Are You Nutrient Deficient? The Hidden Factors of Accelerated Aging | Rhonda Patrick - ENCORE
89 min
•Dec 31, 20254 months agoSummary
Dr. Mark Hyman and Dr. Rhonda Patrick discuss the widespread micronutrient deficiencies affecting 67% of Americans, exploring how insufficient levels of vitamin D, magnesium, omega-3s, and other essential nutrients contribute to accelerated aging, chronic disease, and cognitive decline—and how simple, affordable supplementation can reverse these deficits.
Insights
- Nearly 70% of Americans are deficient in vitamin D and 90% lack adequate omega-3 intake, yet these deficiencies go largely undiagnosed despite profound impacts on longevity and disease risk
- Bruce Ames' triage theory explains why the body prioritizes acute survival functions over long-term health optimization, meaning insufficient micronutrients enable short-term survival while accelerating aging
- Clinical nutrition studies are fundamentally flawed because they fail to measure baseline nutrient levels and use single-nutrient doses, unlike drug trials where baseline is zero
- Phytochemicals from plants (sulforaphane, anthocyanins) activate longevity pathways like NRF2 that regulate detoxification and antioxidant defense—making plant foods essential beyond basic vitamins
- A low omega-3 index carries the same mortality risk as smoking, yet 90% of Americans fall into this category, making it one of the most modifiable risk factors for longevity
Trends
Shift from deficiency-disease model to insufficiency-longevity model in functional medicine practiceGrowing recognition that micronutrient testing should be standard preventive care, not optionalPersonalized nutrition based on genetic variations in nutrient metabolism and enzyme function becoming mainstreamPhytochemical research elevating plant foods beyond macronutrients to therapeutic interventions for agingMedical education gap: micronutrition absent from most medical school curricula despite being foundational to metabolismRandomized controlled trials in nutrition being redesigned to account for baseline nutrient status and optimal dosingIntegration of nutrient biomarkers (omega-3 index, vitamin D levels, homocysteine) into preventive health dashboardsFunctional medicine companies (like Function Health) scaling micronutrient testing to large populations (110,000+ cohorts)Recognition of inflammation-depression link driving interest in omega-3 and anti-inflammatory nutrient protocolsXenohormesis concept gaining traction: phytochemicals as mild stressors activating body's own healing pathways
Topics
Micronutrient deficiency epidemiology in the US populationVitamin D insufficiency and disease prevention (cancer, dementia, bone health)Omega-3 fatty acids and cardiovascular/cognitive healthMagnesium deficiency and metabolic dysfunctionBruce Ames' triage theory of nutrient allocationDNA damage and nutrient insufficiencyPhytochemicals and NRF2 pathway activationSulforaphane and broccoli sprout extract benefitsClinical trial design flaws in nutrition researchPersonalized nutrition and genetic variations in nutrient metabolismInflammation as driver of depression and chronic diseaseGut permeability and lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammationVO2 max as longevity biomarkerUltra-processed food and nutrient depletionFunctional medicine testing and optimization protocols
Companies
Function Health
Co-founded by Dr. Hyman; provides micronutrient testing for 110,000+ person cohort revealing 67% nutrient deficiency ...
Seed
Probiotic supplement company; Dr. Hyman joined clinical board and recommends DSO1 daily symbiotic for gut health
Avmacol
Sulforaphane supplement brand; Dr. Patrick uses advanced formula for NRF2 pathway activation and glutathione production
Fatty Acid Research Institute
Research organization where Dr. Patrick is associate professor; conducts omega-3 index studies with Dr. Bill Harris
People
Dr. Rhonda Patrick
Leading nutritional science expert; studied under Bruce Ames; discusses micronutrient deficiencies and phytochemical ...
Dr. Bruce Ames
Legendary biochemist and Rhonda Patrick's mentor; developed triage theory explaining nutrient allocation and aging
Dr. Bill Harris
Omega-3 research expert; published Framingham cohort studies linking omega-3 index to 5-year life expectancy gains
Dr. Robert Heaney
Vitamin D researcher; authored 'long latency deficiency diseases' paper explaining nutrient insufficiency and chronic...
Martin Gabala
High-intensity interval training expert; involved in Vilpa studies on vigorous lifestyle activity and mortality reduc...
Steven Simpson
Proponent of protein leverage hypothesis explaining overeating in response to nutrient-poor ultra-processed foods
Kevin Hall
Researcher who published metabolic ward study showing ultra-processed foods cause 500 calorie/day overconsumption
Quotes
"We're overfed and undernourished. And so there's a problem that I think we're facing, which is people don't understand the need to actually obtain the right nutrients in the right amounts for not just preventing a deficiency disease, but for optimizing health, preventing disease of aging."
Dr. Mark Hyman
"Your body will triage them to essential functions to prevent, you know, short-term death at the expense of these long-term sort of health functions. Your body hijacks whatever nutrients we have to deal with the immediate needs we have, but then it kind of misses the boat on what they're doing to protect us long-term from the ravages of aging."
Dr. Rhonda Patrick
"If you don't have headache and hospital doesn't do anything, right? So it's like if your levels are great, it will make a threes and you add omega-3s, you won't see a change in your health, right? That's the fundamental flaw of clinical trials in nutrition."
Dr. Rhonda Patrick
"Having a low omega-3 index had the same mortality risk as smoking. 90% of the American population is in that category."
Dr. Rhonda Patrick
"Micronutrients are running our metabolism, which runs everything from our heart pumping blood to neurotransmitter function to repairing DNA. If you don't have sufficient levels of those vitamins and minerals, what happens is those enzymes do not work optimally."
