2019 Podcasts

263: CHTV in Mexico: Innovations in Stem Cell Medicine

263: CHTV in Mexico: Innovations in Stem Cell Medicine

with Dr. Rafael Gonzales and Dr. Eduardo Ulloa

This is part 1 of a special 3 episode series, on location in Cancun, Mexico. I’m seeking out the little-known alternative health treatments that happen to be accessible to all of us. In this episode I’m inside the World Stem Cells Clinic with Dr. Rafael Gonzales and Dr. Eduardo Ulloa. We're discussing how they're harvesting their patients' own natural killer t-cells, and we’ll hear how they’re treating everything from autism to lyme disease with their modern stem cell treatments.

Use this link for a free consultation at Advanced Biomedicine Stem Cell Treatment Centers:

https://worldstemcellsclinic.com/

Transcript:

Episode 263

Dr. Pompa :
One of my favorite things to do ever is to travel places and bring you information you’ve never heard before, and really, the only way I can bring it to you is go there personally. Listen, we are doing a first here on Cell TV. I traveled to Mexico, and my goal was to bring some alternative treatments that could only happen in Mexico. You get what I’m saying? It’s treatments that most people don’t know about.

This is a three part series that I’m doing. The first interview which you’re about to hear is I interviewed a scientist, Rafael Gonzales. I’ll tell you, he is doing something that nobody in the US is doing, and I believe only one other organization in Japan is doing. They’re harvesting natural killer cells. Wait ‘til you see this interview. You’re talking about an answer that nobody is talking about, at least here in the US, for autoimmune, cancer, Lyme disease, other infectious diseases and causes in gut. He talks about how these cases are reversing severe gut disorders. Wait ‘til you hear that, and it’s available. It’s available to us, so I’m bringing you that.

We talk about some very special cells that he has created and that they’re using in studies. Again, you have access to these amazing stem cells, so we’re going to shed light on that. Then we bring the top cancer clinic in the world, and we’re going to be talking about those episodes. This is a three-part series. You’ll see me live in Mexico. Wait ‘til you see this particular episode. Stay tuned.

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith, and this is Part 1 of a special three episode series that was recorded on location in Cancun, Mexico. Dr. Pompa was down there to search out some alternative health treatments that also happened to be accessible to all of you, so stay tuned for this great episode that takes place at the World Stem Cells Clinic. Dr. Pompa will be interviewing Dr. Rafael Gonzales and Dr. Eduardo Ulloa, and they’re just going to be discussing how they are harvesting their patients own natural killer T cells and how they’re treating everything from autism to Lyme disease with their modern stem cell treatments.

Stay tuned to the end because the World Stem Cells Clinic is offering this audience a free consultation, and I will also put the link in the show notes for you. You could also stay tuned to hear about our sponsor, which is HCF’s Live It to Lead It event which now has a livestream option, so you can get that link at the end of this episode. I hope you enjoy. Let’s welcome Dr. Pompa, Dr. Eduardo, and Dr. Rafael to the show. This is Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Pompa :
All right, hey, welcome, live from Cancun, Mexico, Dr. Rafael Gonzales.

Dr. Rafael :
Yes, yeah, pleasure.

Dr. Pompa :
Thanks for having me. Yeah, no, I really love these on location experiences because you really get a feel for what somebody’s [00:03:20]. We hear things out there, but when it comes to stem cells and that’s the topic today, I had to come personally see. Right now, in the world of stem cells, there’s a lot of bad stuff going on. There really is.

Dr. Rafael :
There is. I agree 100%.

Dr. Pompa :
There’s a lot of amazing stuff going on.

Dr. Rafael :
There is a lot of amazing stuff.

Dr. Pompa :
Right, and that’s why I came here, so welcome to Cell TV.

Dr. Rafael :
Thank you very much. Thank you very much for having me. I’ve been fortunate to be part of cell therapy is more what I call it because we dabble in not only stem cells but cells in general. Cells are so important in our life because it’s the functional basic unit of life in general, and it’s what makes us live day to day and function day to day and, hopefully, live a good quality of life more than anything else. I’ve been in this sector for quite a while. I did one of the first clinical studies and I was part of the team at University of California, Irvine years and years ago, actually working with embryonic stem cells. That was a long time ago.

Then I actually transferred into the adult stem cell sector and into cell biology in general being focused on working with any cell type in the body, whether it be a cell from the heart, the lung, the liver, and any type of stem cells, fortunate enough to be able to work with many practitioners, many, many whether cardiologists, pulmonologists, general practitioners, functional med doctors through the American Academy for Anti-Aging teaching stem cell fellowships and, most importantly, understanding and seeing cells in a lab such as the lab that you see right behind me.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, right there.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, that you see that you’re able to produce cells. Then there’s a big difference with somebody working with stem cells. If you can’t see them underneath a microscope and understand how they function and how they work and have an experience with them, you really don’t know cell biology, and you really don’t know stem cells. That’s where I’ve been fortunate and then to be able to translate it into a clinical condition. I am a PhD, a scientist in this sector. We not only do stem cell work, but we also do other cell biology we were talking about earlier, which is actually…

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, you’re going to hear this.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, working with natural killer cells, which—let’s actually start off maybe working from there a little bit first before we go on to the stem cell sector. These natural killer cells are basically cells that are in our body, and they have a purpose. The purpose is they’re part of the innate or immediate immune response and have mostly three purposes. One is to find and target a virus. Secondly is to find and target cancer cells. We all know when you go outside you’re exposed to sun. There’s a mutation. Your immune system has to wipe that out immediately and remove it.

Then lastly and it’s one of the biggest targets that we’ve actually focused on is a target senescence. What is senescence? Not everybody has heard of this term. It’s basically one of the fates of your cells in your body. One is natural cell death, apoptosis. Secondly is necrosis, basically trauma. The cell explodes, and it’s a necrotic event. Then lastly, your cells have a finite amount of cell divisions. Then they age, and they become senescence, senescent.

Dr. Pompa :
This process, natural killer cells, it’s actually one of the things that really interested me and brought me here because nobody’s doing this, at least that I’ve heard, and we have this massive surge of Lyme disease. We have a massive surge of autoimmune, obviously cancer. Again, I mean, you can’t make any claims here, but you’re doing this. This therapy would really approach all of these things in a very unique way.

Dr. Rafael :
Yes, so the purpose of it more than anything else is to get your immune system back to when you were young. Notice as you’re young, unless you have a genetic predisposition to cancer, you don’t get cancer, but as you age, as soon as you hit 50, the propensity to get cancer is actually 50%.

Dr. Pompa :
Goes way up.

Dr. Rafael :
As you age, it becomes higher and higher. It’s because these natural killer cells are no longer natural killers. I call them dormant [00:07:26]. All they do is signal, and we actually have quite a bit of data that actually demonstrates this as you age. What do we do is we can actually take these cells from you, and then we can actually culture expand them, meaning we can actually propagate this ex vivo outside the body. We activate them to a younger state, and we put them into your body. The purpose of it is that it actually makes your immune system younger because it wipes out those senescence age cells. Senescence, once again, is a cell that no longer divides, secretes factors that’s actually bad.

For instance, you see fibrosis. Fibrosis is actually a senescent cell; cirrhosis of the liver, senescent cells. Gray hair is senescence. The cells are not functioning correctly.

Dr. Pompa :
Darn, yeah, okay.

Dr. Rafael :
Wrinkles and so on and so on, so these are senescent cells that are not functioning appropriately, and it’s part of natural part of aging. If we can reduce the amount of senescence, we can actually keep your immune system healthy.

Dr. Pompa :
I mean, again, that’s why the application is so vast. I mean, cells aging prematurely and cells aging—well, even just poorly aging, I mean, basically, bad DNA, etc., I mean, that’s a causative factor in disease. Obviously, just leading to inflammation and not feeling well. Matter of fact, when you had it done to yourself and you said to me—I know when we spoke on the phone the first time you said, oh, my gosh, you feel amazing for days. I mean, why is that? It’s just downregulating inflammation?

Dr. Rafael :
It’s, basically, downregulating. It’s controlling the environment per response, basically forcing your body to reproduce cells that are actually needed, younger cells. Now the new NK cells that are actually in there circulated are much younger.

Dr. Pompa :
What people have to understand is, I mean, really, so many diseases are the immune system misfiring, where you have an overstimulation of an inflammatory part of the immune system. Then there’s another part of the immune system, the regulatory immune system, that’s not downregulating the inflammation, so you see a correction with this process.

Dr. Rafael :
Correct, yeah, you do. You see a really, really large correction, for instance, what we had discussed. Serendipitously, we found individuals that had gut issues, and the gut issues are gone.

Dr. Pompa :
You told that story, yeah.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, so it’s pretty crazy. I mean, some of the things that—for instance, one of the patients that we did it, part of the questionnaire is how are you doing? How are you feeling, etc., etc.? In the questionnaire, he was like, “Oh, I generally feel healthy. I generally feel well. The interesting thing is I can now eat a lot of other foods that I couldn’t eat before.” “Why was that?” “I had inflammatory bowel syndrome before, and now, it seems to have subsided.”

We go back and do test markers on this, and we [00:10:09] specific proteins which are IL-17, IL-21, and inflammatory ones that deal directly with gut issues. This individual had these things very elevated prior to therapy. We look up to 120 days after, and they’re now normal of that of an individual such as myself and [00:10:25].

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, and if you can fix the gut, you can fix a lot of things.

Dr. Rafael :
You can fix a lot of things. We know that, yeah.

Dr. Pompa :
I know they’re going to ask this question, okay. What is that process, meaning that how do you get these cells where you get them from? It’s pretty easy, actually.

Dr. Rafael :
Relatively simple, it’s just a simple extraction of blood. It’s actually a quarter pint of blood. When you normally do a blood donation, you donate a whole pint. This is actually a quarter pint. Then from there, we purify just the white blood cells, and then from the white blood cells, we then purify—focus on working on just purifying NK cells. NK cells as far as the white blood cell process goes are anywhere from 5 to 15% of that cell population that we all have in our body. We normally have anywhere from one billion to two billion NK cells that are circulating on a daily basis. Like I said, as we age, they’re just signalers. They’re not attackers. They need to attack, and they need to kill.

Dr. Pompa :
We had a conversation earlier, and we were talking about different viruses, like Epstein-Barr virus. You have a theory. It’s just a theory, but you see a lot of really sick people like I do, right?

Dr. Rafael :
Yes.

Dr. Pompa :
I have a theory about Epstein-Barr virus, how it’s an opportune—but talk to them about that. This natural killer cell process really applies here. Obviously, it has an amazing effect on Epstein-Barr virus, but tell them your theory here.

Dr. Rafael :
Correct, well, my theory is actually that these opportunistic viruses actually force your immune system to go somewhat into overdrive and just target that and that’s it, and then all these other illnesses can take charge and take over, for instance, Lyme disease, bacterial in nature. Cancer, your immune system is busy targeting these things, and cancer pops up because the immune system actually is so busy doing something else. Unfortunately, we don’t know why, some individuals, Epstein-Barr virus affects them a lot harder than others. That’s one of the things that we need to figure out, how society…

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, I have a theory there myself.

Dr. Rafael :
It’s a matter of coming together and taking these therapies and taking methods of why this is transpiring and making individuals healthier.

Dr. Pompa :
Really, it’s fascinating. What do you seeing with Lyme right now? We’re seeing this explosion of Lyme, and like many things, Lyme leads to other debilitating conditions like arthritis, obviously fatigue. What are you seeing with this treatment?

Dr. Rafael :
With this, what we basically see is a regulation of the immune system, so the immune system can actually target the actual—the bacterium that’s actually transpiring and any other things that are happening. Fortunately, as we actually said—actually, unfortunately for the patients, there happens to be a correlation with individuals that have Lyme and almost every single one of them have Epstein-Barr virus, very, very similar to cancer patients, very, very similar to patients that have mold exposure too. We’re seeing the same exact thing on a regular basis.

Dr. Pompa :
I’d throw heavy metals in there too.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, and that’s another thing that we actually see, yeah, exposure of these too. We actually see a regulation of the immune system. Your own immune system becomes healthy. Individuals, their viral titers go down substantially, and then the symptoms that they have of the disease actually decrease substantially.

Dr. Pompa :
Fascinating, most of the research that you’re doing here—I mean, we are in Cancun, Mexico, but you’re actually doing it in the US.

Dr. Rafael :
All the research is actually done in the US.

Dr. Pompa :
All of it.

Dr. Rafael :
Then we translate that research here clinically in Cancun.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, so is there advantages to that?

Dr. Rafael :
First and foremost, we are US based. We are a US-based company, and there’s a lot more science aspect. There’s a lot more availability to what we need to do in the US. We have a large lab. We need flow cytometers. We need to look at genes. We need PCR. We need to look at proteins, Western blotting, these type of things that we use on a regular basis as scientists, much larger than this lab culture facility where we culture expand cells. The stem cells which we’ll talk about in a little bit is something that we manufacture according to manufacturing practices and look at those guidelines to translate those guidelines over there to over here to make sure that we’re successful.

Dr. Pompa :
Let’s move into the stem cells conversation. I’m really glad we had that conversation first. I do have to ask this. How many people, how many clinics are actually doing this natural killer cell process?

Dr. Rafael :
I don’t know. If you look it up on clinicaltrials.gov, you will find over 750 clinical studies on cancer. Targeting, basically, other diseases and to regulate the immune system, I don’t know of too many. I do know some centers, of course, I believe in China and in Thailand that are actually trying to do similar work, and it’s becoming more of a mainstream type of thing. Remember, this is cell therapy, immune enhancement. As you said earlier, every single disease has an immune component to it, and if we’re not healthy, if our immune system is not healthy, we are not healthy.

Dr. Pompa :
Here, they gave me—I know already people are going to say I want to contact you all. I was going to say—voice it out. There’s no way anyone listening would be able to write down the http://, so we will make it happen. We’ll make sure it’s on the screen here, and if you’re a podcast listener, then go to my website at drpompa.com and find this episode. All right, you get the free consultation as well. What they’re going to do is you’ll get a free consultation if you’re part of my community and you call in from the show and, basically, to see if whatever you have going on applies and if you’re a good fit here for the clinic. You all are doing some amazing work. I want to make sure as many people hook up with what you’re doing as possible.

I have so many people watching that—Alzheimer’s, autism, brain conditions and you’re doing some unique work here as well. I know when they first started doing some stem cell work in the brain, I mean, they were drilling holes in the brain. Now you all are going in the cord itself, and in 24 hours, a lot of these new cells are actually entering into the brain. What’s going on with this research?

Dr. Rafael :
What we basically have is methods of course to get cells where they need to go. As a lot of people know is, if you do an IV—and an IV is phenomenal because anything that’s transpiring neurodegenerative—neurodegenerative disease is actually something—I’m from the spinal cord injury sector, and it’s something that I know well. If it’s transpiring here inside this encased thing, it’s actually started outside a lot of times, and when it starts outside, it’s actually a problem. Now, for instance, in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s and multiple sclerosis, you have compromise of the blood-brain barrier, the blood-spinal barrier too, and your immune system can now actually go in and cause damage. This system, the inside, the brain and spinal cord is not set up because there’s no immune system there to actually deal with these type of problems.

What we do is we look at taking care of you systemically, and when we take care of you systemically, it’s basically an IV. The bad part about an IV is—it’s good but it’s bad also. When you do an IV, it basically goes first to the lung, so all the cells are basically sequestered to the lung. Then they have to find a way to what’s called [extrovate] out of the lung. They have to smash and extrovate, and then they have to find what’s called their niche. Cells work on these, basically, lock and key system, which is called a ligand receptor in science or medical terms. A problem in your body is a signaler is somewhat—could be the receptor and the cells can actually be the actual key that goes into that lung. It finds where it needs to go, but however, the vast majority of it’s stuck in the lung. It’ll set out all these proteins or released proteins as everybody has heard of as paracrine effect.

Dr. Pompa :
Right, meaning it stimulates your body into healing.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, it stimulates your body into healing. That effect basically happens because of cells that are just stuck in the lung, but then eventually these cells, not all of them, wash and migrate out. We’ve done studies on the particular cells that we actually used on this so that we know that they’ll stay in the lung anywhere up to 14 days, and then after that, they go to the rest of the places in your body and signal. If we can directly find ways to go into, for instance, the central nervous system, the brain and spinal cord which is done through an intrathecal injection, which is relatively simple…

Dr. Pompa :
Simple, yeah.

Dr. Rafael :
It’s a lumbar puncture. That’s one aspect. In some cases, when we have to look at more invasive measures, we can actually do what’s called a—sort of similar to an angiogram. It’s an intra-arterial injection where we either go into the femoral artery or the radial artery, and then we drive that all the way up into the carotid artery. Then we inject cells up. This way, it’s the first point. All the blood has actually gone through the carotid artery all the way up into the brain and into the central—into the spinal cord, so this way we have direct access on that.

Dr. Pompa :
I just toured this facility and a hospital right across the street where you do, actually, most of the injections, right?

Dr. Rafael :
Right, yes.

Dr. Pompa :
You said something amazing. You said just being in the hospital environment makes a big deal, especially with some of these cases. You have access to everything. Just in case something would go wrong, there you are in the hospital and, by the way, oh, my gosh, amazing hospital.

Dr. Rafael :
Yes, very, very nice.

Dr. Pompa :
I think one of the things they said on the tour was there’s three hospitals in Mexico that have international…

Dr. Rafael :
Approval, whether it be from Canada, United States, or the EU also and then this is actually one of them. It’s actually also the nicest hospital.

Dr. Pompa :
Oh, the rooms were like—I mean, they were like nice hotel rooms, some of the rooms. I was stunned. There you go. If you come here, it’s amazing, actually. I was really impressed. I’m impressed with just every aspect of this, I mean, the cleanliness, the professionalism. When it comes to the world of stem cells, for me, that’s one of the reasons why I wanted to come. Especially if I’m recommending others coming here for these top-notch procedures, man, I expected to see a top-notch place and I did. Yeah, that’s fantastic.

Let’s get into the world of cells a little bit because you all are doing some unique things with cells. I said this to you; in the world of stem cells right now, it’s the Wild West, meaning that people are claiming certain claims about the number of cells, the proteins that are in their cells, the viability of the cells. You were saying, yeah, that’s all fine and good, but there’s so many ways that that’s a lot not true. We’re seeing that because people are not getting the results from certain procedures. Because the stem cells that are on the market, frankly, they’re crap. What are you all doing different here? I read two of your studies, by the way. That was very, very impressive, and you can talk a little bit about that. What are you doing different in the world of stem cells that brought me here?

Dr. Rafael :
In 2010, we spend—actually, before then, we spend a substantial amount of time investigating cells because cells age as we do. The older you are, the older your cells are, and the frequency of stem cells in your body is less and less. More than anything else, babies are born normally healthy the vast majority of time, 99.9% healthy with no problems. We actually looked at taking the umbilical cord tissue and then taking what’s called a mesenchymal stem cell out of it. This is a particular stem cell that has properties of the two most important things that can transpire for being healthy and for maintaining health. One is controlling the immune system, meaning suppressing that pro-inflammatory response and increasing the anti-inflammatory healing response. Secondly is increasing blood flow or vascular genesis or angiogenesis the way we call it.

The purpose of that is that—think about this. If you don’t get oxygenation blood flow to all the vital organs, there’s no way healing transpires. It does not. This is what these cells are designed to do, these particular cells, and we are talking about pure stem cells. When we discuss a lot of the products that are out there and then they’ll hear about, they talk about stem cells. I don’t call them stem cells products because they’re not true stem cell products. They are self-therapy products. The vast majority of the products that you see over the counter in the US or whatever contain a very, very small percentage of stem cells. The only way you can actually obtain pure stem cells is by culture expanding them in labs such as the one you see back here.

Dr. Pompa :
That’s what you’re doing here.

Dr. Rafael :
That’s what we’re doing here. Even if it’s from you, if I take bone marrow from you, the frequency of stem cells is—in a 40-year-old, it’s about 1 in 250,000 so, basically, .000025%. Even in these cord blood products, the frequency of it is maybe 1%. It’s relatively low versus these products that are pure stem cell products. Now, the difference that we do is we…

Dr. Pompa :
The expansion I think is what you’re saying, meaning that—I had my bone marrow done, but again, there’s no expansion there. There’s not that many cells.

Dr. Rafael :
There’s no purification.

Dr. Pompa :
Right, no purification.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, there’s no purification of it.

Dr. Pompa :
I’m older, so I have to admit this; I’m older. The fact is I have less viable stem cells, so the advantage of taking it from a cord is it’s a younger, viable stem cell. However, it’s still not expanded.

Dr. Rafael :
Correct.

Dr. Pompa :
Okay, so explain that, what you’re doing.

Dr. Rafael :
The process basically occurs when we start doing—working with petri dishes. We call these culture flasks or CellStack systems where we take cells and we extract out pure stem cells, which in this case are mesenchymal stem cells, and then from there, expand them out. Now, the concerns a lot of times that we discussed is what transpires with quality? What happens if I get something that has a genetic problem? Now, we basically take and obtain a lot of cords. Then first and foremost, we have a screening process from the donor, which basically requires that—which is hard to find, believe it or not. They’re free of cytomegalovirus virus. They’re free of Epstein-Barr virus, along with all the other standards that are done in the state of California. We worked out of California.

We look at all this, and that basically gets us down to a frequency of about 15% of the US population. Then from there comes another very vigorous part that we have to look at. Everybody thinks of the transferring genetics from one to another, and what we basically do is we grow these cells up almost until they almost die, until they’re almost gone. We run this thing called the karyotype type analysis, and we make sure that there’s no chromosome aberrations. We will find problems when you culture cells, though, because they can go array. We make sure that these cells are clean, and there’s no problems with them, alongside testing for mycoplasma with different bacteria, all the different viruses, the fungus, and everything else. That’s what makes us—puts us at the quality that’s much higher to make sure that we have no issues.

Dr. Pompa :
I actually wanted to see the quality. One of the things that I had said is, hey, I actually want to see it because there’s so many claims out there. I’ll explain it. I’ll let him explain, but what you just said, here’s the actual words and the actual…

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, this is actually just—believe it or not, this book is actually only one or two donations that have been done of samples that we actually look at and then, first and foremost, of course, all the testing of mom that we have to do, all the way from hepatitis, HIV, CMV, Epstein-Barr virus, etc. Then afterwards, when we start, like I said, culture expanding these things, we also look at, of course, the different—these are called karyotype right here, on this page right here. This is what we look at. We look at chromosomes. We make sure that, of course, they’re aligned the correct way, and there’s no aberrations, meaning there’s no genetic issues. Believe it or not, what we culture there, if something comes up, 99% of the times it actually transpires in the human, and there’s a problem in the human. We’ve had cases such as I just told you where we contact—maybe we contact mom.

Dr. Pompa :
You’re saying the donor, human.

Dr. Rafael :
We tell donor. We tell them, hey, you know what? We found this. Is there a history of this? Can you test for this yourself? They actually go back, actually test for it, and they find exactly what we found; culture is actually founding to that too.

Dr. Pompa :
I mean, obviously, you’re doing this safety. They expand it, so you’re getting a better result. You can get injected with stem cells, but if there isn’t enough viable cells or even cells, you’re not going to get the result. With this, we’re making sure we’re getting clean cells. We’re making sure it’s, obviously, safe from viruses, molds. You name it. We’re also getting an expanded product that actually—it works.

Dr. Rafael :
It’s a pure stem cell product, yeah.

Dr. Pompa :
Let’s talk exosomes. This is a new hot topic. I’ve done shows on exosomes. You have a different view of exosomes. I mean, obviously, it’s exciting. It’s future, but an exosome just by itself in your opinion isn’t the future. Explain that a little bit.

Dr. Rafael :
No, I am a proponent of exosomes in some cases.

Dr. Pompa :
Me too.

Dr. Rafael :
The thing is an exosome—so remember first and foremost is an exosome comes from a cell, and before it’s an exosome, it’s actually called an endosome. It’s a packaged product that’s actually produced inside the cell. Then it’s excreted out. The conditions that we put these in…

Dr. Pompa :
Let me back up one second. Maybe someone listening or watching this hasn’t watched some of those shows. A stem cell produces an exosome, meaning that it’s a communication molecule, that it will communicate with another cell or some part of your body that starts healing. It uses it to communicate, okay, so therefore, when we thought stem cells, all of the healing was the stem cell coming in and attaching and driving the healing. Then we discovered these exosomes that actually are the thing that’s, basically, driving the healing.

Dr. Rafael :
The signaling.

Dr. Pompa :
The signaling molecule.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, the signaling molecule for it.

Dr. Pompa :
Okay, so there you go. Sorry about that.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, so not only stem cells but all cells actually secrete…

Dr. Pompa :
All cells, right.

Dr. Rafael :
Secrete these exosomes.

Dr. Pompa :
Matter of fact, there’s bad exosomes too. Cancer cells produce exosomes.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, they produce an abundance of them that cause more cancer. Cells are put into an artificial condition to secrete exosomes and to secrete proteins, and that artificial condition may not be ideal for you, or ideal for me, or for anybody that has a specific disease. Yes, they work, but however, these are in nature proteins, and these are packets of proteins that are protected. They’re relatively small. They’re about a thousandth of the size of a regular cell.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, 100 nanometers.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, around there versus cells in 10 micron range, around there. They’re much smaller, and they’re packets of information. There’s also proteins on the outside that you can—when you extract this. The way we do this is, basically, we grow cells in an ideal situation. We put them in ideal situations. Then we starve them off, and they secrete packets. It’s the same exact thing what we discussed earlier is, when you put your body into starvation mode, which is fantastic, your cells now slow down their division. Remember, the more cells divide, the older we get, and we know one of the only proven ways…

Dr. Pompa :
Short telomeres.

Dr. Rafael :
Correct, that’s one of the only proven ways to stop telomere attrition is stop eating, period, just stop eating.

Dr. Pompa :
I’ve done that and they know that.

Dr. Rafael :
Stop eating. It’s the best way to actually do it. It’s the only proven way. When we put our bodies in this type of mode, then they start secreting factors, and it’s because they have to survive. My partner helps me. He’s a cell. I’m a cell. He helps me and I help him by secreting all these factors as we start off until eventually we die, and we secrete all our information, all our protein that we needed based on that environment that’s there to try to survive.

It’s an artificial environment versus when I take a cell. A cell does the same exact type of thing. However, when I did an exosome, it’s one and done. Proteins have half-lives, and it’s relatively short. They may do their job quickly, but it’s not consistently going on. Depending on the way it was growing up is what’s going to be in the product.

When I put a cell into your—when I put a cell into, for instance, a joint, the joint now has to—the cell has to try to survive, and the way it survives is by saying this joint or this area is missing X, Y, and Z. I need to secrete X, Y, and Z so I can survive, and it’ll keep spewing the stuff out, spewing it out, spewing it out, spewing out these exosomes and these extracellular matrix. That’s the other thing that people spend a lot of time focusing on is exosomes, but you’re not understanding that you have two massive important proteins in your body. Collagen is the number one most important protein in your body, and number two is hyaluronic acid. Without those two, your cells do zero, do not function, and you have disease. These cells secrete this stuff too besides secreting out these exosomes.

When they’re put in an environment that’s actually harsh, that needs these signaling cues, they can now do the appropriate thing, and they can do what they’re supposed to do, and they last a lot longer. These cells eventually will last, let’s say, a week, two weeks, three weeks, depending how harsh the environment is. In animal models, we have evidence that they actually live—in our case, the cells that we used, for 14 days they lived there. If we translate that into human conditions and there’s other individuals that agree with this, you’re talking about anywhere from three months to six months. It just depends on the environment that’s going on within you. However, the important aspect is that they’re forced to try to survive, and they secrete out a lot more of what you get when you just use an exosome-based product.

Dr. Pompa :
You’re creating your own exosomes, right?

Dr. Rafael :
Correct.

Dr. Pompa :
You kind of explained it, but explain again why your exosomes are in fact different.

Dr. Rafael :
The product that we use is not a pure exosome-based product. We looked at targeting—we’ve had it for years, and we’ve spent some time. We actually did some studies within the clinic of looking at focusing on—we tried various different formulations, like I said. You, basically, put this in an artificial environment, and you can find ways by manipulating what you’re putting them in to secrete different things. When we discuss orthopedics, we discuss more normally problems in collagen, normally problems with hyaluronic acid, but at the same time, we want the long-term effect of the growth factors, the healing, and causing the reparative effect of exosomes, which is—and our product contains—we did a lot of time study. We picked one formulation out of 50 that we actually studied that secretes an abundance of hyaluronic acid, that secretes an abundance of collagen, and most important for orthopedics is chondroitin sulfate stats, which is really, really important. That’s what makes our product different.

