It’s awesome. We’re still trying to convert him. Here he was. He told me, “You cannot compare naturally indigenous plant” – I mean he said, “The chemical compounds in the indigenous plants, you can’t compare to non-indigenous. It just doesn’t even work.” I live in Georgia. I live in Atlanta. I could grow a fig tree in my back yard and have pretty tasty fruit, but the vitamins and minerals in that fig won’t compare to one in Jerusalem. We need to remember that.

Also – I hate to say it for folks out there – but getting around the organic thing is getting virtually impossible. I don’t say that because I don’t want to be defeatist, but it’s becoming almost impossible to get pure anything anymore, pure food, pure water. Essential oils have been tested, and there was a major conference in Italy a couple years ago. They found that organic essential oils had pesticides residue in them. How? There’s runoff water and because Monsanto – again, thanks, father-in-law. Monsanto is spraying five miles down the road, and drift wind, and vectors, and flies, and bees.

Dan, I know you know this, but people need to realize there’s no guarantee of safety out there anymore, so we have to minimize the best that we can. Here’s the key, and here’s why I mentioned it: You get indigenous-sourced plants because the way that God planted them, they don’t need the pesticides if they’re truly an indigenous plant. They don’t need it. They shouldn’t.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely.

Dr. Eric:
That’s the key. I’d rather choose an indigenous plant over an organic plant that’s in some farm in Idaho.

Dr. Pompa:
Me, too.

Dr. Eric:
When it comes to essential oils, same thing.

Dr. Pompa:
That was a great answer. I appreciate that answer. Looking for an essential oil, we want one that’s extracted properly using cold pressing, not denaturing it, using heat, etcetera, you might want to add to that. We also want to find where it coming from indigenous plants as their source versus just organic plants grown in Idaho.

Dr. Eric:
One thing, too, when it comes to heat, it’s a little bit different because they’re not dealing with proteins being denatured. The chemical compounds in these essential oils are stuff that you probably forgot, Dan. It’s in biochemistry class, ketones, esters, alcohols, terpenes. What’s that? There’s no vitamins, or minerals, or proteins in oils. They actually have to be steam-distilled, so they need to evaporate.

What an essential oils is, folks, it’s the volatile organic compound, volatile meaning it evaporates. If there is a chemical compound in the plant that can’t evaporate, then it won’t get into the essential oil. It will be too heavy. It will be too dense. It will be part of the hydrosol. It will be part of the leftover water that’s very healthy, very good. See, the essential oils really – the crème de la crème of highly volatile, very light – we’re talking very low Daltons if you guys are chemistry nerds out there on the Daltons –

Dr. Pompa:
Daltons are molecular weight.

Dr. Eric:
Yep. We’re talking very low on the Dalton scale compared to something else. We could geek out on this a little bit for some of the chemistry folks, but the reality is they’re very special and essentially what we smell. That’s what we got to remember. When you’re walking through that rose garden, you’re not going to find a pool of rose oil. It doesn’t exist. It needs to be extracted. If you’re walking and brush up against a plant, you’ll smell the vapor. You’ll smell the essence. That’s the volatile organic compound. If you’ve smelled -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
Tell them a little bit about the Dalton, which is the molecular weight. I know this from my own biochemistry in product development that for something to go into a cell, it has to be a certain molecular weight, something from 200 to 300, maybe even up to 600. Is that another reason why essential oils work is because they’re able to get into the cell and then affect the DNA?

Dr. Eric:
They’re lipid-soluble. That’s the key. Every one of them are lipid-soluble. When you think about that, how many things can’t cross that cellular membrane because of the phospholipid protection? So many drugs are virtually useless because of that.

There have been studies, Dan. I don’t condone pharmaceutical use unless absolutely necessary, but there have been studies that show essential oil therapy with drugs help the drugs be more effective, mainly chemo. Some chemotherapies just can’t cross the blood-brain barrier, for example, to get glioblastoma and other astrocytoma type of cancers, but if you applied those drugs with essential oils, it essentially opens up the gates so the drugs can do their job.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s awesome. Now we know a lot more than we did in the beginning, so our viewers are already excited. Now, here’s what our viewers are asking, and our listeners. “Okay, great. What type of oils can I use for these type of symptoms and conditions?” I know that we’re not saying that this oil is a cure for this condition. I don’t want to get you in trouble here.

Meredith, this is probably in your questions. Meredith, by the way, she loves essential oils. She’s very good at essential oils. She always hooks me up with essential oils, so thank you, Meredith, for that. Let’s talk about that because honestly, that’s what our viewers want. Meredith, you can fire away with that, naming different conditions. Doc, what are some of your favorites and for what conditions?

Dr. Eric:
It all depends on what you need, and -inaudible- what you want, and I need to remember, people, when it comes to essential oil therapy, there is nothing like prevention. In the guise of this – if we don’t have an hour to talk – I wish we had an hour just about this topic. Folks, we got to stay away from the antibacterial products, the hand sanitizers, and all those that cause toxic overload in the body, and that’s where essential oils are worth their weight in gold. They replace those products. That’s where I could get people to start.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s a great thing. What do you use every day? That sounds like things you’re using every day. Meredith, what do you use every day? Go ahead. Let’s hear it.

Meredith:
I use the blend, too. I never use hand soaps. Especially if I’m not at home where I have more natural soaps, I use essential oil blends. I carry the oils in my purse, and I just rub them on my hands as natural antibacterial. I have a blend, and it has clove in it and wild orange. Sometimes I use rosemary or cypress on my hands. Lavender, of course, is a nice antibacterial, as well. This is just simple oil blends you can keep with you instead of using those toxic soaps.

Dr. Pompa:
Doc, what do you use?

Dr. Eric:
Dan, I just wanted to – I just got out of the gym. I wanted to freshen up. Took a nice shower before the interview. I’m staying away from lavender. I don’t want vetiver, lavender, things to calm me down, so we created a joyful blend, with some jojoba, some almond oil with orange, lemon, vanilla. It just perks me up. Those are citrus oils that have been proven, literally, to work in the limbic system to boost mood, lower depression, and get you in a better state of consciousness. That’s what I want to do right now. I want to be kind of – I’m not one of those who’s laid back. I’m just high energy, especially when I do an interview, so that’s what -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
Where do you put it? Do you put it here? Do you sniff it?

Dr. Eric:
Yeah. For me, when it comes to the lotion – I actually use this as a body lotion throughout my body, but there are many ways that you could use them. You can probably see it, maybe, in the background. I have a diffuser with a few oils that, again, are very uplifting, very -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
I have one -inaudible-.

Dr. Eric:
Do you? I have a couple –

Meredith:
I have mine going, too. They’re great.

Dr. Eric:
I have some that maybe people aren’t familiar with because a lot of folks that follow me, they’re part of a network marketing company, and that’s how they get their oils. I’ve found that I like to go outside of that world a little bit to get some really cool esoteric oils like yuzu, like opoponax, like elemi. Love those oils. That’s what I’m smelling right now. It’s very uplifting, very energetic. You could use oils virtually for whatever you want.

That’s the thing. When people ask me, I always say, “What do you want to accomplish? Do you want to accomplish a sedative, calming – you want to be uplifted? Are we trying to balance blood sugar?” We kind of go with that, and then we really target an approach for people.

Dr. Pompa:
Let’s mention a few things and some things we can target for that, but let’s hit the 800-pound gorilla here right here up front. So many of these oils are network marketing. Gosh, Young Living, that was the original one. I’m assuming they’re still around, and then new one’s doTERRA. I bet you there’s another one I probably don’t even know about. I think that these oils are the perfect thing for network marketing because people love to try them; it’s basic; they can use this; they turn their friends onto them. I think that’s why those companies explode.

I’m always a little cautious. I have nothing against network marketing. I don’t. If the product’s good, I think it’s a great thing. However, typically, it’s overpriced, but again, there’s some products that we love like ASEA that’s the only way to get it. It’s a very unique product. There’s some other products that I have no problem. If that’s the only way to get it, we’ll get it. For doctors, it’s hard because they don’t want to look like they’re just putting people in a network marketing thing. There’s that. Some of the oils you’re using, the ones in the network marketing, let’s discuss it. I know we have some on our website. What do you do? What’s your comment to that? I don’t even know what I’m asking.

Dr. Eric:
I actually use several. Here is my “I will never compromise on this” stance because it’s who I am. I will not tell people the brands I use, nor will I recommend them for a variety of reasons, but I will say there are several good brands out there, and we do use oils from network marketing companies. I use oils from direct suppliers. I use from a variety of different things.

You mentioned a couple good points, and I had gotten this question so many times because -inaudible- reason why, Dan, as a public health researcher, I am convinced that bias is very important to avoid. I don’t know anyone – literally, I don’t know anyone – I challenge you out there watching, listening, find an essential oil educator on the internet who doesn’t sell oils. You’re not going to -inaudible- period. I’m the only one.

Here’s the thing: Once I started telling people, “You know what? I’m not going to sell these oils,” hundreds of thousands of people started flocking to me because they realize I’m a safe place to land. With that, that’s the reason -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, that’s why you’re on the show. What was the first thing I said to Meredith? It’s like, “Oh, Meredith, I would love to bring the topic, but I don’t want someone just [hawcking] what they think is good.” I try to bring the products, I try to carry multiple products, and I try to bring the products that I use myself, that I believe in, that I have researched, and that I’m a part of somehow. Our viewers are still going to say, “I know you’re not selling the product, Eric, but give us the top three or five that you know that are indigenous sources, that are processing it correctly.” People are going to ask, right, Meredith?

Meredith:
-inaudible-.

Dr. Eric:
Here’s my solution to that: Go to my website, DrEricZ.com, look up the word brand, and you’re going to find the article, How to Choose a Brand. Here’s the thing about it, and this is really important. I’ve seen people that they, in a sense, ignore the organoleptic aspect of this. For people who don’t know what organoleptic is, how does a substance, how does an essential oil, how does a new food respond to your body? You break out in hives. You get a headache. How does it taste and feel? You need to be emotionally sound, and you need to be – we need to respond well to something.

Here’s what I’ve seen: I’ve seen “the purest oil on the market” give someone a headache. Why? Maybe that species, that source, just didn’t respond well. What you want to do, there are very – again, I use several. You want to find one that works for you. To me, that’s the beauty of functional nutrition, functional whatever you want to call it because there’s so many different ways of looking at this, is finding what works for you. Again, I’m a 37-year-old white guy from Sicily and Poland. What is going to work for me isn’t going to work for, let’s say, a 74-year-old African-American from Kenya.

I think we forget that. If you’re a network marketer out there, bless your heart. Make a couple bucks, but remember, your oil isn’t the only oil on the market. There’s a lot of others out there. Folks, you want to try, and here’s what you do: You’re going to go first to some family and friends and get a referral. I’m a referral junkie. Whether it’s my dentist, my chiropractor, whoever it is, I want someone that’s proven and tested by a loved one. Go ask your loved ones, “Hey, what oils do you use?” I guarantee you you’re going to find someone who uses oils. They’re that popular.

Then you get a couple. Go online. See what you can see about some ratings. Then here’s the thing: You got to invest some time and money. This is your health. I know people, literally, that use essential oils to treat their cancer. That’s what they’re doing. Chemo failed them. Radiation failed them. They’re using oils, and they’re doing well. It’s that important. You go; you try these oils. Ask the company, “Hey, can I have a test, an analysis of your oil?”

I’m interested in lemon, for example. I will get a starter kit. They’re usually 40, 50 bucks. Get a starter kit with lemon, peppermint, whatever they have, clove, and try them out. Put them on your skin. Dilute them. Do a skin patch. That’s very important. You know how when you get a carpet cleaner, they say, “Go into that corner. Clean the carpet in an inconspicuous spot before you stain the whole thing.”

Same thing with essential oils. Dilute some with some coconut oil, put them on the back of your hand, and see what happens. If you break out in a hive, that’s not a good sign that your body’s responding to that or if you get redness, or itching, or burning. You want to see how your body responds. You’ll find, interestingly enough, that the oils that work for you might not work for someone else just because it’s your body’s chemistry.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. Our microbiome is different. The microbiome in our digestive system and on our skin really determines even how your body uses something like an essential oil, how it breaks it down. The chemical components that come out of it is all determined by our bacteria, which is different for everybody.

Dr. Eric:
Yup. I got myself in trouble. I got to say, I’ll confess, early on, I recommended for people to use a certain brand, and they’re like, “Hey, this thing works horribly.” I’m like, “You know what? I learned my lesson quick.” Again, you make a good point. The skin microbiome is one of the most largely misunderstood and ignored things on our body. I really have done a lot of research on that and how to really maximize that. That’s one reason why I’ve come up with so many DIY recipes, Dan, because it’s so important that we feed and nourish the healthy bacteria in the right way.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely. What’s your website?

Dr. Eric:
DrEricZ.com.