Dr. Rhonda Patrick
Full Transcript
Hi there, it's Dr. Mark Hyman. I just want to start by saying how grateful I am that you're here. Every week you choose to spend a little of your time with me and that means more than you know, as we wind down for the holiday season, we're going to be taking a short break. But we didn't want to leave you without something great to listen to. So today we're revisiting our most popular episodes of 2025. My conversation with Dr. Rhonda Patrick. She's a leading expert in nutritional science and aging and in this episode we break down by nearly 70% of Americans are deficient in vitamin D and what that means for longevity. We look at the overlooked role of magnesium and metabolism, blood sugar and brain function and why our current food system leaves so many of us malnourished even when we think we're eating a quote healthy diet. We also explore the best ways to assess and correct micronutrient and balances so you can support optimal health from the inside out. As you know, I'm always talking about how central the gut is to living a long healthy life. A high quality probiotic is one of the most important things you can do for your gut, which is why I have been recommending seeds DSO1 daily symbiotic. I've reviewed hundreds of probiotics over the years, but DSO1 is the one I personally trust and take every day. Seeds DSO1 combines 24 probiotic strains with a pomegranate-based prebiotic for benefits well beyond digestion, easing bloating, supporting immune function, strengthening the gut barrier, promoting clear, glowing skin and even reducing visible signs of aging. It's patented capsule and capsule design ensures these probiotics actually make it to the colon alive where they have the most impact. That's why I joined Seeds Clinical Board and why I recommend DSO1 as part of any daily routine. Seed is offering my community 20% off your first month at seed.com slash hymen with the code 20 hymen. Get yours today. So Rana, so great to have you on the Dr. hymen show. Welcome and I've been looking forward to this for a long time. I think you're one of the few scientists out there in the public sphere who's actually communicating science and data in ways that have a lot of integrity and that adhere to some common sense principles that a lot of things out in the blogosphere or the podcast world are often a little bit extreme and you kind of really take a very science-based approach. So I'm really thrilled to have you on the podcast. And the topic I want to really dive into is micronutrients, vitamins, minerals, maybe some phytochemicals, but you know, there's so much confusion and controversy and the medical professions historically said, you know, you don't really need multivitamin or if you're eating a healthy diet. Well, first of all, most of us don't eat a healthy diet. And second of all, you know, the idea that vitamins and minerals just cause expensive urine doesn't quite make sense. I always say, if you know you, so why should you drink water, you're just going to pee it out. It's like your body uses what it needs. And I think there's there's a lack of understanding of the widespread insufficiency and often deficiencies of nutrients in America. You know, we're overfed and undernourished. And so there's a problem that I think we're facing, which is people don't understand the need to actually obtain the right nutrients in the right amounts for not just preventing a deficiency disease, but for optimizing health, preventing disease of aging. And I want to sort of dive into that with you where I want to go through sort of the overall framework of like, you know, where we're at in terms of the nutritional status in the American population, what things we should be worried about. And you know, can like dive into the science of each of the key nutrients and what they do and how they affect us. And you know, one of the things that kind of really got me excited when I was sort of, you know, what I have you on was that you studied with the scientists, the Ambrus Ames, who as someone I've, you know, really admired has been someone who inspired me and a lot of my work and thinking has come out of a lot of his work, which was really looking at how do we, how do we really understand the nature of aging and micronutrients and and how do we get a metabolic tune up, you know, he wrote these incredible papers that were, I think landmark papers. And you know, you, you had the privilege of actually working with him, studying with him. So maybe kind of you can share with us how you sort of got into this with Bruce and what, you know, what you've learned from him and what the whole idea of the role of micronutrients is in health and wellness. Well, first of all, Mark, I want to thank you for having me on the show. I appreciate what you do as well. And I also appreciate the kind words. So sorry. They make you cry. Bruce Ames passed away a couple of months ago and he was my mentor and a very good friend mine. Yeah. Unbelievable guy. And it kind of a funny story about how I ended up in his lab. You know, I was, when I was wrapping out my graduate research, my PhD at St. George Children's Research Hospital. While I was there, I really got into health and for just wanting to be healthy. And also I had done some previous research before graduate school in an aging lab at the Salk Institute in the Hoya. And so I was already very interested in aging, you know, even though I was in my 20s when I was working in that lab, you know, there was always people thinking about when their 20s is living to 100. But yeah, I was definitely thinking about it. And specifically I was thinking about like things that I can do in my diet and lifestyle because I had done some research on how insulin affects aging and, you know, glucose metabolism. And so it was very real to me that there's a very strong connection between our diet and lifestyle on the way we age. And so that led me to reading a lot of, um, Bruce's studies on mitochondrial health, on micro nutrients. And I continued reading him throughout grad school and I started a blog at that time. I was, you know, blogging about vitamin D and omega three. And I kind of decided I didn't want to be a professor necessarily. I didn't necessarily want to go and write grants and, and do this sort of classical pathway that a lot of scientists do when they're doing their training. And I had told that to my mentor and my mentors, um, at the time, and they were very distraught about that because they were saying that I was a very good scientist and I was completely, you know, destroying, destroying my scientific career. They begged me to please at least go interview for some postdoctoral, you know, positions. And so I did. I said, okay, well, I'll go ahead and interview when I went on a few interviews and some very prominent labs, um, I interviewed for very, even aging labs. In fact, one of the guys that I interviewed with at Stanford, um, looked me up and saw that I was blogging and said to me, um, you can't do this if you're going to come to my lab. You need to work for me. So then I go to Bruce and I meet Bruce and, uh, he is absolutely just, he, he, blew me away with not only, um, his excitement for science, but his excitement for science communication and what I was doing. And he was so enthusiastic about it. And he was basically like, oh, you need to continue doing this. This is a very important thing you do. Now, remember Bruce, you know, he kind of switches fields every few years or so. He started out, um, looking at enzymes and then he developed this test, and on his, the aims test, that is a very, very simple test for, uh, testing for mutagens, things that can damage your DNA, which is the precursor for cancer. Yeah. It's still widely used today. And he had done a lot of, you know, research back in the, the late 70s and early 80s. And he found that chemicals that were in things like women's hair, dye, children's jammers were mutagens and carcinogens. Yeah. And he published this paper on it and nobody was doing anything about it. And so he was on the phone calling up these companies. Have you seen my paper? And he was responsible for getting these chemicals out of women's hair dye, out of children's pajamas. And he has had an amazing impact on public health. Continues to have an impact on public health. Is anyone of the most cited scientists of all time? He is. He is. And then, you know, he got into, you wonder what he's doing this cancer research. And then he gets into, to micronutrients. So, you know, these are about 30 or 40 essential vitamins, minerals, amino acids, fatty acids that we need to get from our diet. We need them to survive. But as Bruce would argue, we also need them to age optimally. And he got into