Yeah, we measure other ones, protein concentration, and somebody can tell you there’s an X amount of protein concentration of something in there. The other important aspect of it is is it viable protein? We had discussed this earlier. Proteins degrade and they become somewhat nonfunctional depending on the condition that you put them in. We make sure that ours are functional. They’ve been frozen at the right time.

We just have done an abundant amount of study. We spent years studying anything before the product actually comes out. We published this paper on our umbilical cord cells back in 2010, and it took us about four or five years just to start using the product. Then from there, recently we’re now talking about—we’re doing actually clinical—we’re in collaboration with University of Florida to do some work on dermatomyositis and polymyositis, which is autoimmune disease, but secondarily to lung, pulmonary fibrosis, and secondarily focusing on the autoimmune market of rheumatoid arthritis, which is the funded study that we’re actually doing now.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, that’s huge. The autoimmune is just exploding, and I believe there’s an answer here. You said about the proteins—you said, Dr. Dan, there’s so many people are putting out literature about their product based on the proteins, etc. Basically, you scurried over it, but this is why there’s some deception in there. Explain that.

Dr. Rafael :
Yeah, so the deception is, basically, there could be a protein which is—in science terms, we do the simple thing. It’s called the BCA assay. It’s an assay that tells you how much protein is somewhere, but that doesn’t tell you that the protein is functional. It just tells you that the protein is there. When you run something a little bit different, that’s a Western blot. That’ll actually tell you if the protein is degraded or not, and not too many individuals are actually doing that or looking at that.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, that’s huge. I want you to introduce so people watching and listening—if they say, okay, I’m going to Cancun for my vacation of my stem cells, I want them to actually meet one of your treating doctors here. Is there anything else before I let you exit the stage here? Is there anything else that you all are doing that they need to know that’s making—that you say this is what we do different?

Dr. Rafael :
No, the thing that we actually need is individuals such as Dr. Pompa to actually get you healthy prior to. For instance, we have a lot of individuals that contact us and want to get cell therapy. Unfortunately, not everybody is a candidate of it, and that’s why we have a screening process for it to make sure that you are a good candidate for it. I mean, if you come to us and you have COPD and we ask you the simple question—you sound like you’re a candidate. We ask the simple question; are you smoking? You say, yes, you are. We tell you are you willing to quit smoking? You tell us no. You’re eliminated. If you don’t fix the problem, there’s no resolution to it.

Then we need individuals such as you to make sure people get rid of their toxins, their model exposure, be dieting right, be eating right before so your body’s ready for these cells as we’re going to do for you later on. I know that you’re completely ready for this, and we’re going to make sure that he’s in an ideal situation, that he’s eating right. He takes care of himself. This way, you set yourself up for success.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, no, couldn’t have said it better and, again, look for the link here. We’re going to provide it for you. If you can’t find it, tell him you came from Dr. Pompa’s show. You’ll get free consult to see if you’re a candidate. I mean, honestly, make sure they can help you and that’s important. You’ll have to answer some health question, obviously, but absolutely worth it. That’s a thank you to my viewers and listeners, so appreciate you doing that. Yeah, so let’s take a quick time out, and let’s bring in your treating doctor.

Dr. Rafael :
Perfect, thank you.

Dr. Pompa :
Doc, thank you, man. Appreciate it.

Dr. Rafael :
Thank you.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, Dr. Eduardo, welcome to Cell TV.

Dr. Eduardo:
Nice to meet you, nice to be here with you all.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, so we’ve got the science, but let’s talk a little bit. I wanted them to meet one of the treating docs here. Yeah, I mean, you’re doing some exciting work. How long have you been with [00:38:02]?

Dr. Eduardo:
About two years now.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, okay, and did you have any background with stem cells before?

Dr. Eduardo:
Yes, a little bit but more in sports medicine. I did a little bit of my post-grad training in the States, and I have a diploma in the sports medicine too at the end. I’m right now focusing more in younger patients, in the kids.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, that’s it. Okay, so being around stem cells, what are some of the amazing stories that you’ve seen?

Dr. Eduardo:
People recovering starting at—well, from very bad injuries. I’ve been through some injuries. I know how it feels to not complete your routine during the day because you’re going through pain, through chronic pain and discomfort in your daily activities. There has been a bunch of patients that have been very grateful after the therapy because now they’re capable of following with their daily activities. For me, that makes a big difference. Just the fact of waking up in the morning without having the same pain or diminishing the pain that you’re having, that’s a lot for me.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, or diminishing health. Talk about the procedure a little bit. I mean, I think that we have so many new people probably going, yeah, I’d like to get this done, but they’re nervous. Talk about the procedure. Does it hurt? How do you avoid that? Walk them through what it looks like and what it takes.

Dr. Eduardo:
Sure, yeah, well, actually, it doesn’t hurt at all. It sounds more aggressive than it is. What we’re basically doing here is doing a bone marrow aspiration in the hip bone. The hip bone is the one that you can touch in your lower back, so the patient is completely…

Dr. Pompa :
That’s if you’re using your own cells.

Dr. Eduardo:
That’s right.

Dr. Pompa :
Cord cells are another option.

Dr. Eduardo:
That’s correct.

Dr. Pompa :
Where you are, that’s how they do it.

Dr. Eduardo:
That’s correct.

Dr. Pompa :
I had that done, by the way, and I thought it was very easy.

Dr. Eduardo:
Yes, it’s very simple, very simple procedure. We only even have to use one tiny needle for going through the bone, and the patient is completely asleep because we help them with sedation inside of the hospital. Everything is done in the OR, so you don’t have to be worried about any…

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, you said that what you use—if you go to sleep happy, you wake up ten minutes later happy. I thought that was funny.

Dr. Eduardo:
Yes, we only use one agent for sedation, sevoflurane, which is an inhaled gas which makes it very easily for the patient. Yeah, you will not suffer about any pain, any discomfort. It’s very simple procedure. It usually takes less than an hour for doing the whole thing. What else?

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, no, that’s good. I mean, that’s pretty much the procedure. I mean, it’s obviously pretty simple. You’re talking about the joint. We did make mention of doing some of the intrathecal injections into the spine, so talk a little bit about that.

Dr. Eduardo:
Yes, once we have the bone marrow sample, we handle it to our lab manager, Tony, who’s actually working right now in the lab. He help us doing the separation of the cells that we need from the ones that we do not need, trying to get rid of most of the red blood cells, for example. Once he’s done with that process, he will come into the OR again with two concentrates of stem cells.

Dr. Pompa :
At the expansion.

Dr. Eduardo:
Correct, one will be infused intrathecally, which is just a [00:41:28] word for saying application through a lumbar puncture and the other one for the IV, okay, and the whole thing is about an hour, hour and ten minutes.

Dr. Pompa :
For you, easy.

Dr. Eduardo:
Easy-peasy.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, easy-peasy, yeah, I mean, I say that because people always say, oh, my gosh, I would love to get this done, but they fear the needle. I can tell you, I’ve had this done enough to say it’s nothing. Okay, so what about later that day, the next day, the week? What are the recommendations as far as—because that’s the other question I get. How long is going to set me back, the recovery?

Dr. Eduardo:
It’s a little different. If we’re talking with kids, with younger patients, or with adults, okay. If we’re treating kids, they might complain a little bit during that day of some maybe nausea, if that’s the case, which happens less than 10% of older patients because there’s sedation involved. As you may know, any process that involves sedation or anesthesia is one of the most common side effects to see and also because of the [00:42:34] reaction. You don’t have to be worried about this situation. Again, it’s just having some nausea for maybe a couple of hours, and it’s not that bad if that’s the case, which just happens in, again, less than 10% of older patients.

Dr. Pompa :
What about activity levels? Do you have to…

Dr. Eduardo:
Limitations for that day I would say…

Dr. Pompa :
Let’s say I got my back done, my knee done.

Dr. Eduardo:
Oh, okay, if we’re talking about adults, yes, we ask for patients to please rest for the next ten days just to…

Dr. Pompa :
Can I go to work?

Dr. Eduardo:
Yes, of course, you can go to work.

Dr. Pompa :
It’s not bedrest.

Dr. Eduardo:
No, you can continue with your activities. It will be good to take that day off, the day of the procedure, of course.

Dr. Pompa :
That’s it, really. That’s all I did. I don’t even know that I took a day off. I did take the day of. The next day I was back to what I was doing. I wasn’t working out in the gym or anything crazy, but I was mobile, walking around, pretty normal, right?

Dr. Eduardo:
Still, you can go to gym. Just wait seven days.

Dr. Pompa :
All right, there you go, yeah, so any other advice that you would give our viewers?

Dr. Eduardo:
We look forward to see you here. If you are willing to discuss more about therapy, you can always set up an appointment.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, they do. For my viewers and listeners, good point, is you get a free consultation to see if you’re a candidate. Talk to them about your condition. I recommend you do it. We came here to the best of the best.

Dr. Eduardo:
Correct, not just with me. There’s some other doctors.

Dr. Pompa :
Yeah, no, absolutely, I want to at least meet one of them anyway.

Dr. Eduardo:
Sure, of course.

Dr. Pompa :
We appreciate you all.

Dr. Eduardo:
It’s been a pleasure.

Dr. Pompa :
All the work you all are doing and great show. I mean, this is the place. It’s why I’m here. I had to see for myself the work you all are doing and see if it’s—people are talking. Now I have to come look.

Dr. Eduardo:
It’s a pleasure to have you here.

Dr. Pompa :
Absolutely, yeah, and you all treated me well so, all right, great show. I’ll see you on the next one. Bye.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. You can check out the consultation offer as well as learn more about the World Stem Cells Clinic in our show notes. Don’t forget to check out our next HCF seminar in Nashville where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing. We now offer a livestream option, and you can check that out at drpompalive.com. You can enjoy the seminar from any location in the world.

We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 a.m. Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv. Please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, or sharing the show with anyone who may benefit from the information heard here, and as always, thanks for listening.

262: The Hormone Fix

262: The Hormone Fix

Dr. Anna Cabeca

Let’s talk about hormones! What they are, how they influence our health, and especially how they change as we age. I will be addressing all of the hormone symptoms that are affecting many of you. My guest today is Dr. Anna Cabeca, and she’ll give you the lowdown on weight loss resistance, erratic emotions, low libido, hot flashes and more.

Additional Information:

More about Dr. Cabeca

Her Facebook

Her Twitter

Her Instagram

What's Happening To My Hormones ebook

Order the Hormone Fix by Dr. Anna Cabeca:

BREEZE THROUGH MENOPAUSE 10-DAY MASTERCLASS The Keto-Green Way to SLIM, SANE and SEXY launch details

Julva Trial

Mighty Maca Trial


Transcript:

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Let’s talk about hormones: what they are, how do they influence our health, and how do they change as we age. Dr. Pompa will be addressing all of the topics that are affecting many of you. His guest today is OB/GYN, Dr. Anna Cabeca. She’ll give us the low down on weight loss resistance, erratic emotions, low libido, and hot flashes.

Just a bit more about Dr. Anna. Dr. Anna Cabeca is a triple-board certified Emory University trained physician and hormone expert who was diagnosed with early menopause at age 38. Devasted, she set out on a personal wellness journey to reverse her menopause side effects which resulted in her delivery of a healthy baby girl at the age of 41. After experiencing her own health successes, Dr. Cabeca began counseling others ultimately changing the lives of thousands of women across the globe. Her new book, The Hormone Fix, is empowering and transforming women. She has programs which help women of all ages become their best selves again. You can discover more about Anna Cabeca at dr.annacabeca.com. You can read more about her in our show notes.

Practitioners who are listening, please be sure to check out HCF’s Live It to Lead It seminar in Nashville where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing. Please go to hcfevents.com for more information. You can use the code CHTV to take $150 off your weekend pass.

To the rest of our CHTV audience, we have some exciting news. We have opened up one day of this conference to the public. Please go to events.drpompa.com if you’d like to attend and hear amazing speakers who will leave you feeling inspired and ready to take action. We hope to see you there. Alright, so let’s get started and welcome Dr. Pompa and Dr. Anna Cabeca to the show. This is Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Pompa:
Welcome to Cell TV, Dr. Anna. This is a really sexy topic I have to say. Glad you’re here to get these questions answered that I’ve been flooded with about perimenopause, menopause, sex drive libido, how do I save my relationship, my marriage, all the topics no one wants to talk about. We’re going to talk about it today because we’ve had such an influx of interest in this topic. Truthfully, I think it’s one of those things that people really want to hear about, but nobody wants to talk about except for you.

Dr. Cabeca:
Exactly, I am happy to talk about it. You’re absolutely right; it’s that unspoken conversation. I try to get—I let people know I’m their girlfriend doctor. You can talk to me about anything and let’s have a conversation about it. There is nothing off limits here. Shamelessly, guiltlessly, let’s have a conversation.

Dr. Pompa:
This sounds fun. I’m glad my wife’s not in earshot because she’d be—end up running in here as I through her under the bus a few times. No, actually, her hormones have really transformed. I’ll offer people hope right there because my wife was a hormonal disaster honestly like her mother I have to say; well, not that bad. She would actually chime in right there, come on; I’m not that bad. Her mother hormonally ended up with breast cancer, 10 years later uterine cancer, 2 years later died. Obviously, not that bad, but I always say my wife was heading down that road, frankly.

Dr. Cabeca:
Oh my gosh. That’s one of the big things that bring fear into this topic, into this topic of aging because it’s something I saw in my practice, too. I saw that early symptoms of fiber cystic breasts, irregular periods, mood swings, all the hormone imbalance symptoms, and then the diagnosis of breast cancer, and then the uterine cancer and hysterectomy, and then what’s next: colon cancer. Or what’s next versus—the breast are innocent bystanders, the uterus an innocent bystander of the underlying hormonal imbalances that are going on.

Dr. Pompa:
I just spent a few days down at Hope4Cancer in Mexico, one of the top alternative cancer clinics. Toni Jimenez will be in my next seminar, folks, if you’re—by the way, this will be the first time the public actually gets to come or even join us Livestream for a whole day of this seminar. Maybe my team can put that link in here. Toni Jimenez is speaking.

I was able to spend a day with a lot of breast cancer ladies. It’s the same story. My wife was there, so their story started a lot like my wife’s, just the typical symptoms that people aren’t looking at as cancer necessarily, but where does it end? It can progress into much more serious problems as what happened to these women that we were speaking to in the clinic and could have happened to my wife.

I’ll tell you; my wife went through cellular detox. She did a lot of stuff, but it took time. There was some crazies in there. I'm telling you; it was tough. God forbid, we told her what’s going on right around this week. She transformed. Me and the kids were looking at each other, and we weren’t allowed to speak about it, so things got really hard. Forget about sex; there was no sex by the way.

Dr. Cabeca:
Right, and she’s not alone. Let’s talk about a real person if you’re open now.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s this one thing though. Here’s the hope part: she’s not that person anymore. If I didn’t throw that in, she would literally noose—I’d have to have a whole show of me just talking about that.

Dr. Cabeca:
There’d be no more sex again story.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, right; exactly. She’s in her 50’s as I am. I’ll tell you; I have trouble keeping up with her. She has an amazing sex drive now. She’s balanced; we don’t deal with that mom for that week of the month anymore. A lot of other things are absolutely normal like the weird, bizarre stuff. There’s the hope. However, you’re going to give us amazing tips and tricks that I wish I had honestly going through that period of time getting her where she is.

This is your deal. I want you to start actually with your story because I could easily just—you’re so like, I can’t wait to tell them this. Start with your story because I believe our story is really what makes us the expert, honestly, not our years of studies. Tell us about that.

Dr. Cabeca:
Right, and I wouldn’t be an expert in this area if it wasn’t for my story. You’re absolutely right. Even as an Emory University trained gynecologist and obstetrician, at age 38, I was diagnosed with premature menopause, early ovarian failure, early menopause, and infertility. Permanent and irreversible infertility was my diagnosis. I was 38 years old.

This was devasting news upon devastation because our family went through a traumatic situation. In fact, we lost our son in a traumatic accident. He was only 18 months old and three days. That turmoil brought us into a tremendous amount of grief, and despair, and physiologic havoc, just my physiology changed. We don’t talk so much about stress causing menopause, but I’ve seen it over and over again now that I have the eyes to see it.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, it could be physical, chemical, or emotional. I’ve had women get into car accidents and boom, it triggers into menopause. Emotional traumas as you just mentioned, in chemical exposures and traumas, mold, all of it, the body doesn’t know the difference and can land you what you’re saying.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, perceived and real.

Dr. Pompa:
The body doesn’t know the difference.

Dr. Cabeca:
Not at all. That lead me on a journey. I call it my healing journey around the world to learn that everywhere you go, there you are. I went around the world to learn that everywhere you go, there you are. That’s the place that I teach from no matter what circumstances you are in. Let me tell you; trauma didn’t stop there. It was the other from there on. It was that sense of, okay now, wherever you go, there you are.

Despite that, we can be the eye of the storm and the ocean, not the waves. Fixing our internal physiology so that we can experience joy, and peace, and calm, and love, and connection despite what’s going on around us. That’s the transformation that I encourage and help and hopefully inspire hope in women to make, and men, throughout their life, through—despite what they’re facing.

My journey was that irreversible infertility at 38 amongst depression, amongst—you can imagine. I didn’t want to open my eyes in the morning. It hurt. I had the physical aches, too. It hurt to put my feet on the floor. My feet actually hurt to touch the floor.

I was an OB/GYN. I ran two practices, a medical spa. I hit the floor running non-stop. Would sometimes be at the hospital three days in a row, didn’t have a complaint. All that, I would say God had his hand in teaching me and making me humble; that’s for sure. I learned to use natural remedies. When my doctor bag was exhausted, I didn’t have anything else in it, I had to find the answers.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s interesting you coming from that side because the patient comes from after they go through all the meds, the doctor thing, and then they end up looking for this. You were on the end of, well, your doctor bag being empty. Now, okay, there’s got to be something else.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, and so, low and behold, with functional medicine which I had started learning in 2004, 2006 I was diagnosed early menopause, completely infertile. Reversed menopause, and good news, became pregnant and delivered a beautiful healthy baby. I was 41 years old when I conceived her. That was against all odds. We don’t talk about reversing menopause once you’re diagnosed with it; very rare especially at age 38.

That was my story. I reversed menopause until age 48 when I experienced many of the symptoms that my clients experienced. One of them, one of the most aggravating one being when a patient would come in and tell me—I’ll be honest about this. Patients would come in and say, Dr. Anna, I’m gaining 5, 10, 20 pounds, and I’m not doing anything different. I’d be like, really, you’re not? That skeptical surly you’re doing something. You’re eating an extra helping. You’re not exercising, something. Low and behold, I say God makes me humble, I gained 5, 10, 20 pounds, basically so fast, and I wasn’t doing anything different. Do you hear that, too?

Dr. Pompa:
Something I always say is hormonal weight loss resistance, that is not a food problem as much as a hormone problem by the way. You and I resonate on that. That’s exactly what was happening to you.

Dr. Cabeca:
Absolutely, metabolic resistance, metabolic stall, total hibernation. Beyond that, something that worried me more even than the weight gain—although I’ve been over 240 pounds, lost 80 pounds, and keep them off for nearly a decade. Had tremendous hair loss back to the near crown of my head, just tremendous hair loss; stress-related hair loss, not thyroid related hair loss. I learned about that, too. That was devastating. I didn’t want any of that to come back, so I was desperate for answers at that point.

Besides that, it was the brain fog, the lack of clarity, lack of focus that was really debilitating from a financial perspective, from a relationship perspective, from a business perspective. That throw me. What I needed to do, and that’s what I write about in my book, the steps that we need to take to really restore that balance. I call it the Keto-Green way. I learned that we needed to get our body into ketosis through intermittent fasting, some healthy fats, but lots of alkalizing plant-based foods: grains, lots of low carbohydrate grains. You probably do this, too; I don’t know if you tell your patients to check your urinary PH. Let’s get that PH alkaline as a marker for health. Do you have your clients do that?

Dr. Pompa:
I really don’t because I know when they’re on this particular diet, it’s like typically we’re going to see the normal fluctuations in acid and alkalinity. What you’re saying is right on the money. I think that when people even think of ketosis, they’re often putting this massive emphasis on the fat. I always remind people, well, first of all, let’s look at what actually puts you in ketosis. It’s not eating more fat; it’s eating low carb. Again, it can be low carb with really an emphasis on a lot of the greens. A matter of fact, we’ve put people in keto on vegetarian/vegan diets for goodness sake. The point is oftentimes the greens are the missing part. It’s obviously a part of your whole theme.

Dr. Cabeca:
It’s so important for detoxification for cellular health and healing. We need those micronutrients. We need the micronutrients so much to support detoxification especially when it comes to our liver and our hormones.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right. Yep, absolutely. Okay, so there’s your book. It’s behind you. You go through a lot of that in the book. Is the book out yet? Where can they get it?

Dr. Cabeca:
It is out now. It is available anywhere books are sold. We have a book bonus page. I believe you have that link for that. We have some extra supplementary material that just helps support readers. It’s 400 pages, good content, 10-day Keto-Green detox, plus 21 days of extra meals. That’s one part of it. The rest is the lifestyle component to help manage stress, to help manage our hormones, and what we need to do to optimize our hormonal balance.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and that’s a big part. I think that’s where people really need a lot of help. Your book brings that. Talk about why ketones could be beneficial to this. We’ve talked a lot about ketosis. We’ve talked a lot about the benefits of ketones, but I don’t know if we’ve talked about it from the benefits of benefiting your hormones. Talk about that.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah; as a gynecologist, I would often say, I would love to say it’s all about estrogen, and progesterone, and testosterone, even DHEA. The reality is those are the students in the classroom; say they’re the college students in the classroom. They’re pretty awesome and they’ve got their own missions. The professors are insulin and cortisol. The dean is oxytocin. Insulin, cortisol, and oxytocin are the major hormones.

What I learned, again, I want to get to the cellular issue. I want to make the smallest improvements that have the biggest results. I keep wanting to get to those underlying issues that are causing all these imbalances: the hot flashes, the swings, the night sweats. I really boiled it down to those three hormones: oxytocin, insulin, and cortisol.

Many women suffer from debilitating hot flashes not just for one to two years, but often for even over a decade. I’ve had clients talk to me about this. One of the unspoken reasons for hot flashes is insulin resistance. Ketosis, and we get there in my program through intermittent fasting and through lower carbs, but the carbs we choose are all those great alkalinizers and micronutrient-rich carbs. I have clients test, not guess because everyone’s a little different in what their body needs. I have them just check simply—

Dr. Pompa:
It’s a motivator for them, too.

Dr. Cabeca:
Totally; and give them clues, what’s working, what’s not working because it’s again not just about what we eat. I tell clients if you had this amazing, great Keto-Green meal, and you were stressed and angry at the dinner table, you’re acidic. If you have this amazing Keto-Green meal and even splurge with a glass of wine, but with friends and were laughing and having fun, you’re alkaline. Powerful diagnostic tool, powerful clue of discerning what works for you and what works against you. Getting into ketosis helps in so many ways: certainly, with weight management, it leads to help with the weight loss resistance. Certainly, that’s an aspect once we’ve reestablished some metabolic flexibility. Detox: because if we’re not detoxing well, we’re going to hold onto the fat no matter what we’re doing.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely, even as a protective mechanism. The insulin, we know that insulin is a fat storing hormone. If you’re insulin resistant, you’re having trouble with insulin, I don’t care what you do, your body is going to be holding on to fat and creating other problems, too. It will start stuffing the glucose in other areas of the body and other organs of the body. You end up with fatty pancreas that makes everything worse. Fatty liver, that makes everything worse. We’ve interviewed Jason Fung on here and he talks about that. Is that insulin problem your body starts having, it’s so damaging the glucose that it will just start stuffing in other places and makes everything worse.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, 100%. Getting into ketosis through intermittent fasting, stopping snaking, we see insulin sensitivity improve. We see the hemoglobin A1C significantly decline. That’s what we want to see. Insulin sensitivity is key.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and like you said, the HbA1C is good indicator long-term of what your glucose and insulin are doing. Okay, that’s part of it. Now, I would say the cortisol we know is linked to stress, stress disorders.

By the way, when you elevate cortisol, guess what elevates? You’re glucose and insulin. There’s a relationship there. When you get stressed out, why is my glucose going up? Why am I having trouble getting my glucose down? I’m eating perfect; well, where is your cortisol and your stress levels? Talk a little bit about that relationship.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, and that’s powerful to know. Now, I come also from a place of—I’m an OB/GYN, so stress is—I lived a life of stress. Then I experienced post-traumatic stress. The trauma that we experienced really put me into a hormonal shutdown that took a lot of angles to improve. It takes more than hormones to fix our hormones. Getting those lifestyle factors in to—

Dr. Pompa:
I like it; go ahead.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, getting those lifestyle factors in to reestablish a beautiful circadian rhythm, that’s key to get cortisol back up from being suppressed, to get our body communicating again, and say okay, cortisol is not an enemy anymore; it’s a friend. We need to just work with it, getting our hormones to work with us instead of against us. Cortisol is one of those lifesaving hormones. We need it. It’s not all bad.

It’s really essentially good, but when it’s on too long, or—and then it gets suppressed from our brain saying, okay, you’re frying me out, totally frying me. Let’s suppress you. At least, that’s my interpretation of what’s happening. We suppress cortisol and we get into this very dangerous state of cortisol being low and oxytocin being low. Because when the paraventricular nucleus suppressed cortisol, I believe it’s also suppressing oxytocin.

Dr. Pompa:
Now, explain oxytocin a little bit. It’s called the love hormone. Obviously, it makes us feel a certain way. Explain what oxytocin is before you get too far down with oxytocin.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, oxytocin is a hormone that we thought was only secreted in our brain, but it’s actually secreted in our heart. It’s secreted from our uterus, our ovaries. It’s secreted in different areas of our body which is really beautiful. If anyone’s ever experienced a heartache, there are oxytocin receptors in our heart. That is something definitely I physically experienced. I had no idea at that point that there were oxytocin receptors in our heart or that our heart produced oxytocin. That was eye-opening for me as I dug into the research and trying to understand what happened to me, what’s happening to other people just like me.

Oxytocin is our love and bonding hormone. It’s a hormone of connection. Many women experience it when they hold their baby in their arms. For women and men, when they hold their baby, their newborn in their arms the first time, you get that connection, that imprinting that defies all explanation.

Also, in labor, sometimes we give oxytocin intravenously. It’s called Pitocin. We give it IV to help contract, to help improve those contractions. That’s again a very safe in lower doses hormone to give intravenously for that reason. Every time we breastfeed, we secrete oxytocin. Every time we orgasm, with intimacy touching, kissing, hugging, play, laughter, generosity, having fun, all of those, experiencing pleasure increase oxytocin.

Oxytocin is actually the love, and peace, and joy hormone that I call, and I talk about this for chapters in my book, the crowning hormone. This is the overarching hormone. It influences our other hormones as well. It’s really the hormone that we want to enjoy for the rest of our life. The satisfaction of a life well lived.

Also, what I’ve been able to experience despite the trauma and subsequent traumas I’ve experienced is that peace that surpasses all understanding. To be able to have joy again and to be able to repair relationships and have connections which I’m blessed to say that I have the best relationships with my daughters that I’ve ever had in my entire life. The list goes on. Being able to reestablish this great hormonal physiology, they’re able to achieve the goals that you want to achieve in your life.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I think it’s pretty obvious what we have to do for insulin. I think it’s becoming—it becomes a little less obvious what we have to do for oxytocin. People are going, yeah, okay, I have these hurts in my life, my love life. I have in relationships disappointments, post-traumatic stress disorder. All of these things obviously wipe—literally deplete and affect your oxytocin which then affects cortisol. It then affects insulin. All of these are working together.

Okay, where are some crutches here? In other words, what do we do about this? I’m trying to heal my relationships. I’m trying to work on these things, but in the meantime, my oxytocin’s trumping me, and I can’t fix these other hormones. What do we do?

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah; I go through that too in my book, The Hormone Fix. There’s a few good things that we need to do. I want quick fixes. In the meantime, part of my practice was the patient would come in and say with these same symptoms. One thing that I would start them on is detox because we’ve got to open up those hormone receptors so that they can use what your body is producing naturally. Detoxification, alkalization, really clean up our diet, open up those receptors. While I’m waiting for the bloodwork to get back, I’ll be doing that.