Dr. Pompa:
All right. That’s easy, man. All right, DrEricZ. That’s beautiful, man. That was a great answer, honestly. I think that was a really honest answer, a great answer. I agree with that answer. Do what he says because I think that was beautiful advice. All right, so let’s look. What about blood sugar? I’ll throw some things out, and Meredith, I’ll let you throw some things out. Blood sugar. So many people, hormone resistance, whether it’s to insulin, leptin, estrogen, some essential oils that would help.

Dr. Eric:
First thing that comes to mind, we all know about cinnamon. Cinnamon, everyone uses, and that’s a great solution. My friend, the diabetes coach, Dr. Brian Mowll has actually looked into this a little bit more, and he’s found that -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
I did summit for Dr. Brian.

Dr. Eric:
Oh, yeah. Awesome. Brain’s a great guy. He and I have done really a lot of work. We actually wrote a book on this together. We have found that just a couple drops of cinnamon oil in a capsule, like a gel capsule, can have the same effect as a tablespoon of cinnamon powder. Cinnamon oil is very effective.

Folks, this isn’t just internal. You can inhale and also topical. We mustn’t forget these oils are transdermal. Once you apply them with a carrier oil on your body – and so for someone with diabetes or battling a blood sugar issue, you might want actually apply it over the pancreas. You might want to apply it over the abdomen. We have seen studies show that when you apply massage oil over the abdomen, within minutes, those chemicals in the oil are in your bloodstream.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely.

Dr. Eric:
Twenty minutes only, and your whole body has the effect of the essential oil. Here’s the key, Dan: Within four hours, it’s out of your body. They become completely metabolized unlike drugs that have biochemical make-up. That’s the cool thing about oils. Also, don’t forget ylang ylang. The fun thing – and I say fun because I’m still gripping my brain around this. The fun thing about ylang ylang, it actually harmonizes the body. We have seen that for people that might be hyper- or hypoglycemic. It helps create balance.

We’re finding more research actually using the term harmonization. Sandalwood and ylang ylang are two oils that we have seen, clinically speaking, create homeostasis in the body. I try to get people out of this whole medical mindset, like, “I’m hyperglycemic. What do I do to fix it?” No. Why are you hyperglycemic? More importantly, let’s get homeostasis in the body.” That’s what we’re finding essential oils can do. It’s mind-blowing.

Dr. Pompa:
Couldn’t agree more, man. I love that response, too. I tell you what. You’re hitting it with me really well. I don’t like pushing the body in one direction or another unless you absolutely have to. Innate intelligence wants to bring homeostasis in herbs. No doubt, essential oils being part of an herb, can bring that homeostasis and that balance. Meredith, I know you’ve got all kinds of questions. I know that look. She radiates -inaudible-.

Meredith:
You know me well, Dr. Pompa. Yeah, I do have questions, too. I think it’s an interesting topic, talking about the skin biome and back to that because oftentimes, when you think of just applying the oils typically on our skin, even though we like to diffuse them, and we can even ingest them, as well, which is another topic. You kind of mentioned briefly before that your wife had a really interesting healing story with her skin and using essential oils for that. I was wondering if you could share that.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, perfect.

Dr. Eric:
About 20 years ago, she – actually 24 years ago, she was 14 years old. Beautiful, young, teenage girl went on vacation to Minnesota. Her grandparents at the time that she was staying with had well water. I don’t remember what it was, but it was some knock-off facial cleanser that she got at Kmart. She washed her hands. She washed her face with this, and there was a chemical reaction with the chemicals in the well water, and it literally burned from here down, burned the first three layers of her skin. Burned it all, like open sores.

She applied every ointment. She tried everything. She went to the doctor. Nothing could help. Her mother’s best friend, Mrs. B we call her, Cheryl [Buck], is a Cherokee Indian, and she practices Ojibwa medicine. She goes, “You have to use lavender.” She gave her a little starter kit, her first essential oil kit, now 24 years ago, and she gave her an ointment to make with some oil with some aloe and some lavender. Within weeks, her skin was healed. You look at her now, my wife, she’s gorgeous. She’s a pageant queen. She does her anti-aging whatever she does. She’s got it down pat. It was lavender then that helped heal her skin.

From then on, essential oils has been part of everything that she’s done, again, with the birthing process, every time she competes. Everything that she does, she utilizes the mindfulness aspect of essential oils, and not only that, but the therapeutic that goes on your skin. It’s unbelievable. Again, I just knew that. I had heard the story, and because I never experienced it myself, I just kind of dismissed it until I started learning about these things. I’m like, “Oh, that’s why that works.”

Meredith:
I think it’s so perfect, too, to jump into the emotional component and the aromatherapy component of the oils, too, and how they can so just affect our brain chemistry. Can you share on that and how that can kind of support our mental health?

Dr. Eric:
That’s a good question. I’ve been really deep recently into looking into emotional detoxing. Dan, have you ever had anyone on your show talk about that one, yet?

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, yeah. No. Emotional component is something – look, physical, chemical, and emotional, removing these things is very critical to turn off bad genes. The emotional component is something that we really focused on in the last year, so bring it. Let’s talk about it. How can the essential oils help with that?

Dr. Eric:
Because we have seen – the science of smell is becoming so profound in the research world. We’re really starting to tap into what it can trigger, how it can trigger back that emotional response when you were abused as a child. How can it trigger back – it brings you back to 30 years ago when you were just married, and you smell your wife’s perfume, and it brings you back to your honeymoon.

It imprints something in our mind, and so we need to be careful, especially when we’re dealing with grief and trauma, that we don’t trigger those emotions back with certain smells. While we heal using smells that bring us through, that smell can take you through the rest of your life. The research is profound. We always go back to the citrus oils because those have been shown clinically and traditionally to help boost mood, help with work/life balance. There’s really a lot of studies out there.

It all goes back to what works for you. Really, what I’ve been looking at more is about this emotional detox experience. We have to get ourselves where our mind can just calm, where our brain just stops with the wayward thoughts for just a few minutes. Traditional scents, traditional incense, like frankincense, like ylang ylang, like sandalwood – there’s so many other things. When you go to the Bible, look at the ancient anointing oil that God told Aaron to make or Moses and Aaron. We have cassia, cinnamon, and myrrh with calamus, and those are all stuff you can get today.

You got to think there was more than just a spiritual ritual behind that. These oils actually help meditate. They help us get in a higher state of consciousness. That’s really what it boils down to. I really do believe as a Christian it can help us walk through the mind of Christ much more because this toxic overload with the smells that we have all around us, these fragrances, the synthetic aerosols, that’s attacking our ability to really tap into who we are.

Dr. Pompa:
I’ll tell you what, just – matter of fact, let’s just review those, the emotional detox. I heard frankincense, myrrh. What were some of the original – write those down, Meredith. I’m writing them down, too.

Dr. Eric:
You can go into Exodus, Chapter 33, they’d bejust the anointing oil, myrrh, calamus, cinnamon, cassia. That’s a great recipe. Frankincense – there’s a reason why frankincense was given to the Christ child. That was very important. We have actually records that Egyptians used to put frankincense under the bottoms of their eye. You remember the Egyptian eyeliner? In some parts of Egypt, that was burnt frankincense resin. Why? It produces a spiritual experience that helps you meditate. There’s also anti-aging – I mean healing mechanisms, as well. Those are great.

Also, I find ylang ylang is very, very harmonizing, very balancing, but more importantly, what works for you. If you actually smell lavender – there are many people that actually get excited over lavender. It’s not calming for everyone. I want to be careful because we can’t put anything in a box. I’ve found a lot of people do. Again, you have to find what works for you.

Dr. Pompa:
Great. Awesome. Good advice.

Meredith:
Such a good point. Someone told me – I don’t know if maybe you know the study to back it up – but people were actually rubbing frankincense oil on cancer tumors, and they were helping them to decrease. Is there evidence behind that?

Dr. Eric:
Yeah. Unfortunately, when it comes to the research, most of what we have is in vitro. We have cells in a petri dish studies, or we have animal studies. I will tell you, I know a lot of people – the cytotoxic effects of not only frankincense, but you know what’s even more effective according to research? Myrrh, sandalwood, and anything with a chemical called D-limonene, which is in a lot of the citrus oils.

Hey, you know what the best-kept secret is? Orange. Orange is probably one of the cheapest, most cost effective oils you can get on the market, and it’s unbelievably effective at fighting cancer. It produces that apoptotic effect, which is essentially cancer suicide, and it boosts the mood. It is very, very effective at a lot of things. The more I look into certain oils that are cost effective, I’d find, “Wow!”

Now, it’s really important to get that indigenously-sourced and as free of pesticides as possible because that peel is what the oil is made out of, not the juice. If you’re getting it from a Florida grove that’s spraying the junk out of it, you’re getting that into your skin, folks. You got to be careful. I like getting my oils overseas where they don’t use the unbelievable practices that America allows.

Meredith:
Speaking of orange oil, I was just thinking I love – I have a wild orange oil, and I sometimes mix it with balsamic vinegar and olive oil and make a salad dressing out of it, and I ingest it. What do you think about ingesting some of these essential oils and possibly, Dr. Pompa, the effect on the microbiome?

Dr. Pompa:
Great question, Meredith.

Dr. Eric:
Yeah. Good question. When it comes to the microbiome – well, first of all, it’s safe if it’s used wisely.

Meredith:
Not all oils can be ingested, right?

Dr. Eric:
Yeah. Not all of them can be ingested. You’re right. There are certain that are known as toxic. Wintergreen is one that’s really problematic for a lot of folks because it can be – but then again, it’s what flavors root beer. How do you balance that out? Folks, we got to remember one thing. If you have a smell – I’m going back to smell, anything with a fragrance like your Bath & Body Works stuff – anything with a flavor like your lemon bars, your peppermint patties, if it has a natural flavor to it, that’s an essential oil-based product. It’s all over the place. It’s just a matter of dosage.

The problem is when someone gets a bottle and puts two, three drops in their mouth trying to prevent cancer. That could cause esophageal irritation, especially when you use peppermint because that’s been shown to relax the esophageal sphincter so you get reflux. It’s problematic, but it’s safe if you do it wisely. Really, the scheme of it all – I like to make my own homemade smoothies. I’ll put a straight up lemon, a whole lemon, in my smoothie. That’s about four drops of oil. I’m consuming it in its natural form. When you extract it, you’re getting it out of its natural form.

I don’t know what your thoughts about juicing are, Dr. Pompa, but for me, we should limit our juice intake because it’s not in its natural form, without the fiber. Same thing with oils. You’re not going to want to completely just overdose on juice or oils, but used therapeutically or, like you said, Meredith, culinarily, it’s awesome. A drop of cilantro in your guacamole, are you kidding me? That’s what we had at Super Bowl party over here, so we use them.

You know what? I also like to use them to enhance my experience. I love a little bit of liquid stevia with a drop of orange in my sparkling water. That’s my soda pop. Again, for 13, 14 years, I haven’t drank soda. I don’t do any of that junk anymore. I don’t want to – I don’t live on rice cakes and wafers all day. I eat a very flavorful diet, and we enhance that with essential oils. They’re very safe, very effective, but you just got to be careful.

Meredith:
Yeah. I just had some bone broth this morning, and I put some rosemary oil and lemon oil in it because I didn’t feel like slicing an orange and getting the fresh rosemary herbs. They’re so convenient, too, just when you want to kind of drop right in your food.

Dr. Eric:
Always dilute.

Dr. Pompa:
I just feel boring. I’m boring compared to you guys. I got to add these things. I don’t think of this. Meredith’s just always thinking of all these things.

Dr. Eric:
You’re missing out. You’re really missing out, but it’s fun. I need to take a moment and just – we have to remember safety. It’s super-important. You never want to put oils on your body or in your body undiluted. You’re just going to hurt yourself, and it’s a waste. It really is a waste of money.

Dr. Pompa:
How do you dilute them? I always just put them on straight. See?

Dr. Eric:
No.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible-.

Dr. Eric:
You know what? Dr. Pompa, you might actually – you might cause what’s known as a sensitization response. You might cause your body to become allergic because its high concentrated plant compounds our bodies aren’t made by God to absorb in our skin. Think about it. You’re not going to find lavender out in nature, a lavender oil out in nature. You have to extract it.

Dilution helps with a few different ways. You get a carrier oil, opens up the pores. It actually helps your body absorb it more. It protects the skin, and what’s really profound is that we find that it’s going to do more for effectiveness than we actually think than just putting a drop because it prevents evaporation. Remember, essential oils are the volatile organic compounds. It’s the compounds that evaporate. If you want your oils to go bad, keep your bottle open. Oxidation is going to kill your oils like nothing. Carrier oils will prevent the evaporation, and it helps you get the most concentration in the right way. -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
How do you do it? Tell us how you do it. What does it look like when you do it? Tell me how you do it.