this field quite, I would say it was an accident. He had, he had a, a guy in his lab doing a sabbatical doctor McGregor. And this guy was a, a cytobiologist. He was, he was looking at red blood cells and doing a lot of experiments with red blood cells. And it turns out he, he used a media that didn't have folate. And all of a sudden, he started noticing all these double-chranded breaks in DNA. DNA. Who DNA was like, being damaged. Being damaged. And, and so he was like, oh, what's going on? And he, you know, finally traced it down to, oh, we have this media that we've used that doesn't have folate. So then he decided to do some animal work. Well, let's see what happens if we don't, if we deprive, you know, rodents of folate and sure enough, widespread DNA damage just completely, you know, and DNA, double-chranded breaks and DNA DNA are the precursor to basically oncogenic mutate answer. Exactly. Cancer. So Bruce, of course, was like, wow, this is amazing. Not having a important micronutrient can potentially cause cancer. And that's kind of what it was doing in the rodent studies. And then he had done some human, he had found some humans that were low in folate and did some experiments as well, found a similar thing, gave them back the folate, DNA double-chranded breaks went away. He worked out the mechanism, which was folate is a precursor for making DNA. And so if you don't have that there, your body will put something there from RNA, a uracil instead of a thymine. And- Most are like nucleotides. nucleotides. nucleotides. Right. And so it basically causes these double-chranded breaks. So long story short, that's how Bruce got into micronutrients. And he started to really dive into understanding how these vitamins and minerals are affecting the way we age because cancer, you know, is is a disease of age for the most part. There are some childhood leukemias and childhood cancers, but those are mostly linked to genetics. Aging in general is a major driver of cancer. Bruce came up with this this theory called the triage theory. Yeah. And this- That's about that. Yeah, this is a it's a theory that he came up with that posits that vitamins and minerals that we get from our diet. They get triage to essential functions in our body that are important for preventing basically acute death. Right. So if you think about blood coagulation, vitamin K1, very important. Like you need to have your blood clot. Otherwise, you could have, you know, a pretty severe injury and you could have a hemorrhage and that would be detrimental, right. So vitamin K is one example and there's some other examples like selenium that Bruce has published and showed there are proteins that have a stronger binding to vitamin K1 that are important for coagulation. So these are proteins in the liver versus, for example, other proteins that stay in circulation and are activating proteins that are important for calcium signaling and trafficking, moving calcium out of the bloodstream, moving it to muscle, moving it to bones, right. So he's published a couple of papers showing that- so the idea is that your body will triage them to essential functions to prevent, you know, short-term death at the expense of these long-term sort of health functions, right. Your body hijacks whatever nutrients we have to deal with the immediate needs we have, but then it kind of misses the boat on what they're doing to protect us long-term from the ravages of aging. Exactly. And so magnesium would be another one. Magnesium is essential mineral. It's involved in over 300 different enzymatic, you know, processes and ATP production and utilization is one of those and ATP is the energetic currency of ourselves. We need to make energy to survive. Right. So when's our cells? Is energy everything? Exactly. But it's also essential for DNA repair enzymes. They use it to repair damage to our DNA. Every time we make a new cell, whether that's a skin cell or a liver cell or a blood cell, there's there's damage that occurs even with just the process of cell division, right. Let alone the external processes that were exposed to UV radiation, unhealthy diet, things like that. So we need to repair that damage, but magnesium is essential for those DNA repair enzymes. And so if you don't get enough magnesium, it's only going to those essential roles of ATP production and not the DNA repair enzymes. And this is important because about 50% of the US population does not have adequate levels of magnesium. 50%. Close to 50%. Yeah. And you know, magnesium, as Bruce would say, is at the center of a chlorophyll molecule. Chlorophyll give plants their green color. So magnesium is very high in dark leafy greens. Yeah. You're supposed to eat your greens. You get your magnesium. And so people are eating enough of their greens and they're not getting enough magnesium. Greens and beans. Greens and beans. And oats. All men. Exactly. Things that aren't typically staples of American diet, which is 60% ultra processed food, right? Right. Exactly. So you know, the magnesium RDA is about 350 to 400 milligrams a day, depending on if your male or female males require a little bit more. And so you really supposed to be getting the majority of that from your diet. People aren't getting that from their diet. And you know, just in terms of, we talked about triage theory in cancer, there are a variety of studies that have looked at these are observational studies. So it's always difficult to establish causation, of course, from observational to that. But nonetheless, there are studies that I found a dose dependent effect of low magnesium. So for every 100 milligram dose, less, 100 milligrams less intake per day was associated with a 24% increase in pancreatic cancer incidence. Well, so instead of magnesium. Of magnesium. So eventually, and that's a dose dependent, right? So let's back up a little bit. Yeah. A year ago, I 20, God, more than 20 years ago, I wrote an article called paradigm shift, really about the sort of end of normal science, which is this sort of our current view of how things are in medicine and how the body works. And shifting more toward a systems view and understanding the body as a network as a sort of an integrated organism that requires basic raw materials to function optimally. And what I wrote about in that, in that article was that, you know, micronutrients are really kind of miraculous because back in the turn of the century, we didn't really know about them. Of the 1900s, not 2000s, but we still, I kind of don't know that much about them from the consumer and medical point of view, for sure. The amount of serious deficiency to Jesus, like pelagran, berry, berry, and rickets, and, you know, zero phthalmia, which was like a vitamin A deficiency and causes the blindness, just widespread, you know, zinc deficiencies. And these cause really significant serious diseases that could literally be cured almost in minutes with infinitesimally small amounts, you know, milligram amounts of nutrients. There's no drug that can treat that. And you're talking about magnesium having 300 different enzymatic reactions. When you take a drug, it usually has one target, like one receptor and one action. But nutrients have our pleomorphic, which means they can do many, many, many things, and they do many things. And each nutrient literally can have hundreds of different reactions in different systems of the body that regulate almost everything we can think of. And what's really frightening to me as a physician, and we do testing of this. I co-founded a company called Function Health, and we do a lot of micronutrient testing as part of that, which is not typically done, whether it's methylation testing for homocysteine, methanolog acid, you know, the B vitamins, we're talking about like pholic acid, or the vitamin D, or omega-3s, and zinc, and the selenium, and we list goes on, and we see iodine, the tremendous amount of deficiencies that exist in red blood cell magnesium, you know, that exist within the population that are being undiagnosed. I mean, and we're seeing, I don't, I'm just, we have 110,000 people in our cohort, 67% not the time we looked at the data of the cohort, which is, I think a more health-forward cohort could be like proct with about their health, going to function health, getting room jobs done, 67% have a nutrient deficiency. I don't know, omega-3s, vitamin D, what was this, whatever, at the level that the lab reference range says, not at what you or I would think would be optimal, right? So like, you know, we probably would think vitamin D should be over 45 or 50, but their levels 30 or Farican, I think their level 16, which is your iron store, probably I think it should be a 45 or more in a proct with health. So they're, we're