I may also add a bioidentical progesterone and pregnenolone depending on their age, what’s happening with their cycle, or if they’re post-menopausal. Progesterone helps us get a good night sleep, helps us rest, and restore, and repair overnight. I’m a fan of bioidentical progesterone. That’s a big part of it. A good night sleep goes ages in towards—into healing as well as rebalancing cortisol, getting that—resetting that circadian rhythm. I’ll be doing that as well as increasing nutrients.

Another crutch, I created natural solutions where none existed for me or for my patients. My Mighty Maca Plus formula that has over 30 superfoods and is loaded with adaptogenic, natural adaptogens, Maca, organic Maca from Peru, turmeric, quercetin, resveratrol, lots of greens, fiber enzymes that work on the cytokine pathways that work to reduce—that work to help your body fight inflammation, or support your body’s natural inflammatory response, and support your body in detoxifying and hormone production. We give it the nutrients, the substrate it needs. That’s key.

Then in my Keto-Green way, the principles, that gently moving into longer intervals of intermittent fasting. Gently working on the principles that make a difference in resetting our cortisol, so mindset. It’s starting with positive thinking, positive verbiage. I give clients a cheer word. Because it takes more than—it’s not just about the food we need to nourish our body. We have to feed our mind, our spirit, and our relationships to really be well.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I agree. By the way, I love—it’s back there behind you on your right, the Mighty Maca product. At Revelation Health, there will be a link for it. They started carrying it. I think it’s a fantastic product. I’ve been a fan of Maca for a long time for men and women by the way. I think it’s one of the really safe—everything you have in that product are really the safe hormone support adaptogens. I think it’s a fantastic product.

You and I feel the same, too: there’s a time for hormones as crutches. If you’re not doing all these other things you’re talking about, and you just think you’re just going to take these hormones and win the game, and progesterone is going to work for you, think again. It’s just simply not. Without looking, oftentimes, it can be transferring into more toxic forms of hormones. You have to obviously be careful especially if you don’t make those lifestyle changes and detox, etc. Talk a little bit about that as well.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, and I talk a lot about the endocrine disruptors, the toxins, and also healthy estrogen detoxification which is so important. What comes in must go out and we need it to go out safely very simply. That’s a big part of it. We know that if we’re not—if we’re constipated, if we’re not having regular bowel movements, if our microbiome in our guts not healthy, we’re likely to have more toxic forms of estrogen circulating back into our bloodstream. That’s a really big problem.

If anyone’s listening and they’ve struggled with constipation for years evens decades, I’ve had clients struggle for decades, we can turn that around. It’s amazing how good you start feeling very quickly. That’s a big one for women. Sadly, it’s not just about that. For women from the sexual health standpoint as a sexual health expert, we get prolapse. We get discomfort in—with intercourse from issues that stem from constipation, from relaxation of the pelvic floor as well, or breaks in the fascia from straining. That’s a whole other topic.

Dr. Pompa:
Actually, I want to discuss some of these symptoms here. Because okay, here we are, women in perimenopause. We have an increase—talk about the increase in back pain and pelvic pain. That’s up; they’re going to every chiropractor. They’re talking all this, but meanwhile, that’s an estrogen thing. Literally, estrogen can basically affect this ligament laxity that occurs. I want you to talk about that. Then it also can affect the bladder. Talk about that because I just had probably three emails on that.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yes, yeah. Going back to the whole concept of the reason I’m a propionate of getting into ketosis at least cyclically is because our brain uses ketones for fuel more efficiently in the post—perimenopausal, post-menopause because of declining estrogen. Making glucose, utilizing glucose for fuel in the brain is an estrogen-dependent process. As those levels decline, women experience this brain fog. We think that’s it: down the road, we’re going to have dementia. Not if we switch our fuel source, so go from gasoline to jet fuel. That’s going from glucose to ketones.

Dr. Pompa:
[00:29:34]
back around the estrogen.

Dr. Cabeca:
Exactly; certainly, we’ll substitute sometimes with estrogen, and progesterone, and DHEA. Absolutely, big fans of that. A little bit goes a long way, but also recognize that this is what’s happening. Let’s address the cause of it.

The same with the pelvic floor. Not only are there estrogen receptors in the fascia but there are progesterone receptors in the fascia. Why women start to experience aches, pains, incontinence, pelvic relaxation, thinning of the tissues, loss of musculature, estrogen, progesterone, testosterone all have a role in that as they decline. This is where we can support with some bioidentical hormone use. Again, just that little bit with pelvic floor exercises, let me tell you that we need to do those Kegels or pelvic floor exercises until we die; we’ve got to keep doing those, can really help.

Dr. Pompa:
I feel really bad that you have to do that. Right now, everyone wants to kill me because I’m being vicious, but I really mean it. That’s a lot of work, honestly.

Dr. Cabeca:
Men have to do it, too. Men should do their own Kegels, too.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re right; prostate issues is another subject. We won’t even go there. I think a really good place to start is your Mighty Maca honestly. Start there. Literally, 50% of the women, that might be your answer.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah absolutely, that will help. The other product I created to help is Julva. I have it here, too. It’s a natural anti-aging formula for the vulva. Julva, I created it because I wanted a topical anti-aging solution for women that was natural, paraben free; like a cosmetic, but natural, paraben free. It contains DHEA which I know you’ll love. Topically, you use it from the clitoris to anus; keep all that tissue healthy. It also has plant stem cells from the Alpine Rose.

It helps with the vaginal dryness symptoms. It helps with the accidental leak when we cough or sneeze. It helps with just nourishing that tissue. It really does change lives because women suffer. I always tell clients if you have pain every time you do something like for example having pain with sex, or discharge, or odor, or urinary infection after intercourse, why would you want to? That’s definitely going to kill your libido. If we can increase the pleasure, increase the sensation and sensitivity and improve that, certainly decrease discomfort, why wouldn’t we want to?

Dr. Pompa:
That’s something you can use daily. You just rub it in basically. It helps with the problems you were just talking about. It’s very safe that way as well. You’re bypassing the liver. A much better way of delivering it.

Dr. Cabeca:
Exactly, yeah. It smells good, tastes good. It’s a good product.

Dr. Pompa:
I believe we’re carrying that yet. I haven’t tried that one with people yet. I can’t wait to. Again, we’re talking about a big area of covering a lot of women. These are really safe crutches here. That’s the exciting part.

This is an area I think when we look at some of these symptoms that people are—and going to their doctors. They end up on a lot of dangerous hormones; let’s face it. They’re not doing a 24-hour urine test to see if they’re producing toxic forms of estrogen like 4-hydroxy estrone that leads to breast cancer and other cancers or toxic forms of testosterone. They can even feel better. I always say sometimes you’ll feel better actually developing cancer and not know it. Some of these things that you’re talking about, they are much safer no doubt about it. Obviously, testing is something that I would still recommend if you’re taking a hormone.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, I agree. Testing gives us an idea again what’s that interaction between our physiology, and our genetics, and our environment; those three key points in looking at that. I’ve done serum testing, urinary testing, salivary testing; you name it, I have done it. I say if you’ve come into my practice, we will test every body fluid you have at some point or another.

Dr. Pompa:
Let me ask you something: are most of the symptoms you see in perimenopause, are they related to low progesterone, low estrogen, or at least tell us the ones that are related to high estrogen levels which sometimes happens, and why.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, typically what I see initially are the symptoms from declining progesterone, probably DHEA too, but we never pinpoint it. The reason I say that now is we just did a survey on 2,000 women age 30 to 60. Seventy-one percent of women who had a difficult time with menopause, had menopausal symptoms, post-menopause, said their symptoms began at age 36. That’s when we’re classified as advanced maternal age in the gynecologic diagnostic book. I hate that terminology.

That’s when our ovarian function is notably declined on average. That’s when progesterone takes its deepest drop. I believe it’s that quick drop in progesterone that causes the initial symptoms: the PMS, the symptom of hating your husband only two weeks out of the month. When that happens, I always say it’s your hormones, not your husband.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m glad you’re protecting these men right now; that’s good.

Dr. Cabeca:
I think it probably is some component to blame, but if it’s only two weeks. That irritability, that PMS, those mood swings, and women, we don’t like to feel that way. We don’t like to feel like, look, I don’t want to act that way. I don’t want to be nasty. I don’t want to act witchy or bitchy; whatever it is. I don’t want to be that person. There’s physiology that our body is crying for help. We have to hit those areas through balancing the hormones.

Definitely, all the low [00:35:46] lifestyle factors, we’ve got to create that internal peace, that milieu of internal peace despite what’s happening, despite what’s going on in our life. It can be done I guarantee you no matter what you’re dealing with. I want to emphasize that, but certainly, it’s that drop in progesterone and DHEA. We have to restore the adrenals. We have to prioritize what’s important to us.

I’ll share with you, and I just published this in my blog this week, but I wanted to tease out what made me go from that point and totally transform to this better stage and quality of life that I have. I would say it’s I paused, I had to take a break, had to stop the hamster wheel from turning so to speak. Stop from running around the world, stop from running. I just had to be still and listen to that still, small voice within me. I had to pause and pray and then prioritize. What’s the most important thing for me? What am I so glad I did yesterday? To get that perspective of what do I—what matters to me most in life?

Then pour: pour into myself for healing to nourish my body, mind, spirit, soul, relationships, and pour out into others in that area. The last thing we do is to pour out into others because we can’t give from an empty cup. I want to say that again to the women listening: we cannot give from an empty cup. We have to fill our tank. With doing that, these steps, and on a regular basis, that reestablishes a great energetic magnetism about us and about our mission towards our family, towards the things that we love most to do. That just feeds us back, continues to circle back to us to feed our souls. That’s been my practice.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, wow, that’s a great message. It’s a true one too because you just don’t realize the connection. If you think about it back from those three hormones that you talked about, obviously, you said that the oxytocin being at the top, well, there you have it. It’s directly or indirectly affecting oxytocin all of those things which again is a big factor. You had mentioned oxytocin is a very safe hormone. Where would you get oxytocin? Rarely do you find someone taking oxytocin.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, it’s very rare. There’s a lot of challenges in prescribing it. Certainly, I did prescribe oxytocin periodically. I’ll tell you when I prescribed it, but it’s so much more powerful when we create those habits and practices in our life to do it. Sometimes it’s just like, okay, let’s just manage cortisol. Let’s start the day with a green smoothie. Let’s intermittent fast. Let’s start with a couple of steps.

Anyone listening, start with a Keto-Green smoothie. Start with what’s the next right step you can make today. Start nourishing your body in these positive ways. That will help you gain perspective Number One.

Number Two is oxytocin, increasing healthy oxytocin behaviors: calling up a friend that makes you laugh, watching a funny movie. I bought my daughter—now we’re in the middle of book launch, one of the most stressful times in my life. At Christmas, I got my daughter a puppy. I know puppies increase oxytocin, so I wanted to bring that in during the stressful time. I should have got a puppy—a potty trained puppy, however. To bring in oxytocin, pets do that to us as well. Think of things like that.

As a prescriber, when I saw clients that were disconnecting, that had been through trauma or were under significant stress or daily stress, and especially physicians, teachers, principals, before they come home as they leave work, a sublingual oxytocin can be beneficial, can just help reset. Now, it’s a crutch. It’s temporary. It’s a crutch. The problem is it’s hard to test for oxytocin deficiency.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s is, yeah.

Dr. Cabeca:
Those are the challenges. We have an oxytocin quiz that I have clients take. If I was going to prescribe it, I would give an injection, intramuscular oxytocin and watch the reaction, monitor the response. Then say, okay, definitely oxytocin will help you, let me prescribe. I could document that from a safety perspective.

Even 10 to maximum 50 IUs a day, daily sublingual, or even intervaginal oxytocin can help. That’s what I experimented with my clients with really good success, too. Again, it’s temporary. I typically have clients maybe three, four months max that needed it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. It’s a crutch just like anything else. God didn’t create us needing to take progesterone or anything else. However, the lifestyles today really puts a strain on these pathways from physical stress, emotional stress, chemical stress, all of it. It really is straining women today.

One of the things that I’ve found too is women really support the home in every aspect. Health is what they support it with. Their health declines. It’s affecting the household from the top down. This is a big subject. When do most of these symptoms start? You said 36 is when oftentimes some of things happen but is that when the typical perimenopausal symptoms happen or is it more in the mid-40’s?

Dr. Cabeca:
From what I studied as an obstetrician and gynecologist as a resident in study that it was in our ‘40s. In our mid to late ’40s, we expect to see the perimenopause; however, I do see it in our 30’s.

Dr. Pompa:
I think you start seeing the brain fog, the lack of just that feeling you as I hear it described; I just don’t feel like myself type thing. Then by the mid-’40s has typically been when it’s diagnosed. Okay, now I know I have a hormone problem type of thing.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, or the hot flashes start. Typically, mid to late ’40s, early ’50s, we really see the issues with the hot flashes. That can be certainly very lifestyle limiting.

Dr. Pompa:

Yeah, and again, some of the quick tips and tricks that you have for the hot flashes, give us that. How about the sleep? Give us some of those. They’re probably going to go back to what you already taught us, but I just want people to hear specifically. You gave us some tips for the pelvic pain that we oftentimes see, the bladder stuff, the intercourse, the sex stuff, but what about some of the sleep issues and that?

Dr. Cabeca:
Yeah, and that’s so important. For hot flashes, because they are the ban of our existence, one thing certainly is bioidentical progesterone in the evening. That’s two-fold. It helps with the brain and is neuroprotective. It helps the brain. Helps with a good night sleep. It can help with some hot flashes. That’s one.

The second is becoming more insulin sensitive. Hence the Keto-Green approach again because insulin resistance associated with worse and more frequent and longer duration of hot flashes. Becoming insulin sensitive, that was eye-opening to me when I saw the research around that. I’m like, huh, I never learned that; how cool. That makes a difference. We’ve seen hot flashes completely diminish or go away within two weeks. Especially if they’ve been dealing with it for years, that’s liberating. That means the night sweats are gone too which keep us up in the middle of the night.

One thing I teach in my book is that a good night starts with a good morning. How we start our day can really change the way we end it. I think that’s really important.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s huge. Alright, let’s finish with the most sensitive topic of all. That’s the sex topic. Men today lean towards Viagra and get past their dysfunction. I don’t agree with it, but that’s what men do. What do women do? Obviously, from a healthy standpoint, what can women do? I know it’s going back to some of these things we already talked about, but I want to be very specific because again, this is the unspoken topic.

Dr. Cabeca:
Yes, women typically, what they currently do is bear with it, power through it, silently avoid it. That’s what they typically do, but that’s not what they have to do. That’s again one of the reasons that I created Julva to just help with any discomfort that we’re experiencing from declining hormones that create that vaginal thinning, the loss of lubrication, those symptoms. Also, again, the second thing, pelvic floor exercises.

I teach and have a program online called Help Doctor, My Sex Drive Has No Pulse, a free webinar. I love it because I teach women that it’s normal for us to have a secondary desire. In other words, men are like, okay, I’m interested; let’s go; 0 to 90; here we go. Or, I’ll take the Viagra; honey, I’m ready. Okay, well, first of all, guys, foreplay starts at breakfast; bring me some coffee, bring me coffee to bed, the nice little things, some sexy texts.

For women too, we got to get in the mindset. We just need to be receptive and understand that once—and this is what my patients would say, once get started, then I get into it and I’m interested. They would say, I never want to get started. Hormone balance like with Maca, with detoxing, keeping those hormone receptors open, maybe we need a little bioidentical hormone but even without, just know that once we start petting, touching, caressing, we get that oxytocin flowing, and then we’re receptive.

Dr. Pompa:
Got it, okay. Hopefully, the men who are listening to that part. Women, you play that little part right there for your men; right there. They have responsibility. They have responsibility here for sure. That is so true. Then you get the oxytocin going with the touching and the kissing, and women of course then respond to that.

It’s like men are more visual. It’s like, I see; that gets me going, but that’s not women. Women need more of the touching and the caressing. Like you said, the compliments, the emotional part of that, my wife has to remind me every once in a while that sex starts in the kitchen. We don’t actually mean the kitchen, but you know what I’m saying.

Dr. Cabeca:
Maybe tonight could be your lucky night.

Dr. Pompa:
Maybe I better start complimenting her somewhere in the kitchen; I don’t know. Anyways, I have a [00:47:13] for the health guest as you can tell. It’s a really delicate subject, but I think the oxytocin plays such an important role that you get a better buy probably if you let your husband watch this.

I think how many women are doing pelvic exercises? Very few, but it’s an important thing because again, all the pelvic muscles there, they have all the estrogen receptors. If you’re already low in most of your estrogen and progesterone, that’s going to get laxed. Then you’re going to have pelvic pain, low back pain, and nothing’s going to work. Then the bladder gets involved.

It keeps going on and on; all those tissues are getting involved. Then you don’t have a sex drive. Then that affects your marriage. Then that makes your oxytocin worse. You see where I’m going with this. This is the crazy cycle.

Then again, then it’s the opposite. Meaning that if you’re able to get the relationship right, sex is going to improve your oxytocin massively. It’s going to improve your hormone sensitivity. It’s going to improve all your hormones because we need it as humans. You see it’s either winding the correct way or the wrong way.

Dr. Cabeca:
I 100% agree.

Dr. Pompa:
As I just said it, I’m like, wow, that’s a crazy cycle that again as we just speak of that, how many people are in the crazy cycle. The very thing that unwinds is the very thing that you need to fix it. I’m thinking that’s what this lesson is. We need more of this to go in the other direction. This is a complicated thing, but you have to be intentional. You need a plan. Would you agree with that? Obviously, that’s what your book does, too. It gives you a plan. Otherwise, this is a battle you’re not going to win.

Dr. Cabeca:
Right; yeah, and I’ve been there. I’ve been through it. I’m happy to say there is light at the tunnel—light at the end of the tunnel and every step along the way, too. Exactly what you said; we have to prioritize. We have to do the practices whether we want to or not that are going to improve our physiology because that affects our behavior. We’ve got to do the behaviors to improve our physiology.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s the thing; none of these things unless you literally have a plan and you’re intentional, you’re—life is going to—that was your point earlier when you have to feed into yourself and part of all of that. All of these things, ladies, you better rewind this, watch it again, send it to your friends. Because if you don’t have a plan, you’re going to lose the war. Then your relationship is affected. Then it’s going to feed back in. There in lays the crazy cycle, but there’s an answer. The answer is these things that are so obvious, yet so hard to do unless you’re intentional about it.

Dr. Anna, we thank you for coming on this show, thank you for your book, thank you for the products that I think are going to be a big help. I’m glad Revelation Health is carrying them. Look for the products here. We’ll put them right in the show notes and the link. I’m sure that they’re going to offer some sort of discount if you use the link I’m sure; they always do that as we carry a new product like this. It’s a very—

Dr. Cabeca:
We have a free trial. We have the free trial of Mighty Maca, four sample sticks of Mighty Maca, and/or—and we have the free trial of Julva, a seven-night supply. We have that for your audience, too.    

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, it’s a great product. I don’t carry hormone products because I want people to change their own life, but these are great. Awesome; Dr. Anna, you’re just a great wealth of knowledge in a topic that was so overdue here. We are so glad you’re bringing sanity to the crazy cycle as we just pointed out.

Dr. Cabeca:
I love that. Thank you.

Dr. Pompa:
Alright, thank you; bye-bye.

Dr. Cabeca:
Bye.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. Practitioners, don’t forget to check out our HCF seminar in Nashville where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing. Please go to hcfevents.com for more information and use the code CHTV to take $150 off your weekend pass.

To the rest of our CHTV audience, please check out events.drpompa.com if you’d like to purchase a one-day ticket for our special day of public attendance. We hope to see you there. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 AM Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv. Please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, or sharing the show with anyone who may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.

 

261: Conversations in Cellular Healing and Detox

261: Conversations in Cellular Healing and Detox

with Women N Wellness

Transcript:

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. You’ll notice that Dr. Pompa is actually the one being interviewed today, and for good reason. Today, we welcome some very special friends from a podcast called Women N Wellness. When Dr. Pompa joined them to discuss detox, the conversation was so good, we asked if we could share it with our CHTV audience, so here it is. In this episode, the doctors discuss heavy metal testing, how to detox correctly, and how to identify and address other chronic infections such as mold, Lyme disease, and candida.

They’ll also discuss how Dr. Pompa’s own healing journey is a true example of pain to purpose. You won’t want to miss this episode. First, I’d love to introduce the fabulous Women N Wellness team. Drs. Caitlyn, Mindy, and Sonja dive into the key health and wellness topics that plague the modern-day women. These three docs are in the health trenches with women who are struggling with their health. All three run very successful functional health clinics and share a burning passion to help women navigate the long list of health ailments that women are dealing with in today’s world.

The Women N Wellness Podcast was borne out of these docs’ desire to empower women who are trying to do it all, family, work, and stay on a path of health. Their dream is to give women the knowledge and tools to steer their health in whichever direction they choose. You can check out their amazing podcast, Women N Wellness, and that’s the letter N, to catch up on their latest episode. You will love their show. Practitioners, please be sure to check out HCF’s Live it to Lead It seminar in Nashville, where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts, including Dr. Pompa and the Women N Wellness crew, who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing.

Please go to hcfevents.com for more information. Practitioners, you can take $150 off with the code CHTV when you purchase the four-day pass. For the rest of the CHTV audience, we have some exciting news. We’ve opened up one day of the conference to the public. Please go to events.dr.pompa.com if you’d like to attend and hear amazing speakers who will leave you feeling inspired and ready to take action. We hope to see you there. All right, let’s get started and welcome Dr. Pompa, Dr. Caitlyn, and Dr. Mindy to the show. This is Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Mindy:
We are really, really excited for this interview today, and bummed that Dr. Sonja’s not here with us.

Dr. Caitlyn:
She’s bummed.

Dr. Mindy:
She’s bummed, too. We have brought on our mentor, who we’ve been learning heavy metal detox from. We are just really excited to go through how he developed it, why he uses the approach he uses, that not only are you seeing miracles with, Dr. Pompa, but we’re seeing miracles in our office as well. Welcome. Let’s start off just by welcoming you and thanking you for being here. Dr. Caitlyn and I were talking before you came on. We have so much gratitude for you.

You really taught us how to think and not just throw protocols at people, not just throw supplements at people, but really pushed us, I want to say because there were times I just wanted a quick-fix protocol given to me.

You really pushed us to think deeper about people’s health, and always get up to that root cause and go upstream. Because of that, what we’ve been able to help in our office has just been incredible. Dr. Caitlyn, you jump in.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I do, I want to chime in because my biggest thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you—and I’m sure every one of my patients would thank you, too, is—myself and my husband, we were looking for a very long time on finding a safe and effective heavy metal detox. We actually were looking at getting certified in chelation therapy and all these other things, but all the research and everything to back it up, we were just not comfortable doing it until we found TCD. That was the first time where we were like, finally, finally something that’s safe, effective, that’s really going to help us be able to take our patients to that next level of healing because that was always an underlying issue for everybody.

I’m sure you guys would agree. Everybody has had heavy metal toxicity problems, but now we’re able to address it, so thank you, thank you, thank you.

Dr. Pompa:
It means a lot to me. It’s funny. We just discussed this before we got on. I was saying, isn’t it amazing? I just had another person that I spoke to who had been to a top doctor in our space. Yet, they still weren’t well, of course. They had done everything, spent obviously a lot of money, and they still had everything. They still had a silver filling and root canals, which means infection, hidden infection in their mouth. It’s amazing to me. I said these words, “Are we the only group of practitioners and doctors on the planet doing what we do, with looking for the causes and doing the right detox on top of it?” It amazes me; it does. Anyways, honored to be here to talk about these things that we know people need to hear.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, we’ve talked about this a lot in our group, about how it’s the two people that aren’t getting well that really force us to go looking for more answers. I resonate with what you said, Dr. Caitlyn. Those two people I could not get well before I had TCD as a resource and a tool for me—would keep me up at night. It was in digging that we both—even Dr. Sonja would say this same thing—found your teachings.

Dr. Pompa:
What honors me the most is, obviously, it has nothing to with any of us here. For me, speaking about it—it’s a known voice. Now you go, look what you’ve done with this. You’ve started this show. We’re branching out in a growing group to make a difference. Everyone one of us know we have a message the world needs. It’s not going to get out even just with the three of us. We need more of us speaking this and teaching it as well. Both of you are teaching at the next seminar. You have a lot to teach; you do. You have a lot to share.

Dr. Caitlyn:
The crazy part is, the more that you learn, the more you realize there’s way more to learn about everything.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, I think that’s a really good place to start, too because what blows me away, and we talk all the time on this podcast about this, is that we just live in the most toxic time in human history. The more you dig, the more you’re like, how are we alive? Why is it that the human body is so resilient? How the heck are we even alive? Then when you start to look at what your resources are for detoxing, they’re really sparse. There’s no proper detox out there. Maybe you can start off by just talking about how you came across heavy metals. I know you had your own journey with it. More specifically, how did you come across this way of detoxing these metals?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I’ll focus on that. It’s probably of the most interest to people because it really applies to them getting their lives back. My story was such. Just like so many people, I had all these bizarre symptoms that started. It mostly started with fatigue, then it goes to brain fog, then sleep problems, and anxiety. Like many, I tracked down my adrenals, my thyroid, my hormones, all going south quickly. Just like most, addressing those things helped some things, but most things, not—wasn’t getting my life back. Like we’ve been saying here, I tracked it upstream with the help of a very bright endocrinologist, actually, who said, “Yeah, I think you have heavy metal toxicity.”

I said, “I thought so, too.” A year before, I did a blood test—classic mistake, no heavy metals. When he said do this test, I challenged it out of my tissue, and then there it was. Then of course,  I asked the logical question, where do you think you got it from? Did you have any dental work when this all happened? Sure enough I did. Those silver fillings, 50 percent mercury—you’ve talked a lot about that. I won’t bore your listeners. The bottom line was, when I was sick, too, I thought that my thyroid and adrenals were too far downstream, which I was right. I thought it’s the pituitary hypothalamus, which runs those, sits in the center of our brain. Every time I tried to do stuff for that, it didn’t work, either.

Oftentimes, maybe it works. I realized later that that’s where these neurotoxins accumulate, of course, hormonally—this disrupted society because of all the toxins. Who’s going out after it in the right place? A lot of people are doing colon cleanses, liver cleanses, this cleanse, that cleanse, but if we don’t get up to the cell, and more specifically, in the brain, we’re not going to change lives. I didn’t get my life back until I got it out of my brain. There’s so many things that affect it, hidden infections. Caitlyn, that’s your story, and partly mine, too. These causes people aren’t going up to. As far as how I created this, from pain to purpose has been my life. I was dyslexic as a child.

I couldn’t read until sixth grade. I can’t even say I could read in sixth grade. At least that’s when they identified that I was dyslexic. I didn’t remember them calling it that. They said I had a reading problem. That makes you dumb, of course. I always say jokingly I rode the short bus, but I was in the special classes. That doesn’t do a lot for your ego or your confidence, anyway. What happened during that time is, I compensated to fake people out because I didn’t want to be called out on my problem. I developed this part of my brain that today, fast forward, I’m able to read literature and apply it. I’m able to remember everything about it, even years ago. I read a study on that, and I find it again.

I’m able to put these things together. From pain to purpose—I tell you, God developed my brain for this very reason in this area. I got sick for this. I was dyslexic for this. I always challenge everybody, including my own children, look at your weaknesses  and your pain. The things you complain about the most—just maybe there lies your greatest superhero. Your superpower, most likely, is in the things we hate about ourselves the most, or most insecure about, who knows. Through my illness, through that, I really started—when I started getting online and searching about detox and heavy metals, I realized, like probably most people watching, oh my gosh. There’s controversy all over this.

Using my superpower, I started digging and digging and putting it together. Everything that we do today really came out of all that. Putting together where real detox is—it’s in the cell. It was funny because again, looking at people’s work, I had a knack for seeing what actually worked, what they were doing that worked. Richie Shoemaker was a mold guy who found that this cholesterol binding agent that people don’t even use anymore—it bound up the bile that our liver dumps that’s toxic. He gave it to people unknowingly. Literally, these people getting hit with this biotoxin in the Pocomoke river. Fish were dying and making people really sick. They were coming in with fatigue, anxiety, sleep issues, and diarrhea.

He gave them this binder called cholestyramine to deal with their diarrhea. That was the piece of his work and discovery that was a key piece. Why did it work? What was it doing? Then we found a certain binder, very specific binder in literature that only binds the bio complex, other carbons and things that people use—they don’t do it, but this one did. It’s really hard to process and manufacture because it literally sticks to walls. This stuff’s amazing. Anyways, we utilized that as part of this process. It sits in the gut along with three other binders. It doesn’t leave the gut. It pulls the [13:45] cell function, which nobody does in detox, which is the key because if you don’t do that, you don’t get well.