Dr. Eric:
If I’m going to actually – my family and I just had a little flu thing a couple weeks ago. What I did – my medicine – was I got some coconut oil, some good, unrefined, organic coconut oil. I put a couple drops of an immunity blend that I like. It’s very similar to one that, Meredith, you’re talking about. I like having one with cinnamon, and clove, lemon, orange, eucalyptus, and rosemary. You mix all those together, and you get – as a blend, you put one or two drops of that blend in, a little bit of honey, a little bit of Himalayan sea salt. That right there is an immune-boosting shot.

If you really want an immune-boosting shot, add some lypo-spheric vitamin C. I think that’s great, a liquid version of that. Something like that, that’s my kids’ medicine. That’s how we internalize it, but I don’t do that every day. I did that for just a couple days to get through the flu. When you’re talking about topical, we want to keep things under a 3% dilution.

In the aromatherapy world, it’s all about percentages. Easiest way to remember it is this: One tablespoon of oil, like a carrier oil whether it’s jojoba, almond, coconut, fractionated coconut, you have 600 drops. If you have a 3% dilution, 3% of 600 is 18, which means you can use up to 18 drops of an essential oil per tablespoon of a carrier oil, which is good, standard, safe dilution.

When you’re dealing with children and your face, because your face is sensitive, or your genitalia – some people like to use these for issues down – like vaginal infections or prostate issues – 1%, which is six drops per tablespoon. That is considered very safe. For oils that are a little more hot, we call them, like the cloves and the oregano, be very careful, always dilute. You don’t want to do a 1 to 1 ratio. That’s a 50% dilution. That can burn. That’s what happened to me early on, too. I didn’t know what I was doing. You just want to be careful. More does not mean better, especially with essential oils.

Meredith:
That’s so true. I put oregano oil directly on my skin one time, and oh, my gosh! Would never do that again, Major burn. Do not put oregano oil directly on your skin, anybody. The fractionated coconut oil is what I tend to use, as well, and it goes on really smoothly. I haven’t always been as good about diluting it. It’s a really good reminder, too, to the importance of absorption and protection of our bodies, too.

Dr. Pompa:
People are going to ask the question – you said fractionated coconut oil versus not. What’s the difference, and where do they buy it?

Dr. Eric:
Yeah, good, good, good question. Fractionated is probably the carrier oil of choice if you’re doing therapeutic things because it prevents oxidization, and it helps – it penetrates the skin relatively immediately. Here’s the problem with using regular coconut oil if you’re trying to treat an illness: It creates an essential barrier to your skin because it’s so greasy.

When you put fractionated oil on your skin, it goes right in. It’s just like the oil. If you actually put a drop of essential oil on your skin, you’re not going to see it in five, ten seconds. It absorbs that quick. Coconut oil doesn’t. Fractionated coconut oil basically takes out the long-chain fatty acids, so it allows just the medium-chain fatty acids to absorb immediately. It’s a little more expensive, but I’m not using that for my lotions, and my potions, or my internal things.

I’m using that for – okay. I’m trying to help with a specific issue like blood pressure, like cancer, like even a wound. Great for wound care. You use coconut oil, regular, jojoba, almond, even evening primrose for a nice lotion, for your basic body care. They work great. Fractionated is the go-to in my opinion and very, very helpful.

Meredith:
It’s essentially the same as MCT oil, right, the fractionated coconut oil?

Dr. Eric:
I guess I don’t know enough about the manufacturer that’s going to be selling the MCT oil, but yeah, in theory, it is, but again, I know Bulletproof and all these other folks – they have Brain Octanes. I don’t know what else is in that stuff, but essentially, it is, but there might be even short-chain fatty acids. Essentially, it’s taking out the long one. Yeah. Just readily absorbable, and it won’t freeze up, or it won’t harden -inaudible-. Yeah, essentially, you can use MCT oil, but that could get pricey.

Dr. Pompa:
You can buy fractionated coconut oil in most health food stores.

Dr. Eric:
Yeah, and on Amazon. All this stuff’s available on Amazon, really. I try not to get my essential oils from Amazon unless it’s from the direct source because you just don’t know who Joe Schmoe is selling. Again folks, this is medicine. This is how my family and I take care of ourselves. I can count on one hand how many times my family and I have been on antibiotics the last 10 years. When it comes to it, I want to get it from a good source. When it comes to your carrier oils and things, you can find all those relatively inexpensive on Amazon from good suppliers.

Dr. Pompa:
When you live your life from inside out, knowing that the body heals itself – I have five kids. None of my kids have ever taken an antibiotic in their entire lives. The cool thing is that the two there, right here, we adopted at age seven, and they were on antibiotics all the time. They were a family member that parents tragically died. Then we got them, and they were never on an antibiotic again.

Point being is what changed? The philosophy changed. That’s it. Their health and the DNA was the same. What changed? They miraculously needed all these antibiotics, and then miraculously after we adopted them, they never needed another one, and they’re amazing, healthy kids. Yeah, I appreciate hearing that. This is great information. I know people are going to love this show, right, Meredith?

Meredith:
Yeah, it is.

Dr. Pompa:
Thank you, man. Thank you for just – there’s a lot of myths. Matter of fact, let’s finish with one more big myth about essential oils that you have to battle and deal with, Dr. Eric.

Dr. Eric:
Essential oils are not safe, I’ve heard, for babies and pregnant women. I’m currently writing a book. I just signed a book deal with Harmony, an imprint of Penguin Random House. It wasn’t part of the book proposal, but I can’t get away from this topic of women’s health, specifically pregnancy, labor, and delivery. I just have to tell folks, they are safe. We’ve used essential oils since birth on all of our children, wisely, safely.

My wife has used essential oils all through her pregnancies and have been a major factor in how well she produces milk. We exclusively breastfeed our babies for at least one year before introducing anything else. They are super, super safe for infants, for children, but you have to use them wisely. Highly dilute them, be very careful, and use them the right way.

That’s the other myth. I get lambasted by people, “Show me in the research.” I got lots of research studies that I just came up with that I’ve seen that show how to use them, labor, delivery, nursing, all that, even prenatal. That’s another big myth.

Dr. Pompa:
What’s the dilution you usually do for babies or children? Is it the 1% or even less?

Dr. Eric:
Yeah, even less. Less than up to 1% is what you want to do. I have four children. You have five. You know what it’s like. A baby’s skin is like a sponge, and so they -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.

Dr. Eric:
It’s just so little. We got to think, too, dosage. That’s my big issue when it comes to most drugs and the whole vaccine thing is this little, unbelievable amount of dosage to this little, tiny human being. You got to remember that with essential oils, as well, plus aromatic use. Here, folks, remember this. This is really important. How many of you walk into Michael’s or Joann’s Arts and – you know – and you get hit in the head with those smells? I’ve seen babies from birth go in to stop with mama. Hey, bless her heart. That’s fine. Why would you think that aromatherapy through a diffuser would be harmful to your infant?

You’re putting your infant everywhere else. It doesn’t even make sense logically speaking, and that’s the myth. That’s the myth. Oh, and you can’t have peppermint or eucalyptus because it could cause respiratory arrest. Prove it. I know. I see kids going around Bath & Body Works with a cornucopia of smells, and they’re fine. Folks, we need to use common sense, and that’s so important. God’s given us that measure of wisdom that we could use to really use things. Here’s why I do what I do is to empower us so we don’t have to go to the doctor all the time, so we know how to take care of ourselves, and we know we’re not afraid to use things.

Dr. Pompa:
Dr. Eric, thanks for your expertise in this area. Meredith has been wanting to bring this show and couldn’t have brought a better guy to bring this information to our listeners and viewers. Thank you. Thank you very much.

Dr. Eric:
I appreciate it. Thanks for having me.

Meredith:
Awesome. Thanks, Dr. Eric. Thanks, Dr. Pompa, as always, and thanks, everybody, for tuning in. We’ll catch you next time, and have a great weekend. Bye-bye.

161: How to Walk the Talk

Transcript of Episode 161: How to Walk the Talk

With Dr. Daniel Pompa, Meredith Dykstra and Dr. Randy Michaux

Meredith:
Hello, everyone, and welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m your host, Meredith Dykstra, and this is Episode #156. We have our resident cellular healing specialist, Dr. Daniel Pompa, on the line. Today, we welcome very special guest, Dr. Randy Michaux.

Before we jump into today’s topic, let me tell you a little bit more about Dr. Randy. -inaudible- Michaux is a chiropractic physician. He received his Doctor of Chiropractic from Palmer College of Chiropractic in Florida in 2007. Additionally, he has extensive training in cellular health and cellular detox. He is a speaker, husband, father of four awesome kids, and a Spartan racer. Dr. Randy believes that we each have a God-given purpose. As we seek to understand this purpose, we are led and guided in ways that strengthen both our physical and spiritual health.

Welcome, Dr. Randy, to Cellular Healing TV. We have a lot to talk about today.

Dr. Michaux:
Thank you so much. I’m excited to be here.

Dr. Pompa:
We’re pleased to have you. We want to just always bring testimony to what we’re doing. We’re a growing group of doctors that are doing something very unique and changing lives all over the planet. You’re one of them, so we want to hear from you.

Let’s start. You have quite a great personal story. Start there. What brought you into this?

Dr. Michaux:
I was talking to Meredith before. Preparing for this, I went back to early 2011 where I’m 6, 3. I weigh about 185. I had dropped down to about 155.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s what I weigh, but I’m short. I’m 5, 9.

Dr. Michaux:
I didn’t understand why. Here I am a chiropractor. I’m doing all the things that I know how to do, but yet I don’t feel like I’m digesting food. I’m getting migraine headaches almost weekly if not every other day. I had to shut my office down multiple times because migraines were so severe that I couldn’t function. I couldn’t work.

Went to a holistic doctor and she essentially told me that your gut is a wreck. Go figure with all the things that I’ve learned now. She said that you’re on your way to colon cancer. I’m like I’m 33. How is this even possible? That’s something that people get in their 70s, not their 30s.

For the first time, my wife and I were really exposed to the necessity of organic foods, of reducing sugar, of concepts with how the liver helps detoxify. Here I am thinking I know a lot about health but really realizing that I didn’t know anything, thought I knew a lot.

This was really my wife—this was the start of our journey in health. We made a lot of drastic changes. We cut out almost all the refined sugars. I was eating a super restrictive diet. You only do those things that restricted if there’s a compelling reason. My compelling reason was I’ve got four kids. There’s no way I can let this thing keep going. I’ve got a practice and a wife.

That changed, improved. My health got better, started seeing my weight gain, and got back up to my normal weight, 180, 185. Things were going along really well.

Then, 2014 hit. My dad came into the office probably 4 to 5 days before my 37th birthday, 38th birthday and said I’ve got cancer. It’s of the liver.

My dad was former Marine, so he always had this look in his eyes of determination and I can conquer anything. On this day, and I can still—on this day, that wasn’t there. There was fear. There was anxiety. I don’t know what’s going to happen.

I remember this was really a turning point for me because with everything that, again, I thought I knew, how come I didn’t see these things? As he went forward, he died two months later. This was middle September, so he died two-and-a-half months later end of September. It just rocked all of us.

Then I began to put things together. I saw prediabetes. I saw things with autoimmune that, looking back, I can start to piece things together. Then I’m seeing my own self in that, like wow, this is where I was maybe headed. Things, again, had to change.

If that wasn’t bad enough, my sister’s health began to tank. This is where I really met you and was introduced to true cell detox with a doctor in Boise, Idaho, Dr. Todd. My sister was introduced to him. I’ll never forget our conversation where, for the first time, she had hope because she was hearing—she was talking about cellular inflammation, and chronic inflammation of the cell, and toxins, and gut health, and things that I had heard of. I had met you at a Dr. Fred conference and started following your stuff online. Still, it was such tip of the iceberg.

As I’m hearing things from her, I’m like Jenny, you have to do this. This is everything that you need. Talked to Dr. Watts, then he said hey, there’s this seminar coming up. You need to go.

I remember listening to you and hearing everything about true cell detox and about ancient healing strategies. I’ve never been more determined to—this is my path. This is what I’ve been led to. It was truly a—it was where I was supposed to be: the right time, the right timing for me because I had had a short conversation with you. I don’t know if you remember but probably a year-and-a-half prior to that, I said I’m not ready to make these changes yet. When I am, I’m going to call.

Now, here I am. Our whole family has made these phenomenal changes with cell detox. My wife is doing this. I think she is more spot-on than I am with things. To see her health—found out she was prediabetic and completely has changed that. Her life has been changed.

My life has been changed. We talked about these Spartan races. The change that I’ve seen physically in myself in terms of recovery, and stamina, and mental clarity has just gone through the roof. I’m getting to levels that I really only hoped for at best.

Dr. Pompa:
I’ve watched your health change through this, just implementing what you teach right now, what we teach. I’ll tell you, your call—people are being called. Doctors are being called into this because there is so many people that are experiencing exactly what you experienced.