talking about 67% being deficient at like a level that I think is already pretty low. So what about the general population, and maybe you could talk about the degree of nutrient deficiencies, and then talk about like how, how these things actually do their magic, and why they're not just causing expensive urine, and then I want to sort of get into, you know, what should people be taking, because that's how you're going to get into that thing, because it's important, no, what are the foundational things that are going to protect you long-term, you know, for pennies a day that could actually save your life? Well, I want to start out with the multivitamins and vitamins don't do anything in their expensive urine, which you also mentioned earlier, being as this is a pet peeve of mine. And I'll tell you about where I was funny these, I just going to show her, I'm sorry, I go to these medical conferences, and I'm like, I ask, okay, doctors, how many of you recommend supplements to your patients, and like a few hands will go up, you know, I said, how many of you personally take supplements, I'm like, almost everybody's hand shows up. Oh, really? Yeah, it's very funny. It's a great question. Yeah. So there's no evidence, but I take. But I take. Here's a big flaw with a lot of those studies that are cited by journals, great journals like JAMA, for example. They're poorly designed. They're poorly designed. So, you know, there's signs like drugs, I guess. Exactly. Exactly. Exactly. So the problem is when you have a drug trial, randomized control trials are the gold standard, right? You have a drug, and then you have a placebo. But the thing is, is that with a drug, everybody has zero levels of that drug in the start of trial, right? That's right. So you don't have to measure anything, right? Because there's nothing to measure until you take the drug. There's no like pre-ozemic level, although actually with those ambiguous through you have a GLP one. Yeah, bad example. Like statins. So, you know, but when you when you're doing a normal blood level of lipitor, right? Right. Exactly. When you're doing a study on vitamin D or omega-3 or fill in the blank vitamin mineral, everybody has varying levels of these micronutrients in their body. And so you have to measure things. You have to measure things at the start of the trial. You might have someone that's already got sufficient levels of vitamin D. They may have 50 nanograms per milliliter level vitamin D. And so you give them a vitamin D supplement. And it's not going to do anything because they're already sufficient, right? Or the converse is they're so deficient and you give them a supplement that's 400 I use or 800 I use which doesn't raise their blood levels hardly at all. That it doesn't really do anything. And so you won't. Dosis wrong. You don't measure whose solution. Like, yeah, I mean, like if you don't have headache and hospital doesn't do anything, right? So it's like if you if your levels are great, it will make a threes and you add omega-3s, you won't see a change in your health, right? Exactly. So, so that's the the fundamental flaw of clinical trials in nutrition. That right there is that that the the MDs that are running these trials are running them like your drug trials. And not you have to measure things with that said, there have been some well done trials. And in fact, I believe it's just been trying to think the other thing the other flaw is that they they will use a single dose of a nutrient that usually works as a team like and they can actually make things worse like the beta-caraching trials and smokers show that it caused cancer, but oxidative stress is managed by a whole team of nutrients. So like I was saying, you could be, you know, uh, you know, Michael Jordan, but if you're playing one against five on a basketball team, you're going to lose every time, right? Even if he's the best player in the world. So you need a team of of these nutrients, particularly in terms of oxidative stress cascade to actually modulate free radicals. And if you give a high dose of one nutrient, you're going to kind of screw up the whole chain. Yeah, that is possible not to mention the fact that smokers, I mean, if you give beta caretune to non smokers, it doesn't cause cancer, but smokers are doing so much oxidative damage and they're getting DNA damage that a high dose of something like beta-carotene, which can be an antioxidant may then allow, you know, some of that. It's basically, um, it's allowing some of the cells that would otherwise die from the oxidative stress, you know, not to die, right? And so it's, yeah, it's a very complicated thing when you're doing things like that. Um, but it, you know, I think like it was about 10 years ago. There was a huge study in the annals of internal medicine, and it was called the enough is enough vitamins and mineral supplements. Not only don't do anything that may be harmful. Yeah, I think that was, do you remember that study? Yeah. It was about 10 years ago. Yeah. And, you know, I, I was, I just dug in and it was a meta analysis and I went and looked at all those studies and I found that all these flaws again coming up. You looked at the actual studies that they made their conclusions from. So they do a review and they go, we're going to look at all these these studies and we're going to make a summary and that's called a meta analysis. And then from that, you didn't just take their conclusions. You actually went and looked at the data itself from the original studies. Exactly. Yeah. And, um, I put out a video about it like years and years ago. And it get all these flaws that we just talked about were there. And, um, here we are 10 years later. And the cosmos trials was just published, right? So this is another meta analysis of a couple randomized controlled trials where older adults were given a multivitamin. They had about 20 or so essential vitamins, essential minerals, omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin D, right? Magnesium. This was all present in this multivitamin and they were given it for two years. Yeah. What the study found these are randomized controlled trials, placebo controlled, right? The multivitamin actually did improve brain aging. So they had they were less people taking the multivitamin mineral supplement were less likely to experience cognitive dysfunction, memory loss. And in fact, they experienced a improvement in their brain aging that was equivalent to reversing two years of brain aging. Wow. Yeah. Brand mice controlled trial. We are 10 years later. Yeah. And there's many, many other studies that show the value of nutrients in many, many different conditions, right? Exactly. Yeah. I, you know, I think that it comes down to, yes, you should try to get your micronutrients from diet. However, taking, you know, a multivitamin supplement, taking vitamin D, taking omega-3s, like these are insurance, right? This is insurance to make sure you're getting your optimal levels. So you asked about deficiencies and what are some of the common ones? Well, omega-3. Okay. So about 80% of the world's population and 90% of the US population does not meet the requirements for omega-3 fatty acids. Yeah. That's a lot. Which is basically what your body's made of, you know, the cell membranes, your brain, the chuteone nervous tissue, it runs regulatory inflammation. I mean, it's, it's, it's critical everything. Exactly. So when the check engine light comes on in your car, do you ignore it? Of course not. You take into the mechanic and fix it before it's a bigger problem. Your body is known different. It's constantly sanding signals, inflammation, blood sugar is rising, hormones are shifting. But if you don't look under the hood, you won't know what needs attention. And that's where function comes in. It's your body's personal dashboard. It's designed by doctors, including me. And it's trusted by leading physicians and hundreds of thousands of members with the 100 most critical lab tests covering every major system from hard to liver to kidneys to metabolism, hormones, toxins, nutrients, and more. You can get real numbers, real data. So you can take action and make improvements and track them over time. And that's how you prevent disease instead of just treating it. So check your system. Start testing. Go to function.com slash mark. And if you're one of the first 1,000 people this week, use the code mark 2026 for a $50 credit to your $365 membership. It's time to stop guessing. Start testing with function. Here's something surprising. The air inside your home can be two to five times more polluted than the air outside. And since most of us spend nearly all of our time indoors that adds up fast, that's why I rely on air doctor. It's