This is where the problem is, the cell. That’s where the five Rs became the first step. Using another binder to move it from there to the liver into this other catcher’s mitt that sits in the gut called [14:06]—that process, literally, I’m telling you when I say this. It sounds trite to say it. It really does. I’m not smart enough to come up with it. God brought me through these discoveries, putting them together, up-regulating cell function, using a binder from the cell that we now call cellular detox to the binder in the gut, this process, and then supporting it. There’s prepatory stuff, there’s opening pathways, all of that—it was from God. Maybe a lot of prayer and other people praying. I get it. It sounds trite to sat that. I honestly mean it. He gave us something very special that we all use.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, I think the binders have been really pivotal of what we’ve seen in our office, is that that and opening up the detox pathways—those two steps seem to be so missing in all other detox programs that I’ve seen out there. There’s a lot of great ones, like the protein powders, Caitlyn likes to say the [15:20) and the wheat grass.

Dr. Caitlyn:
Cilantro, not wheat grass.

Dr. Pompa:
They all miss it, meaning that people do these things, even like raise glutathione. If you raise glutathione without a binder in the gut, you’re in deep trouble. If you raise glutathione without a binder moving it even to the liver and out of the body, you’re in trouble. Those things are weak binders, yet every detox product has them in it. I’ve sure you’ve used the example that I love to use. It’s like the street sweepers. You see that plume of dust settling on the cars around you. What are our tax dollars even paying for? It does nothing to the street.

That’s these weak binders. It just creates more redistribution. Look, no one’s put it all together. Again, I always like to say we don’t have all the answers, but in this world of cellular detox and true detox, we have something nobody else is doing. There’s no doubt.

Dr. Caitlyn:
Yeah, my biggest problem is nobody’s putting it all together, just like you said. You might be taking something that makes you poop a lot, but it’s not actually opening up your detox pathways for everything to actually move out. Just like you said, Dr. Pompa, you’re just reabsorbing the toxins that you’re moving from one cell and putting it somewhere else, which is why, up until TCD, I always had people coming in who’ve done these other heavy metal detox programs and felt like crap after. They felt worse than before they even did it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s so common. Again, it even goes beyond our detox. It’s this multi-therapeutic approach that we’re doing—the fasting, the feast famine cycles, the diet variation. Nobody’s putting it all together. Again, we don’t have all the answers, but what we’re doing, nobody’s doing. Gosh, we need more of us, obviously.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, absolutely. Can you talk a little bit—and we’ve talked about this, too, on the show. When you say people add in glutathione and they start to push the toxins out of the cell, I think it’s pretty common, if you go to Whole Foods or a natural food store, you can find a lot of glutathione on the shelves. You can find a lot of—mitochondrial detoxes are quite popular right now. I think the most popular—what I hear people talk the most about is chelation. Can you talk a little bit about why that is not sufficient enough, and what people need to think about? I think people really—because of the cost and the fact that it’s IV, they get really excited about that without knowing it’s not effective.

Dr. Pompa:
The glutathione you buy at, say, Whole Foods—most of it doesn’t even make it into your gut, and it definitely doesn’t make it into your cell. Then there’s IV. I started really doing a lot of glutathione research because I was like many people. I went in. They said, this glutathione, it’ll help you so much. I got it, and I reacted terribly. Of course, then I dug in to be like, why? Only to learn, it’s not a strong binder for heavy metals, so it just redistributed a lot of the mercury around my body. It’s really good in the cell to move toxins out of the cell, but then once they come out of the cell, you’d better have a really strong binder to move it all the way out of the body. That’s what people don’t understand.

Of course, glutathione is a part of the picture, but by itself, it doesn’t do a great job. It needs stronger binders. Heavy metals are very difficult to get rid of, same with other infections, hidden infections—very difficult. You need other binders that are better at binding those things than glutathione. It works great in the cell, but beyond the cell, you can be in trouble. Then there’s the other IVs like DMSA or DMPS. I did DMPS challenge IV and I was weeks of ready to take the bridge. Yeah, it was not good. Of course, I start digging. What happened there? Only to find out that there’s a half-life. It’s water-soluble, and it pulls a lot of once. It pulls away, and then what your body doesn’t get rid of, it redistributes.

I should have stayed on it daily for a few days before I stopped it. Who can do that many IVs? Nobody. Through that all, honestly, all these things, maybe I learned more from the things that made me sick and worse, at least not better than I did from anywhere else—again, from pain to purpose.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I think we all learn that way, the hard way ourselves. Half-life is so important, and we have talked about it before.

Dr. Pompa:
Who talks about it, Caitlyn? You all talk about it on this show. Using binders and their half-life—I hope people understand that, meaning that you have to keep the level up a certain amount in the blood, so you don’t get redistribution. If you give a chelator that actually works, unlike these weak binders that are in all the detox products on the store shelves, but if you give one that works, it goes away and redistribution happens. Keeping it up and taking it within that half-life or under the half-life—it minimizes that redistribution because there’s always a binder present. It keeps mopping up, and then staying on it enough days to when you stop, you don’t get that redistribution again.

Dr. Caitlyn:
That’s what I love about cyto. The half-life isn’t every three hours like DMSA. That was crushing when I had to wake up every three hours to make sure that I was taking DMSA to avoid redistribution. That’s not something, compliance-wise, long-term, that people can do long enough to truly detox themselves.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s like 10 or 12 hours, so some people do fine with it twice a day. Some people do better with it three times a day. It is right around there—yeah, much easier to take, so much easier.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, for sure. Go ahead. Were you going to say something?

Dr. Caitlyn
I was just going to say—you mentioned, Dr. Pompa, how originally, when you were trying to figure out why you were so sick, you did this blood test for heavy metals and it came back, everything was good, and then you did a challenge test. Do you mind touching on—is testing necessary to know whether or not you have heavy metal toxicity, what type of testing? Then we can go into how long it actually takes to heavy metal detox.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, those are all really good questions. If I was watching this, I’d have those same questions because I did at one point, too. Yeah, let’s start here. There’s no perfect test because again, what makes most people sick is what’s deep in their nerve tissue, mostly the brain. Without biopsy, no test shows what’s that deep. Even the one that I did—it challenges it out of the tissue and then we’re able to measure it in the urine—still didn’t show what was in my brain. Maybe I got a little lucky that enough was built up in my tissue that it reflected my brain. We always hope that when we do a test. I do still think the best test is challenging it out of the tissue and then seeing what’s there.

Caution—if you do that and come off of the agent, then you’re going to get that redistribution, so you have to stay on the agent. There’s a right way to do the test. You girls have walked your clients through that. The other part of that question around testing is the blood test you had mentioned. I had said a year before, I did the right test. I thought, oh, this is why I’m sick. I found mad hatter’s disease. People who were making felt hats were using mercury as part of the process. I had every symptom that they had. I was like, this is it. I’m mad as a hatter. I went out and did a blood test and it was negative. That’s good for that acute exposure, meaning you’re getting exposed every day or at least weekly, which wasn’t the case for me.

I was exposed when I had all the fillings in, and it just was bioaccumulating in my brain over the years. It didn’t show up in my blood; it showed up in a normal range. Again, you have to do the right test. The other part of the question is, is it necessary? I don’t know that it is. I would say for some people, it’s necessary because they have to see something. Some of your sickest people, as we can speak about—it won’t show because it just won’t come out. You have to be a little careful. Some people need to see something, so for those people, it’s necessary. If it walks like a duck, quacks like one, it’s fuzzy like one, it’s a duck, meaning that we become very good at doing this.

You can see a mile away heavy metal people. For me, maybe it’s not necessary. Sometimes I like to test because lead shows up more accurately on these tests because it’s stored mostly in the body, so does arsenic. Maybe we will change some of the binders and chelators that we use to keep someone on a certain one if they have super high blood levels. In that case, I think it’s a good thing to do, but is it absolutely necessary? No. I’ve done a lot of people without ever testing, and it worked out just fine. I think it could help.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, we’ve gone back and forth with testing, not testing. I think a really common question is, how long is this going to take? People will ask. One nice thing about the test is if your metals are off the chart, sit tight. This is going to be—you always say, it’s going to take years. Sometimes that’s helpful for people to know that the process—

Dr. Pompa:
Especially lead—when you have a super high lead level, like my wife had, it took her—lead’s harder to get out of the bone. It takes longer, I should say. It’s not harder. It just takes longer than even mercury out of the brain. Literally, it’s estimated 7 to 15 years, it’ll just keep coming out of that bone when you’re doing the right thing to get it out. That’s a long time. That’s why I would say—you’ve heard me always say this. It’s the doctors that make people think that they’re going to detox something like heavy metals out of their body and brain in three months, six months. It does people no service at all; it’s a disservice because it’s years, not months.

Our goal—one of the unique things that we do as a group of doctors is we educate. We coach the people on the process. That empowers them to do it long enough to actually matter because it is years. It took me—I did brain [26:15] for four years. At a certain point, I did it more and more inconsistently, purposefully. I would do several in a row and then take a month or two off, several in a row. We’re talking phases, whether it’s seven on, seven off, three on, four off, whatever it is, four on, ten off. All detox should be cycle. Then I would purposefully take a little longer off cycle, but I always knew when to start again. I always would be—my wife, I should say, knew because she’d be like, you need the chelate. You need to get back on your cycle. I guess I got irritable.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I think I need to do another brain—

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, I’m sitting here thinking the same thing. I’m like, oh, is that what was going on with me today?

Dr. Pompa:
When the lights start dimming in the room, if it goes slow enough, you don’t realize you’re in darkness until someone turns them on. Literally, within two pills, I’d be like, oh my gosh. She was right. She was right. I feel like a million bucks again. What we do is unique. Our goal is to train the person in the process. They don’t need us. They get used to doing it. They know what to look for. They know when to adjust things. Education is power here.

Dr. Mindy:
Do either of you want to touch on then why it’s important to have somebody teach you how to do it, versus just trying to pick up a box and do it on your own? I hear and see that all the time. Oh, I’ll just go pick it up. I don’t need your help.

Dr. Pompa:
Look, if you have a condition, it’s impossible to do yourself. People will hire a coach to help them through tennis or golf. How much more important is this? Look, the doses are different for everyone. The cycle lengths are different for everybody, and the body teaches us what that is. Some people do better with higher doses than lower doses, longer cycles than shorter cycles, shorter cycles than longer cycles. You are not going to be able to figure that out on your own. You’re not. Then there’s the support around. It’s like, I’m doing bad.

That could be a lymphatic issue. It could be a liver issue. It could be a gut issue. Gosh, you have to hire a coach. That’s all I can tell you. There’s no way of knowing that. It’s like me trying to learn how to hit a golf ball. I’m going to guess on what I think is right, but I’m going to be there a while, and I’m probably going to make myself worse. That’s what happens without a coach.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, and I think we—the way my brain thinks is that toxins aren’t getting any less in our world, so now’s the time. Whether you have massive symptoms or not, you need to learn how to detox. There is a way that the body wants you to pull these toxins out of you. When you just pick up a box or you pick up a set of pills, there’s no education in that. You’re just taking them. You don’t know if they’re working. You might feel bad and go, okay, they’re working because I feel bad, but you don’t understand the protocol. I think that it’s just as important as learning how to eat. You’ve got to learn how to detox.

Dr. Pompa:
Maybe more importantly today because I think we’d all echo this, and we have—look, the perfect diet won’t get you well today. You won’t get well without it, but it won’t get you well today, meaning that you have to remove these sources, upstream sources that we’re talking about. That’s the key. That’s when we’re seeing these miracles that we see. We get upstream on it. Today, the perfect diet—it’s just part of the picture. You have to learn this, to your point. You have to be educated in the process. There lies the true value. Treatments—you will go broke doing treatments. You can’t be treated for this because again, you need to learn the process to continue beyond the three months, six months, whatever it is.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, I think a lot of our listeners may already be doing TCD. I know we have some listeners that are TCD practitioners. We have some docs. Can you talk a little bit about why you would want to do an on-off cycle? That’s where I think the art has really happened for us after detoxing so many people. We now can clue in and go, oh, wait. You need a shorter on-cycle and a little longer off-cycle. I think that, along with those binders, is a really missing part of detox.

Dr. Pompa:
When we look in nature, all of detox is cycle, even in the environment. They’re seasonal. There’s cycles, weather cycles. Everything cycles. Really, when you look at how it cleans nature, it’s a cycling. The microbiome changes outside in nature via cycles, weather cycles. There’s a time for this and a time for that. A woman cycles monthly. That’s a cleansing process that the body does. My point is that all detox cycles. The next question is why. When we look at cycling that we’re talking about here in our body, a couple things happen. Number one, you’re resting your detox pathways. You can’t keep putting that stress on it, just like the environment.

We want to give the liver, the kidney, the gut, the lymphatic system time to rest. You don’t want to stress it continually. Number two, something—and I don’t want to bore people with the science, but things move from higher concentration to lower. When we cycle, we give time for the deeper tissue, higher concentration toxins to move across that concentration. Therefore, some people will do better with a little longer cycle. Give that a little more time. Some people because it moves so quickly, they need to get on a cycle right away.

How do you know? These are some of the questions that you all are trained in, to know when that is. Okay, we’re going to shorten the cycle or lengthen the cycle. Some people do better with higher doses because they have so much circulating. All of these are things that again, have to be individually adjusted.

Dr. Caitlyn:
What are your thoughts on symptoms of detoxing? Are they good? Are they bad?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s a great question. I get that all the time. I like a little symptoms because some people know something’s happening. Of course, you can’t shut down someone’s life, either. Again, I think all of us—and I hope I’ve taught you this—it’s in the sense of, I like to give people the steering wheel or at least the gas pedal, anyway. Maybe that’s a better analogy. We’ll steer them, but you have the gas, meaning if you think you can handle that speed, continue it. If it’s ruining your life, back up. Again, there’s the value in the education. I think giving people some say, and doctors don’t do this—say in their care.

It works, but you have to educate them on doing that. Can you handle that? If this happens, then back down. Let’s try that. I think involving people in their care is something that doesn’t happen today, but I think it’s absolutely critical. It’s very, very important for people to start learning that fee, and it is. I call it, you have to learn the dance. It’s different for everybody, so again, you’re going to have to involve them in their care.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, and it’s different at different times. Some people can take a really long on-cycle and they can do a short off-cycle, and all of a sudden, something changes. I’ve seen that happen before. Dr. Caitlyn, I’m sure you get this as well. I have patients that are like, I just want to put my head down and I just want to detox. I’m just going to push on through it. My response, typically, is that there’s no awards won for the fastest detoxer. Nobody’s going to give you a gold medal. You do have to figure that dance out.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely, and then there’s a time where you get that person who wants to push too hard. We’re saying, hey, you need to back down because we know that detox pathways can only handle so much. Then we’ll end up with a new problem. We’ll blow out the gut. Again, it’s part of that education process we do with the person. You’ve heard me always say this. You have to know who’s before you. You know the person who’s afraid. Take it a little slower with them. You have a person who’s gung-ho, you have to pull back. You have to know who’s in front of you all the time and coach accordingly.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I’m laughing because I was that person where I’m like, I’m just going to do this [34:54].

Dr. Pompa:
I was always pushing myself.

Dr. Caitlyn:
You learn.

Dr. Mindy:
I can see that person when they come into my office. Their eyes are like this, and I’m like, okay now. Come on, let’s just slow this sucker down.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and then they’re comment is, I just want to get this stuff out of me. Okay, [35:17] out of your cells and your pathway.

Dr. Mindy:
That’s right.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I can honestly say that when I did slow it down and take a step back, I got better results. I really believe that I started taking more of the toxins that were built up and getting them out of my system, versus when I was just—

Dr. Pompa:
Listen, smaller doses work better for some people. Large doses work better. We said that earlier, and it’s so true. Again, that’s why you need a coach because what would determine that is not what you think, oftentimes.

Dr. Mindy:
Right, yeah. I like steps. The way my brain thinks is like, okay. A, if you’re listening to this, you want to do the proper heavy metal test to begin with, if you’re going to test it. Then B, when you actually do detox these metals out, you want to really open up the pathways, and then you want to pull it out of the body, pull it out of the brain. Then the third step that I’ve been teaching my patients is if you are having a really tough detox reaction, start by upping your binders. Slow the on-off cycle down. This is what you’ve taught us.

Then the third one, and I know both of you could talk on this particular subject for hours, is maybe if you’re having a bad detox reaction, you didn’t get to all sources of toxins. Can you talk a little bit about that? I know that that’s really common for people, even following TCD. They’re like, but I’ve been doing it for years. Why am I not better?

Dr. Pompa:
I’m so glad you asked that because you’ve heard me say this so many times. If somebody’s not progressing as you would expect, there’s something else upstream. How many times has it happened to us where all of a sudden, you’ve asked the questions right. I just got this email last week. They ended up finding mold. You know how I pressed them for that? We had it tested, and then they ended up opening up a wall because there was a new leak and there’s ridiculous black mold, or the cavitation, the hidden cavitation that they—oh, my doctor looked at it. Okay, let’s just check one more time. I’m going to send you to my guy. Then boom, there it is on a [37:33]. How many times?

Looking for these hidden things, whether it’s mold, whether it’s a root canal, cavitation, hidden infection—it’s critical because once sensitive to one neurotoxin, you become sensitive to all. You’ve heard me say this all the time. The cavitation, hidden infection from a wisdom tooth being pulled, which creates the cavitation 80 percent of the time—that may not be what made you sick, but you will not get well if that infection’s still there. You’d darn better check—or there’s an amalgam under a crown that you swore there wasn’t. Caitlyn, did you tell your story about your husband? I don’t know. Maybe you did; maybe you didn’t—example of what we’re talking about.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I had cavitations, and then we found out my husband, after doing over a year of TCD—he hit a plateau, and we couldn’t get him past it, no matter what. We thought we got all of the mercury out of his mouth. We even called the dentist that put the crown on one of his tooth to make sure that there was no silver fillings, no amalgams under. They assured us, reassured us, and told us over and over again. Then our biological dentist up here, Rebecca Taylor, took the crown off, and was like, there’s a huge freaking piece of silver filling under there. That entire time, he was just re-intoxicating himself because we didn’t know it was there.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s absurd. You know how many people are doing this detox or that, and they still have a mouthful of metal. The body can tolerate some of that. Clearing the body may even help people, but after a certain point, it’s going to start. When this gets clear, it’ll start going after the metals. It’s, again, detox done wrong.

Dr. Caitlyn:
You can ask all the right questions, or you think you’re asking your dentist all the right questions, and boom. There’s still something there. just like the mold in the wall. Boom, it’s there.

Dr. Pompa:
We were talking about the movie, and I had just recently saw it. It’s called Root Cause—very well done. It’s on Netflix. You people should watch it. I loved how it starts because the person that did it—actually, I think he was the director. He went through his story, how he was punched and he ended up with a root canal. All his symptoms started after that. He never put it together. He went through everything he did. He did this. He did that. He did acupuncture. He went through everything that most people—I did that, I did that, I did that. Piles of supplements, medications, everything, you name it—went down the list, still sick.

Then someone says, it’s the root canal. Of course, he gets the root canal out, did the proper stuff afterwards, and gets his life back. It’s the classic thing. How many people are looking at these causes? Again, it’s beyond the root canal—could be a cavitation, could be the mercury hidden somewhere. It absolutely could be the mold that’s unknowingly in your basement.

Dr. Mindy:
I think that’s the hard—to me, that’s the toughest moment, when you’ve got to go looking for those hard answers. If you’re really sick, you’ve got to address them. We had a patient who was—we couldn’t even get her two days in the body phase without her being so fatigued. We had her do a mold test. She was in a fully remodeled house. There was a little bit of mold. She brought a wi-fi guy in to look and see if there’s dirty wi-fi anywhere. Yeah, there was a little bit. Everything was a little bit. Then we sent her to have her cavitations looked at. Two cavitations cleaned out, came back into our clinic, and now we’re eight weeks into a brain phase. She can detox no problem.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, if there’s an upstream source still hidden, you’re not going to get your life back. It is one of those things that it seems like alternative medicine is not catching onto. I don’t know why that is. I don’t know if it’s just because they don’t want to deal with it, if they don’t want to tell people that they have to get their home remediate, leave a home, or get a cavitation surgery done. I don’t know. I don’t know what it is, if they’re worried about someone [42:00] too hard. So what? I don’t want to waste their time or mine. Am I right on that? I think we owe it to people to tell them this.

Dr. Caitlyn:
You know what I think it is? I think a lot of doctors are worried about the patient’s finances and trying to determine what a patient can and can’t do. Yet, if you don’t give them all the information and all the options, you’re hindering them. You’re actually technically making them worse, just like the person you just saw. We call this expert doctor. You’re not helping them.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s true. I think we owe it to people to tell them the truth, obviously. We owe it to people to say, look, you won’t get well if this is still there. It’s true. You may get well for—well, yeah, I feel a little better. You won’t get well lasting if those upstream causes are there. Eventually, if you want your life back, you may have to—you’re going to have to figure it out. We all do. When I got my life back, I had nothing. We lost everything, but here I am. Life will re-build if you have your life, if you have your health. If you don’t, give people the chance. I think you’re right. Pre-judging them based on their finances—I think it’s a big mistake.

Dr. Mindy:
I also think it’s interesting for people listening to this to understand that some people are going to do heavy metal detox and go through TCD, and it’s miraculous. Boom, their life comes back right away. Other people will spend years and they will have to really go after all these root causes. To understand that this system works, you just have to follow the different steps.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it was at six months of the brain phase for me that I actually saw some light. Then it was up and down after that. My wife would have to talk me down because I would have my bad days, or in the beginning, bad weeks. She’d be like, look, you just had the best week of your life. I always thought, I can’t go back there because I was so scared. Then it went to bad days, and she’d still have to talk me down. Then it went to bad hours, and she still had to talk me down. The point is it’s like the stock market. It’s up and down. It was after a year of the brain phase that I was putting good months together.

I’m telling you, if I still had a bad day, I was still like, oh my God. I can’t go back. I think that’s a really good message. Again, I was pretty severe, but I’ll tell you this. I looked back over an eight-year period. Even if you’d have met me four years after, I’d have been like, oh, I’m perfectly healthy. Then year five, I’m like, actually, I’m healthier again. Year six, gosh, I’m healthier again. If you’d have met me through that process, I always thought I was perfectly healthy. I just didn’t know. My brain—I’m in my 50s now. It works far better than when I was in my 20s.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I think it’s so important for people to understand it’s not this linear, exponential health rate that you’re going to achieve. You are going to do these ups, downs, and steps back, two steps forward, five steps back. You’ve just got to keep going. I know, unless you want to talk, throw something in right know—I know Mindy, you wanted to talk about heavy metals, coinfections, and how important addressing those two things—

Dr. Pompa:
You guys really thought this through. I think I’m going to have to air this show on Cell TV, the interview, Dr. Pompa. It’s really good because you’re so educated. You’re pulling me in to all this stuff that matters. In our space, once again, everyone’s chasing—we all do. I chase candida like a dog chasing its tail. I chase parasites like a dog chasing its tail. I chased Lyme at one point. Every one of those hidden infections I chased, only to realize that the only reason they existed is because they’re opportunistic. The heavy metals had my body down, my immune system down here. Until I got the heavy metals out to a certain point, I couldn’t even beat that candida, let alone Lyme.

Miraculously, as my immune system came up, as the metal came out, my immune system, then my candida treatment worked. Then the parasites stayed away. That could be the moldy home. It could be the heavy metals. It could be the infection. All of those things that we’re talking about keeps the immune system down here. Those darn pesky opportunistic pathogens, parasites, candida, whatever they are, they will cause you discomfort. How many practitioners are focused on trying to get you well for addressing the candida or whatever it is? It’s not going to happen.

Dr. Mindy:
That was me. I was really into repairing the gut before I discovered heavy metals. Then when I started detoxing heavy metals, my really difficult candida patients started getting better. I was like, what? What do you mean your candida that we’ve been going after for ten years is now officially gone? It just blew me away. One thing that I see is that you get people with all these co-infections. It seems like more people have Lyme, parasites, candida, EBV. They are jumping from specialist to specialist to specialist, and everybody goes, you’re this because of your EBV problem. You’re this because of your candida problem. Nobody is looking at the totality of how to handle these infections and where metals play a part.

Dr. Pompa:
I had Epstein Barr. I had cytomegalovirus. I had it all, but treating those things didn’t make me well.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I think every practitioner goes through that, though. I know that we did, where we’re like, this person has this gut infection. They have blastocystis hominis, a really terrible one. We’ve just got to hammer it.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s not that—we address those things, but again, without going upstream, it’s useless. We have to beat back those things to even keep the detox pathways open. Again, in and of itself, it’s not the answer.

Dr. Caitlyn:
Doing the heavy metal detox isn’t the be all end all. It’s not going to fix everything. You still have to after and address the coinfections or possibly even support hormone imbalance. I think what we’re all saying is if you don’t address the heavy metal—

Dr. Pompa:
I think hormone support—you have to support downstream pathways, you have to support—every person has their weaknesses that needs supported along the pathway of the detox and the infections, etcetera. You’re right, and that develops, again, that multi-therapeutic approach. I know you all have talked to your folks about the perfect storm. Everyone wants to be this one thing, but how people end up sick and how the genes of susceptibility get triggered, your thyroid condition, your autoimmune condition. It’s three stressors coming together and bam. That’s what triggers the gene.

Whether it’s chemical, mold, heavy metals, and the emotional stress. Maybe it’s a car accident, physical stress, creates [49:37]. There’s a physical stress, then the moldy home, and then the infection. It’s always this combination of three. It’s like the movie. The three weather fronts come together, and they create a catastrophic storm. That catastrophic storm in us is the gene of susceptibility being turned on—Chron’s, colitis, lupus, whatever it is.

Dr. Mindy:
Yeah, one of the mindsets that I see people use to approach these catastrophic storms is, if I walk into my medical doctor’s office and they give me a diagnosis of cancer, typically, what they’ll say is, and your solution is this round of chemo. It’s like a one-to-one correlation. Then somebody decides, I don’t want to go the medical route. I want to go the alternative route, and so they end up still taking with them that one-to-one correlation, but that doesn’t exist in this world that we’re talking about. That’s why I love the idea of this multi-therapeutic approach, that it’s really about creating a game plan and going, okay, I need to change my diet. I’ve got to fast. I’ve got to detox. I’ve got to go to—that concept has to get out into the world because it’s so missed.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I have to change it as we go, too. You can’t just continue doing the exact same thing forever.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s why you need a coach. We all have these people. They’re on the same probiotic for a year. Now they’re mono culturing. They’re on the same multivitamin. They’re on the same supplements. Why? They’re on the same diet. Why? Because it worked at one point, at least it helped with the symptoms. Now they have to understand that they have to evolve as the body’s finding homeostasis. Mindy, to your point, understanding the body finding homeostasis, which means balance that creates health. Everybody has cancer cells, but a body that’s able to find homeostasis figures it out. It gets rid of the cancer cells constantly and it builds better cells.

A body out of homeostasis because of one of these upstream stressors is a body that will eventually form disease, including cancer. It’s a multi-therapeutic approach in understanding this flow and the balance that again, so few really get and understand.

Dr. Mindy:
I think it’s the most confusing part of everything we’re talking about. It’s much easier for me to give somebody a pill and say, this is going to make all your problems go away. It is definitely the most confusing. What I approach so much about you is that you have not only taught us to think about all the possible upstream causes, but you’ve also encouraged us to teach the patient how to get themselves well. I think when you bring those two things together, now that’s truly where the magic happens. You’re not just handing multiple pills. You’re handing knowledge and you’re personalizing it for them. It’s incredible!

Dr. Pompa:
If I was on the other side as the patient, that’s the value. When you learn that, now you’re empowered. Your life’s going to change. If you don’t, you’re subject to be a patient your whole life, treating your whole life—didn’t work for me, and didn’t work for you all, and that’s why we’re passionate. That’s why we’re here. How few doctors are doing that because they don’t want to lose the power; they don’t. To me, if you’re doing the stuff that we’re talking about, it’s the only way out.

Dr. Caitlyn:
What I’d like to do, and you can correct me if this isn’t okay to do, Dr. Pompa. If you guys want to learn more about this and learn what Dr. Pompa does, what Dr. Mindy does, and what I do, and what Dr. Sonja does in our office, come to an HCF event.

Dr. Pompa:
First time the publics’ involved, able to come.