Cancer, we talked about this on the doctor call today. I don’t know if you were on the training call, but someone in our profession just had died. He wrote a book about cancer. People were taken back by it. He had cancer five years passed, and he wrote a book about conquering it. I think everyone was stunned that he died.

When I was asked about it, I wasn’t—not because I’m negative and not because I didn’t love who he was. The guy was a world changer. However, I said this was a deep-rooted thing; 30 years of bio-accumulating toxins in our flesh. I know that he didn’t dig deep enough, long enough to those deep-rooted tissues and really remove the source.

We understand that we’ve been bio-accumulating toxins for the years that we have since our mother’s womb, triggering certain genes, driving cellular inflammation, causing prediabetes, cancer, and everything else that we’re suffering from. It’s amazing that we all don’t have cancer, honestly. I think that every one of the doctors on the phone, we all walked away from the conversation today more inspired to do multiple brain phases, to continue to do brain phases.

Even me, I do them. I just got off one a week ago. You know what? I’m doing them more frequently. Just knowing that the amount of toxins we’re exposed to today, it’s just unrelenting. We live a clean life. Not to mention what you’ve accumulated from a child. You put all that together—I’m telling you, Dr. Randy, it’s amazing that more people don’t have cancer.

You were headed down that road. How has that changed you as a practitioner, to know that you’re bringing the truth? How’s your headspace coming because you’ve been changing lives now in the short time that you’ve been doing this program? You’re making a difference all the sudden. What changed here?

Dr. Michaux:
Again, I go back to my dad and thinking that—not realizing all the things that he’d been exposed to, in Vietnam exposed to Agent Orange. Growing up, he talked about running through the fields as they were spraying DDT, a field of just white, running through it thinking how cool it was, and us laughing about it. These were the things that started decades ago with him as a kid.

What’s changed for me is this mindset of you are running out of time. There’s not enough time to delay and hope that something comes along or hope that I’ll just let nature take its course. It’s been this mindset change of if I don’t change now, then are my kids going to have a dad through my 70s, 80s, 90s, 100? Are they going to be around? My wife, looking at her health, it was the same. Here I am, a chiropractor, unrelenting back pain in my wife and things that just weren’t—I didn’t understand them.

Now that I see how—I think you said it best. It’s bio-accumulation. It’s not one thing. You expressed it so eloquently on the “Vaccines Revealed” that it’s not just one. It’s this whole accumulation starting in utero and building up. Really understanding that and—understanding it here, not here. This is part of it. Understanding it here, you feel compelled. I feel compelled to share hey, this is what I’m doing, and this is why, and this is how your life can change, and really finding out what you want, why do you want it.

It’s all been about mindset. My mind wasn’t always in the right place. I’ve always been one that wants to help, that loves to serve, but the belief in myself has not always been there. I think this goes with healing the cell. You’ve said this, others have said this, that you are the five people you hang out with. I had to take inventory of who am I—who do I talk with most frequently.

I can say that that has changed. That has changed me from a mindset point, as well, not just health but spiritual health and emotional health. It’s gotten me to a much higher place so that I can sit down in front of someone, stare them in the eye, and tell them this is how you’re going to get your life back. This will get your life back.

Dr. Pompa:
Confident that you’re bringing the real deal, confident that you’re bringing something that no other practitioner is bringing. When we look at the MTA or the multi-therapeutic approach—we were discussing it today as a group of doctors. We know that we have such a confidence, knowing that we’re bringing the answer. We can’t say we have all the answers, but we have something so unique that nobody else is bringing.

What changes have you seen? Now that you’re dealing—talk about some of the cases. You do a lot of thyroid. You do a lot of, I think, maybe diabetes. Talk about that.

Dr. Michaux:
Let me, if I can—let me just start with myself if that’s okay. Again, here I am now. This is back last year, last April. I had finished my fourth year of Spartan racing. I had gotten this bug that I loved doing these endurance events. Even during the race, I find myself thoroughly enjoying them.

I would finish one, and I’d be laid up for a week. My legs would just ache. Walking up stairs let alone trying to do squats or trying to train for the next one, it was—I wouldn’t say debilitating. That’s too strong of a word, but I had to rest for a week. I wanted to exercise more.

I remember talking to you in April or May. You had looked at my questionnaire, at my stuff. You’d said here are some things I think you need to change. The first -inaudible- into ketosis. You said you have so much stress that you’re putting on your body through these races that you have to down regulate inflammation. You have to get your cells stronger. You said get into ketosis.

I told Meredith before the show—I’m like you want me to fast when I’m exercising? Really? I remember doing that years ago, or on a fast Sunday at church, and migraines and I’m in a dark room for three hours. You said no, do this and you’re going to see the results.

I’m like okay, I know that he knows a lot more than I do. He’s been down this, so I’m going to start. I think that day I said Jenny, here’s what I have to do, blah, blah, blah. I went on with it. I think the first race that I had was maybe a month after that. I felt really good through the race. It was 15 miles.

For those people who don’t know what a Spartan race is, you have obstacles. You’re carrying 60-pound buckets of rocks, hauling 55-pound logs, rock-wall climb or log climbs—sorry, wall climbs, climbing ropes, going through mud. All these are on a mountain course, so a ski resort that we’re going up and down while doing all this stuff.

I came off that first race, and it was the first time that one, I didn’t have to eat anything during the race. I didn’t need these protein gels that I never felt good taking. Otherwise, I felt like I was going to pass out in past seasons. I’m like this is really cool.

Dr. Pompa:
Fat adapted, you were fat adapted.

Dr. Michaux:
Then I came off the race. My wife is like you almost finished an hour before you did last year at the same—she was shocked. I’m up walking. I’m moving. I’m talking. She’s like you’re different.

I remember the next day. We drove home from I think it was New Jersey. We drove home that day, another six hours in the car. I got out of the car and was like oh, legs feel pretty good. Maybe I can work out on Monday, and started right back into training, and was like wow, there’s something to this.

That was my first step. Then you told me now you’re going to need this product Asea, which is going to help with your performance. It was funny because my wife in the background, she’s like he’s sold. You said increase performance. He’s going to buy it.

Just long story short, the races that I did last year, I finished each of them an hour faster than I had the previous year and didn’t have this burn in my legs. I could walk up the stairs when I got home, back in my office on Monday, feeling like life is good. Let’s do another race this week.

Every three weeks this past year, I was doing a race. The recovery was huge. What that helped me see was that one, my cells were not in this lactic acidosis state that I’ve learned from Dr. Darren, and from you, and Dr. Seyfried talking about that, which scared me to death when I learned about that. I’m like oh my gosh. This is going on in me, this build up.

That alone has been really cool because it’s encouraged my patients to say well, I want to experience the same things that you are. Maybe I don’t want to do a race, but we just see your health improving and how dedicated you are to it. That has been a really neat to see effect that I never expected or never looked for, for people to start making changes in their lives.

Dr. Pompa:
It gives you a different authority when you sit before a patient or client having experienced it yourself. Your confidence, you come from a different place. Honestly, you’re changing lives like crazy now because you believe it. You’ve experienced it.

Dr. Michaux:
Yeah. Now when I look at the patients that I work with, I think the biggest thing is one, to listen. I had someone come in last week that she said you know, you’re the first person—I’ve been to holistic doctors. I’ve been to naturopaths. I’ve been to so many. She said with this approach that you have, you’re the first person that’s ever addressed my amalgams. You’re the first person that’s ever addressed the chemicals that I’ve been using for the past 30 years with my business. She said I never once thought that that had affected me.

This multi-therapeutic approach, as we’re looking at how our bodies are changing, these toxins are just killing us. It’s a slow death, sometimes a fast death. To begin to roll back the effect of toxicity on people, to see people start to lose weight for the first time in 30 years because they’re releasing toxins, that their body can let go of fat for the first time, and then the energy that’s changing. It’s such a delight to have people come back in for their followup and be like oh my gosh, people are noticing my skin’s better and my hair’s better. I don’t have this brain fog. It’s like this curtain is starting to lift. It’s just amazing to see that.

Here, they’ve been stuck on Synthroid or something else like that for five years, and they just keep increasing the dose when their cells just can’t perform. We start to utilize this multitherapeutic approach of working on the genes, working on their gut, working on the inflammation. There’s just nothing like it.

Dr. Pompa:
The changes are lasting because I know when I was getting my life back, I could do certain things, and I would go oh my gosh, this is it! This is working. Then a month later, I’m back to where I was. Then I’m on to the next thing and on to the next supplement. None of it lasts until you get upstream and remove the cause.

One of our goals always is to educate people in this process. If you work upstream and you truly get to the cause at the cellular level, it’s a lasting change. Your life is going to stay this way. You’re not going to end up a statistic.

Our message, I hope it falls not on deaf ears. You experienced it. I experienced it. We all have experienced it. We have a world to change because even in the alternative world, they’re telling a different story.

People, human, want that one thing. They do. They want that one darn miracle supplement or drug, whatever it is. That’s it. They don’t want to really make the changes. They don’t want to go upstream and do real detox. They tell us. That’s what got your life back.

Meredith, I’ll open it up to some questions for you. Thanks for sharing, Randy. That’s an amazing story.

Dr. Michaux:
Absolutely.

Meredith:
There’s so much that we can talk about. What I like to know sometimes is okay, Dr. Randy, you’re implementing all these strategies, but what does that look like in a day of a life in your life. What do you eating for meals when you’re training? What does that look like? What are some of the supplements you’re doing? What does your detox plan look like right now? Can you share some more of the nitty gritty so our viewers and listeners can have some more take-home strategies?

Dr. Michaux:
Yeah. One of the things that I’ve learned from you is the strategy of 5-1-1. That’s five days on of intermittent fasting. What that looks like for me is in the morning, I wake up. It blows some of my friends away that I’m not eating breakfast. I used to think it was the most important meal of the day. There’s no breakfast.

I wake up and I love Asea. I start with Asea and Restore. That is my breakfast, that and water. I won’t eat again until around 1, 2 o’clock. Sometimes, it’s not until I get home 7:30ish.

If I do have lunch, often I will have a big old plate of broccoli, put a tablespoon of butter on it, avocado oil. I’ll have some meat. I’ll have some ham with that. I know that pork is maybe not in the cell diet, but I still like ham. That’s my lunch.

For dinner, Jen, my wife, has fully embraced this. We’re going to have something where it’s high in fat, good fats. We’ll have something—last night was a stew. We had some new vegetables that we tried out. We were doing some fermented vegetables. We did some sauerkraut. I think that’s the first time I’ve had sauerkraut in 20 years and really enjoyed it. -inaudible- said hey, you’re going to be happy. You’re eating fermented foods tonight. Then it was a broth in that, bone broth. That’s my day when we’re intermittent fasting.

I might I’ll throw in, maybe in the mornings even, some coconut butter or some just grass-fed butter in general. I’ll just take a tablespoon and eat it.

Meredith:
Straight up, it’s so good.

Dr. Michaux:
It tastes good, right? That’s my eating. In terms of cell detox, I’ve been following the prep phase, the brain phase, the bio phase, the brain phase, and just doing cycles of that. Last Saturday, I started another round of the on phase of that to continually detox. I can tell that the first cycle of that was definitely yeah, you’re detoxing again. I’m following that. I might throw in some things for my adrenals because of just how much I’m exercising, that and the Asea.

That’s five days a week. One day, I’ll do a whole fast from dinner to dinner. I really find that I love those days.

Dr. Pompa:
Me, too. I love those days, too.

Dr. Michaux:
I used to hate those days because within three hours I was getting migraines, had no idea that I had a blood sugar problem. I just thought oh, everyone has this, right?

That’s what they think! They think oh, everyone has headaches. It’s like no. I haven’t had a migraine now for seven years, eight years. Anyway, I digress.

I’ll have that one day of fasting, and then I have my big eating day. That’s a chore. I’ve heard you say this before, Dr. Pompa. It’s like a chore to eat breakfast. I have to force myself to eat before 10 o’clock breakfast. It’s hard some days, but I need to do that because I do find then that when I go back to intermittent fasting that I’m more leaned. The two days following that I’m like I like my abs. It’s cool. It works.

That’s what I’ve done, and I’ll do phases of that. Right now, I’m not fully starting up. March is going to be where I really go full on into that. I would say this winter season I felt like I need to stop with the intermittent fasting and just go back to three meals a day. During race season, I am full on in that ketosis state because I feel better.

Even when I’m not doing full-on ketosis, I’m still three meals a day, and there is a fast day. I look forward to that fast day. It is a cleansing for me, both physically and spiritually.

Dr. Pompa:
No doubt. When are you exercising? Do you exercise first thing in the morning, midmorning?

Dr. Michaux:
I try to do mornings. I love the mornings, again, because the things that you’ve taught me. In the mornings, my growth hormone and testosterone are at their highest. If I’m going to eat and spike insulin, then I’m not -inaudible-. I love exercising in the morning because it even shoots that up more, not to mention I feel like hey, I’ve already accomplished something today.