a medical grade purifier designed to dramatically reduce common contaminants, everything from dust and pollen to VOCs, wildfire smoke, bacteria, and viruses. It's ultra hepa filter is engineered to trap ultra fine particles far smaller than what traditional hepa can handle. Plus, the smart sensor automatically adjusts to keep your air consistently clean without the noise. Better air means better breathing, better rest, and better overall health. Thousands of families are already using air doctor to create safer cleaner homes. I think you'll notice the difference too. Right now, you can save up to $300. Go to airdoctorpro.com. slash DR Hyman. That's airdoctorpro.com slash DR Hyman. Breathe better, sleep better, live better, with air doctor. And there's been a lot of work by Dr. Bill Harris. So I'm an associate professor at the Fadi acid research institute with Bill Harris. And so I'm involved in a lot of research on omega three. And he's published just an array of studies that are quite convincing. So looking at the omega three index. So this is the omega three levels in red blood cells, which is sort of like a long term marker for omega three because they take about whatever. What is the index actually measure? It measures the EPA and DHA levels along with a bunch of other fatty acids if you're interested in that. But it's really the EPA and DHA level in the red blood cell membrane, which is usually index and you want a certain number. Exactly. So he's published studies using like the Framingham cohort. So these are large cohort studies with a lot of people. And he's looked at the omega three index and correlated with all cause mortality. So dying from a variety of different causes. And what he's found is that people that have what is defined as a high omega three index. So this would be 8% or more. Okay. Have a five year increased life expectancy compared to people that have a four percent omega three index, which is low. And actually the average omega three index of the US population is about five percent pretty close to that four percent. Yeah. Well, that's what I could measure that in the function health labs. Yeah. It's great to see that. Five year increased life expectancy. If you think about Japan, Japan, who eat, they eat a lot of seafood in Japan. Yeah. There are omega three index on average is like 10%. So they're above the high, the eight percent. Yeah. Yeah. The mercury levels are probably also right. What's funny? It's fun to that you say that Mark. There's been studies like impregnant women. Yeah. You probably remember this that decades ago women were advised to stop eating fish because of the high mercury. And that actually had a detrimental sort of effect because omega three fatty acids, as you mentioned, they're so important for the brain very important for neuro development. And there have now been a whole host of studies that have come out showing that omega three fatty acids actually protect from any potential mercury toxicity in the developing fetus. And in fact, there's been studies looking at children that were born to mothers that had a high level of omega three and high mercury. Those children had scored higher on intelligence tests, so IQ scores. Even like even if so, so high mercury was actually biomarking intelligence. It wasn't actually the mercury was high on the three. It's crazy. But yes, you get you get the although in Japan, they eat a lot of seaweed, which I see we as a key later for heavy metals. Was this so is green tea, by the way. I think garlic, garlic, the beta beta macaque, yeah, macaptons and garlic as well. But back to the omega three and this study I was talking about from Bill Harris is so interesting because he also this is a huge cohort of people, the framing him. There's people that have all sorts of lifestyles, including smoking. And so he to the sub analysis looking at smokers and non smokers and their omega three index. And what Bill and his associates and colleagues found was that smokers with a high level of omega three. So they had a high omega three index of 8%. They had the same mortality as non smokers with a low omega three index. Okay, everybody, this is not mean you can smoke and take your own visual pills. I don't get any ideas. If you're not getting enough omega three, it's like smoking, right? I mean, if you look at the graph of this, I mean, it's incredible. The overlay is perfect. Perfect. Fascinating. So having a low omega three index had the same mortality risk as smoking. Okay, so we're talking about 90% of the American population is in that category. Yes, yes. And there's also been a whole host of randomized control trials looking at omega threes being protective, right? So they're very important for cardiovascular health, triglycerides. Yeah, there's actually prescription omega threes, which you can pay much, much more than you would have go get a musical omega three for lowering triglycerides as a therapies. Right. Yeah. And you mentioned inflammation. So this is another thing. They play a major role in lowering inflammation. And so that's a driver of aging. In many ways, brain aging, cardiovascular aging. So omega threes, or I would say one of the most profound lifestyle factors that can play a role in negating inflammation aside from exercise. Yeah, they're just so, like the word I use is pleomorphic, but it's a big medical word, but essentially means it does a million things. Right? It's not just one thing. It's great for your skin, for your hair, for your nails, for your brain health, for preventing dementia, cardiovascular disease, cancer. I mean, it's it's it's a it regulates inflammation. So these are these are nutrients that do so many things in the body. Then they work differently than drugs and they're they're essential. They're called essential because they are essential. Right. And you know, one of the challenges is that we're looking for that in your quick fix. And we're trying to diagnose a real disease that's directly connected to that particular problem. So I'm sure if you're familiar with Robert Heaney, who was a vitamin D researcher, and he wrote this beautiful paper years ago called long latency deficiency diseases. And the basic thesis was that in the short term, if you're a nutrient deficient as a year level, like we used to see, you know, in the 1900s, if your vitamin D is super low, you'll get records. Or if you don't have vitamin C in your assailer, you get scurvy, right? Or if you don't have enough, uh, too much white rice and white flour, which they started to do in the third century, you get very, very implegra and all these horrible B vitamin deficiencies. The thesis you had essentially is that you can correct those vitamin deficiencies in the short term to fix those deficiencies diseases, like if you're low and fully in the short term, it'll cause anemia, a form of anemia, which is big cells called megalolastic anemia. But in the long run, it could cause cancer and heart disease and dementia. And same thing with a vitamin D, you know, in the short run, you'll get rickets and long run, you'll get osteoporosis and cancer and by sooner. And so medicine hasn't really gotten that concept. It's like, yeah, if you're deficient, take a vitamin, but otherwise you don't need them, right? And that's also very much in line with Bruce's triage theory, right? So these these these micronutrients are running our metabolism, which runs everything from our heart pumping blood to neurotransmitter function to repairing DNA. So there's a lot of, you know, you can look in the mirror and if you're your vitamin C deficient and your gums start falling apart, you can see, oh, I've got scurvy, right? But like when you're magnesium deficient, like, you're not going to see DNA damage happening. Like you might feel muscle cramps and you might have anxiety and might have constipation, you might have muscle twitching or headaches or a million other things that are symptoms of magnesium deficiencies. Right. Stability of the loud noises. And so like as a, as a social medicine doctor, I take a deep history to look at micronutrient deficiency symptoms that are not necessarily pure true deficiency, but more like insufficiency. And I think I think people sort of don't make that distinction. And I think when you treat people, it's often a miracle when you when you get them like pleated in the nutrients of deficient, so many things get better. I like it is insufficiency because most most people are not deficient. We do have a lot of fortification even in our ultra-possessed foods. Yeah. Because of, you know, preventing neural tube defects, sex preventing pallagra like all these diseases that were sort of cropping up like you mentioned in the early fortified, but it's like junk fortified. It is. It is. But it seems to stop some of those deficiencies, right? But it's the insufficiency. And with vitamin D, it's a really big one because it is converted into a steroid hormone. So this is something that is going into the nucleus of our cell and binding and interacting with DNA. It has a little sequence of DNA called a vitamin D response element. It's so important that it's encoded in our DNA, right? So to not have enough vitamin D, so 70% of the US population doesn't meet this sufficient levels of vitamin D, which is about 30 nanograms per mil, 70%. 