Dr. Caitlyn:
I was going to say, I think you’re allowing public to come, so you don’t even have to be a practitioner. You’re going to start to learn all of these premises, how to look at things, and how to address them for yourself. Maybe you’ll even get to meet myself, Dr. Mindy, Dr. Sonja. You’ll be able to pick Dr. Dan out of the crowd because he’s legendary there. I invite you guys to come and check it out and [53:58] yourself.

Dr. Mindy:
Awesome, this has been great. We could talk to you for hours. Again, from the bottom of our hearts, and from all of our patients, thank you for all the research you’ve done, and for teaching us how to think this through at a really deep level. I know we’re going to change the world with this level of healthcare, this thorough approach, and the way that we’re looking at it.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re welcome, gladly. Loved it.

Dr. Mindy:
Awesome.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. Practitioners, don’t forget to check out our HCF Seminar in Nashville, where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing. Please go to hcfevents.com for more information. Practitioners, you can take $150 off with the code CHTV when you purchase the four-day pass. To the rest of our CHTV audience, please check out events.drpompa.com if you’d like to buy a one-day ticket for our special day of public attendance. We hope to see you there. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 AM Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv.

 

260: A 3,000 Year-Old Secret to Restful Sleep

260: A 3,000 Year-Old Secret to Restful Sleep

with Michael Tyrrell

Learn How Thousands Are Getting to Sleep Again Without Supplements or Drugs

TRANSCRIPT

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Today, we welcome back award-winning author, musician, composer, and producer, Michael Tyrrell. Most importantly, he’s the creator of the Wholetones Healing Frequency Music Project. Michael is back today to introduce the newest member of his Wholetones family, the Wholetones2Sleep sleep device. He’ll tell us the story of how Wholetones came to be, and he’ll discuss the benefits of specific frequencies, and how they can impact sleep in a positive way. Music impacts our mood, body, and health in ways we never thought possible. We can’t wait to share this new sleep solution with you.

Before we get started, I’d like to share a bit more about Michael Tyrrell. Michael began developing Wholetones after a visit to Israel yielded an unexpected but divine event which led him to discover seven hidden musical frequencies that have the power to heal the mind, body, and spirit. Stay tuned to hear the whole story and discover the secret to wellness through music. If you would like to read more about Michael’s story, learn more about his Wholetones2Sleep device, or if you’d like to hear more about his Healing Frequency Music Project, please check out our links in our show notes

Practitioners, please be sure to check out HCF’s Live It to Lead It seminar in Nashville where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing. Please go to hcfevents.com for more information. Practitioners, you can take $150 off with the code CHTV when you purchase the four-day pass.

To the rest of our CHTV audience, we have some exciting news. We have opened up one day of this conference to the public. Please go to events.drpompa.com if you’d like to attend and hear the amazing speakers who will leave you feeling inspired and ready to take action. We hope to see you there. Alright, so let’s get started and welcome Dr. Pompa and Michael Tyrrell to the show. This is Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Pompa:
Michael, welcome back to Cellular Healing TV.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yes, it’s an honor to be back with you, Dr. Pompa. It’s nice to see that you’re in a room without any leaky water.

Dr. Pompa:
Before the show, you reminded me of that.  I was like, oh yeah. Yeah, that’s who I did the show with; it was you who I had that problem with my house.

Michael Tyrrell:
It wasn’t my fault, I swear.

Dr. Pompa:
I’ve had it all happen to me. Yeah, these things happen especially the things that I fear the most: mold. How about that. No, listen, I love this topic. We had an amazing interview.

Michael Tyrrell:
We did.

Dr. Pompa:
It was a great one. We’ll make sure we put what episode that was so people that love this show can go back and listen. Yeah, we went deep into your story then because I was super fascinated about—and I want you to still review it, just how you came to this. The story for me being a Christian, a believer, and how you were in Israel, you just got to repeat that a little bit.

You discovered these tones that to me are biblical tones that affect our healing. In the last episode, we discussed how these tones affect different health aspects, but we didn’t cover the one we’re going to talk about today. That’s sleep. You have something new that takes it to the next level. Stay tuned, folks, because you’re going to get to experience what I got to experience. Tell the story a little bit, Michael, just to remind our viewers.

Michael Tyrrell:
Absolutely; well, I did a lot of things with my pastor, Don Finto. I was on staff with him and proofread his book: Your People Shall Be My People. He wanted to go to Israel to do some ministry over there. I had the opportunity to proofread a book and go to Israel. I never told anyone this story and I feel like I’m supposed to.

When we embarked on the trip, when we got to New York, we flew EL Al. They have amazing security, really top security. When we got there, they separated the two of us, the security agents. One was a guy; one was a girl. They started asking me all these questions, trick questions.

Finally, I said, “Look, I’m going to tell you why I’m going to your country. Then you can decide whether you want me to go or not. I’m going to go to your country to tell people who Yeshua is. I’m going to expose the Messiah of Jesus in Israel. I’m going to leave money and guitars. We’re going to play worship music in the streets of Israel in your country. That’s why I’m going.”

He looked at me for a minute. He looked at the girl and motioned her to come over. They talked for a second and had Don, my pastor, come over. He said, “Can we do something for the two of you?” I said, “Yeah, sure.” They bent down and they put their hands on our feet. They prayed over us and thanked God for sending us to their country. I’m just sitting here going, Orthodox Jews are laying their hands on our feet asking God to bless our feet as we travel through the country sharing the truth about Jesus.

Dr. Pompa:
That was a blessing and [00:05:19] really. It led the way to what was—the blessing that was coming, right?

Michael Tyrrell:
Oh, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Tell that. That was impressive right there showing that God, man, was on where He was sending you and what He wanted you to discover.

Michael Tyrrell:
Sure, so when we got in the car up in Gurion, we started heading for Jerusalem. Don, my pastor, just said, “I just feel like we’re supposed to go to this coffee house Ben Yahuda Street. I feel like a friend of mine that lives in Tel Aviv was going to meet us there.” I said, “You keep saying you feel. Did you call him? Does he know we’re coming?” He goes, “Oh no; he doesn’t have any idea we’re here.”

I said, “Tel Aviv is two and a half hours away.” He goes, “I have a feeling.” I thought, I want to live like this guy. That’s absolute faith. What was more faith was letting me drive in a country I’ve never been to; I have horrible direction. That took more faith.

We’re driving into Jerusalem. I’m driving down Ben Yehuda Street and here’s this beautiful coffee house. He goes, “That’s the place.” We pulled around back, went in the side.

As soon as I walked into the coffee house, the very first thing I heard was beautiful piano music playing. I looked to my left and there’s a guy up on a little riser playing piano. As soon as I walked in, he just like [non-verbal] just staring. He’s staring a hole through my head. Then he started smiling. I was like what’s going on. I knew he knew something. It’s like when somebody’s telling a joke, but you don’t know the punchline, and something’s coming.

Finally, I just had to close my eyes. I listened to the music. I thought, man, these are like famous worship songs that we hear in church in American. This guy’s playing an instrumental version in a Hasidic coffee house. I’m thinking, how does this work.

Finally, he made a beeline to our table and introduced himself as David. I was like, yeah. He said, “Excuse me for staring.” He said, “I know it was probably a little bit awkward,” but he said, “I think you’re a believer.” I said, “I absolutely am.” I said, “Obviously, you are, too.”

He said, “I had a really strange thing happen this morning when I woke up.” He said, “Yeshua told me that I would talk all my life’s work and hand it to somebody else.” He said, “I think you might be the person that I’m supposed to give my life’s work to.” My question was, “What was your life’s work?” He said, “Decoding the songs of King David. Different kind of music. Heals the sick.”

I’m just going [non-verbal]. I said, “What do you want me to do?” He said, “Just wait for my next set. I’m going to go out to my car. It’s in a backpack. I’m going to give you everything.”

That’s exactly what happened. I’m thinking about Don’s friend that he said was going to magically appear who lives two and a half hours away. Also, I wonder what this music is. That’s what’s going through my head.

He plays some more music. About two songs in, I see Don turn around in his chair, stand up, face is glowing, runs to the door. There’s his friend from Tel Aviv just like he said, Ruben Duran. They’re hugging each other.

Ruben came back, and I said, “How did you know we were here?” He said, “I woke up this morning and God told me to come to this coffee house. He said my friend was here, but He didn’t tell me who.” I’m just going, I want to live like this all of the time; all the time. I don’t want to even—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I’ve had these things. I tell stories in my life and I say the same thing. It’s like this happens in these little things where God wants to show you something. He has something. Then we couldn’t handle it if it happened all the time; let’s face it.

Michael Tyrrell:
He just wants us to trust him. It’s been a long journey. After Don embraces this guy, David comes back with his backpack and hands me two sets of music. One was what we would call tablature form music that we all are familiar with that are musically inclined. Then the other one was a complete—to the layperson chicken scratching. All I can call it is avant-garde notation. Obviously, you would have to know the code in order to be able to deceiver what the heck the lines were for.

I saw it. I hugged the guy, kissed him on the cheek, thanked him. He said, “Yeshua will tell you what to do with it.” We left. I went home.

I played the tablature back in American when I got home. I didn’t feel anything. It was like that’s just more music. That wasn’t exciting. Then I didn’t know what to do with the others, the avant-garde notation because there wasn’t a key signature or any polyphonic chordal stamp anywhere where I could—I put everything in a manila envelope and shoved it into my drawer in office and went back with—I was on staff at a church. Went back to ministry for two years. I didn’t see that paper for two years.

One day, I came home from church about 6 o’clock and I remembered it. It was like, I need to look at that music again. It was amazing. I pulled the music out. I still didn’t really have anything, but I noticed my Bible right by my computer. I thought, 222, that number. I wonder what’s on Page 222 in the Bible? Then my thought was, not thinking out loud, I said, if there’s anything about David on that page, I’m going to come out of my skin right now.

It was an NIV Thinline. For your listeners, obviously depending on what version that you get, it’s going to be a different page. My Bible, Page 222 is a genealogy edited within David, the son of Jesse, was the last word of the page. I went ahh. Then it was like oh, then it was like aw, and then it was like OMGG, oh my God, God, I’ve got it.

What happened was I suddenly realized 222 if I doubled it was 444, 444 hertz. Which again, to the layperson might not mean much, but our music is 440 hertz. Most of the music that’s used in America and other parts of the country, Canada as well is 440 hertz. Meaning, the note A equals 440 vibrations per second. That’s the stamp.

All of a sudden, I’m trying to answer all these questions in my head, Dr. Pompa, like I wonder how David tuned kinnor. I know it wasn’t for chords. Then all of a sudden, it was like this giant rubrics cube moment like everything lines up. I went 444 hertz is still an A, but it’s 4 cents higher.

I retuned my guitar. Then I played the music. I was like, my hair stood up. I went, I think I got it. I started working with all the frequencies that are using A as your tonal center. That’s how I began to discover the seven healing frequencies out of that.

Dr. Pompa:
Just to remind people, David went in and played for Sol. Sol was going out of his mind, but every time David played, he would—that was the only time he felt normal and calm. Obviously, everyone always wondered what was so special about what he was playing, or how he was playing, or in your case, the frequency he was playing. That’s what you discovered there.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yeah, and the powerful part of that is that David created his own instruments. The Bible is very clear about that. There was a lot of guys that played a kinnor. Just for history’s sake, it wasn’t a harp; it’s a kinnor. A kinnor is a jubilee wire style with 10 strings but no chords. The 10 strings, each one of those was a specific melodic note. They played melody; they didn’t play polyphonic music for thousands of years later.

What’s really awesome about this is he built his own harp. He built a harp that could withstand a higher tensile strength. Which means if you’re tuning a little bit higher, you have to use a wood that’s a little bit more resilient. He did. He also created his kinnor out of wood that was impervious to bugs and weather.

Long story short, this guy—there’s lots of kinnor players. Sol would have had quite a few to choose from, but obviously, he did before and nothing happened when they played. When David would play, the spirit that vexed him and caused him great despair, depression, despondency, suddenly within moments was gone. When I started working with 444, which I call the key of David, when I started working, Dr. Pompa, with this frequency as my tonal center, I realized really quick that when I started playing, that everything around me, the atmosphere changed very quickly. Not me feeling it, but people walking into that space or coming to hear worship would go, I could just go to sleep right here.

Everything, all the blood, just I’m so—I thought, wow, this is where this came from. This is probably—well, we know is the same tuning that Jesus listened to because of the music of the time of course. We know that it was part of what was supposed to be a never-ending litany of pure worship that was Davidic worship, and then, of course, his son Salmon carried on. It was carried on by priesthoods for centuries.

What we don’t really understand which I think your listeners would find fascinating is in 313, there was a rite that was put into law called the Edict of Milan. Emperor Constantine, it was sweet and sour because what he did was he decreed that anyone could worship whatever they want. Before that, Christians were being killed because they were a sect. They were subversives in the mind of the Romans. They tried to wipe them off the face of the Earth as we know.

When the Edict of Milan was signed by Emperor Constantine, it basically said, you all can worship whatever you want to now. The Christians came out of their clandestine hiding places. No one could use the sight in the sand of the aqueous. They could meet openly.

When they started meeting openly, things started to happen. Spontaneous healing started to happen. They were still using the same music that had been used since David’s day. That was their music. Romans didn’t have their own music at this point. It’s interesting. Eventually, there was a tetrarchy of what we would call Christian communities that were vibrant.

Then the Romans said, hey, why are we doing something different? Why don’t we assimilate these guys? They did. When they did, the formed a Roman state church which was an amalgamation of Roman citizens and all of the Hebrews that were already—that some of them—most of them where from families that had been in the upper room during Pentecost in their bloodline.

You’ve got this unbelievably anointed music; then you have an unbelievably rich group of people, so they came together. At the beginning of the Roman state church, which is not the Catholic church yet or the Roman Catholic church yet, it’s just before. There’s some great literature that talks about spontaneous healings. That part of the big drawing card back then was people would walk into this music when they were playing in these frequencies. People would just be spontaneously healed in the service.

That ended about 542 when a guy named Pope Gregory the Great who’s the one that tried to single-handedly wipe out all of the music that contained this tuning in these frequencies. Once he did that, all of the pomp and circumstance returned to worship which is not what God asked for. He asked for intimacy. When Pope Gregory the Great did that, he was an heir of secret relics and art. He would bring in all of his stuff and that would be the center point of the service was about, hey, I got the eyetooth of John the Baptist. I’ve got all this stuff. Before, it was just the worship.

Dr. Pompa:
With that said, at that time, did the frequencies change, and therefore, we saw—we stopped seeing the same outcomes?

Michael Tyrrell:
A couple of things happened. In that timeframe, what Pope Gregory the Great did was take away two. When I explain this, it’s really going to excite you. The two he took away was one called in the Greek, MI-ra gestorum, which means the miracle frequency 528 hertz which scientists have proven have a direct relationship to the human DNA, the human genome. That it actually has the ability to restore broken DNA, mindboggling. They called it the miracle frequency 528. There’s people that call it the love frequency. I call it transformation because it has the ability to actually transform the most vital information in our body which our DNA.

The other one that was removed was 741 hertz which I call the great awakening believe it or not. It’s a frequency that on one side has been proven to have an interaction with viral, fungal, and bacterial infection. On the spiritual side, there is this unbelievably—when people listen to it, they’re brought to tears. They immediately see the difference or a chasm if they’re not already in the family, a chasm between them in God. They see the greatness of God and they see the horrific nature of their sin. There’s an awakening that comes when—and he removed those two from the seven.

What was really interesting is that he retained the other ones, but he would domesticate the music. He was not a musician even though was called the patron saint or the pope—the musical pope. You’d have to play the radio. He had no ability to play music. What he did was, he had to play “Ave Maria” for the whole worship part which was, of course, truncated because to him the most important thing was his religious icons. He didn’t fully destroy it, but what we know now, Dr. Pompa, is that there’s two schools of thought: either A) over 300 hymns were either burned or are still in the Vatican archive, but nobody has the access to know if they’re still around.

Dr. Pompa:
Interesting; if there’s these frequencies that make a positive impact on our health in our mind, are there frequencies then that can make a negative impact that are influencing music even today?

Michael Tyrrell:
Yes, to the 10th factor. When we read in the Bible, one line it says that we possess the power of life and death and it’s in our tone, the vibratory member that is what decrees what our heart is wanting to say. There’s a couple of things. Maybe on another show because I’d like to go into it. I’d like to talk about Schumann resonance at some point. I’d like to talk to you about what’s happened at heart, and also, about what’s happened with a certain collider, and why things are as crazy as they are right now because they’re all frequency interacted.

To answer your question as simply as possible: absolutely there’s nefarious use. You can either speak life or death. You can either create with frequency, frequencies that bring people to a higher consciousness, help their body which was perfectly designed by God spontaneously heal, or I can destroy things with it. I can blow molecules apart. I can blow a wall with it.

Dr. Pompa:
True; yeah, no, absolutely. We know how important frequency is. We understand more about what’s happening at the cellular level with frequency, how DNA is disrupted with frequency, etc. Scientifically, it’s solid.

You listen to music—people have talked about plants growing better with certain music. It’s dying with certain horrific music that we heal. I don’t know the labels of some of this music, but I know that we all—we can hear it and just know there’s something not right. There’s certain frequency and commonalities in some of those musics?

Michael Tyrrell:
There are. One way to easily explain it is when you talk about musical harmonics. There’s two forms of harmonics: odd or even. Odd is exactly what you would think it would be. It would not be balanced.

All the frequencies that give life are balanced frequencies. All of them are interrelated by mathematics or the scan of Pythagoras. You can calculate frequencies that are positive for the human body, positive for the environment in the same way you can pretty much calculate frequencies that are nefarious and negative have a different type of spin that instead of building, they begin to cause degradation.

Yeah, one thing that I’ve seen, and you mentioned plants which is awesome because—it’s really funny; they’ve always tried to prove that talking to plants cause plants to grow and it’s true. What they’ve never known is it the frequency of the voice that’s speaking to the plant, or is it the carbon dioxide that they’re admitting, or is it both? I can tell you that Jordan Rubin and several people have been using successfully my Chroma project to grow plants that are—there’s exponential difference in the yield and the efficacy of the amount of—for example, he’s [00:23:02] being mushroomed or some of the other mushrooms that Jordan’s growing—

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, I’ve—when Jordan started that project some years ago, I was in the room. That was the first time I heard your music.

Michael Tyrrell:
I had no idea.

Dr. Pompa:
Jordan’s been a friend of mine for years. I walked in, and I was like, “What’s play? What is that?” He explained it all to me. That was you. I found out later that was these frequencies.

By the way, just so people watching, I have all these; I have the seven frequencies. There’s seven by the way that you discovered. They’re on my phone. When I’m lying in my far infrared sauna, I always play them. I always fall asleep by the way. We’re going to get to the sleep thing in a minute. Okay, finish the story there. Jordan plays all the plants. Yeah, right, he said that there was a difference.

Michael Tyrrell:
He had told me before what he had was a cassette or he had bumped it up to obviously a better form of music. I think it was a CD he would play, a recording of a Rabbi reading the songs before. He said there was some change. He said there’s something about the photon activity with the music that you’ve created that I think if I put these big screens up in my indoor growing, I think something’s going to happen.

Then it wasn’t two weeks later—Jordan is one of my favorite people, but he’s not overtly excited. He’s more flatlined and he’s very balanced. He called me up and he goes, “I’m sending you some pictures right now. I said, “Okay, what?” He goes, “Mushrooms; you’ve got to see it.” He was really excited.

I started getting these pictures of these mushrooms and stuff. I was like, “What’s the difference?” He goes, “This is how small it should be. These are the ones that are growing from your music and your light. I was like, oh my gosh.

Dr. Pompa:
You know what’s cool about it is it removes the placebo effect when you’re dealing with plants.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yeah, pets and plants. See, you’re the first guy that’s said that. That’s why I love working with animals because they sniff it: they like it, they don’t like it. They sniff it: yeah, that’s good. They think, I’ll lick it, or they just walk away. It’s one or the other.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, what about in humans? This has been there—this has been going enough now that we have some testimonies. Tell some stories that—how these frequencies have impacted people’s lives?

Michael Tyrrell:
I actually pulled some for you from some of the sleep stuff too which has just been—because we’re going to get into that, but oh my gosh, that stuff has been mindboggling. Usually, I’m really in tune with the people that—I call them Wholetoneians; I don’t even call them customers. I field as many calls, I call them at home, I take a lot of surveys. The number one thing—well, the number one thing that was good was that all of them reported almost 100% doctor said, when I play this music, no matter how stressed out I am, I immediately feel myself pieced out.

The one thing I wasn’t—when I got this, [00:25:59] told me—I’m sorry; I’m trying not to be emotional. After all the years of 30 plus years of ministry and being a pastor, an associate pastor, worship leader, the Lord told me, what I’ve given you is going to eclipse in a year everything that you’ve done in your whole life. It’s going to be the most powerful evangelical tool that I have. I’m thinking, how? My first thing is, how’s that going to happen?

It’s like when He told Abraham that his sons are going to be greater the number than the stars in the universe. He’s like, I can’t even have a kid. I’m thinking the same way. I was like, how’s this going to work out? Then next thing you know, 92% of the people that responded to Survey Monkey said, when I put this music on, I was backslide. When I put this music on, I felt far away from the war. I put this music on, I didn’t even know anything about spiritual life. This brought me to God. This brought me to Jesus. That’s what knocked me flat was I didn’t see that coming.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s amazing. Yeah, and like you said, the physical, I’ve read some. I don’t know if it was some pieces you put out or some of the testimonies. Pain, headaches—

Michael Tyrrell:
Yeah, mindboggling.

Dr. Pompa:
—digestive issues, sleep. Obviously, we’re going to—

Michael Tyrrell:
We’ve even broke it down now, Doc. On all the landing pages where the testimonials are, there’s hundreds of them. You can go even now by what it is. You can look under the malady or what you’re feeling.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. If people doubt it, just go read. Go read for yourself; these are live stories. Frequencies matter. There is no doubt something to this; absolutely no doubt. It’s amazing; for years, they’ve talked about certain musics and how it—people link it to different things and how—for the negative. It’s like even now we have all this science coming out how it can be linked—music can be linked for the positive. Here you go.

Sleep is a big passion of mine because neurotoxic people, many people who have different illnesses, sleep is the hardest thing to figure out. Until we get their brain detoxed to a certain point, they don’t ever sleep. Yeah, melatonin works for a little bit; this works, but then it doesn’t; this works, then it doesn’t; and then now, nothings working. Tell us how this works for sleep, why it works for sleep, and give us some stories.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yeah, well, the first thing was I didn’t really think about any of that. Honestly, when the Lord changed everything, and I’ve actually learned after 52 years to get out of his way, things became remarkably smooth, and silent, and peaceful, and there was no striving. I changed the way I did everything. One of the things is I used to just go through life going, I think I want to do this project; Lord, bless it. Instead of saying, what do you want to do? What do you feel like doing? I’ll do whatever you want to do. When I did that and could rest in that, that’s how all of this wonderful stuff happened.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, I can so relate to that. I’m the person who constantly has to be doing things. What’s the next thing? At least in my growing wisdom, I’ve learned not to do that. I have to wait. Waiting is the hardest thing until He says, do this, or this is what’s next. In the waiting is where I’m in most my dangerous place because I’m creating things that He didn’t want.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yeah, and you’re smart so you’ll think of something.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly; and they’re all disasters.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yeah, they are.

Dr. Pompa:
My time, so I get it; go ahead.

Michael Tyrrell:
The one thing that—to mention something in that is that I just learned that creativity is a river. I wait for it to come to me. It has its own current. I used to go and manufacture stuff. Yeah, that’ me. It’s like I can’t just sit here and be smiling. I’ve got to build something. Then when I finally got to that place, God dumped Wholetones on my head. I wasn’t even looking for it.

Yeah, we were talking about the whole sleep thing. I really got to say that I didn’t initially start out to make a sleep project, but to be honest with you, so many people fell asleep listening to the first one.  Me, too. Then there was people who’d say, I can’t sleep to this because it has drums. It’s like I didn’t create it for sleep, but it will relax you.

I thought one day, man, I was an insomniac for years as a musician and stuff. I bet a lot of people are struggling. I Googled it of course: 70 million people are suffering. In 2019, 70 million people in our country alone are struggling from some type of sleeping disorder. When I read that statistic, Doc, I just went, this should be like number one.

I’m thinking this, and then as fate would have it, I go to New York. I ended up spending the day with Dr. Oz. We’re talking about everything. He goes, what’s on your—what sounds good for right now? I said, sleep, man. He just looks at me and goes, are you kidding? I’m like, no.

He goes, sleep, that’s what you’re going to focus on? He goes, that’s what I’m going to focus on. I thought, wow. Then he said this; he said, “Michael, it doesn’t matter why type of allopathic drugs you’re taking, or what kind of natural substances or supplements you’re taking, if you’re not sleeping a minimum of six to eight hours a day, your body can’t heal itself.” I went, lightning, thunder; it’s like okay. That’s it.

What happened, Doc, is I went into the studio. I thought, what do I remember growing up? I remember my mom holding me and singing lullabies. I remember I would vibrate as a baby on her chest when she would sing. I’m thinking, take the drums out, don’t use drums. You don’t need any of this stuff. Just find the elemental instruments and keep everything without dynamics. You want to lull someone to sleep, which is what lullaby is, bye and be lulled until I see you in the morning. I had to find this river, this water sound of just fluid stuff without any peaks and valleys.

I went in and recorded it. I couldn’t believe it. I’ll tell you; I don’t know if I’ve shared this live either, but this is how I knew it worked in the funniest way. When it just shows you that personally speaking, I’m not so smart. Everybody thinks I am, but I still do some of the dumbest things.

All the recording’s done. This magnificent music, we’re mixing it. We’ve got the soundboard. We’re mixing everything. The musicians went home. I started at 10; by 11:30, I’m like [non-verbal]. I’m looking over at the engineer and same things happening with him, but we’re not smart enough to figure it out.

We drink more coffee. About an hour later, we’re both starting to do the head cracker, I’m tired, dude; more coffee. I had about four cups of coffee in me. Then we started going for the iced coffee. I’ve got four cups of coffee and an iced coffee and I can’t keep my lids open.

All of a sudden, I looked over at him and said, “We are such morons.” I said, “We’re mixing lullabies. This stuff, this works.” The guy that was coming to listen to the music was sitting on the couch behind us. I look over, he’s like this: out cold.

Then you would say, Tyrrell, you might not be the sharpest tool, but you got it then, right? Oh, no. Then I thought when I got it all done, let’s have a listening party. We invite all our friends over. We’ve got food and everything.

I put the music on. Everybody is like, I can’t wait to hear the new music, so put the new music on. Five minutes into it, Doc, everyone in the room, same time; everybody’s catching flies. Most boring party you could ever have. That was the end of it. Everybody just sleep for an hour and then they all went home.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s great. Hey, that was it. Actually, they’re actually probably going, hey, when’s the next one of those because I slept great.

Michael Tyrrell:
How about tomorrow night.

Dr. Pompa:
You came out with this really cool device because you don’t want your phone. You don’t your phone; it sits there and plays it through the night for you.

Michael Tyrrell:
Mm-hmm; and there’s some really cool things about the device, too. First of all, hopefully, your listeners like me because I voiced all of this. When they turn it on, that’s going to be me saying, “Power on.” I’m going to be talking them through how to use it.

Dr. Pompa:
I didn’t even notice that actually. That’s funny.

Michael Tyrrell:
Then the other thing is that people are really quirky when they sleep. The first device that I made had a light on the bottom. More people complained about there’s a light! I said, well, cover it with electrical tape. I can’t stand the light.

I thought, okay, when we do the Generation Two play, we’re going to make it indestructible. We’re going to put soft touch buttons that stay light for 12 seconds and then go right out. It’s on the bottom. I don’t know how many people go to a hotel and they’ve got one of those clock radios there with the brightest in the world. I just put something over it: socks, anything.

The takeaway from this is you can take it—we just got back from Antigua my wife and I. The first thing that goes in the suitcase is this little gem. Then anywhere you want to go, if you have somebody that’s—you have a friend that’s an insomniac or something, and they want to try it, but they don’t want to buy it, then lend them your Wholetones2Sleep. It’s all in one device.

Again, I’m like you; I’m not a big fan of EMF. I try to create everything with as low of EMF. This has virtually no EMF until you use the Bluetooth option on the bottom. There’s a switch that says, M, which means mode. There’s two modes: music play mode and then of course Bluetooth.