For instance, today was a three-and-a-half-mile trail run, no breakfast, hadn’t eaten. Beautiful day outside, it finally stopped raining after two weeks here in Virginia. The mornings are, I find, the best time to exercise. It’s just there’s more clarity. I know what I’m doing hormonally for the body, that I’m up-regulating the hormones that are beneficial and reducing those that are not.

Maybe that’s the mindset that has changed, too, that I’ve talked about with people. This isn’t about weight. It’s about hormones, and cell inflammation, and reducing, and doing everything we can to see our cells as healthy as possible.

Dr. Pompa:
There’s no doubt. On a teaching note, that spike between 5:30 a.m. to 8:30 we get our highest growth hormone rise, testosterone rise. Working out in that range is a great time because you do, you get that—then working out empty stomach you get another growth hormone surge. It’s hormone optimization, no doubt.

Days I can’t, I’ll work out later. Studies show that people who worked out early in the day actually slept, got more time in deep sleep, than working out later in the day. Although I will work out later in the day if I have to, no doubt you don’t get as good of sleep. It does something, again, for the circadian rhythm, hormone rhythm, etc. Working out in the morning definitely helps.

Dr. Michaux:
I totally agree.

Meredith:
It makes sense from an ancestral perspective, too, where back in ancient times, they would get up early in the morning, and work, and go earlier in the day, but in the evening, they would rest more. It makes sense from that historical standpoint, too.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely.

Meredith:
Dr. Randy—oh, did you have something, Dr. Pompa?

Dr. Pompa:
No, go ahead.

Meredith:
I’m just curious, too, with the fasting. You’ve shared a lot about intermittent fasting, but do you incorporate block fasting at all? Is that too challenging with your racing schedule?

Dr. Michaux:
No, I’ve done a couple of those. Again, scary the first time. I did it with whey water. Again, I found that I like it. I felt energized as opposed to a lot of people think oh, fasting, lethargy, no energy. I was really just the opposite. It was really beneficial.

Now, during a race week, I won’t. Maybe some people might, but I won’t fast during, when I know a race is coming up, the week before. During this off season, I have. I’ve incorporated these block fasts. Just last week, it’s almost three days, not intentional. It should be but it’s almost three days of a block fast. I did have something at night, but still they’re just very cleansing. I feel that the benefit of that, especially after the race season and before, is to really, again, down regulate all the inflammation that we’re accumulating daily. That four or five-day fast is so healing for the body.

All my clients have felt better on it, too. Maybe the second and the third day, they’re not really enjoying that because their body is reverting from burning glucose to burning fat, but they come out of that, and look back, and they’re like wow, that really helped start to lift this curtain off me. I feel I’m not in the shadows anymore. I don’t have this fog, or at least it’s been lessened. The block fasting is incredible.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it is critical, especially the challenge cases that we see. Without block fasting, it would be almost impossible to down regulate some of the inflammation cycles that are there. Doing it while you’re doing cellular detox, it’s obviously part of our therapeutic approach for sure.

Dr. Michaux:
Yes.

Meredith:
I’m just curious, too. How has it been implementing the true cellular detox program in your office as far as maybe some testimonials or stories you want to share? So many people are reaching out more and more to our offices. We’re giving them true  cellular detox. They’re so excited about it but seeking some more stories and maybe some special pieces or some conditions that really responded to it. I don’t know if you have anything that you can share that you’ve seen in your clinic.

Dr. Michaux:
There are a couple people that I’m thinking of specifically. One lady came in, and she had been—started TCD, was not walking well, in bed probably 20 hours a day, very little resources to draw from. Started TCD and I remember when she came in the next month. TCD she was doing: I had her start in ketosis, I had her start intermittent fasting. I had her do a whey-water fast in the beginning. She started the prep phase.

She came back in that first month, and she had this huge smile on her face. I’m like okay, something’s change. She said I lost weight this month. I’m thinking well, that’s cool. She’s like no, you don’t understand. I haven’t been able to lost weight for ten years. That was huge for her.

We increased some things that she was doing. I’ll just go to most recently. She came back in, and she said I think I can go out and get a job again. She said I think I can go back to work because my energy is high. I’m feeling better. My joints don’t ache like they did. She said this is probably 80% less of this inflamed feeling in my body. She said I know that I’m getting my life back. It’s been remarkable to see this change in her.

She’s starting a brain phase I want to say this next week. Again, she was really excited about that. She’s like I’m just so excited that I get to get this toxicity out of my body and for it to heal. She knows it.

We’ve got another couple that started this. They did it together, and it was really cool. Again, this was inspired because they said hey, we see all the races you’re doing. We want to do something like that, but we’re not ready for it yet.

They did TCD together, incorporated some of the strategies, and just felt their energy start to increase, their clarity at work, the stress that they had at work. Both their jobs are very stressful. They said it’s not bothering us as much. We’re not feeling just so constricted because of the stress that we’re feeling.

Our exercise is better. We feel better after we exercise. We’re seeing improvements in so many different things in their health.

Everyone’s experience is different. That’s what’s so neat. They all have different things they come and say this is better, this is better, this is better. It’s unique to them. That’s what I love is that in their lives—many of them are saying this is going to affect my family and their family. It’s generations.

Dr. Pompa:
No doubt. It’s funny. I had a client today. She was saying oh my gosh, let me tell you about my husband now. He was the doubter. Now, he’s doing this. I have this all the time. It effects generations, even the ones who are skeptical in the same house because they start seeing the results of this one. That’s funny.

He got a hold of our TCD pilot challenge. He signed up unknowing -inaudible-. True story. Here he was the doubter, and he did it. He’s like from watching all the videos. Now he’s harassing her. You just never know how you’re going to affect people. It’s a great thing.

We live this life. We practice what we preach. We all have our story. We have a message the world needs. There’s no doubt about it. There is no doubt. Thanks for bringing it, Randy. Thank you for being on the show and giving your testimony. Thanks for living it day in and day out and every patient, client, that you come in contact with. They need you, bud. Awesome.

Dr. Michaux:
Absolutely. Thank you.

Meredith:
Thanks, Dr. Pompa. Dr. Randy, in closing, anything you’d like to share with our viewers or audience members who are listening and thinking about jumping into TCD and the multi-therapeutic approach, want to implement some of the strategies—what would you say to them?

Dr. Michaux:
I would go back to this 3% rule that you teach, Dr. Pompa. It’s a choice. The health decisions that we make, the life that we want to have is 100% a choice. When you take that step—I love this principle. It’s the principle of the gospel. You take that step, and the Lord is going to light your way. You may not see where that path is going, but you know that it’s right. Everything inside of your heart says yes, move forward, but everything here says but what if.

When we follow our heart and take that step, I love how the Lord opens up this path to us. We begin to see, not with our eyes, but we begin to see with our spirit that yeah, my body and spirit, when they are more in harmony, my life is better. I see things. I feel things more intently.

I would just say take that step. Follow your heart, as scary as that may be sometimes. Know that when you take that—this is my sister. Every reason to say no but she took that step forward, and it’s changed her life and her family’s life. It’s changed my life, big step meeting you in Atlanta, huge step for me to take. Just take it. Don’t worry about necessarily the how. Worry about why. Why do you want this? How is it going—why is it going to affect your life? Why do you want this improved health?

As you move forward in that, everything of what and how, those things are just going to appear, but we’ve got to make that choice and take that first step.

Dr. Pompa:
Well said, Dr. Randy. Well said.

Meredith:
Amen. Thank you so much, Dr. Randy, for being on the show. How can people find out more about you?

Dr. Michaux:
Our website is advspinalcare.com. We’re on Facebook. I do a lot of Facebook Live videos on health and really love those. Again, advspinalcare.com, and I just look forward to helping as many people as are ready.

Dr. Pompa:
Thank you. Thank you, Meredith.

Meredith:
Thank you, everyone.

Dr. Michaux:
Thank you.

Meredith:
Thanks, Dr. Pompa. Thanks, Dr. Randy. Thanks, everybody. Have a great weekend, and we’ll see you next time. Bye-bye.

Dr. Michaux:
Bye-bye.

160: Fasting Questions Answered with Dr. Jason Fung

Transcript of Episode 160: Fasting Questions Answered with Dr. Jason Fung

With Dr. Daniel Pompa, Meredith Dykstra and Dr. Jason Fung

Meredith:
Hello, everyone, and welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m your host, Meredith Dykstra, and this is Episode #160. We have our resident cellular healing specialist, Dr. Dan Pompa, on the line, and today we welcome back Dr. Jason Fung.

Dr. Jason had a very popular episode with us on Cell TV, and that was Episode 112. If you didn’t check that out or if you haven’t seen it before, you can watch it at podcast.drpompa.com, and search for Episode 112 there. Dr. Fung is a fasting expert. In this initial episode, we delved into the ins and outs of fasting. We talked about interim fasting and block fasting.

You guys just love that episode. We have well over 200,000 views already on YouTube, and it’s been in a lot of other places. There was a lot of amazing feedback, too. You guys loved it but had a lot of questions so want to do a followup episode with Dr. Fung just to get some more questions answered on fasting.

Before we jump in, Dr. Fung, what’s new? What’s been going on? You’ve had a few books come out since our last interview. Give us the update.

Dr. Fung:
The Obesity Code was my first book. That was released in about February, March of 2016. It really talks mostly about the science of what causes weight gain. My whole thesis is that you really have to understand what causes weight gain, what causes type 2 diabetes, in order to effectively treat that. At the end of the book, I touch on intermittent fasting and also extended fasting because the whole point is that insulin is the main driver of obesity.

One way to lower insulin is not with drugs because drugs generally don’t do that, but low-carbohydrate diets work. If you want to get the ultimate, fasting where you don’t eat anything really helps prevent the insulin resistance, which is the long-term problem. I spent the last chapter on it, but there’s a lot to talk about in terms of fasting. There’s lots of questions in terms of what regimens to use, what problems come up, what sort of things to expect because there are different things that happen, how long you need to get used to it, that kind of thing.

There’s really not a lot of resources out there, so I co-wrote with Jimmy Moore The Complete Guide to Fasting, which came out in October of last year. There it is. This really is a more practical guide to—sort of a how-to book. It has a lot of the science of fasting, but it goes with the other book so you get a complete understanding of why you’re doing it and so on. It really answers most of the questions that probably have come up in terms of what to do about medications, what to watch out for, when you have to be careful, and those sort of questions.

That was October of last year, and it’s been out for a couple of months. It’s done very well. I hope that people are able to read it, and take that information, and go forward, and give themselves an option in terms of weight loss because it’s not like you have to -inaudible- terrific.

Dr. Pompa:
You broke up there a little.

Dr. Fung:
Oh, sorry.

Dr. Pompa:
Did he break up on your side, there?

Meredith:
Yeah, a little bit of a delay.

Dr. Pompa:
Can you hear me, Doc? I hope you can hear me. Meredith has so many questions, there. I want to turn it to her. I’ll just say this: first of all, thank you for your work. I became friends with Jimmy Moore, who I know put some efforts into this, as well. Jimmy, fasting has made a massive impact in his life, insulin resistance. I can’t speak for Jimmy, but just hearing him, fasting probably had the greatest influence. No doubt ketosis and those things, but fasting really transformed him.

I train hundreds of doctors around the country. Part of my multi-therapeutic approach is fasting: block fasting and daily intermittent fasting. Doc, we utilize all of them, and we’ve seen absolutely amazing results. To have something like this book that really gives people some basics, it really is a complete guide to fasting, so appreciate the book, no doubt. I hope all of our listeners and viewers get it, no doubt about it because fasting, I believe, is—humans are meant to do it because we are forced into it, like you said.

Is there a need for it today? I don’t know. I think if you have challenges, I’ve watched miracles happen with fasting. However, I believe that something happens with the gene code when we fast, or go into forced ketonic states, and all these amazing things. I think there’s more to it than we even think.

With that said, Meredith, let’s just go right after it. We all love fasting.

Meredith:
We sure do, and we’ve got to walk the talk, right? It is amazing, the amazing strategy of it. Thank you, Dr. Pompa. You taught me all about fasting, as well. I had a lot of fears, just like so many people out there. As Dr. Fung and I were speaking about before we started the episode is that we just have to untrain our minds and our culture which has such fears around fasting. There’s so much misinformation out there. As we share today and continue to share, hopefully all of you will get more information on fasting and share it with those you love, too, because it is a transformative strategy.

With that said, let’s jump in here. A lot of these questions are posted on the YouTube page for Episode 112 of Cellular Healing TV, so I’ll just give an overview. We get this question a lot: does meal timing matter when we’re eating during our feeding window? When we’re not fasting, does it matter if we eat breakfast and lunch? What if we just eat lunch, or what if we eat lunch and dinner? Does the meal timing matter? Is it specific to people? Is a certain way of doing it, perhaps just eating dinner, better? What are both of your thoughts there?