30. Which would be. And if the I had up to 45 or 50, it's probably like 80 plus. Right. Yeah. So and so that would be there, there have been studies looking at all cause mortality and vitamin D levels. Of course, this is again, observational. Lots of meta analyses out there, even dating back for like 30 years. And it seems as though having at least 40 nanograms per mil seems to be a sweet spot, you know, 40 to 60. Yeah. Is a really good place to be where you're having a good level vitamin D. But again, it's a steroid hormone. It's not it's it's regulating over 5% of the protein encoding human genome. That's like thousands of genes. Yeah. You know, everything from immune function, it plays an important role in preventing autoimmunity brain function. It regulates genes that are important for converting trip to fan into serotonin. Yeah. Serotonin is an important neurotransmitter that regulates mood, cognitive function, impulse control. You know, so vitamin D. I need more of that. Well, and the problem is is that you know, vitamin D typically you make it from UVB radiation exposure from the sun. Yeah. But I'll told the shielders house from the sun and sun lock. And so we live indoors work indoors. Yeah. It's it's a problem. I mean, you're all running your half naked hunting and gathering. We got a lot of vitamin D and we ate and we're coastlayer reason we ate, you know, fish, small fish like herring and so he's at their iron vitamin D or if you're forging mushrooms, you're high in vitamin D. So there's ways in which our historical population got it, the napilothic ancestors, but we don't get that. Right. Exactly. We don't. And so, you know, I do think so people will the simple solution is a vitamin D supplement, right? And so about 4,000 I use a day will generally get someone from a deficient range, which is 20 nanograms per mil up to a sufficient range. But you use talking about 10 times, but it's normally in a multi vitamin or what doctors will recommend. I am. I am. Because you yeah, you really do. It's about a thousand. I it's a 1000 I use of vitamin D will will raise blood levels between five to 10 nanograms per mil. But at all, we have genes. We have different variations of our genes that are able to do this. And this again comes down to these clinical studies showing that, you know, nothing happens. We're all different. We're all different. And so some people actually have to take a much higher dose, right? Because they have genes that aren't doing converting vitamin D three into 25 high-droxy vitamin D, which is this circulating form of vitamin D or this steroid hormone, one 25 high-droxy vitamin D, you know, so. Well, it's what I'm this rabbit hole because I think, you know, there's a paper used to remind me of the Bruce Hanzero, it was published in I think the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition years ago about how one third of all of our DNA codes for enzymes. And an enzyme is a catalyst that converts one molecule to another molecule. The catalyst or the coenzyme to the helpers are micronutrients. And so what he said in the paper was that there's a huge variation in the populations need for different nutrients. So some people might need 400 micrograms of folate. Some people might need 4000 micrograms of folate. And so it's really about personalized nutrition. It's about testing, not guessing. It's about figuring out what your body needs, what your genetics are. And it gets really fascinating that you can actually start to customize your own diet and your own supplement management based on what your own particular genetics and your levels are. And so I think there's this, it was sort of like a wake-up call from you like holy cow. When you think of our DNA, everything it does. If one third of it is coding for enzymes and all those enzymes require vitamins and minerals, if we don't have enough of those nutrients, it's like an assembly line and a factory. If you don't have one station, the thing can't get made. So you'd come up the whole works of your metabolic machinery if you don't have the right levels of nutrients to optimize the function of your body. And that's why we call it functional medicines. It's about how do we optimize function? It's true. These minerals and vitamins, so you're talking about magnesium, zinc, calcium, B vitamins, these are co-factors for these enzymes to make these enzymes run properly. If you don't have sufficient levels of those vitamins and minerals, what happens is those enzymes do not work optimally. So in the case we talked about DNA repair enzymes, they're not going to be repairing damage as well. Zinc is also involved in DNA repair as well. So B vitamins are involved in serotonin production, magnesium is involved in vitamin D production. You were talking about nutrients working together and it's very true. So I think a really great way to think about eating diet is what do I need to run my metabolism? I mean, you say metabolism, what do you mean by that? Because I can't like my weight. You're talking about metabolism as sort of a bigger concept in medicine. Yeah. Yeah. I guess when people hear the word metabolism, they think about weight loss. I got a slow metabolism. Right. Right. Right. What I'm talking about is much more a biochemist definition of metabolism, which is all these enzymes. You're talking about one third of the protein encoding genome that are doing enzymatic reactions that are making proteins function. So they are producing energy. They are running neurotransmitter synthesis. They are causing your liver to function properly. You're hard to function low lungs. Everything. So every chemical reaction all the time. Exactly. I don't know if I heard I read this somewhere. I can't find the original citation, but that there's 37 billion trillion chemical reactions in the body every second. It's just like an insane amount of activity is going on chemically and biochemically and converting one molecule to another. And if you don't have any of these nutrients, that whole 37 billion trillion chemical reactions may not work optimally. Exactly. So getting the micronutrients you need from food and nature sort of color coded them in a way. I mentioned chlorophyll, that's magnesium. You have vitamin K, also the color is that. What color is vitamin K? I guess it's green too. I would say green. Great. I've been the orange ones. The orange, right? And then you've got the phytochemicals, right? So that would be the purples. But you know, you really do need to get a lot of vegetables and fruits. And then you need your protein, right? And fiber, when you're getting your micronutrients, you're also getting the fiber because a lot of the micronutrients are coming from plants. Which are great source of both fermentable and non fermentable fiber, right? So I think it's a really simple way. There's so many fad diets out there, right? Carnivore, keto, vegetarian, paleo. And I do think paleo is the closest thing to what I'm talking about. But what I'm talking about is even simpler because what it really means is that you understand why you need food. What's the purpose of food, right? The purpose of food is to provide you with these essential vitamins and minerals and fatty acids, like omega-3 and protein and fiber to improve gut health. That's the purpose of eating. And fuel. Right. And so that's, that means you don't need ultra-processed foods. That means, you know, if you're eating something like just carnivore diet, you're going to be missing out on a lot of micronutrients. It's going to be very hard. I have a theory, which is like I have many theories. One theory I have is that, you know, we're so depleted in these nutrients. And this regulates our appetite. And so when you're eating ultra-processed food, there's no nutrients in there. And so what a kid is ironed efficient, it'll lead dirt. It's called pica. And try to get some iron from the dirt. And I think so many people in this country are so nutrient-efficient that they're just eating more and more of the ultra-processed food. It's like they're looking for 11 all the wrong places. Have you heard of the protein leverage hypothesis? Yes. Yeah. So it's kind of the same thing