Now, Bluetooth connectivity you have to put it on devices or people won’t purchase it. For example, if you’re like me, if you listen to your phone and just listen to music without good headphones, it sounds awful. If you send your iTunes list to this device, it sounds heavenly because this makes your phone sound great because it bypasses those cheesy little holes in the bottom of your phone and pumps it through a decent speaker. That’s why I added Blu-ray, but I like the listeners to know that you’re not stuck with that being on all the time, so you’re not going to have EMFs running all the time.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, that’s perfect. I would have requested that as well. Yeah, and this thing’s so durable, the NHL, the hockey league has a puck. They say it makes them play better; I don’t know.

Michael Tyrrell:
It’s the power puck, man. Oh, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Power puck, it would be a little heavy though. No, it’s created well. For me, it’s made it more convenient. I also like being able to utilize my phone in those odd situations like an emergency.

Let’s talk about that. Where can they get—and I think we have a link here. We’re doing something because you always give us something for our viewers and listeners. We’ll put that here in the show notes. How can they get this, and what does that cost, and what if they just want to download different frequencies?

Michael Tyrrell:
Yep, they can do all of the above. Again, we usually do run a special. I wasn’t queued in to find out what we’re doing for your listeners, but I can guarantee it’s better than what I can do off the website. Yeah, the way we usually do it, this unit standing by itself is $129. The one thing that I wanted to say to your listeners is a lot of people don’t realize this, Dr. Pompa, you probably do already, but we’re a year to two years away from everything except devices, apps, and streaming music, everything is going away.

It’s terrible that it is because what the industry has switched to and I’m not a fan of this at all in my music industry is the fact that they don’t want people to own their own music anymore. By subscribing to streaming audio, you never own any music. As long as you pay them every month, every quarter, every year, then you get to rent your music. You can create all your playlists, everything, but the moment you don’t pay your subscription fees, guess what? Just like the radio stations that are out there that you have to pay for, it’s gone. The day that I don’t pay for whatever, that Sirius Radio, SiriusXM—

Dr. Pompa:
Spotify, whatever it is.

Michael Tyrrell:
That’s the end of that. One other thing I’m continuously doing is giving somebody value and something that is theirs forever. It would be hard to break this. I don’t suggest you have to buy another one. When you get this one, I really don’t foresee a problem. If you have a problem with it and you have warranty period, we just send you out another one anyways.

Hard copy music, a lot of the demographics that I work with, especially some of our female Wholetoneians, they don’t want to buy air; they want something for their money. I don’t blame them. They want either like you said a digital download. We have digital download cards. They can get everything they want instantly downloaded. Then they can keep it in their own playlist and it’s their MP3 music. Nobody’s going to be able to take that away.

You can have hard copy CDs of course. Which I really love how this turned out, the Wholetones2Sleep CDs are absolutely brilliant. It’s over three hours of music. Then, of course, you have devices. Now, an app; we even have a sleep app now. They can go to the App Store and get a sleep app which I believe is $49.95 as well. Yeah, that’s the four ways of doing it. I’m going to try my best to defy the industry as long as possible and hopefully never have to get into that subscription thing. I just don’t—

Dr. Pompa:
It’s funny; I just recently bought a record player, the vinyl.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yes!

Dr. Pompa:
I never knew this, but I didn’t know that analog which is a vinyl record is better than digital. All the experts are like, oh no, vinyl’s the best. I’m like, really? I said, “Haven’t we advanced beyond?” No, no; it’s still the best. I’m actually am buying albums again for goodness sake.

Michael Tyrrell:
You’re smart. I watch everything. I’ve got my finger on the pulse of the industry. I predicted 10 years ago the return of vinyl. The reason there hasn’t been any vinyl, first of all, it’s because they’re—people really don’t want people to own media anymore because they don’t want to manufacture it and they want to be able to—hey, what’ s the best thing I could do to make money? Sell you air, bro. I could just sell you this streaming audio. Now, think about what we’ve said. Streaming audio is so truncated. It’s the complete diametric opposite of a 12-inch vinyl CD.

What happened was America when they decided not to support records anymore, sold all of that equipment, all those record pressing plants, and all of that manufacturing equipment to Deutsche Grammophon in Germany. All these years when this started coming back, all those records that we were buying, the vinyl was coming from Germany. It was at a premium price. Two years ago, the first three major manufacturing companies bought back a bunch of that equipment from Germany. Now, we are manufacturing vinyl in the United States. Vinyl is starting to take off. I will probably put out a Wholetones vinyl project. You can’t see it, but in my room, I’ve got a record player right behind you.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I was going to ask that. I was going to ask you to put it in vinyl, so we can get the analog.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yeah, the good thing is that what we’re talking about compared to what—Quincy Jones says we’ve finally reached the apex where an entire generation has never really heard sonically what music can do. For example, their best sound they’ve ever heard is two really cheesy head—earphones plugged into what? A phone which generates what? MP3s. That’s the best.

We grew up with records. I can put a record on a really good sound system in my house, and bring a young Millennial into my house, and sit them down, and turn it on, and watch the spigots come on. Watch them cry because they’ve never felt the music; they’ve only heard the music. That’s the difference.  

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s funny; not to get too off track; this is what I do with you. Just last night, I couldn’t find a VHS recorder because I had this old Frank Sinatra, Portrait of an Album. It’s that one he created, LA is My Lady. The reason it’s significant is they did something even in the 80s that is not being done. They brought all the best musicians in one room.

They have Lionel Hampton, The Breaker Brothers, you name it, George Foster, they brought them all. Frank Sinatra, the singer, all in one room. They recorded LA is My Lady. It was the best of the best recorded in one room. It was like nothing other. That’s a lost art. I don’t know if it’s been done ever since. Anyways, I just watched that last night. I have the LA is My Lady vinyl. I’ll tell you; you listen to that album, man.

Michael Tyrrell:
It’s too much.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s just too much.

Michael Tyrrell:
You think about this; those guys didn’t have the ability to have virtual tracking. We have endless tracking; everything’s in digital domain. Back then, you had to play it right or do it over again.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right. By the way, I think why it went—that’s why they don’t do it that way, right?

Michael Tyrrell:
Right.

Dr. Pompa:
What singer can stay in the pocket like he did?

Michael Tyrrell:
Yep, exactly.

Dr. Pompa:
What he did is he brought an energy to the musicians playing. Their hair would go up.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yeah, it was unbelievable.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, there he is, man. He’s the master himself with the greatest musicians in the world. My gosh, I’m ready to tell people when they can buy LA is My Lady. You should get it, but you have to get a phonograph to that.

Michael Tyrrell:
You should become an affiliate for Frank.

Dr. Pompa:
I grew up with Frank, man; the Italian heritage.

Michael Tyrrell:
No kidding. That’s awesome. I love all of that. We could talk about crooners forever because that’s—

Dr. Pompa:
That’s awesome. Do you have anything else you want to share with my viewers and listeners about what you’re doing, where you’re going with it, and how it can affect their life, whatever?

Michael Tyrrell:
Sure, yep. I want to read a couple of our friends that wrote in about sleep because that’s important. I want them to hear this. For example, “I just got Wholetones2Sleep. I love it. Three nights and I’m sleeping so much better and longer.” That was Nancy.

Here’s another lady. “Amazing for my grandchildren. I’ve always wanted this for myself. I believe in getting a good night sleep, so I’ve been checking this product out. It helped me, but I took it to my grandkids and those kids really took to it. My eldest grandchild went back and forth for the songs, but by a couple of days, went straight to the songs she liked, and fell asleep. My grandson took to it like a duck on water. Now, I know what I need to get them to sleep when I want them to lay down.”

We just got a bunch of these. Insomniacs, we have a whole page of people that were addicted to using Ambien which is a bummer. Any type of sleeping thing like that because it’s a psychotic drug, so you can become a psycho using it. People do things; they don’t remember doing it in the morning. They get the munchies and start eating in the middle of the night. There’s a trial of corn chips going back to their bed. It’s just crazy stuff.

Finding something as, at least in our understanding, as benign as music, Doctor, that can have—that can move so many markers with so many people. You mentioned dogs for having outrageous—in fact, that’s going to be one of the next QVC things I do this year is just dogs. We have a lot of hurricanes in Florida as you know. My dog was extremely sensitive to that kind of stuff like separation anxiety, loud noises, 4th of July fireworks, and especially hurricanes.

When I found out that this worked for dogs and I put mine on, my dog slept through the whole Category Three outside. You can see our palm trees like this, the dog’s out cold. A local place, Jake’s, down here that’s a pet supply found out that I made music for dogs. They bought everything I had here and they sold out of them. Every one of the people came back and said, during that hurricane, my dog slept in his bed the whole time.

I guess what I’m trying to say is that I haven’t begun to tap the applications. I would say that every living thing can benefit from proper—the good news is that your listeners would want to know is that after listening to this, it’s like a recalibrating experience. I hear the tones very well without ever even turning them on anymore because I’m used to hearing them so much, they become part of me. Like I’ve told you before when we’ve talked, one of my biggest advocates was a girl who was born deaf: Stephanie Rude in Saint Paul, Minnesota. She’s a huge advocate for the deaf community because she said this is the first time I ever knew why people love music because I felt it in my body when you played.    

Dr. Pompa:
Your cells hear frequency. We can hear it with our ears, but our cells still perceive and can—I guess perceive is a better word, the frequency. You get the cellular change regardless whether your ear is picking it up. Matter of fact, I think you taught me that the first time. You know Dr. Pompa, you don’t even have to hear it.

Michael Tyrrell:
The hearing is irrelevant.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, if the frequency is going, meaning it’s putting out the frequency, whether you hear it or not doesn’t matter. Your cells will still vibrate. Your receptors to it will still vibrate, so you’ll still get a cellular response so to speak. Likewise, with this, I asked you that question right off the bat: can you change the volume? You can; you can change the volume down to a point where you can barely hear it or—but it’s still going to affect you.

Michael Tyrrell:
Yep, well, here’s the thing; it’s like we don’t think that—what you just said was epic because people don’t think like that. It’s like, okay, alright, let’s go outside on a sunny day where you live, okay. Close your eyes. Is that going to keep you from getting sunburned? No, it’s not. Whether you can see it is irrelevant. The sun is amplifying a certain type of frequency. It’s outside the realm of sound. It will burn your skin whether you see it or not. This will affect your body whether you hear it or not as long as you’re in proximity.

Dr. Pompa:
I think at a cellular level, the example is you produce vitamin D whether you see the sun or not if you’re getting sun. If we put a full black thing on, your skin’s still affecting it.

Michael Tyrrell:
It’s still making it.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re getting a cellular effect, that’s the point, yeah.

Michael Tyrrell:
It’s so exciting. One of these days, we need to get together for real.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no kidding. I would love that myself.

Michael Tyrrell:
Me, too.

Dr. Pompa:
I went in Florida—I used to do a seminar every year in Florida. You should think about, and you can talk to Ashley about this, but my next seminar’s in Nashville because we’ve got to mix it up on the east coast. Nashville, where Jordan is, that’s my March seminar.

Michael Tyrrell:
Really.

Dr. Pompa:
Honestly, you should have a booth at my seminar because the doctors need to be educated more about your product, truthfully.

Michael Tyrrell:
I’m in Nashville a lot. I was just with Ty and Charlene Bollinger. I actually got a lifetime achievement award in Nashville a few weeks ago at Opryland.

Dr. Pompa:
Well deserved. This seminar has a focus on cancer, so we have the top in the world there. By the way, this is the first seminar we have a whole day for the public.

Michael Tyrrell:
Oh, wow.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s March something. Oh gosh, I can’t remember the exact date, March 24th.

Michael Tyrrell:
Just email me.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, get some info, but you should be at our seminar. Anyways, we can hook up there. I used to spend more time in Florida because we always did seminars there, but I’m not in Florida as much.

Michael Tyrrell:
Wow; well, we’ve got to help these poor people out there my friend that need to get sleep. I said something the other day and it made me giggle. I said, “When you stop counting sheep, you can start counting your blessing.” Because when you don’t sleep, man, you feel awful. Your body isn’t going to heal. I depend on sleep so much because like you, I always have to talk with people. I at least have to act somewhat eloquent and at least look like I’m not a complete moron. If I don’t sleep, I’m just—I’m so out of it when I don’t sleep.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you know what; I’ve done a few shows now on sleep just recently. Sleep’s a big deal. It really is. It’s so undervalued. Sleep’s one of those things, here’s the problem; people go, oh, I do fine with five hours of sleep. They don’t realize that their body adapts. It will adapt with adrenaline through the day or they’re adapting with coffee forcing the adrenaline. Either way, the body will adapt.

That doesn’t mean it’s good for you. Meaning that it will drive you, drive you, drive you. Then eventually though, you’re aging prematurely. You’re driving a low-grade inflammation which we know causes inflammatory disease, etc. It’s like you’re not winning just because you think you’re getting away without sleep, but we do.

We need anywhere between seven and nine hours of sleep. Obviously, some people more. Days I work out very hard, I need more. Some days, seven hours is just fine. You have to get the sleep. Then, yeah, some people sleep, but their deep sleep or their REM sleep that you need for your brain and your recovery is not happening. Again, you may think I’m getting sleep, but are you getting deep sleep?

That’s why I use my Oura Ring right here, charging it. Yeah, the Oura Ring, it’s just a simple ring that you put on and it basically monitors your—I’ll keep it on now. It gets done charging. It monitors my deep sleep versus—right here, I’ve got your Wholetones app. Then I’ve got my Oura; it’s O-U-R-A. Many of my viewers and listeners have it. With this, it’s the most accurate way to assess. Here’s my sleep last night.

Michael Tyrrell:
Then it gives you a score?

Dr. Pompa:
It does. My sleep score last night was 88. I’ll tell you; that was pretty good considering I went to bed late because I was traveling. I got back, so I didn’t get to bed until late. However, I still got a decent score because I had an hour and one minute of deep sleep, so I had 15%. REM sleep was two hours and 48 minutes. That means my brain because it was lecturing and stuff, my brain needed a lot more recovery than my body. My efficiency was 95%. I slept seven hours and 30 minutes.

Michael Tyrrell:
Awesome.

Dr. Pompa:
Then it gives me a readiness score. Look at that, my readiness is 67. That means I [00:53:20] and I didn’t. Why? Because my heart rate was a little high because of the traveling. The traveling put a stressor on me, so I knew okay, I need a day of rest without workout. It’s a pretty cool ring.

Michael Tyrrell:
That’s brilliant.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. It will be interesting testing certain things certain things with and without the frequency which actually, I just thought of for the first time. I need to do so much with it.

Michael Tyrrell:
We’ve got to talk about this or send me the link to that. I’m captivated. I haven’t seen it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s a great thing. Anyways, Michael, you and I could talk forever. That’s why we need to get together in person. Thanks for being on the show again. I hope everyone gets this. I think it’s brilliant.

Michael Tyrrell:
I do, too.

Dr. Pompa:
Everybody should have it. Thank you for the discount for our viewers and listeners. You’re good to us. Get it right here on the page. Thank you, Michael.

Michael Tyrrell:
Man, thanks for everything. 

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. Practitioners, don’t forget to check out our HCF seminar in Nashville where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing. Please go to hcfevents.com for more information. Practitioners, you can take $150 off with the code CHTV when you purchase the four-day pass.

To the rest of our CHTV audience, please check out events.drpompa.com if you’d like to buy a one-day ticket for our special day of public attendance. We hope to see you there. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 AM Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv.

259: Reversing Breast Implant Illness

259: Reversing Breast Implant Illness

with Sarah Phillipe

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Our guest today is Sarah Phillipe who is talking about a little known infrequently discussed form of toxicity. That is breast implant toxicity otherwise known as breast implant illness. Sarah is here to share her story, explain what breast implant illness is, what problems implants cause, and what symptoms one would experience. She’ll also offer hope in effectively detoxing and restoring your health. If you or someone you know is struggling with breast implant illness, Sarah will show you how to reverse it, take back your health, and live vibrantly.

Before we jump in, I’d like to tell you a bit more about Sarah Phillipe. Sarah has a passion for health that has taken her along a path from RN to fitness enthusiast to becoming a certified functional diagnostic nutrition practitioner and true cellular detox practitioner focusing on breast implant illness. Sarah’s own struggle with breast implant illness has ignited a passion within her for helping women restore their health after explant through nutrition, lifestyle, detox, and guiding them through the sea of misinformation in hopes of finding their path to vibrant health. She focuses on healing the body naturally at the cellular level with real foods, lifestyle changes, detoxing, and addressing the downstream conditions caused by breast implants.

Practitioners, please be sure to check out HCF’s Live It to Lead It seminar in Nashville where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field cellular healing. Please go to hcfevents.com for more information. To the rest of our CHTV audience, we have some exciting news. We have opened up one day of this conference to the public. Please go to events.drpompa.com if you’d like to attend and hear amazing speakers who will leave you feeling inspired and ready to take action. Hope to see you there. Alright, so let’s get started and welcome Dr. Pompa and Sarah Phillipe to the show. This is Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Pompa:
Welcome to TV—Cellular Healing TV; welcome to TV. It is TV. We also have audio, so I can’t just say TV. Listen, I said this before we even got on here. I said this show is long overdue. Why do I say that? Because we’ve been getting more and more emails about toxic breast implants.

I had one this morning ironically enough; basically, a woman spilling out her story that she found out that this is what was making her sick. We know it drives autoimmune, unexplainable illnesses. Yet, so few people are talking about it. I can’t tell me how many people get their life back by getting rid of their breast implants. I want to talk about—I want to start with your story because you’re an RN. Really, this is your pain to purpose right now because you had breast implants removed and it affected your life in my mind because you’ve been through it.

I am so excited to hear all of this. We have so many questions. These are the questions I get: what are my options? What do we do? Is there specific doctors that we look for? Why are these things toxic? What’s happening? Is there testing I can do? All these questions you’re going to get answered on the show; can’t wait. By the way, you’re actually—you’re a true cellular detox practitioner. You use that as part of your process post removal, correct?

Sarah Phillipe:
I do, absolutely. Every single client of mine does this detox.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s awesome. You do the right detox which is very important. It’s like when we tell people once they get their fillings out, if they don’t do the right detox afterwards, they’re going to either get more sick or stay sick, one or the other. Even if they feel better right after, six to nine months down the road after the source is gone, the body just starts letting go of toxins; it knows the source is gone. Same thing happens with breast implants. You can’t just get your breast implants out; you have to do true cellular detox afterwards to really reclaim your life. Okay, let’s start. Sarah, start with your story. Obviously, from registered nurse to this, it took a story.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, thank you so much for having me. I’m just really thrilled to be able to share this information today with you and your audience and hopefully spread this message. My story started with of course I was a registered nurse. I worked night shift for probably five years. About four and a half years in, I decided I was—I started to become really into fitness. That became a really big passion of mine.

It started off slowly with intense workouts like P90X and that kind of stuff. Then it morphed into more like bodybuilding focused, so really intense workouts, really serious cyclical type of dieting to get the right physique that I wanted. It wasn’t about competing for me; it was just I wanted to be in the best shape of my life at 30 years old. That seemed so old at the time.

With that came along my desire for breast implants to just enhance my body even more. It had always been an area of insecurity for me, an area that I struggled with. I think that started early in childhood just from certain things that I heard growing up about the female body and saw growing up about the female body.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh yeah, it takes one boy to make a—or girl—making a comment. Then it’s like there it goes; it’s insecurity created. You’re human.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yep, absolutely. I really pushed for it. My husband wasn’t super thrilled about that idea, but he eventually just wanted me to be happy. I went through with it; got my breast implants. I never had a single health issue in the world. I wouldn’t have called my lifestyle or diet healthy, but as far as symptoms go, I didn’t have a single symptom.

In my mind, I thought I was [00:06:47]. Within six months of having my breast implants placed, I started developing vague symptoms. I thought it was night shift. Initially, it was fatigue; it was irritability; it was low sex drive; it was hair loss; it was weight gain; it was just general inflammation.

Dr. Pompa:
It was general inflammation caused by toxicity driving hormone resistance. Obviously, your thyroid was affected I’m sure.

Sarah Phillipe:
Exactly.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, estrogen affected. I talk about that on this show constantly. Toxins drive hormone resistance and every symptom you just said.

Sarah Phillipe:
They do. That’s where I started. I thought, oh my thyroids totally whacky right now. I went and saw a doctor. They didn’t take me seriously, wouldn’t run the right lab work. I knew what I needed because I was a nurse and I just did my research and went in asking for the right testing, but they didn’t want to order it for me.

I ended up going to a couple different doctors, finally found someone that would order the work for me. I had Hashimoto’s, but they wouldn’t treat me. I finally found someone who treated me but treated me with the Band-Aid of thyroid hormones. That wasn’t enough for me. The way I started thinking was more along the lines of I really want to figure out why this is happening rather than just throwing the Band-Aid on it because there’s a reason that we develop dysfunction in the body. I just didn’t feel like that was the right approach.

I really progressed from there. My symptoms ended up getting so much worse. I developed really awful IBS type symptoms, diagnosed with SIBO. I developed really awful insomnia, night sweats, heart palpitations, anxiety, depression, inability to go out in public because I would almost have a panic attack if it was too nosy, or if I walked by someone that had perfume on, I almost—I would just cringe because the chemical smell is so overly stimulating to me. I just couldn’t deal with that kind of thing.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, chemical sensitivity runs in the wake of neurotoxic illness. It happened to me. I couldn’t stand air fresheners, perfumes I could smell. If someone took their shoes off on an airplane, I could smell it. God forbid they had perfume and sat next to me. I’d have a headache and be bonked out for hours upon end. Yeah, go ahead.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, as my symptoms progressed, they continued to be quite vague. Then I ended up getting diagnosed with chronic Lyme disease. Which the provider that I was under the care of at that time thought, you probably had this for 10 plus years. Now it’s an issue and it was never an issue before.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right.

Sarah Phillipe:
At that time, there was not really any information about breast implants being a problem. I did my research. I looked and looked. I scoured the internet, couldn’t find anything about breast implants, but I suspected it. Intuitively, I suspected that might be the issue. It took a long time for me to get to the point of really willing to acknowledge that.

During my quest for the answer I guess you could say, I ended up going through a practitioner at training program called FDN, just Functional Diagnostic Nutrition just so that I could figure out what was wrong with me. I wanted to use myself, like practice on myself, try to figure out what’s the underlying cause here. Did a lot of functional lab work, which is when I ended up discovering SIBO, and then hormone imbalances, HP axis dysfunction.

Dr. Pompa:
Just so people know what that is, it means her—the control tower in the head: the pituitary, and her adrenals, and thyroid, everything. That whole system was malfunctioning most of your hormones. Go ahead.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, just a whole slew of other issues that I thought I just need to work on my gut. That’s the answer because all health and illness begins in the gut. Which is true, but I didn’t remove the root cause first.

Dr. Pompa:
I hope everybody heard that because right now the gut is in vogue, but what we find is that you’ll never fix your gut if there’s something toxic upstream. An example I love to give is you’re downstream in a river putting in new fish and microorganisms. All of a sudden, bad algae starts growing. You kill that. Your fish are dying. You put new fish in and new good bacteria and they die again. Only to find 20 miles upstream, they’re dumping mercury into the river. You’re never going to fix what’s happening downstream without dealing with what’s upstream. To your point well taken in breast implants, in this case, was the big deal.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, and I was going through that practitioner training program. At the time, my mentor in the program had suggested to me, “Maybe you should look into getting your breast implants removed. That might be what’s preventing you from healing.” Because I was only able to make so much progress and got to the point of stagnation. I thought, yeah, I know. I know this is probably a big issue. I really took it to heart, but it just wasn’t the right timing in my mind. I wasn’t ready to receive that.

Fast forward, I end up trying to get pregnant, trying to conceive. This became a huge sour subject for me because we had been trying for a couple of years and were not able to get pregnant. I had a suspicion that I had endometriosis that I did not have before implants.

Dr. Pompa:
[Phone Rings] Sorry, I forget.

Sarah Phillipe:
That’s fine. It seems like every kind of inkling or suspicion that I had I was right about; I just didn’t always trust my gut. Of course, I did a lot of different testing. No one could ever figure out if I did have endometriosis or not. They said, “Well, in order to know for sure, you’re going to have to go under exploratory surgery to find out.” I wasn’t willing to do that at that time. After years of trying to get pregnant, just the more—it just started to weigh on me so much more that I’m probably not able to get pregnant because of all these toxins that are in my breast implants contributing to hormone dysregulation and probably creating these lesions outside of my uterus of endometrial tissue.

By the time I got real—a true diagnosis, it was Stage IV. A lot of the things are reversible that you deal with breast implants, but some things aren’t. That was the case with me where I had to actually go and have excision surgery at that point. I lost not only a fallopian tube which affects my fertility, but I also lost part of my bowel. Huge, major surgery, but I’m grateful. In my heart and in my gut, I knew that I wasn’t going to get pregnant with these implants in, and I wasn’t going to get pregnant with this endometriosis affecting me, so I had to have both of those surgeries.

That’s when I made that decision to get the breast implants out after a lot of prayer, a lot of talking with my husband, talking with my family. I just made that decision, and within a month, I had them out. It was like once I finally came to that point where I was ready to acknowledge that and do something about it, I just did it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and we’ll talk about that procedure as women are watching this thinking maybe I should do this. Let’s back up a little bit and say okay, obviously, you’ve done a lot of research here. What have you found to be the problems with breast implants? Why is it driving these autoimmune conditions, and all the inflammation, and all the hormone problems? What have you found?

Sarah Phillipe:
First of all, it’s a foreign body inside you; it’s a foreign object. Your body knows that as you mentioned before. Your body knows it’s not supposed to be there. Your body innately just tries to protect you by creating scar tissue around them to wall them off so that you’re protected from that foreign invader. In that sense, I think that they’re a huge factor for contributing to immune dysregulation.

Then secondly, they’re a huge source of toxins. There’s 40 plus toxic chemicals and heavy metals in silicone implants which are the implants that I had. They don’t have to be ruptured to be creating a problem and leaking, bleeding into you.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, that’s a big misconception. It was one of the questions I had for you because people think it’s only—doctors tell people, well, it’s only if it’s leaking it’s a problem. That’s not true.

Sarah Phillipe:
No, it’s not true. You won’t find a lot of studies about breast implant illness because it is fairly—a fairly new understanding. There are some studies showing that you get gel bleeding into the body from silicone implants from the point of implantation. These aren’t really well studied inside the body at body temperature which is 98.6. Sitting at room temperature, 70 degrees or 68 degrees, they’re not necessarily going to leak or leach toxins. Put at body temperature, maybe a different story.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s like plastic. Plastic leaches when you add a little bit of temperature. Now all of a sudden, chemicals like phthalates and other chemicals that are in plastic start coming out of the plastic which are hormone disruptors. It’s not until you add a warmer temperature that occurs. Yeah, point taken. Go ahead.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, in silicone implants, for instance, you have things like methylethylketone which is a neurotoxin. You have cyclohexane, another neurotoxin. You have acetone. You have ethyl acetate. You have toluene which is a carcinogen and a neurotoxin. You have xylene and ethoxide. You have all of these chemicals and solvents. You even have metal cleaning acid. What is that doing in breast implants?

Plus, you have other heavy metals like aluminum and platinum. Interestingly enough, I couldn’t wear my wedding ring while I had my implants in. It’s platinum. It kept reacting to it over and over. I had to get to a point where I couldn’t wear it anymore. I got my breast implants out and now I can wear it just fine. Clearly, these things are affecting our bodies. Clearly, they’re creating a huge level of toxicity in addition to all of the other things we are exposed to in today’s modern society.

Dr. Pompa:
Go ahead.

Sarah Phillipe:
Silicone, it’s not just about the silicone implants. The saline also pose a huge problem. The saline are made with the same shell that the silicone implants are made from, so there is silicone in saline implants. They also have the potential to have a faulty valve. There’s a valve that’s used to fill saline implants when they’re placed. Sometimes that valve is faulty from the get-go; sometimes it may become faulty if you have some kind of incident that pushes that valve the wrong direction like a car accident or just some kind of trauma to that chest well. Once that valve is faulty or just opened up the wrong direction, then you have the ability for that saline solution to come in and out of that implant. With that can come microbes or even mold.

Dr. Pompa:
I’ve had cases that end up with moldy saline implants. Moldy implants, people think, how in the world? They got very sick. Let’s be clear; they don’t have to leak for it to drive autoimmunity to your point. Yeah, go ahead.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, the mold is a huge issue. Even with silicone implants it can be a huge issue, but with saline especially because of the fact that we are exposed to different types of molds regardless of whether they’re toxic molds or nontoxic mold. When you’re breathing those mold spores in and you have a faulty valve, those mold spores can get inside your implants and grow there. All it takes is a moist environment.

You can have mold inside your implants, you can have bacteria, and fungi, and viruses that get in there. Then what do you have when you have all those things? You have biofilm. That creates a huge problem as well because that’s—in a way, your pathogens that are in there are invading the immune system because they’re protected by that biofilm.