Dr. Fung:
Yeah, I think it does make a difference. First of all, with everything, there is actually large inter-individual variation. Even though you can say one time is best, it may not actually be the best for you specifically. You have to always keep that in mind.

You see this with almost every dietary study. You do a low-carb study -inaudible- on average, people lose this amount of weight, but there’s actually a huge splay. Some people lose 50 pounds, and some people gain 10. Just because the average is a certain number doesn’t mean that it necessarily is the best for you. Always keep that in mind whenever you’re looking at things. We talk in averages because that’s all we can do.

If you look at the circadian rhythm, there’s a natural body rhythm. The least hungry you’re going to be in the day is 8 a.m. That’s for several reasons. One of them is that the body produces, just before you wake up, a counter-regulatory surge of hormones that includes norepinephrine, and growth hormone, and cortisol -inaudible- your body for the day, so you’re actually trying to get some glucose into the system and so on.

You’re actually not hungry. This is, when you look at large groups of people, you’re the least hungry at 8 a.m. even though, at 8 a.m. is the longest that you have been without food. What you have to understand is that hunger is not merely the absence of food in your stomach. That’s only one component. This is one of the things that fasting has taught a lot of people is that their hunger actually tends to go down the longer that they do the fasting, but 8 a.m. is the least hungry you’re going to be through the day. Forcing yourself to eat at 8 a.m. if you’re not hungry is not a winning strategy, right?

If you look at the nighttime, so late-night eating, 8 p.m. to midnight, for example—what you see is that for the same amount of food, you can actually get more of an insulin response, and insulin is the main driver for weight gain. If you’re worried about weight loss, if you eat late at night, you’re going to have more insulin effect and therefore, it’s going to have more of a fattening effect on you for the same number of calories. The eating late at night is also not a good strategy.

If you want to know what the ideal is, I think it actually lies somewhere in the middle, eating if you’re going to eat, say, one meal a day or have the largest meal, I think it actually makes the most sense to eat somewhere between 12 to 2 o’clock, something like that.

Now, that doesn’t work for a lot of people, myself included. I’m working, and I’m not about to break up my office, and go have a big lunch, and then come back into it. That doesn’t work at all. For me, you really have to take that physiologic, what is best, and fit it into your life.

There are other people who will eat mostly a big breakfast and do very well. Physiologically, I think I’d go with the large mid-afternoon meal if you’re going to go with a compressed eating window. I think that is optimal, but you can do very well eating early in the morning. You can do well eating late at night.

You see some of this in terms of the folk wisdom. You see a lot of people who have always said throughout the years oh, make sure you don’t eat right before bed because all of that is going to turn into fat. To some extent, that is true. -inaudible- late nights, and I would avoid the early mornings because it’s hard to really force feed yourself.

Meredith:
What does it mean—I’m just following up on that. If you wake up really hungry, what does that mean?

Dr. Fung:
It doesn’t really mean anything specifically. Everybody’s different. Some people, and I’ve treated a lot of people, they say well, I do best eating a big meal, a big breakfast. I’m like you know what, if that is what works for you, go for it. On average, people are not as hungry at 8 a.m. as they are in the midday. A lot of variation -inaudible- got to find what works for you.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m going to put this—by the way, my view on that is the same. I have some people who—even their schedule. It has to be successful even within their work schedule, their social schedule, so a lot of that determines it. Can they stick with it? We want someone to stick with it first and foremost.

I agree. I think the perfect big meal is the European way, right? Sometime in the afternoon, late afternoon would be optimal. Again, I’ve switched my eating window from maybe one. I tend to eat more at that time now and then a lighter meal, say, around five. I’ve switched that around, but it doesn’t work on the weekends for me. My wife and I go out to dinner, so on the weekends, I switch it out. You don’t even have to do the same thing every day.

I agree. Most people, carrying the fast through the night, not eating right away in the morning, I think for most people that works best because most people are not hungry first thing in the morning. I agree.

I’m going to Facebook Live this. I’m going to put it up there. Go ahead and ask the next question. I think people will love this. Go ahead.

Meredith:
Awesome. In the middle of a—we’re podcasting, recording, Facebook Living. Been loving the social media lately, Dr. Pompa.

I just wanted to followup on that, too. If you’re suggesting possibly a larger meal in the middle of the day, the European way, they suggest a siesta after that. What kind of effect would that have on our body composition or insulin response if any? I’m just curious.

Dr. Fung:
I don’t know that there’s a lot of data on the siesta, but certainly the old-style European, because you know a lot of Europeans are switching more to an American-style eating schedule, I think is ideal. They tend to have a big midday meal and then very light dinner. I think that works very well.

The siesta, personally, I think is great in terms of stress reduction, which is one of the things that is never really talked about a lot. Clearly, there’s an effect. All these stress hormones and if you’re under a lot of stress, you gain weight, right? If you’re not sleeping well and you’re under a lot of stress, you gain weight. We know that there’s an effect of these stress hormones. I wonder often.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible- TV episode, but I wanted to bring you in live because of the topic. Jason, meet the Facebook Live people. They’re going to be watching. Anyway, go ahead. Finish your point.

Dr. Fung:
Terrific. Yeah, as we were just talking about the siesta, and I think, personally, I love to sleep a couple hours in the afternoon when I can. It happens once a year, right? Sometimes on a Sunday afternoon, I’ll go oh okay, this is awesome. I find it just so relaxing. Sometimes I’m at the cottage, and I get a little nap in the afternoon. That is the best I feel all year because it happens two times a year, right? My kids always want me to take them fishing or something, right?

I think there is actually something to that. I think that the siesta specifically more relates more to stress, and relaxation, and so on. The problem, of course, is we go to these 24/7 worlds where we’re always working or always checking our emails. We’re always worrying about this. We’re always worrying about that. One of the things that really is important is to unstress yourself. Where I think to some -inaudible- lifestyle is disappearing, though. The European relaxed lifestyle, it unfortunately is disappearing. On the other hand, if you are able to incorporate some of these ideas, I think that’s great.

Just following up with Dr. Pompa’s ideas, our number one rule for fasting is really to fit it into your life and to really do something you can stick with long term because if you do these longer fasts but it completely breaks up your normal dinner with your family and you’re not going to social events because you don’t want to eat, that’s not the idea. The idea is to do what you normally do -inaudible- and slot it in. If it’s not a shorter fast, maybe a 16/8 schedule, then that’s what you should do, not try and force these schedules into your life and make it something of a big deal.

In the old days in a lot of religions, they would have prescribed periods of fasting so it would fit into people’s lives. Let’s say Greek Orthodox where they have lots of different fasting days, it does fit into their life because everybody in their community is doing it, too. They’ve already allowed for that Ramadan, which is the Muslim faith. There’s lots of different ways—around Easter, and Lent, and so on.

There are lots of ways that people have used to build this into their way of life. That is our most important rule so that you can keep it up long term because this is not something you do for a couple of days -inaudible- healthy and to stay on top of yourself, to prevent the illness, not to let it all build up.

Dr. Pompa:
Doc, we know that research is showing why so many amazing things happen during fasts. Healing occurs during fasts, and that’s why, as you mentioned, it’s throughout history. Every religious group fasts, everything fasting, Epocrates. We go back into history, and we can see that fasting has been a part of healing in multiple ways, even emotionally.

Today, I know the gentleman who won the Nobel Prize last year talks about autophagy being all these bad cells dying during fasts and good cells becoming stronger. What are some of the other reasons that you have found in your research why so much healing occurs during fasting?

Dr. Fung:
I think that’s absolutely right. One of the really powerful things that people talk about now is the autophagy. Related to that is this idea that everybody thinks that breakdown of protein is bad, but it’s not. In order for people to stay healthy, what you’ve got to do is break down all that old protein and rebuild the new protein. That’s how the body works.

If you look at bone, for example, our bones are not static throughout our lives. There are osteoclasts and osteoblasts. You’re actually turning over the bone, and that’s a cycle of renewal. If you leave that old bone on there all the time, it will become brittle, and it’ll snap. It’s the same with proteins. If you can take some of that old protein, break it down, and then rebuild it, it’s much better.

For example, if you think about renovating your kitchen or you’re renovating your bathroom, the first thing you’ve got to do if you renovate your 1970s bathroom is throw out that lime green bathtub that’s sitting there, right? You simply can’t build and put another bathtub on top of it. You’ve got to throw it out, right? You throw it out, and then you build it again.

If you think about what fasting does, that’s exactly right. You have this process that has been recently described, which is the autophagy, where you break down this old protein. On the other hand, you secrete very high levels of growth hormone, which means that when you start to eat, your body is going to start building up this new one. That’s perfect, right? It’s a complete renewal cycle. You’re renovating all your new cells. That’s incredible.

When people talk about it, there are several different areas that people are very interested in. One is Alzheimer’s disease because we know in Alzheimer’s disease, you have all this old junky old protein that’s sitting around clogging up your brain. What if you had a process where you could actually clear it out, and get rid of that old junky protein, and renew it? That’s amazing and maybe has the power to prevent something even as prevalent as Alzheimer’s disease.

The other thing that people talk about is cancer cells. Cancer -inaudible- your body to throw out some of this old protein and so on and get rid of it. Of course, the other powerful thing is that it lowers insulin -inaudible- which is very well known is that it’s a growth factor. If stuff is growing, if you’ve got fertile ground to grow cancer cells, then they’re going to grow. If you lock down the glucose and you shut down the growth factor such as insulin, it’s like taking away sunlight and water, right? Those cancer cells just cannot grow in that kind of environment.

Again, you have here something which is not a real treatment. It’s preventative, and that’s the way we’ve always used it. Do a week a year, a month a year, a couple days a week -inaudible- put a lid on all that stuff, but it’s a cycle of renewal. In that sense, it’s almost got an anti-aging property which is fantastic because this is what everybody’s looking for, right? They’re looking for this fountain of youth, and maybe we’ve had it all along, right? Isn’t that crazy? We had it all in front of us all along. We just decided to ignore it, right? That’s the crazy part about it.

Dr. Pompa:
We know with fasting that certain genes get turned on for longevity, the SIRT1 gene, for example. We know that bad genes get turned off. In another study that was—I don’t know. Maybe it was two years ago. Maybe it was last year. They showed that during fast, the proteins, your immune cells actually get depleted in a good way. Then, because the body comes back in an adaptation, you actually make all these stem cells because it wants to regenerate these immune cells. It makes better immune cells, stronger immune cells. It starves down the old ones, gets rid of them, and makes new ones via stem cells.

They were saying that with another recent fasting in cancer—what works so well for cancer is the stem cell connection. I’m sure you’ve read that study.

Dr. Fung:
Yeah, absolutely. There’s many potential mechanisms, not a lot of studies in humans, honestly, but so many interesting things that could come out of it.

Really, as in medicine, you always look at what the risk/benefit ratio is. -inaudible- benefits aren’t proven. What’s the risk? People have been doing it for thousands of years at least, at least since we became humans. There’s very little risk to doing it on a regular basis. Not like all of a sudden just jumping out and doing a huge 40-day fast when you’re on 30 medications, right? That’s not what we’re talking about, right? We’re talking about doing it on a regular basis throughout your life the way people used to do it, right?

The risk/benefit ratio is just off the charts because the risk is so low when you do it on a controlled manner with education, and the benefits are potentially—look at the benefits: diabetes, weight loss, cancer -inaudible- modern medicine, right? Diabetes affects so many, anti-aging, so much. People talk about it in terms of athletics. People talk about training in a fasting state, all of these potential things.

One of the things that I think is personally very interesting that’s topical is also in terms of mental clarity. People talk about it in terms of being able to function better in terms of your mental clarity because everybody thinks oh, you eat food to let you concentrate. It’s actually the exact opposite. Everybody knows that. You eat a huge meal, and you get this food coma. After Thanksgiving meal, you sit down, and all you can do is watch TV, whereas when you don’t eat, your brain is actually able to work better. People talk about this mental clarity. People are using it almost as a biohack.

For example, a group in Silicon Valley, they meet together, and they’re young, skinny guys, right? They don’t need any of this other stuff, but they use it because they realize that they can use it to function better. If you’re in a hyper-competitive market, that means bigger promotion, more money. -inaudible-

Dr. Pompa:
You and I on the last episode talked about on our busiest days, we just simply don’t eat. I don’t even realize sometimes. I go oh, I didn’t eat today because I get so busy. My focus, my brain works the best when I’m in a fasting state. There is no doubt about it.

Many people watching this, Doc, are going to say it’s the complete opposite for me. I don’t know what they’re talking about because their cells are literally only able to use sugar, very little fat, as an energy source. They don’t adapt. When they go even three hours without food, they start getting dizzy, angry, irritable, but that’s a pathology of the cell. Talk about that.

Dr. Fung:
That does happen, for sure. It takes a couple of weeks for your cells to get used to it. When you first do it and you’re used to having all this sugar, and your body runs on sugar, and then you don’t give it sugar, you’re going to be a little bit off. Just like when people—you have alcoholics, for example. You’ve got these withdrawal symptoms. You have to let your body become accustomed to burning fat.