where, you know, your your body needs a certain amount of protein to to run optimally. And if you're eating, there's been a couple of randomized controlled trials on this. I think it's like Steven Simpson is one of the the proponents of it. It was like 2000s or something. And that essentially, if you're eating ultra-processed foods, which are high in, you know, a lot of refined carbohydrates, low in protein, that you overeat to sort of try to get enough proteins. So it does make sense if your your body is looking for more of micronutrients, more vitamins, more minerals, more protein, that you start to overeat. And are you familiar with Kevin Hall's study that he published a couple of years ago? You mean the ultra-processed here where they had 500 calories more? They had 500. Yeah. So for people listening, I mean, your process food. Exactly. They had, you know, two diets. They had a Whole Foods Diet, which was essentially mostly they were getting salads and they were getting poultry and lean meats and some fish, oatmeal. And then there was the ultra-processed foods diet. And they were trying to match them for macronix. So they were, yeah. So they were matched for calories. They were matched for total sugar, although the refined, the added sugar and the ultra-processed foods group was, it was like a huge difference. I mean, it was like something like 70 or 80 percent versus 1%. So the sugars in the Whole Foods Diet were coming from fruit, which has a fiber matrix, right? So they were matched for that. Exactly. So the added sugar was not matched, although total sugar was, right? And then protein was somewhat matched. The Whole Foods had a little bit more protein. It was something like 15.6 percent in Whole Foods Diet versus 14 percent in the ultra-processed foods diet. And they were given. So a lot of a lot of things were matched. And they were given these foods, you know, in a sort of metabolic ward where they came in and eat. They had 60 minutes to eat the meal, add a little bit of, right? So they could eat as much or as little as they want. Yeah. So you got a big, as much like giant buffet, eat as much as you want. Like you got 60 minutes. Right. And then they did it. And then they grouped and eat the ultra-processed food, ate 500 calories more day. And I just used a math on that. 500 calories times 7 is 3500 calories. That's one pound of weight gain. So you added that up. That's 52 pounds of weight gain in a year. The order of America is overweight. Yeah. I didn't do that math. I know that I just read the results, which was two pounds. They gained two pounds in two weeks. Whereas the Whole Foods Diet lost two pounds in two weeks. Well, let's say two pounds, right? Two weeks, a 20. It's like, you do the math. It's like, but you add that up over a year. And then you add that year over a year. It's like, that's why we're seeing this sort of just credible level of severe obesity and diabetes. And I mean, it's just, you know, the latest date I saw sort of shocking was that 38% of teenagers have pre-divities. Wow. That's like, what? I mean, didn't exist when I graduated. I'm old, but I didn't, it's because when I graduated from medical school, like we didn't have it. We didn't have a saw kit. There's been studies that have looked at like healthy individuals and they've given them, they're actually young men. They gave, they gave them 20 ounce sugar-sweetened beverage, sort of akin to like a soda, coke or something. And they did this for three weeks. And after that three week mark, their c-reactor protein biomarker for inflammation went up 100%. They are small dense LDL. So this is these are lipoproteins that are the fact sporting. Yeah, they're causing more heart disease. Exactly. Causing more atherosclerosis. They went up as well. This was just after three weeks, you know, and the health of sugar-sweetened beverage, which is the ultimate, right? That's the old assumption. The ultra-processed. But the reality is that it's gluten free. It's gluten free. Yes. But it's definitely, it's causing inflammation, massive inflammation at the level of the gut. And so you can take healthy people and dramatically change their profile with a matter of weeks of having, you know, this ultra-process foods, these sugar-sweetened beverages, you know, which again, like- And they did the pleat nutrients because I think people don't realize that one, you're not getting them. But two, you actually need nutrients to actually run your biochemistry. And so you're trying to burn these calories and burn the food, but you're actually depleted in the very nutrients required to run them metabolic pathways to actually metabolize the food. So you're kind of, you know, getting it from both sides. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So again, it comes down to, I think, you know, thinking about why you need to eat is so important because then it's like, I need to get microturrients. I need to get my fiber. I need to get protein when I say fiber carbohydrates, right? But it needs to be carbohydrates in the form of fruits and vegetables, which have the micronutrients and the fibers, right? And nuts and seeds. Yeah. And oats. And then, and then avoiding ultra-processed foods, I think, I think if people were to do that and think about eating that way, and then you have to move, right? You have to be physically active. Being sedentary is a disease. Yeah. Like that's like there's, there's data out there that show people with a low cardio respiratory fitness. So this is a marker of, you know, I mean, it's a, it's a marker of how physically active you are. Essentially, that's over simplification. But people with a low cardio respiratory fitness have the same disease risk as people with diabetes, cardiovascular disease smokers. So how do you measure your cardiovascular fitness? Well, cardiovascular fitness is something typically you can measure if you go into like a lab that measures them and they put that like a mask. It's a VO2 max. So it's measuring your maximal oxygen uptake under maximal exercise. They put a mask on you and that's, that's really how you empirically quantify it. However, if you, you know, if you have like a smart watch, after watches, do you see it measure it? It's not really entirely accurate. Like mine garment because it says I'm 45, but I don't believe it. Well, you can actually do it. You can do what's called the Cooper test. And so that's basically you do a 12 minute run on a flat surface like a track. If you have hills, it's harder to run hills. And so you can't, you're trying to run as fast as you can maintain for that 12 minutes. So it's like a, it's a maintainable 12 minute pace, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And that is, and there's a calculation. You can look it up the Cooper test and you can sort of get a good estimate of your VO2 max. Yeah. Yeah. But essentially, you know, having, that's a semi you could run for 12 minutes, which most Americans can't. You know, there is, there's an argument to be made for exercise snacks. You know, so these are short bursts of, you know, physical activity where you're getting your heart rate above, you know, 70% max heart rate. So you're getting this to more into the vigorous exercise, you know, range. And there've been some studies there called the Vilpa studies. Are you familiar with these? These are vigorous, intermittent lifestyle activity studies. And Martin Gabala, who he's a, you know, expert on high intensity interval training. I've had him on my podcast. He's involved in a lot of this. Jumped out and then 10 burpees and then go back to work. Sort of. Yeah. People are wearing these, you know, wearable devices that they can measure their heart rate. And so scientists can see when they're getting these bursts of high intensity exercise. So this type of exercise is actually not structured. What you're talking about would be structured, right? Where you like and get up and do burpees or air squats or high knees or jumping jacks. This is where people sort of take advantage of everyday situation. So they sprint up this day. Right. And run, you know, they're running to some, some place rather than walking. So they're really using their everyday lifestyle to kind of get their heart rate up. Yeah. Well, people that do that do anywhere between three to nine minutes a day have a 40% reduction in cancer. Mortality at 50% reduction in cardiovascular, weight and mortality, all cause mortality. So this is beneficial for people. And this is even in people that identify as non-exercisers. So just getting like some sort of exercise does have benefits for people in general. When you're low on electrolytes, it can lead to headaches, cramps, fatigue and brain fog. Whether you're working out, fasting, following