The toxicity is a huge problem. It’s just there’s so many downstream effects that are correlated with that toxicity that’s coming from the breast implants. It affects your gut bacteria. It affects your neurotransmitter balance. It affects your hormone balance. It affects your immune system.

The possibilities are endless and so the kinds of symptoms you might experience are endless which is why it’s been more like one of those illnesses that is like the great mimicker like Lyme or mold illness where it’s not easy to get a diagnosis. Really, what is a breast implant illness diagnosis anyway? It’s just something we call it. The real solution is to get them out first of all.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and I’m going to point something out again. Many people are being diagnosed with Lyme, or I could go down the list, candida, or this type of infection, or another. Again, you have to look upstream to what lowered the immune system and allowed the Lyme to become a problem. Parasites, same thing.

You always have to look upstream and realize there’s another problem. You can go killing the parasites. You can try killing the Lyme. There is whether someone’s living in a moldy house, has toxic breast implants, silver fillings, hidden infections, cavitations, these are the things that lower the immune system, and will end up driving the problem, and keep somebody from getting well; that’s the thing.

Obviously, women are watching this or have friends with breast implants. They’re going to say, well, so and so is not sick. So and so has had them for 10 years and is not sick. What would your response to that be?

Sarah Phillipe:
It’s just different for everyone. The timing, the onset of symptoms, it just depends on so many different factors. Chronic illness, so many practitioners have likened chronic illness or even autoimmunity to a three-legged stool. I know you have as well. I think that’s a factor here, too.

You have genetics that play a factor whether it be genetic predisposition to autoimmunity, whether it be mutations is your MTHFR, or COMT genes, or HLA gene mutations that make you more susceptible to chronic inflammatory response type conditions. Then you have altered microbiome to where your gut flora aren’t healthy; your gut’s not health. You have pathogenic organisms that may be able to thrive because the terrain isn’t healthy.

Then you add into that things like breast implants. Breast implants for some people may be what you call the straw that broke the camel’s back; they may not be. They’re one stressor. They’re one factor to this type of chronic illness. I think for people who get sick right away, it could be the surgery that was the straw that broke the camel’s back; it could be the implants.

For people who don’t get sick right away, who it takes maybe decades for them to become sick, typically, they’re just the beginning. As they’re exposed to more and more stressors, more—whether it be mental-emotional, or physiological, or chemical. Things like that that just add up and fill your bucket. At some point, that bucket is going to overflow

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, those are the analogies I give. I want to be clear too with people that it’s toxic for everybody. It’s a matter of how filled your bucket is with other exposure as you pointed out. I liked to call it the perfect storm. Like you said, it’s like you’re already getting exposure from silver fillings and maybe a cavitation. Maybe you’re getting some mold; you’re living in a moldy house. You add one more thing, and it’s the breast implants, boom, you’re sick.

However, let’s do the other thing. You get the breast implants. You really don’t have other stressors, but now you create two more 10 years from the—down the road. Now, you get sick. Be clear, these are toxic to everybody. It’s a matter of if your body is dealing with it at that moment or not. Caution because these things leach toxins at body temperature.

Again, more studies obviously need to be done to convince people, but how many stories do we have to hear of people getting sick? Again, it’s like, well, mine are okay. Mine aren’t leaking. As you just heard, that’s a problem.

Okay, let’s talk about it. Let’s say, okay, here we are now. A woman says, okay, gosh, well, how do I know? Is there anything I can do to check if mine are okay? Again, that’s going down are they leaking concept. How do I know if mine are causing me a problem? I don’t know; my answer to that is—but what’s your answer to that?

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, I get asked that question a lot. Being someone who’s been in those women’s shoes, I had a hard time coming to that decision because I wasn’t sure. I didn’t want to go through that whole explant process to then be sick still if it wasn’t the case. For me, it just took getting to a point of trusting my intuition, trusting my gut, and realizing that it doesn’t matter; these are toxic regardless. I would be devastated if I were to actually have gotten pregnant and created all kinds of health conditions for an unborn child or my husband being that I could have prevented that. It was more about the toxicity for me.

Long story short, I’ll just say—when people ask me that question, I just say, when did your symptoms develop? Was it after you got breast implants? If it was, get them out. If it wasn’t after breast implants, it was before, you’re not going to be able to heal your body unless you start removing all of these contributing factors, all of the possible sources of toxicity, all of the stressors. When you’re able to remove all those sources, then your body can get back to returning to a state of homeostasis.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, Sarah, you’re saying all the right things. I always tell people, look, whether your breast implants are the thing that made you sick or not, or whatever it is, the moldy home, it still has to be dealt with. Once you’re neurotoxic, you have to go upstream and remove all of them because once you become sensitive to one, you become sensitive to all of them. You won’t get well still living in a moldy home. You won’t get will if you have a cavitation. You won’t get well if you have breast implants in it.

You know what, if I take a client on myself, I have to be really clear that I expect them to be able to—we’re going to be eliminating all of these things. If someone’s not willing to go there, it’s—and oftentimes, you don’t know. They don’t express that they have breast implants. It’s hidden from doctors. They don’t want to put that down.

Sarah Phillipe:
I think that every intake form should ask that question: do you have breast implants? Because that’s such a huge part of why people are sick. A lot of practitioners don’t even know to ask that question, but now that we’re starting to become more aware and more knowledgeable about this topic, I think it should be on every intake form because it’s something that absolutely had to be addressed if it’s a factor.

As far as testing goes, there really aren’t any tests right now that will tell you, yes or no, you have breast implant illness. People always want to know what they can do to test their level of toxicity. There aren’t really great tests out there. Blood tests are only going to show you an acute exposure like what your blood is carrying through the body right at that moment because it’s not a storage fluid; it’s a transportation fluid.

Hair tissue mineral analysis, well, that relies on your body’s ability to release these metals, so that’s not a reliable way to test. I don’t really recommend provoking metals when you still have the source inside of you just to see what you have. We know; we have the information here in black and white of what is in these implants. Once you know that’s super toxic and could be creating—

Dr. Pompa:
I feel like people aren’t—I feel like women aren’t being given informed consent. They don’t know. More studies obviously need to be done in the sense that obviously, they’re leaching. Obviously, these toxins are coming out, but we have to do a study just to show what we already know. That way now doctors are—then they can say, okay, now you have to tell patients this.

That, of course, becomes like cigarettes. You hear it enough times and you check the box. Meanwhile, you just checked off that you know that these things leech and cause health problems. You don’t care because you’d rather look a certain way, etc. That’s a problem.

Let’s talk about the explant surgery. Can you go to any doctor? Do doctors that put them in, are they the right ones to take them out? Are there special people that do this? Are there concerns? Are there things we should do, not do? Let’s talk about that.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, this is definitely an area that is really important. I talk to a lot of women every day. Of course, funds are always an issue for a lot of people. Some people just need to find someone that they can afford. For me, I feel like don’t even—just wait. Save your money. Wait until you can afford to go to the right person because it does take a very skilled surgeon who’s not only skilled but confident in his ability or her ability to—

Dr. Pompa:
On your website, do you have some of those practitioners?

Sarah Phillipe:
I have a list in my Facebook group. It’s a private group, but they’re—yeah, I can give a list to everyone.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, give how do they reach you at that. How they get on that group and do that.

Sarah Phillipe:
My Facebook group is just Reversing Breast Implant Illness with Sarah Phillipe. I have a lot of different files in there with information. That’s one of them is a list of providers. There’s a list of recommended surgeons. These are surgeons that we’ve known for a long time now, years and years, have done hundred if not thousands of explants.

The proper technique is en bloc which means that you’re removing the implant and the capsule together at the same time. You are not cutting open the capsule, and pulling the implant out, and leaving that capsule in there because the capsule contains—it may be ruptured, too; the implant may be ruptured. You don’t want to expose yourself to all those toxins just freely floating around your body. Even if it’s intact, that capsule contains a lot of toxins, a lot of microbes, potentially even cancerous cells that could then go floating around through your lymphatics. There is now breast implant-associated ALCL that has become an issue lately.

It’s just really important that they’re removed en bloc to prevent that exposure and that you have a complete capsulectomy. That means that every little suck of capsule is removed. Some surgeons will tell you that’s dangerous, that they’re not comfortable doing that because you could puncture their lung. Then there are some surgeons who are very skilled and very competent at doing that. They do it very safely.

For me, it wasn’t a matter of the money. I just thought, I have to get my implants removed by someone who I trust can do this right the first time so that I don’t have to go back and have someone else explore and find more capsule. I ended up going to Costa Rica for my explant surgery because at the time I thought, this is the best surgeon. I’m a big believer in going to whoever can provide you the best option for what you need.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, absolutely. We’ll make sure we put your Facebook to access that here in the show notes. Ashley will make sure that happens because I think that’s really important. It’s like going to the right practitioner who does detox right. It’s oh, I’m going to say this, or do this, or do it on my own. In the end, I’m worse and more sick. You wasted more time and money. This is life or death.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, and the really unfortunate thing that I’ve been hearing a lot of from women is that they thought they got an en bloc with a capsulectomy and they didn’t. Whether they’re being lied to, or deceived, or maybe they just didn’t understand what they were getting when they signed up for that surgery, I don’t know the answer to that. What I do know is when they’ve gone back in with another surgeon for an exploratory surgery, they’ve found more capsule that got left behind. They stay sick until that capsule comes out.

Dr. Pompa:
God, this is a disaster. Oh my gosh; it reminds me so much of what we deal with in the mouth. It’s so critical to do it correctly; wow. Okay, let’s talk now—we already said how important it is, the cellular detox is after the fact. Let’s talk emotionally though because you had said in the beginning—this is a touchy subject. You can go with it as far as you want to go with it.

Here you are; you got them because you said you had insecurities. You were upfront with that. Okay, now, I think it would be worse coming off because now you’re used to yourself this way and now you’re not. Are there other options? We’ll go other options in a minute. What about the psychology of this post? How did you deal with that? What can you do about it?

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, I think the psychology of it, the mental-emotional aspect is—it just varies from person to person. For me, I was okay with it. By that point, I had been thinking about this for a long time. I was mentally prepared. I did go to a surgeon who was able to do a lot of great reconstruction for me which is really important. Finding someone who’s skilled at making your breasts look like breasts again after they’ve been stretched out for however many years is a skill in itself.

Dr. Pompa:
Are you really happy with that outcome?

Sarah Phillipe:
I’m happy, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, because women have to hear that. I’m asking that because women want to hear that because that’s going to be a concern. That’s going to keep them in this sick situation longer if they think that they can’t achieve that. You achieved it.

Sarah Phillipe:
Right, and you have to get to a point where you’re willing to accept that and love yourself no matter what, love your body no matter what. You were designed perfectly. Our insecurities are what drove us to enhance ourselves, or modify ourselves, or change ourselves. Just getting to a point where you’re able to really truly love and accept who you are, who you were born to be. That includes the physical aspect as well.

As far as spouses go because that’s a huge concern for people, people are very worried about how their spouse is going to see them with these scars and the deflation that comes along with it. Sometimes people’s spouses are the ones that pushed them into it. That can be a huge factor for some women to come to terms with. For me personally, I know my husband and I went through a lot together as—through my chronic illness like yours. By that point, he was just so resentful that we ever got those in. He was just like, I don’t even—they do nothing for me anymore. He was very supportive and just happy to get his wife back because I was a different person than who he married for years.

Dr. Pompa:
Believe me, when you lose your life and things get prioritized differently, all of a sudden, it’s like—it becomes a small issue. Husbands, I think most of you’d realize if your wife loses her health, you weren’t even attracted to that about her anyway. It’s such a small thing if anything. Yeah, priorities have become really changed; that’s for sure.

Okay, are there any options? I have heard people doing fat relocation. Is that part of the reconstruction? I hear even fat with stem cells is part of an option. Talk a little bit about that.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, that is a really great option. Fat grafting, fat transfer, there’s even a relatively new technique where they use a flap of fat from underneath your breast or from the side of your armpit where they basically cut and turn it around and make it into a breast which is really amazing because the fat grafting doesn’t always take because it needs an immediate blood supply to survive. When you suck it out of the different part of your body, it loses that blood supply. It may not get another blood supply fast enough for it to survive, so sometimes you lose that fat graft.

I personally did have a fat graft when I had my explant surgery. Being a thin person, he had to take fat from a lot of different parts of my body. It was worth it to me because even though I didn’t retain a lot of it, that initial—seeing myself initially without my breast implants wasn’t so horrifying. It wasn’t a shock. It was like, okay, that’s not so bad. I can deal with that. Then gradually over time, I was able to adjust as they got smaller and smaller.

These days, I think the technique is even better. There are some surgeons who are very skilled in fat transfer. They aren’t always the surgeons that are skilled at explant. I would think it might be even a better idea to for someone to get the explant and if they truly in six months to a year are unhappy with their results to go back for a fat transfer or that flap technique at that time because that’s when you’re going to get the best results.

Dr. Pompa:
I think they’re doing some of the fat transfers with stem cells which obviously help a lot with what’s retained.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, that and hyperbaric oxygen treatments really help with that. After my explant and fat transfer, I did eight hyperbaric treatments: four in a row, then a break, and four in a row. That really did help. Yeah, some people keep their fat transfer and some people don’t. I wasn’t one of those people.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, well, the good news is you’re still pleased.

Sarah Phillipe:
I’m still happy, yeah. I have my life back, to be honest. I think that’s where a lot of women get to. They get to that point where they’ve been so sick for so long, and they’ve suffered for so long, and everyone around them, all their relationships with people have suffered because of that, because of how they feel. Maybe they’re out of work. Maybe they haven’t worked in years because they’re unable to. Just getting your life back is more important than how you look.

Dr. Pompa:
I agree. It sounds trite, but what would you say to the woman watching this that’s not fully sick yet? Maybe she has fatigue, brain fog, and a little anxiety that she’s—can still live life, but not sick enough to be like, okay, I’m not ready to adjust my body here. What would you say to that woman maybe considering this, has breast implants but not fully sick yet?

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, I would say—I guess I would ask if you had known the risk factors before you got them placed, would you have still chosen to do that? Given the fact that they’re likely a ticking time bomb, how much are you willing to go through just to have that outward appearance and that specific look you wanted when you got them? Because as you lose your health, you start to realize that it’s way more important than what you look like. A lot of people including myself just don’t understand how important the health is until it’s gone.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m one of those people.

Sarah Phillipe:
We take it for granted.

Dr. Pompa:
Yep, I’m one of those people. I can never go back there. I would never go back there. If you were loping my arms off to get well, I’d been like—and I knew that was going to help, lop them off. That’s something I was born with; breast implants isn’t. It is, it’s so true. You’d just do anything to have your life back.

You know what; I think you have a lesson in your story though. Because part of what you should say to those women, and I’ll say it to them now is Sarah didn’t come out with all her body parts. Meaning that she waited too late. Don’t wait too late. Sarah lost part of her intestines. There was parts of your body that you didn’t have to lose if you’d have moved fast enough. Learn the lesson: don’t wait too long.

Sarah Phillipe:
Yeah, it was a big lesson. Now, I’m happy that I get to as you say, turn that pain into purpose.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I read your—when I read your story, I was touched by that because, yeah, that’s me as well. Now, you’re serving on this end of it with the opportunity to change lives. I promise you this show will change many lives. Women are watching this show. They’re going to get their breast plants—breast implants removed. It’s going to save their life. That’s a guarantee.

That’s what’s so cool. If you get these out, your life is going to be drastically different. You changed lives today. You changed a life today. Again, from pain to purpose. People are watching this. No doubt they’re going to get their life back. Thank you for being here, Sarah; what a story.

Sarah Phillipe:
Of course, thank you for having me.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. Practitioners, don’t forget to check out our HCF seminar in Nashville where we’ll have a lineup of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing. Please go to hcfevents.com for more information. To the rest of our CHTV audience, please check out events.drpompa.com if you’d like to buy a one-day ticket for our special day of public attendance. We hope to see you there.

We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 AM Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv. Please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, or sharing the show with anyone who may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.

 

258: The Metabolic Approach to Cancer

258: The Metabolic Approach to Cancer

with Dr. Nasha Winters

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Today, we welcome an incredible person, Dr. Nasha Winters. Dr. Nasha has turned a personal journey of overcoming cancer and she’s turned it into a purposeful career specializing in integrative oncology and cancer prevention. She’s here today to discuss how to avoid becoming a statistic. She’ll explain why we’re seeing more cancer than ever before. She’ll also offer helpful tips about what we can do about it.

Before we get started, I’d like to share a bit more about Dr. Nasha. Dr. Nasha Winters is a sought after luminary and global healthcare authority in integrative cancer research. She consults with physicians around the world. Her focus has always been to seek integrative modalities for treating cancer in addition to or in lieu of conventional standard of care in order to enhance outcomes and offer hope in a dismal prognosis. She now trains practitioners in her methodology presenting at medical conferences globally and sharing her passion and purpose to be a beacon of hope for thousands. Dr. Nasha is the best-selling co-author of The Metabolic Approach to Cancer. She has a second book in the works on the therapeutic diets for cancer. You can check her out at dr.nasha.com.

Practitioners, please be sure to check out HCF’s Live It to Lead It seminar in Nashville where Nasha Winters will be a speaker along with a lineup of top health experts in this field. Go to hcfevents.com for more information. We have some exciting news. We have opened up one day of this conference to the public. Please go to events.drpompa.com if you would like to attend and hear amazing speakers like the lovely Nasha Winters. We hope to see you there. Alright, so let’s get started and welcome Dr. Pompa and Dr. Nasha Winters to the show. This is Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Pompa:
Nasha, welcome to Cell TV. I’m very excited. I’m very excited to hear your story because I’ve heard about you and about your story. You reminded me actually that we met at Low Carb USA briefly, right?

Dr. Winters:
Yep, sure did. We were also laughing because we also apparently go to the same hairstylist as well which makes me very happy.

Dr. Pompa:
We were laughing off air because I had just got my hair cut. You had just got your hair cut. I was so tired of my hair being long. You moved to a warmer climate for three months, got yours cut. We both showed up like this.

Dr. Winters:
I love it. It’s a fresh start for the fresh year.

Dr. Pompa:
I said you look like my sister. You do anyway and then now that we have the same hair.

Dr. Winters:
Thanks for having me here.  I’m very excited to hear your work. Your persona I’ve been following for some time, so it’s an honor to be here with you and your guests.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, well, you have a great story. You’re going to be actually—you’re actually one of the speakers at our next seminar in Nashville. Actually, I should really tell my audience we’re opening up a whole day for the public. The reason is because of the main topic is cancer, which is our topic today. I think if we polled our audience, everybody here knows somebody very close to them, a friend or family with cancer or at least battled cancer.

This is a topic everyone needs to hear about, so we decided to actually open up a full day really around this topic. Those of you who’ve been wanting to come to one of my seminars because they’re only doctors, not anymore; you get to come. I’m speaking to Ashley who’s—she’s my team member here. She’s actually not on camera, but she hears me. We actually put that invite here.

Yeah, you’re one of the guest speakers because you came recommended by so many people. One of the things that I love is my story’s from pain to purpose. I said it today to one of my clients; I could never even speak this way to you if I didn’t feel what you feel, go what you went through. It’s been many years now, twenty-some years since your story like myself, but still close to heart. I actually was speaking that to the person that I still have this post-traumatic feeling sometimes when I think about that. I’m sure you could reflect that. Tell your story.

Dr. Winters:
Yeah, well, that’s just it. We were talking right before we went on that I had just gone off after my 27-year out mark with a terminal diagnosis, not given any options, any opportunities to heal per se. In some ways that was a lucky strike for me because it prompted me to look after myself. It prompted me to get creative. It prompted me to become resourceful. Now, we didn’t have Dr. Pompas at that time. We didn’t have webinars and resources. We didn’t have Dr. Google. This is back in 1991 for crying out loud.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, my gosh, but she looks amazing. You don’t look like you could be living back in 1991.

Dr. Winters:
You’re so sweet. I appreciate that. There’s your $20 bill. We’ll carry later. At that time in my life in my world, I actually tell people, I look and feel healthier today at 47 years old than I did in my late teens, and my twenties, and my thirties because I learned how to care for myself.

Dr. Pompa:
Me, too.

Dr. Winters:
Exactly; and it was thanks to—I love your concept of pain to purpose. That put me on a journey of seeking for self-care which then turned into supporting others on a journey. Now, it’s turning into supporting doctors to support others on a journey. When you’re given a diagnosis after many months of in and out of hospitals, ERs, and being misdiagnosed over and over because of my age—I was the zebra that we talk about in medicine that no one was thinking ovarian cancer in a 19-year-old. At that time, I’d had a lot of health issues. I’d had life long GI issues. I had life long hormonal issues. It all just blended into the mercury soup of what I had known for the first almost 20 years of my life.

By the time they figured it out, that time I landed in the hospital with—they thought I was having a terrible arrhythmia process. What was happening when they walked in is a doctor, he was on call that day, happened to recognize the signs of end-stage cancer. Finally did proper testing, proper diagnostics, proper imaging, and realized that my electrolytes were so far off because I was so cachectic. Meaning my muscles were wasting terribly. Meaning my belly was extremely bloated full of fluid, liquid cancer cells basically, and that my organs had decided to go on strike.

My kidneys and liver had basically stopped working. At that point, I was so far gone, so sick, so malnourished, so hopeless in their eyes that they were even afraid that a single dose of chemotherapy would end my life abruptly. They at that time told me I had three to six months. Now, as a doctor looking back, I realized I was probably closer to three to six weeks from what I know of this state where I was then.

As I was telling you before we dove in or right at the early part of our conversation, being told there’s no other way pushes you to seek a way. It pushes you to drive all of the resources you can possibly muster up. I had to do it by myself. Like I said, I had the Dewey Decimal system. I didn’t have Dr. Google. I didn’t have resources online. Back then, the information obviously for treating cancer was incredibly limited. Because I went to a very small, financially lower to the ground four-year liberal arts college, my library was also filled with outdated textbooks which was to my benefit because the main textbook—

Dr. Pompa:
You probably used something called microfiche. Do you remember?

Dr. Winters:
Microfiche, Dewey Decimal cards, all of those things. It was crazy, but because of that, because of the old-school way, I stumbled upon some literature from the 1920s and ‘30s by a guy named Otto Warburg.

Dr. Pompa:
Man, were you lucky or blessed; oh my gosh.

Dr. Winters:
Seriously; guided I think is really it. It made the most sense to me of anything else I was running across that this was a metabolic process. That knowing my background and where I was came unglued, unhinged if you well, over a period of time, I thought to myself, well, if I can get broken, I can possibly get fixed. Now, mind you, at that time, I had no expectation of surviving this. What my expectation was, learning as much as I could to understand and be present in the process.

Each week, each passing week, each passing month that I happened to still be kicking it, I kept learning more and more. I felt like every time I was alive another week or month, I’d stumble upon a new piece of information, and then another, and then another. Here we are 27 plus years later and the times have changed so much which is why I appreciate your conference you’re getting ready to have in that for about the past 25 years, we learned this much about oncology. In the past five, six years, an explosion of what we’re knowing and understanding and having a new way to look at it. We’re still trying to function from a broken, outdated model, but the conversation is there. Frankly, the hope is there for the first time that I’ve ever seen since I’ve been on this journey.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I want to hear more—okay, a lot of people watching, I have interviewed, and we can put those interviews up here, Thomas Seyfried, who really took Warburg’s work into the modern era; same concept. As a matter of fact, his book is called, Cancer as a Metabolic Disease. That’s what you discovered from his work. Okay, great; what did you do about it? Talk about some of the things that you did because like you said, you were on your own.

Dr. Winters:
Totally; I think about the work that you guide your patients through today, it was very much a very organic, simple process. The way I had been eating, a latch key kits standard American diet: a first-year college student living off Roman and boxed mac and cheese, not a single live piece of food in the mix. My first jump was actually to a vegan raw food diet because that’s all the data that was out there. Now, in my chemistry where I was, that was very beneficial at the time. It cleaned up a lot.

Dr. Pompa:
I would think it would, yes.

Dr. Winters:
Like a lot; and in fact, because of the amount of paucities I had, I had a belly that looked beyond nine months pregnant and had over 9 meters of fluid pulled over a period of time, I didn’t have room to eat. I also naturally fasted a lot because I didn’t have hunger which is part of the cachectic process. I didn’t have room to fit food in the small amount of real estate I had left from the fluid pushing against my organs. I was very nauseous. I was very sick. My kidneys and liver were shut down, so I did not heal well. Food did not sound good.

A lot of that initial first few months was a lot of fasting and then starting to eat live, real food. At that time, mostly—in fact, all plants. That made a monstrous difference in that end-stage game for me, but over time, that wasn’t enough. Over time, I was still fighting the cancer. Cancer was still active in my body. It was still taking root. What I didn’t know, even though I was learning about the metabolic approach or Otto Warburg’s work was that everything I kept putting in, all that well-made food was also pretty much all sugar.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, stop right there. Let’s give people that don’t understand Warburg’s principal or what I interviewed Seyfried about, without confusing them in the science, which we—it’s easily confused people here. Tell them a little bit about what we’re talking about in saying what was Warburg’s theory? What are we talking about? Why would sugar be such a negative to people, even healthy sugar? Explain that.

Dr. Winters:
Beautiful; very simply what I tell the people that I work with is that we were meant to be a hybrid engine. We were meant to be like human Priuses, okay. That’s what we were built to do. Until about 1850, the year 1850, we were all “low carb” which is a big hot topic today.

We ate about 30% of our calories from carbohydrates. That included fresh fruit, grains, honey, maple syrup. You name it, natural, healthy sugars, up until we started milling and processing sugar and flour in the 1850s. Once the industrial food revolution came on, we were all low carbers.

We had been functioning that way for millennia, alright. In a relatively short period of time, we overwhelmed our system taking us from that hybrid engine of being able to burn fat or sugar as needed in our healthy cellular metabolisms depending on availability of our resources. We suddenly had our resources available to us all of the time and a lot higher amount. That’s the simple term. What happens at the cellular level is when you overwhelm the cells with that much carbohydrate, they basically start to ferment, and not like the good sauerkraut fermentation.

How I tell my patients is our cells are meant to respire. They’re meant to breathe, to move these biochemical processes, to create our energy, our ATP. As the gas tank if you will gets gummed up, our mitochondria get gummed up. They start to ferment and they stop breathing. They stop respiring which perpetuates the fermentation more which then changes the environment around those cells which then draws in more toxicity and more inflammation, yadda, yadda, yadda, then we have a problem. That’s basically what Otto Warburg said is that the problem isn’t acidity in the outside body affecting a cell; it’s what’s happening at the mitochondrial level that starts to breakdown that starts to change the communication to the rest of the body around it.

Dr. Pompa:
Stop right there because that’s a very interesting point that drives me crazy in the cancer thing. Because of Warburg’s work, we have everybody running around trying to alkaline. That’s not what he meant. He didn’t mean that acidity was the problem; he meant that the cell is going through this process of using only sugar in the presence of oxygen when it should be using oxygen. That’s what I’m saying; it’s not breathing as you said.

Therefore, it’s creating this acidic environment. You don’t force the alkalinity down; you fix the cell to get well. That’s the point. The whole alkalinity thing really took off on a false understanding of what Warburg’s principal was.

Dr. Winters:
You got it. I love that you bring that up because I look at the push for alkalinity almost as bad as the push of just cytotoxicity because neither of them are addressing the problem, neither of them are getting to the root. You’re correct in that in that also at the time in 1991, the only information out there was about the juice thing, and the raw food, and the pushing alkaline diet. That made me sicker and sicker and sicker after it initially rescued me. Then my body started to actually breakdown again. I ended up getting a resurgence and an aggressive pushback of the cancer over time. I tried to eat this alkaline way of being.

From that is where I started learning more about, oh gosh, this is a sugar burning system problem versus being a dual engine problem. That’s when I started to really change my diet that it was still and still is today incredibly plant-based. I want people to hear is that I still eat 10 to 15 servings of vegetables every single day and I still maintain ketosis or metabolic flexibility in a profound way. I’m not eating that much meat. I want people to hear that, too. It’s not a meat diet as it was promoted. Eating a lower carbohydrate diet was the key for me.

I will tell your listeners, it took me even understanding that from a textbook level. I was still going by the recommendations and the ideas of what a low carbohydrate diet was. At that time in the literature and even in my early medical school training that I began in 1996, we were having diabetic patients on 150 grams of carbohydrate a day and telling them that was a diabetic diet. Guess what; that is only now changing today. Still 22 years out, we’re finally still having that conversation. Still eating “low carb” for the diabetic patient in the ‘90s was still far too much sugar.