Now, it’s a lot easier to go from a very low-carbohydrate diet to fasting because your body is already used to burning fat whether it burns fat in your diet or whether it burns body fat, it makes no difference. It’s fat. It just burns it. We’ve noticed that people who come from that ketogenic, low-carb diet find fasting a very natural transition. They transition into it no problem. The people who eat 55, 60% carbohydrate diet like they used to tell us in the American Dietary Guidelines, they really have a hell of a time. Luckily, it only lasts for about two weeks. Then your body just gets used to the fasting. After that, away it goes.

Certainly, there is a period of adaptation. People used to call it different things -inaudible-.

Dr. Pompa:
Keto flu, yeah.

Dr. Fung:
—week or two where you just feel like crap because your body has no sugar, which it’s used to, and your body is not yet used to burning fat. You’ve really got no energy. You can’t really think and that sort of thing.

It’s interesting because if you look at the muscles, when you switch over to a ketogenic diet, for example, you see that you upregulate the genes that let the muscle oxidize the fat better. You can actually stain for that. You can see that when you go on to diet -inaudible- just fuel source the fat.

Your muscles, for example, don’t have all the receptors that they need to burn it properly, right? It upregulates. You start to produce more of them. Then, you use the fat more efficiently. Then, you’re good to go. About two weeks, we tell people. It takes that much time.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re saying the muscles—you were breaking up there. For our viewers here just bring some clarity. You were saying that these receptors in the muscles and possibly in the liver, they become more efficient. They become active, if you will, and you may even develop more of them. Therefore, now all the sudden, you’re utilizing fat for energy at a much better rate.

Dr. Fung:
That’s right.

Dr. Pompa:
Go ahead, Meredith. I know we have a lot of questions from the last show. These Facebook Live people probably didn’t realize that we do have another episode that we did. This is part two of an interview with Jason Fung. Go ahead and ask some of those questions because those are great questions. People have them.

Meredith:
There sure are so many. Just want to follow up quickly, though, because so many people do pair the keto diet with fasting. Is the success of that likely due to the fact that the keto diet really tends to suppress our hunger from all of the fat?

Dr. Fung:
I think there is that because if you look at the study—I think this is quite interesting. If you eat proteins, there are hormones that get released, such as peptide YY, that will tell us to not eat anymore. That’s satiety. The same for dietary fat: if you eat fat, you release cholecystokinin, which has the same sort of satiety mechanism, whereas if you eat a lot of refined carbohydrates, sugar and wheat for example, you don’t get that.

It’s very easy to see because if you eat a big huge buffet meal and then somebody says well here, have another pork chop, you’d be like oh, I really can’t do that. If somebody says oh hey, you want a cookie? You’re like yeah, sure. I could do a cookie. They might be an equal number of calories, but you really see that the cookies really don’t activate your satiety mechanism, so you can stuff it down.

This is what I call the second stomach phenomenon, which is what we used to say as kids. Your mom would say do you want a cookie, and then you’d say yes. She’d say hey, I thought you were full. No, I have a second stomach for deserts. That’s what we also used to say as kids. It’s true because you can. You can put it down no problem. You could eat two cookies and some ice cream no problem.

That’s the whole idea that if you go for a ketogenic diet, then you’re activating all -inaudible- to that intermittent fasting. If you’re doing shorter ones, like 16 hours, 24 hours, then you’re going to naturally go into that. It’s very, very easy.

Yeah, I think the satiety mechanisms do play a big role. If you’re coming from a very high carbohydrate diet—this is the whole problem is that if you eat two slices of white toast with jam in the morning, which used to be quite common because hey, there’s very little fat in that, then you get hungry at 10:30. If you eat a couple of eggs, you’re not hungry until 12. That’s that satiety effect, and that’s very important.

It was eating all those refined carbohydrates in the first place that led us to say oh yeah, you should just eat all the time. It’s like okay, but that doesn’t make any sense physiologically. I think it’s a lot easier coming in.

Dr. Pompa:
One of the things I wanted you to address is that five, six meals a day. Many people watching this still are hearing from their trainer or someone else to eat five, six meals a day. What I always say is it kind of works in the beginning. You maintain your metabolism. People could lose a little bit of weight. Then they hang onto that, but it would stop. Then they don’t lose weight. Now, you’re aging faster than you should. Eating more we know ages you more, especially when you eat more often. Speak to that a little bit.

I think he froze. His internet is in and out.

Meredith:
Shoot. You could speak to it, and then we can follow up with Dr. Fung.

Dr. Pompa:
I’d love to get Doc’s opinion on that just because I’m sure he hears that all the time. What we say on this show is don’t eat less, eat less often because we know that if we just cut calories, our metabolism does go down. The premise of keep your metabolism up, eat more often, people do tend to lose a little weight in the beginning because they’re so catabolic, and it keeps their body from burning its muscle and keeps the metabolism up.

It’s short lived. It really backfires because you’re not ever giving your body time to burn its own stored fat for fuel. When you’re doing that, when you’re not eating in an intermittent fasting state, whether it’s fasting through the night, 16 hours, 18, 20, you’re allowing your body to burn its own fat, and therefore you’re getting a very constant glucose and insulin. That’s the key to living longer. We know that.

Ketosis was called the diet that mimics fasting because you’re basically getting this rise in ketones. It mimics fasting. I think that fasting itself brings a whole lot of different and more benefits than even does ketosis. Putting them together is magic, as well.

I think he might be back, here. Dr. Fung, are you with us?

Meredith:
Is that where -inaudible-. He’s coming back on. I think the satiety component with the keto diet, as we were just talking about, too, is really key.

Remember that study I sent you not too long ago, Dr. Pompa, where most Americans are eating probably 15, 18 times a day. Remember I thought that was so shocking, but most people out there aren’t counting that handful of nuts their eating, or the half a smoothie they’ve drunk, and those little things that they’re having throughout the day. That still counts as food. It’s still spiking their insulin.

Dr. Pompa:
It is, and you’re spiking insulin even if you ate a salad or a handful of nuts. Again, you want to die sooner, you want to age faster, just eat, honestly. Every longevity study is basically done—the science shows. Eating less is the key. However, you can’t just say okay, I’m done eating. Really, the key is eating less often.

I had the opportunity to visit a hunting/gathering tribe that ate one meal a day. It was the first I saw that, but again, even ancient Europe was two meals a day. They had their dinner in the middle of the afternoon and later on in the day another meal, but they didn’t eat breakfast.

I think that there are so many studies that show this, that we have it all wrong as far as the number, eating more often. It’s just a fast way to age, fast way to age.

Meredith:
When you were just watching them eat that one meal, too, was it a massive meal or was it just like it was a big meal but it wasn’t shockingly huge? I’m just curious.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, they sure did. They ate a lot, I have to say. It wasn’t like it was this quick thing. I think even when we look at any ancient culture, that meal time, it’s their social part of their day. It almost tends to go on for a couple hours, right?

I do the same thing. Once I start eating—let’s say I’m going to eat at 4 o’clock today. I can continue that process. I start with some cheeses. I start with maybe some nuts. Then, I sit down to the meal. A glass of wine, dry farm wine, but the whole process is a process. -inaudible- lifestyle. We’re in and out. We don’t even sit down. I think that it really is—that one big meal wasn’t like they sat down and got up 45 minutes later.

During that time period, they ate a lot more food. Imagine if you tried to eat all that in a half hour. It would seem ridiculous. As you put the social end of it in, you eat longer.

Meredith:
Such an important point, too, to just think of the joy factor as we eat, as well, and to really enjoy it. I think, sometimes, when we’re very health-minded and health-focused, it can just be a little bit legalistic. Okay, I’m going to sit down, and I’m going to eat my grass-fed protein, and my coconut oil-fried vegetables, and my organic sweet potato for my starch because I’m supposed to have my starch in the evening to carb backload—just taking the joy out of the experience, whereas if we’re just eating and having a few hours to enjoy it where we’re starting with the cheese. Oh, there’s Dr. Fung again. Hopefully, we’ll get him back on. Have that beautiful experience around food which we’re meant to enjoy then we can even get more benefit from the food when we eat it, as well.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, I know. There’s no doubt. Dr. Fung, are you with us?

Meredith:
Oh, shoot. I see him, see his picture.

Dr. Pompa:
The guy is a wealth of knowledge. I know one of the questions is—we get it all the time as far as can diabetics fast. This is what Dr. Fung does. He’s fasting people with massive insulin resistance and diabetes. His results have been more than spectacular. Obesity, all of it, they’re fasting, again, with amazing results. I think that if we can get him back on, we’d really gain a lot.

Meredith:
He said his Wi-Fi died again. Darn.

Dr. Pompa:
-inaudible- Tell him to look at other things pulling from it.

Meredith:
He’s on a desktop now and just doesn’t have a webcam. Dr. Fung, if you can just do audio, that’s great.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, fine.

Meredith:
If you just want to speak. Can you hear us?

Dr. Pompa:
Ask me another question that people had because I really wanted this to be about answering their questions.

Meredith:
A lot of people who are commenting and having questions on the impact of fasting on the microbiome, a couple questions on how fasting could impact SIBO specifically, and a general impact on gut issues, and how fasting can be healing for really specific gut challenges.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s one in our category of ancient healing strategies. I always say you can’t fix the gut with just giving bacteria. We look at ancient healing strategies. Diets, ketosis, cellular healing diet, that’s how you fix a gut. Fasting intermittent, block fasting, that’s how you fix a gut. Even diet variation, that’s how you fix a gut.

Fasting is magical for the gut because you’re starving down old bacteria. Then, just like we said we’re starving down immune cells really fast, and stem cells recreate stronger, better ones, the same thing is happening with the microbiome. We’re starving down bacteria. Now, we’re able to create better, stronger good guys, getting rid of the bad guys.

Reinoculating after a fast is a really perfect time to start eating some fermented foods and different things, good rich fibers, that will feed the good guys, as well. Just the resetting of the microbiome occurs during fast. I would love to get Dr. Fung’s opinion on that because I know he may even be a part of some of those studies.

Just referring back to why people are sick, the gut today is damaged, the microbiome. We know that toxins are playing a big role here. We know that certain genes get turned on. The multitherapy approach, we use these ancient healing strategies like fasting as really the key to how you fix a gut today and a microbiome.

Meredith:
Are there more healing methods of fasting or liquids to fast on than others for gut healing?

Dr. Pompa:
I would say that each fast is a little different. It’s different for everybody. Pure water fasting you get the most autophagy happening, where you’re starving down bacteria and bad cells. Broth fast you get a lot of different electrolytes, and type II collagen, and different minerals that are amazing for the gut. Then, we have whey water, which is a whole different type of fast that offers different fermented, different bacteria, many different types of fast which could be appropriate for people at different times. I like to use a variety of different fasts with people. The body almost gravitates to one over the other.

Meredith:
I remember when I first met you, and started with the company, and learning about fasting, I did a four-day whey water fast. I found it to be—it was so healing but so easy, too. I couldn’t believe it because I thought the whey water was delicious, number one. As you’ve said, number two, especially for those starting out if you’re listening, haven’t done a block fast before, which means fasting for consecutive days—that the whey water can be very easy because the blood sugar stays balanced because of that lactose in the whey water.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly. It’s an easy one for people to do because they’re not used to using fat for energy. Those first two or three days can be hell. The whey water absolutely makes that easier.

No doubt I’m a firm believer in water fasting. I’ve studied it for years. I think it’s the most natural way of fasting. Partial fasting in many ways, maybe just with some fats, MCT oil or coconut oil with some broth, you’re going to get a lot of benefits there, too.

I think I’m always asked this question: how long should I fast? We’re talking about block fasting, not daily intermittent fasting, which maybe some of our people are new to this. Block fasting, I like four days. Many people just do a three-day fast, but when you understand that what’s happening from a physiological standpoint, you realize that most of the magic happens on day four. Why stop at the fast day three? It takes that adaptation to break through to where you’re now actually producing really high ketones.

We measure ketones. This is one of the ways I do. This is a breath—it looks at acetones in the breath. Then, of course, we can do the blood prick, too, which I do. Right now, I’m doing some experimenting with both.

We’re able to see higher levels of ketones on day four, which again, ketones turn off bad genes. Ketones heal the brain. Ketones are remarkable for all types of different healing that’s occurring in the cell. If you tested your ketones, you would realize why would I stop day three so at least day four.

From there, I will even put people in maybe a partial fast where they’re not doing any more than 3 to 500 calories in a day. It could be from broth, fats, avocado, some very light foods, maybe some eggs. Going from a fast to a partial fast, the healing will still occur.

You can tell because their tongues will change. Some people don’t have a lot of nutrition stores. It’s very difficult for them. In a partial fast, you’ll see their tongue turn white, yellow, green where the body says you know what? I’m good with this. I’m going to continue healing.