Dr. Pompa:
A lot of the studies that people say, well, the study on low carb diet, you look at the grams, it was 150, 180 grams of carbs. That was a study they were doing on low carb diets. It's like oh my gosh; if I get 150 grams of carbs in, that’s me purposely trying to hit high carbs for a day.

Dr. Winters:
Yeah, seriously, and that’s hard when you haven’t done it for so long. Even the RD nutritionists are telling us that we should not max out at 100 grams of carbohydrate a day. For men, 25 grams of that being sugar, and women, 20—or excuse me; 20 grams for women—excuse me—25 grams for women and 20 grams for men of sugar each day. We are doing that by the end of breakfast each day on the standard American heart-healthy breakfast.

Dr. Pompa:
Oatmeal, a bowl of oatmeal, a bagel, and god forbid a bowl of regular cereal. Honestly, just that alone.

Dr. Winters:
There it is; you’ve blown your carbs for the next two or three days with that in some cases. Especially if you add a banana, some low-fat milk, and orange juice, we’re done.

Dr. Pompa:
One glass of juice, but it’s 100% orange juice though.

Dr. Winters:
Exactly; that you have to remember is we didn’t have people like Dr. Feynman and all these others out there paving the way for us to understand. Frankly, there wasn’t much research and still isn’t today in nutritional biochemistry. Because I happened to meet and fall in love with a biochemist at the time of my diagnosis who was crazy enough to stick around at 22 years old with a 19-year-old who now 27 plus years later, we’re still together and married.

Dr. Pompa:
He’s somebody in the room because he’s an expert in epigenetics and genetics. He’s the guy that they were—

Dr. Winters:
They were consulting right now on it, some epigenetic cases. This is what we do for fun now at our house, Doc.

Dr. Pompa:
I get it.

Dr. Winters:
That was someone who could actually walk me through the biochemical reasoning behind it because biochemistry frankly terrified me at that time. I made it through organic chemistry simply because I had a live-in organic chemistry tutor, but I understood the theology very well. That was my cup of tea. Now, years later, I can look back and understand the biochemistry because we weren’t taught in the way to help us understand how to apply it in real life, how to apply it clearly.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s different when you have a need you see. When we were going through biochemistry, all we needed was to get through school. Then we needed it later to save our lives; very different.

Dr. Winters:
It’s very different. At that time, what I started to learn about just piece milling it together as you can imagine was just like how do I start to gently and effectively upregulate and clean out my cells one by one? Because if I went hardcore, it backfired. If I just ignored it, it backfired. It still took me another 20 years. Yeah, in 2013, 2012 when I got my epigenetics run to understand even further ways that my body was challenged in the way that it mentholated or detoxified to even understand it further.

Ultimately, I started to learn and carve out a path for myself. Then luckily had many willing—thousands of willing participants to learn from and with over many decades at this point, two, three, almost three decades later to watch this process unfold. That’s where meeting people like you, you’re taking it to the masses now in a way that did not take 27 years to figure out. You’re making it accessible right now. They don’t have to wait and figure it out for a good 10, 12, 15 years on their own. They’ve got folks like you and I today guiding them.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no doubt. When we look at the statistics right now with cancer, remind people of where we are with some of the cancers. They’re a little different per cancer. Then let’s move into the conversation. Obviously, you’ve learned a lot. This is your passion. My desire for this is okay, let’s speak to people on how to avoid these statistics.

Obviously, my recommendation for those people who have a loved one, family member, going through cancer, get your book because you made it more simple: The Metabolic Approach to Cancer. I’ve recommended Thomas Seyfried’s book to people. They’re like okay, I got through like Chapter One and I’m done. I think you’ve done a much better job. Tom, if you’re listening—but I think you would agree that you do a better job of bringing this information. It’s loaded with facts on here’s what to do, here’s what to eat. Get the book. I’m sure you can get it on Amazon.

Let’s talk about some things that people can do to avoid not becoming a statistic. The obvious right now is lower your carbohydrate intake but go ahead. Let’s talk about that. What are the statistics?

Dr. Winters:
Yeah, well, I appreciate that because the statistics I think are the wake-up call. It’s the call to action. The statistics currently are 1 in 2 men and 1 and 2.4 women are expected to have cancer in their lifetime in the United States. Okay, so that’s our US, but it doesn’t differ that much globally anymore. That’s Number One. Number Two, what’s very interesting is we have said for years that it was one in eight women with breast cancer, but that is getting ready to be updated to one in three. That’s the unfortunate reality.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow, I’ve been using one in eight still because I—knowing that it’s going down, but I didn’t realize one in three.

Dr. Winters:
Boom; yeah, one in three. By 2030, they’re expecting cancer is to double. Another interesting statistic is that there is a 300% increase in just secondary, brand new cancers in people who were previously diagnosed and treated with cancer since the 1970s. That should give you a clue about the amount of toxicity, cellular toxicity those folks are still contending with after treatment.

In the fastest, there’s two interesting stats that also intrigue me about again that ties into the work you’re doing and what we’re going to talk about next is the fastest growing cancer in people under the age of 35 is glioblastoma which is a form of very aggressive brain cancer. That’s what took the life of Senator McCain. With all the resources in the world, he still followed the exact statistic and the exact time frame of his expected life expectancy having the access to the best of the best healthcare because frankly, they missed all the things they could have been doing which makes me very sad. I know people like Adrienne Scheck and others reached out to their family which is in their own backyard, but—

Dr. Pompa:
Adrienne Scheck spoke at my seminar.

Dr. Winters:
Good, she’s so outstanding.

Dr. Pompa:
She got a standing ovation.

Dr. Winters:
I’m standing ovating her right now. That being said is like we have information that’s out there with different outcomes. People like Seyfried, people like Dominic, people like Dr. Scheck have seen different outcomes, and so have I in our clinical experiences, but it takes a different approach entirely. That cancer, glioblastomas, I believe so much because it’s a very sugar sunk cancer type, a very glucose uptake type of cancer. Also, think about what we have on and near our heads at all times. When I ask the patients about which side they wear their Bluetooth or where they use their cell phone, it is almost always on the same side as their phone use, the site of the tumor, so that’s unfortunate.

The other cancer fastest growing and this is under the age of 24 is colorectal cancer. That should clue you in that precisely what we choose to put into our mouths and travel through that tube is having an impact. That is so challenging to see young, healthy people diagnosed with Stage IV colorectal cancers more and more every day.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, scary; just absolutely scary statistics. When you look at statistics like one and two, if you don’t think it’s going to be you, you’re fooling yourself. Here’s the problem though because right now, if you interviewed most of the public, they’re hoodwinked into believing that it’s just they’re unlucky. That it’s their genetics, not your—your husband is a genetic expert. He would tell them differently. It’s not your genetics; it’s epigenetics. Meaning that there’s certain stressors like toxins that turn on genes of susceptibility.

Here’s the point. What’s going on right now in oncology? What’s going on in medicine? Meaning is there a shift? Because they still are spending billions of dollars on genetic therapies when we know it’s not the cause of cancer. What’s your thoughts?

Dr. Winters:
We got all excited when the Precision Medicine event came through with Dr. Bydon’s work. Everyone was thinking, this is it. Unfortunately, it was basically for—it sounds a little bit rude, but basically putting lipstick on a pig because we were still following the same path; we were just giving it a different filter to move through. We started getting really aggressive about genomic testing; we’re forgetting about epigonmic testing—or epigenetic testing and still looking for a single target with a single treatment and spending billions of dollars on therapies. Even the American Cancer Society will tell you that cancer itself is a collection of hundreds of disease. Why do we still keep spending our valuable resources on single cause, single cure? It doesn’t exist.

In fact, I’m the—really a bearer of bad news; I do not believe there is a cure for cancer because I think and believe as do the researchers out there that cancer is part of us. It is around us. It’s what our terrain is telling it that keeps it in check. I’m not looking or interested in curing this or fixing this; I’m curious about keeping it dormant, keeping it part of who we are. That’s the place.

We’re still in that in battled—that battle cry, that war cry on this that if somehow some exoduses that we have to kill or extricate from our self to heal. Yet, I will tell you, and you will—your other docs who will be speaking at this conference will tell you, there are multiple reasons why someone’s terrain starts to let the cancer take hold and pick up momentum. Yes, can you get lucky enough? Yeah, about 3% of the time with an absolute “cure” with chemo, or about 12% of the time with radiation, or about 50% of the time with surgery. Yet, 70% of the time, there will be a reoccurrence. These again are American Cancer stats.

If someone’s not taught the why they got there to begin with, and the how to prevent it from coming back, they might have been lucky enough to take the first chemo and have a nice response, but when it comes back, it tends to be bigger, more aggressive, and less responsive to those previously cytotoxic therapies. Unfortunately, people like me, people like Dr. Hermiz and others that you’ll have at your conference later in March, we’re accustomed to seeing people who are maybe on their second, third, or fourth reoccurrence of cancer after multiple treatments that have left their cells, their mitochondria even weaker than they were prior to their very first diagnosis. That becomes much more of an uphill battle. My goal is to catch people well before because really the only cure is prevention.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right; yeah, absolutely. It is, it’s so sad because I think that people believe that we actually are making headway in cancer because that’s what the commercials tell us. That we’re blessed to live in this day in age when wait a minute, the statistics are getting worse; not better despite the billions of dollars being spent. I think if logical people knew the real facts, they would say, well, wait a minute. If that’s the case, we’re spending billions of dollars with smart people researching, and things are getting worse, what is going on?

Maybe, just maybe we’re looking in the wrong area. Maybe this approach needs to be radically changed. Yet, we’re still seeing billions of dollars being spent on these genetic therapies. Yet, they keep crying out better testing. We have better testing. Yet, the numbers are still getting worse. What the heck is going on? Is there hope? Help me out here.

Dr. Winters:
Yeah, and it feels—believe you me, I’ve been at this for long enough, there has been so many times where I’ve probably been in a heap on the floor with my husband trying to console me feeling quite hopeless and helpless in these situations. Part of this is perpetuated. Just in the last year, we’ve had two studies coming out of I believe Harvard basically saying, it’s just genetic roulette. It’s just bad luck. You’re a sitting duck. You’re screwed. You have no impact on this.

Yet, just down the hall, you have people that are actually telling you completely otherwise. These are the people seeing this as a metabolic disease. Even within our brilliant academic institutions, we’re having infighting. You have to look at who’s funding a lot of those studies.

Dr. Pompa:
I think that’s the bad part is that there’s an inflame because there’s doctors that know the truth. Thomas Seyfried was 26 years in this. He pulled out and he got crushed. He lost all funding. Drug companies have the money to fund the things, so the scientists that are still doing it, they’re getting funded.

It’s like the moment you step out of that arena, now you’re on your own. Now, it’s where are you going to get your funding and make a living? People have to understand that, it all boils down to dollars and cents of why the money is going to drug companies. This is a cash cow. Cancer is a cash cow for drug companies. The fear is the greatest thing that people will pay for. To step outside of that, it’s just suicide if you’re a scientist.

Dr. Winters:
It’s interesting; my husband because of his epigenetics and his family of origin, every—they’re actually a case study at Creighton University. That’s how much cancer has afflicted his family of origin. He’s the baby of 10 children. His eldest brother died of pancreatic cancer. His middle sister had ovarian cancer. Another sister with endometrial cancer, another with ovarian. It’s just everywhere. His parents died of cancer; just on and on and on.

He was interested and went into drug cancer design in grad school and was one of the main people, one of the main researchers and players in the KRAS protein. That won’t mean much to some people here, but a few of your listeners might go, oh my gosh; this is 25 plus years old information that got buried because it wasn’t a blockbuster drug. It’s being dusted off and repurposed and tried again because nothing else is working. As my husband can tell you, it’s going to fail and fail miserably because the side effects and the profile that are so damn terrible. They did great for animal studies, but once you got into humans, all broke lost. It was just terrible.

He left that world thinking he could do more outside of the industry. He thought he could change it within; left it realizing he could do more out. It’s people the Believe Big Organization who funded, who went out and funded The Mistletoe trial happening at Hopkins right now for instance. It’s becoming more philanthropic donations to actually non-industry driven research that may actually be what changes us out of this mess.

People are like, I just want to know. I just want to learn. I want to see what could work. Let’s see what we throw at it and what sticks. That’s very different than saying, we’re going to make this billion-dollar drug. We’re going to make it work no matter what because the industry is driving us to do so. We’re going to keep our funding so we can do this. That’s a very different ballgame.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no doubt. What are some other—obviously, you’re on the front lines here in the cutting edge. What are some other things? We were talking about diet. I believe without what we’re talking about you teach in your book, you’re not going to really get your body in this state of balance like you said. We all have cancer cells, but a healthy body is able to constantly get rid of the bad ones. Fasting and the low carbohydrate diets, I think ketosis, this is key. What are some of the other therapies right now? There’s some other things on the horizon that you recommend that you have—that are real.

Dr. Winters:
Yeah, well, Mistletoe is probably the most studied integrative therapy that’s been out—

Dr. Pompa:
It’s not just about kissing under it.

Dr. Winters:
Exactly; coming right out of the holiday season of this, but it is an injectable form. We’ve been using it for continuously for 100 years. It’s a subq injection taught to the patient by their physician. It’s prescription only. It’s probably the most utilized integrative therapy worldwide both in subq, intravenous, even intertumoral, [00:34:12]. We’ve even put it right into the ascites fluid in peoples’ abdomens to dry up ascites fluid. It’s an incredible therapy that is used as an adjuvant therapy to enhance outcomes of standard of care treatments be it radiation, surgery, chemotherapy.

Also, in many patients, it has some direct cytotoxic impact to actually help kill off cancer cells. Mostly, by modulating, upregulating the impact of the immune system which is another key player. A metabolic balance is key. That’s the foundation. Then the immune function is also key.

For instance, if you have a teaspoon of sugar, you suppress your IGA and a lot of your immune cells for seven hours for each teaspoon you take in. Yet, we’re all living in that sugar burning state, so of course, our immune systems are completely downregulated. Getting low carb, upregulating your immune system, I know you have a lot of other speakers who are experts in how they do that in their practices. Even a three-day fasting will upregulate your immune system entirely. It’s like a total rebuild.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s autophagy; your body is eating the bad cells. It’s that simple. It knows the cancer cells. It’s going to not go for a healthy cell; it’s going to go for a cell malfunctioning. That’s the point. Then it upregulates the stem cell.

Dr. Winters:
Exactly, you’ve got it; exactly. Then the third part—there’s lots because we have 10 factors we talk about in the book, but if I had to choose the Top Three that you could get your hands around right today would be what we’ve already covered: the metabolic, the immune upregulation. The third big one that goes really underappreciated in our culture is stress modification. Stress is the key driver to—having your body in a sympathetic fight or flight process is what encourages the cancer cells to move about the building. It drives metastases. It drives the cells to embed into surrounding tissues and into the vasculature in the lymphatics.

That’s what starts to get a problem. We don’t die from primary tumors unless the crop up in a very vulnerable place like right against a vessel or right against a particular organ. We die of metastatic processes that change the metabolic expression of our body and basically starve our healthy cells to death. Most of us die from cachexia which is not about calories; it’s about metabolic inflammatory angiogenic process that cannot be cured with Boost and Ensure. I can assure you that.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and sugar. By the way, that’s a take two though, and then people are eating sugar.

Dr. Winters:
Oh, yeah, the sugar—I have patient after patient who have taken photos of the chemo room that is just—it’s like, Coca-Cola is hosting this event in their hospital. There’s cookies spread out everywhere and ham sandwiches on extreme crappy white bread just all around you. It’s impossible to get away from. If you’re trying to fight against that dominant belief system, and you’re in there by yourself eating your hardboiled egg or nothing at all, everyone around you is making you feel like a freak.

That makes this even more challenging for well-meaning, well studied, thoughtful patient who’s trying to do it differently. They’re literally being asked, do you need something to eat? Can I get you something to eat? Here’s a cookie. Everyone’s saying, you need to eat something. You came from an Italian family. It’s like, eat. It’s our language of love.

Dr. Pompa:
You need to eat something. I grew up with that. My grandma, you need to eat something, so I’ll eat a cookie. When the reality is, no, eating nothing is actually better. Then when I do finally get hungry, then I’ll eat very good food.

Dr. Winters:
Exactly; that’s just where we’re at. You asked earlier about hope in all of this. Now, what’s beautiful is conferences like yours, conferences that are getting ready to happen at the end of January, the Metabolic Health summits at Low Carb USA, and all these others. We’re starting to get likeminded consumers, likeminded researchers, likeminded clinicians, likeminded industry leaders, and tech people, and data people.

In fact, engineers have been blowing my mind at all these conferences. The tech world seems to be moving us further down the road of medicine than doctors. I’m celebrating them for sure. These gatherings are picking momentum and we’re finding each other. We all used to all be weird little islands, but we’re finding each other now, and it’s changing. Though I can’t say much about it yet, I’m hoping in the next few months I can talk to you about some exciting things that are happening at the level of our standard of care medical system that I am starting to see a glimmer of hope down the line on the horizon in the realm of cancer therapy.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, well, that’s good to hear because oftentimes I think—sometimes I get negative because I see the money coming in from the drug company. I hate how we do that. You’re right though; these conferences are getting more and more. At this conference we have Dominique D’Agostino talking. Just so much great information. He’s worked with Thomas Seyfried. I’m sure you know him well as well.

Dr. Winters:
Yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
The answers are out there. It’s just a matter of doing more of these conferences. Ultimately, when enough people start getting cancer, you’re right, the private funding will start to come in.

Dr. Winters:
That’s who’s funding some of these future projects I’m talking about where people that were big in the industry that lost a loved one, that said how is it possible with all this money, and all this effort, and all this time, and all these brilliant brains we aren’t further down the road in this who have pulled out their resources and said, let’s put it elsewhere. You’ve probably heard of Dr. Slocum and their group, Chemothermia in Turkey. This is a group of doctors all extremely conventional oncologists who a few years ago had a colleague diagnosed with pancreatic cancer who died within 20 days.

Here’s these men who are looking back at there colleague going how? How is this possible? Then they stumbled upon the work of people like Seyfried and whatnot and started to incorporate into a very conventional chemo driven Western standard of care oncology environment, these metabolic therapies, and are now having outcomes far greater than they experienced in the previous 50, 60 years of their careers. It’s pretty cool, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it is amazing. Let me tell you something; the people that I have seen and I’ve interviewed many here on this show that have beat cancer. I say lasting because a lot of people will do chemo like my mother-in-law. She did the standard of care, and then 10 years later almost to the day, she ended up with—from breast cancer to uterine cancer. It happens all the time. Of course, they weren’t connected, no. That’s what the doctors told her. The ones that do beat it are the ones that are doing the things that we’re discussing here.

Okay, so where would you—I want you to address two groups of people watching this. The group that has a diagnosis, has cancer, and the group that has a friend or a family member with cancer. Where do they start? Meaning the group with a friend or family member, what can they do to say, okay—delicately say maybe there’s another answer. What do they do? What about the person who has cancer? Where do they start?

Dr. Winters:
Such good questions. First of all, Number One, this is not a medical emergency unless it showed up in a very vulnerable place that made it so like it showed up and it’s pushing against and obstructing your colon. Obviously, that’s an emergency. If you just find out, oh my gosh, I have a lump, or I’ve noticed this, or they’ve caught this on an x-ray, or my bloodwork was weird, what happens then is you get thrown into an assembly line: one that’s very aggressive and one that’s very standard of care.

You’re basically a number. You’re treated the exact same way in many situations whether you’re a Stage 0 or a Stage IV especially in a smaller medical environment, smaller towns, not in a more savvy testing research environments. Number One, I remind people, take a breath. Stop; if you can avoid it, do not get immediately on Dr. Google and start looking for everything because most of the information you’re going to run across is likely misinformation in the beginning.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I would say on both sides. The medical side and the alternative side, you’re going to get bad information.

Dr. Winters:
Exactly, you nailed. That’s it exactly; it’s both. Then it’s going to be even more confusing. Number Two, it took you an average of 7 to 10 years to have that cancer collect enough cells to get big enough and loud enough and capture our attention and get the diagnosis. Seven or ten years, you’ve got seven or ten days or seven or ten weeks to do some due diligence, do some research, get a second if not third opinion from your standard America—standard of care team. Find out what their thoughts are.

While you’re doing that if you have the—if you’ve had a biopsy, have that sent off for molecular profiling. Get a tissue assay always. Every patient should have this offered. It should not be asked for. You only get it offered in places where they were doing research for a treatment for that target, but people like myself, we can look at the targets and still know what’s in our toolbox and what the metabolic personality is of that tumor. For instance, it might be high in the PIK3C, which is very much a sugar sucking cancer type of thing, or a P10 process, or some of these others that might help us say, yeah, you really need to get on the low carb bandwagon right away.

The other thing is to get some basic labs because the only thing they’re interested in is to make sure your white blood cells are high enough to be able to get your next chemotherapy infusion. There is a lot more going on under that hood that can be easily seen on basic blood tests. The basics, if nothing else I want people to get a CBC with differential, a metabolic panel preferably that includes a GGT because that can show us what a cytodetoxification status. It’s a particular liver enzyme. Also, a C-reactive protein, which is a prognostic factor in all cancer types. An LDH which used to be run as part of our chem panels but has been left out for the last 10 years or so, lactate dehydrogenase, which actually shows me the state of your metabolic health in general and an ESR or a sedimentation rate. It goes by both names.

When those three tests, the last one’s ESR sed rate—or excuse me, ESR, LDH, and CRP are all elevated, that is a metabolic tsunami going on in your body. That’s why I know cancers more in the driver seat than you are. If you have all three of them within functional, normal ranges, then no matter what the diagnosis, what’s on the scan, and what’s on your markers, you are still in the driver seat. You have not been taken hostage. That information lets me know how aggressive we need to be with whatever therapies: conventional, non-conventional, combination. That is a simple step. That out of pocket testing runs about $105 in most walk-in labs.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow, no expense.

Dr. Winters:
It’s like seriously; there’s a nice dinner out with your loved one. Go and run some labs. Then your next important step is to put together your dream team, period. That dream team may include a standard of care oncologist, your surgeon, or radial oncologist. That’s absolutely critical because we need diagnostics, we need testing, we need to know where we are.

I would not want to come to me and ask me automotive advice when I’ve never worked on a car in my life just like I would never ask a physician nutritional advice who’s never had—when less than 25% of all medical schools were even offered an elective course in it. Please don’t ask for medical advice from doctors unless they’ve been specifically trained above and beyond RD nutrition. Frankly, I’m going to upset some of your listeners. RD nutritionist, because they’re industry driven nutrition—we have a lot of recovering RD nutritionist. I know a lot follow you and we see a lot of them at these conferences. They’re funneled into a particular belief system and value system that is frankly not therapeutic. It’s just enough to keep you from getting scurvy. You need a therapeutic nutritionist.

You need someone who’s going to help you work on the stress of all of this whether it’s a life coach, a friend, a pastor, a therapist, somebody who’s going to help you navigate the mental-emotional. If you’re someone who knows that you’ve got some good, reliable, trusted resources of an integrative oncologist, or integrative naturopathic, or functional medicine, or chiropractic, cancer centric practitioner, that’s a bonus, but there are far and few between. Hopefully, in the next couple of years, that will be a different story because I imagine it to be on everybody’s cancer team in the not so distance future.

My point is, do not put all your eggs in the basket of your standard of care because you will only get the standard. You deserve a lot more than that especially if you do not want to be that statistic. It’s folks like us who can help you navigate this territory.

Dr. Pompa:
You need someone on that side who understands, truly understands the low carb thing, that understands fasting, when it would be beneficial, when it wouldn’t. Really, you need that. Then the detoxification down at the cellular level, critical.

Warburg, his original cell—he talked about environmental toxins, how that is affecting the mitochondria where the respiration goes bad. He even said, he said, I don’t quite understand it. I don’t understand its role quite yet, but I know it’s a factor. I don’t even know to what degree. He knew it was a factor. Now today, we know it’s even more of a factor than what we think of what can cause the cell to go bad.

Dr. Winters:
Big time; and that’s what I thought was so great is this is 1920 he was saying something’s off. People like Weston A Price, and the Pottenger, Dr. Pottenger were also in the background saying, oh my gosh, we’re killing ourselves with our diets. This is in 1920 only a few—50 to 75 years past the initiation of the industrial food revolution. A hundred years later, we’ve really got ourselves in a pickle.

When you talk about my husband being a biochemist, he’s also—he’ll tell you and others tell you that arsenic and mercury are about the worst mitochondrial poisons out there. They’re just everywhere: hydrogenous corn syrup, coal-burning plants, our water source, a lot of our food sources. Yeah, I was waiting saving that for last because that’s the most obvious. It’s incredible to me that we are as—my friend, colleague, and mentor, Dr. Walter Crinnion, who’s an expert in the field of environmental medicine has said it’s not about if you have toxicity; it’s about how much and how you biochemically, individually process it based on your epigenetics and other factors.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I’d love to interview your husband on the show because a lot of people are doing the SNP testing. There’s benefit; it shows weaknesses, etc, but it’s the epigenetics that really is much different. People don’t understand the differences. We’re not going to define it here. The point is, I would love to interview your husband.

Dr. Winters:
Yeah, and everyone loves him. You guys, if you thought this was fun, you wait until you talk to Steve. You guys will really have a hair—a fast yourselves again.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s great. I would love to because people don’t understand epigenetics and epigenetics is really the key. Toxins and stressors trigger these genes. That’s the key. I teach a lot of that in my stuff because we want to turn off the gene. It’s part of what’s important, but you won’t turn off the gene for whatever cancer susceptibility you have if you still have the stressors and toxins being one of them.

That’s why you have to put your team together, folks. I hope you heard that because, in these things that we’re talking about, it’s not just one person. When I get on these teams, I know exactly my role. It’s like my roles not over here in diagnosing. My role is not even over here on trying to kill the cancer cells. I stay in my own lane.

I thought that was—okay, the last question was, what do we do with the person that’s watching this that they want to tell their mother, their loved one, their friend about this. This could go south real quick. What’s your advice to them?

Dr. Winters:
It’s interesting because I get this question a lot especially through my social media. Someone’s like my aunt’s—I’m scared to tell them. First of all, I think the way you—the tone in the way you approach it is, hey, I heard this great podcast, or hey, I read this book. It was very interesting to me. If you’re interested, I’m happy to send you a link or send you a copy of it. More of just an invitation I think is there.

Sometimes the best place to start though is to say, what do you need? What resources do you have? How do you feel most supported right now? How can I most support you? That might be your perfect opening is more start it out as a question of, hey, what do you need?

If they’re like, I’m just overwhelmed. I don’t even know where to start. Then it’s something like my book or even when you talked about Dr. Seyfried’s book, I often tell them read Travis Cristofferson’s instead. I’m like, Travis’s book is like the cliffs notes of Dr. Thomas’s book. That’s an invitation. Or luckily, it’s conversations like this, podcasts like this that are out there, that people can watch in a matter of less than an hour and learn a lot. Then see if that resonates with them. If it does, tell them to come find us.

Dr. Pompa:
I should have gotten Travis at the seminar. Ashley, maybe we have spot.

Dr. Winters:
There you go. I could get up there and we could do a little duet.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, if you have his email, give it to Ashley.

Dr. Winters:
I will.

Dr. Pompa:
I should reach out to him because you’re right; he does make it simple. That is a great book. Unfortunately, I read it after I read Seyfried. It was a breeze. I was like, oh my gosh. I should have read this first.

Anyway, what a great show. Thank you so much for I think inspiring our listeners and our viewers here because I think you give the hope that people need. There is an answer. Probably just your story alone, like mine, is enough hope. There’s a different way. There’s an answer.

Folks watching this, share this with as many people as you can. Because as you pointed out, it’s these podcasts, it’s the seminars, that’s the key if we can keep getting this message out that there is, in fact, another way and just another view of this whole thing that you won’t cure cancer. There is no cure. By the way, that sounds negative to people, but it’s actually a positive when people understand it. Share the show. Thank you so much. What a blessing you’ve brought our audience, no doubt about it.

Dr. Winters:
Thank you so much; what a pleasure.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. Practitioners, don’t forget to check out Dr. Pompa’s event in Nashville where Nasha Winters will be a speaker along with a lineup of top health experts in this field. Please go to hcfevents.com for more information. To the rest of our CHTV audience, please check out events.drpompa.com if you’d like to buy a one-day ticket for a special day of public attendance. We hope to see you there.

We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 AM Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv. Please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, or sharing the show with anyone who may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.