I hope Dr. Fung -inaudible-. He may not be able to join us again.

Meredith:
No, unfortunately his Wi-Fi has dropped, and he doesn’t have a mic and just really not sure why he can’t get back on.

Dr. Pompa:
We’ll have him on again. We’ll have him again. Let me answer some more questions. We’ll finish out the hour, here. While you’re doing that, I’ll just show—go ahead. Ask me a question. I’m going to do this.

Meredith:
Okay, let’s see what your ketones are right now. We’ll check where you’re at, Dr. Pompa. Awesome.

One of the questions: how can people avoid weight gain post fast? I think this is more in reference to block fast versus the daily intermittent fast, of course. They’re doing this fast for a couple of days—which I wanted to make that point, too. Once you’re on day three, day four, you’re hunger really does shut off at a certain point. It’s not like you’re starving the whole time or if you are hungry the whole time during a longer block fast, then maybe there’s something else that’s more broken at the cellular level, I think. Anyway, just to kind of—if they’ve done a longer fast, three, four days, hopefully have hit that four-day mark and they want to avoid the weight gain post fast, what do they do?

Dr. Pompa:
Look, you don’t come off of a fast and go into the standard American diet. That would be a waste. You don’t break a fast too hard. You break a fast very gradually, of course, very slow and low: soft foods, blended foods, some cooked. Believe it or not, raw is harder to break down even than cooked vegetables so soft cooked vegetables. That’s really the appropriate way to break your fast. Avocado is perfect. It’s what you do post fast, that’s why you wouldn’t gain weight.

You move right into ketosis. I love taking people out of a fast. They’re forced into ketosis in three days. All of a sudden, their ketones are going up, above .5 on a blood measuring hydroxybutyrate. When they start eating again, you’ll see a drop in that, but then they’ll start rising right back up and end up in ketosis. That’s an easy way not to gain weight after. Utilize that to force your cells to use fat for energy by going into ketosis. That would be one of the best suggestions I have.

Meredith:
Great, and it’s what you do after the fast. That is so true. Dr. Fung, we’re going to reschedule with him. Yeah, a few more here.

I thought this was an interesting question. It says, “Hi. How do you explain vegans or people who eat high-carb, low-fat diets and have normal blood sugar levels? I’m really curious about this because I have tried both low-carb and high-carb diets, and honestly, neither worked for me. I’ve had continuous elevated blood sugar for a few years now, and I don’t know how to lower it. I also have an eight-hour eating window for the same few years, and it didn’t seem to work. Do I need to fast for a longer period of time, or what could be going on?”

Dr. Pompa:
With every fast, more healing occurs. Every fast, your body gets more and more efficient. More bad cells die through autophagy. Like he was saying, the receptors become even more responsive. You can develop more receptors. With each fast, more efficiency. I just did a Facebook Live yesterday, and I talked about this with Marilee because Marilee was not successful in breaking through even in ketosis. Her glucose would remain a little high, and her ketones would not rise up.

Again, now it’s been whatever years intermittent fasting, and different daily fasting, fasting. Now, what’s happening is her glucose is dropping, her ketones are rising, but it took some time to get her to—she wasn’t sick. She wasn’t diagnosed with diabetes by any means, but no doubt about it she had some hormone resistance, which is what we see in a lot of women during perimenopause, with thyroid issues, etc.

I am often asked that question: is it harder for women? Scientists seem to say no, but I say clinically, yes. We see that, but that doesn’t mean you can’t break through.

Now, the other part of that question was why do you see some people on maybe a vegetarian diet with normal blood glucose? Again, a vegetarian diet could affect you in other ways, not just with an insulin resistance. Again, if you’re doing it right with a lot of fiber, that would control your glucose, too.

That doesn’t mean that eating all day is healthy. You could end up not having diabetes or insulin resistance and aging prematurely because the more often you eat, the sooner you’re going to age. It’s going to be a little different for everyone.

Right now, we’re doing a study with Dr. Mercola and some of our platinum doctors. We have them hooked up to what’s called Dexcom. That measures your glucose all day and night. We have a gal who is going in ketosis right now on a vegan diet. Just because you’re vegan or vegetarian doesn’t mean that you can’t go into ketosis, and we’re actually proving that.

There’s plenty of fats in vegetable form, and it’s still about carbohydrates, net carbs, meaning that you’re going to get a lot of fiber. You just keep your carbs low, and your fats high, and your protein moderate, boom. You’re on ketosis on a vegan diet. Pretty neat.

Again, I’m not saying that we should be in ketosis all the time. I think that I got some slack at the carb conference I spoke at. The point is that—

Meredith:
Good for you for sharing on it, going against the grain.

Dr. Pompa:
Every culture was in and out of ketosis. The moment they could get out for any reason, more root vegetables or berries, whatever it was, they did. They were human. I believe that these times of ketosis are really necessary to reset our DNA, to change our epigenetics. I think that we’re learning that these times in ketosis are very, very needed in humans.

By the way, many cultures went into ketosis because they lacked food. They were fasting or partial fasting. The Hunza people, it was starvation spring, out of food, the Indians, same thing. Fasting or just shifting to a diet higher in fat happened because it had to happen, or it was forced to happen.

Today, we’re loaded up with carbohydrates constantly. When I move into a higher-carbohydrate diet, I’m not saying moving into—it’s still considered a low-carb diet, by the way, whether it’s 100 to 150 grams of carbs a day. That by American standard—for me, that’s higher carb, but for the American standard, that’s still low carb. The average American gets 100 grams of carb for breakfast, for God’s sakes, of pure sugar.

Anyways, maybe there were some more questions you had there. Those were good ones.

Meredith:
Yeah, It is crazy to think that—I’m hearing a lot of echo.

Dr. Pompa:
I don’t hear your echo.

Meredith:
No? Okay. Just -inaudible-. Alright, so let’s see here.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, here’s a question. Here’s a Live question. Can I take a Live question?

Meredith:
Bring it on, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Gina said, “Is it wise to force your body into ketosis when you have elevated cortisol levels since ketones alone stresses the body, since ketosis alone stresses the body?”

No, because we actually see a lowering of cortisol because what happens is fat and ketones burn much more efficiently than does glucose. Remember, a cortisol rise is a normal response at certain times of the day. It’s not like every cortisol rise—now, hypercortisol is not good.

However, we know that we get this leveling off just because we’re switching the cell energy from being glucose driven, which drives up oxidation in the cell, to fat or ketones, which lowers it, which is taking a metabolic stress off the body.

Now, I would say this: for those people who have more adrenal fatigue, they need more electrolytes because during when you’re breaking through in adaptation in ketosis, switching from sugar burner to fat burner, that you will deplete glycogen in -inaudible- going out will bring some electrolytes with it. Magnesium, potassium, sodium, make sure you get these, even zinc. Definitely elevate that level. Salt intake helps you hold onto potassium, so we increase the salt.

By the way, salt is fantastic for your thyroid and your adrenals. Just support with some extra, at least 2 teaspoons, of sea salt a day when you’re especially breaking into ketosis. You will have success.

That was a great question. Bring me some more questions.

Meredith:
Awesome. Thanks, Gina, great question. We get this a lot: as far as during the fasting or the feeding window, the proper number of calories to eat. I know that may be dependent on goals. There are a lot of different variables, but how do people have a gauge for how many calories to consume during that fasting window to meet their needs?

Dr. Pompa:
I showed this article in Scientific American. The article, you should get this, Meredith: “Workouts and Weight Loss: Learn the surprising evolutionary reason why exercise alone won’t shed pounds.” In this, they were stunned because they measured the caloric output of one of these hunting/gathering tribes in northern Tanzania.

These people did the one-meal-a-day thing. All day, the men were out chasing down game. They’re literally exhausted, just like the tribe I visited. The women are out gathering. They’re just gone. It’s unbelievable the amount of work they’re putting in in a day.

They measured their caloric output with the most scientific way, the most accurate way. I think it’s called the doubly water test. It measures CO2, and it’s the most accurate way of looking at how many calories somebody burns at the end of a day.

You know what they found? For men, whether you were in this tribe—these men in this tribe who went all day long, burned 2500 calories a day on average. Guess what? Compared to the average American couch potato, it was the same! Humans were genetically burning about the same amount of calories. Ladies, it’s about -inaudible-.

Meredith:
Really?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. I think that my answer to that is why ingest more than 2500 calories unless you’re a body builder who’s trying to put on muscle. Then you’re going to want to take in more calories because you’re trying to transition that into muscle. Now, I think you’re giving up some health benefits when you’re doing that. To become larger, more muscular than the average human or your average metabolism DNA wants to be, you’re going to have to eat more calories.

The bottom line is that if this no matter what we burn, whether we’re sitting on the darn couch or whether we’re chasing down animals all day, I think this gives us a good idea. In your eating window, anywhere between 2,000 and 2500 calories is probably where you’re going to end up as far as what you need or want to be satisfied. I think it could be less. I think some people might have a lower metabolism.

Remember, these are averages for very healthy people. Unhealthy people, you may be a male burning 1800 for all I know. Again, that was a study done on a very healthy, thriving tribe that’s able to burn that genetic maximum human.

By the way, when they looked at primates, apes in the zoo—primates were half of the human caloric burn at the end of a day, basically exactly half. Apes in the zoo burned the same amount of calories as apes in the wild, despite being so much more active. Crazy, right?

Meredith:
Fascinating. That’s amazing that with such different lifestyles and activity levels, that it would be the same. That just speaks so deeply, I think, too, to an innate intelligence that, regardless of our situation, our bodies adapt. It’s really incredible, that information. I love that.

Do you have time for a few more questions, or do we need to wrap it up?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, go ahead. Give me a couple more questions. Maybe some of you on Facebook, share or like this, guys. I know you’ve all had a lot of questions about fasting and on ketosis. This is a way to transform many conditions. You heard Dr. Fung in the beginning of this talk about all these benefits. I wish we were able to keep him on. I’ll bring him on again. Share and like this with your people there.

Anyway, maybe I’ll get another question from here. Fire one more off me.

Meredith:
I think this is interesting, too, just curious to ask Dr. Pompa on fat fasting. This is a technique that I think some people use to break into ketosis and to burn fat where, literally, for days on end. I think I’ve done this for at least a day or two where you’re literally eating nothing but fat. Perhaps, you’re eating literally a stick of butter with sea salt or straight up coconut butter or coconut oil, literally eating pure fat for at least a day, maybe multiple days on end to break into ketosis and to burn fat. What are your thoughts there? Is that a healthy thing to do?

Dr. Pompa:
I think it’s degraded. I would call that a partial fast. You’re not purely fasting, but you’re eating fats. I’ve done that with several of my clients, especially for people who just are so unhealthy at the cellular level, in their mitochondria, that breaking through for them would be difficult. I would add some of these MCT oils, coconut oils, some ghee, some of these really sustaining fats, and they did good. They still got a benefit. Then the next time they fasted, or maybe two times later, then they were able to do just pure water. It could just be a strategy to break through. A little bit of broth and some fats is a nice modified partial fast.

Meredith:
Yeah, easier to maintain your insulin, and your blood glucose levels, and a transitional-type fast, that’s great. This is talked about a lot, too, unless you have some other questions coming in.

Dr. Pompa:
No, I don’t have any other coming in.

Meredith:
Some of them were just wondering about longer-term fasting and if there’s dangers to that. I know you’ve talked about this a lot, but I’m just really digging in for people who just aren’t getting results with intermittent fasting, shorter-term fast. They’re just seeking to maybe do a longer-term fast but also a little bit nervous about it. Can you speak to that?

Dr. Pompa:
I think that, first of all, to do a longer-term fast, you need a professional practitioner who understands fasting because, no doubt, intermittent fasting daily, I think that’s a completely different animal. Things can change. Electrolyte depletion can occur. Then, you must break the fast. Longer fasting, definitely supervised.

You’d be stunned—and I’ve realized just right now I have another call I have to get on, but you’d be stunned how long people can fast. Tell them the other episodes that we did with Dr. Dempsey fasted 22 days, another doc with 30 days. You can refer to those episodes. I’m going to sign off here. Go ahead and refer to those episodes on Cellular TV. Thanks, guys.

Meredith:
I’m not sure of the numbers exactly, but if you go to podcast.drpompa.com and water fasting done right is with Dr. Derrick Dempsey. He did a 22-day water fast. With Dr. Don Clum, he also did about a 30-day water fast. Those are about maybe around the 110, 114 marks for Cell TV. We’ll look those up and make sure they’re in the shout-outs correctly. Those are definitely key episodes to check out, as well, for those doctors who did longer fasts and got some really interesting results.

Thanks so much, Dr. Pompa, for the awesome answers. Thanks, everyone, for the amazing questions. Stay tuned, we’re going to get Dr. Fung back and dig into more of your questions for him. Have a wonderful weekend, and we’ll see you soon.

Dr. Pompa:
Thank you.

Meredith:
Bye, everybody.