a low carb or keto diet or just sweating it out in a sauna, element helps keep you hydrated and performing at your best. Right now, I'm especially loving elements, chocolate salt and caramel. I like to mix the chocolate mint with my morning coffee for a cozy minty mocha, or I enjoy a wine down at night with a cup of chocolate chai and a splash of cream. It's the perfect drink on a cold day. Best of all, element has a risk-free offer for my listeners. Get a free element sample pack with any order. Just head to drinklmnt.com slash hymen. And if you don't love it, no problem. Element will give you your money back. No questions asked. So go check it out. Stay hydrated and thank me later. You know those cooler mornings when you want to feel centered, common energize, but not wired. That's why my fall and winter daily rituals start with peaks sun goddess, mocha. Peak is a wellness brand I've trusted for years, creating science back tea crystals and super food blends with clean ingredients. The products make it effortless to support gut health, skin, energy and immunity while keeping wellness simple. When it comes to mocha, peaks sun goddess mocha is ceremonial grade from Japan. It's shaded longer than typical mocha, boosting L-fienine and chlorophyll for calm, focused energy that lasts. Without the crash of coffee, I love how one simple ritual keeps me centered, boosts my metabolism, and even nourishes my skin from within with detoxifying antioxidants. Transform your wellness from the inside out and get up to 20% off for life plus a complimentary gift. Explore peaks radiant wellness products at peaklife.com slash hymen. That's p-i-q-u-e-life.com slash hymen. I mean, you look at the data on mortality and longevity. One of the biomarkers, it's the most correlated with longevity is VO2 max. It's your level of cardiovascular and respiratory fitness, which is basically how fast your metabolism can run because it's basically an indirect measure of how much calories you can burn per minute and how much oxygen you can burn per minute because they're very correlated. Your metabolism being having a slow fast metabolism is really about your VO2 max because if you have a high VO2 max, you can burn a lot of oxygen and then you can burn a lot of calories because you need both to actually combust in your mitochondria, the energy factories actually produce ATP, which is the source of energy for the runs everything in your body. It's like you actually have this incredible system, but we don't really take advantage of it and we don't maximize our fitness, which is so correlate in. I think the other number that's sort of a little easier to get is your waist to hip ratio, which you need to tape measure. And that, again, is the bigger your waist, the shorter your life, basically. Is that also for visceral fat measuring this real fat? Yeah, I mean, it's a, I mean, your waist to hip ratio is a crude measure of visceral fat. I mean, but yeah, if you did a dexascant or an MRI, you could look at body composition for sure. It's like that it's that belly fat. But again, that's all relates to insulin resistance and prediabetes and inflammation, which again, I want to get back to the micronutrients. All those things actually accelerate your risk of how many of these have magnesium is very involved in blood sugar regulation, right? You're talking about 45% Americans being deficient in our 50% being the fish of magnesium. That affects blood sugar. We have a epidemic of diabetes and prediabetes in this country. Are you familiar with some of the, there's some gene variations in the transporter that transports magnesium into cells and people with a gene variation that obscures the trans, transport. So basically, they're not getting as much magnesium into their cells are much more likely to have tattooed diabetes. So there's really some, I would say more causal evidence there, because one would argue, well, people that are low in magnesium are also eating refined sugar diet and they're not exercising and all these other potential unhealthy lifestyle factors that could be contributing. But when you look at the genetics, right? I mean, it doesn't lie. So you're looking at someone that's not getting enough magnesium. There are insufficient and deficient in some cases and their risk for tattooed diabetes just skyrockets. I mean, I think this is so important that we are walking around with a population that has got such treatable, cheap solutions for so many issues and that we're looking for sort of drugs to treat this and drugs to try. I'm not against drugs at all, but it's like we're missing the boat because yeah, somebody doesn't have scurvy or rickets, but they're still insufficient and they're going to need these nutrients and actually optimize your health. And you kind of started unpack the degrees of different nutrient deficiencies and as you're going through the list, you're going through the things that are the most common deficient in our country. I know, megathrease, vitamin D, magnesium, and there's others, right? So there's other, you need every essential vitamin in mineral, right? You need all of those for sure, but the ones that are really causing havoc are deficiencies in the methylation nutrients, like the B vitamins, folate B6, B12, deficiencies in iron, deficiencies in zinc, potassium. These are like, yeah, because we did die of this very plant poor and that's where you get your potassium, which is from plants. And you need to actually not get as much sodium, which is where you need all of your processed food. So not like salt is bad, we need salt. It's just, it's all the salt added by corporations to your food to make you palatable because otherwise it tastes like cardboard. They shoulder and salt in fact, and it makes you addicted to it. So we, and we leave out all the key nutrients that are needed to regulate everything in our body. And so, so maybe you can kind of take us down that, that lists a little deeper. So we've got, we've got to get omega-3s, we've got to get vitamin D, we've got to get magnesium. And literally we could spend a podcast on each nutrient and probably 10 podcasts on each nutrient, but we're just going to go through, so we'll understand like these are the things that are not negotiables that you've got to have and that you've got to test, you got to measure and figure out whether your levels are okay because the average physician or practitioner isn't going to do it. And they don't know how to do it. And they don't get taught this in medical school. And I'm working on trying to change that in Washington, but it's, it's, it's, it's kind of, it's kind of a, it's kind of a travesty because it's, it's, it's like a staring us in the face that we have this epidemic of micronutrient deficiencies or insufficiency. And they're not being addressed and often worse, we're being told not to fix them. Yeah. So the vitamin D magnesium omega three, we talked about, right? You know, believe it or not, a lot of people, I don't remember the exact percentage, but quite a bit of people are not getting enough vitamin C, something like 30 or 40, 40%, 40% or something like that. I'm not getting enough vitamin C. Yeah, I heard the 10% are deficient the level of cost scurvy in America. That's unbelievable. Just not eating any, any vegetables or fruits because vitamin C is also in vegetables, not just in fruits. Calcium is another one. So I mean, these are things that can be tested for and measured. Another one is vitamin E. People are, are not getting enough vitamin E. Again, that's also found in things like avocado, nuts, whole grains. And then potassium is a big one because it's so important for the sodium potassium pump, which plays a role in blood pressure. And so when you're talking about too much sodium and not enough potassium, it's really exacerbating that not getting enough potassium aspect, right? Because that ratio is so important. And so not only are I think it's something like 96% of the US population doesn't meet the adequate intake for potassium. It's essentially everyone. And our potassium intake is as hunter-gatherers would be 10 to 1 potassium to sodium. Now it's the other way around. It's the other way around, exactly. And so there's, there's, you know, all sorts of problems with blood pressure and, you know, gosh, it's like even like 30% of like individuals age 20 to 39 have hypertension. Yeah. You know, these are young adults with hypertension. And we now know that hypertension isn't just a risk for cardiovascular disease. It's a risk for dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Particularly if you start earlier, right? If you're like a younger person, so like it's cumulative exposure to hypertension. You know, it's, it's, it's, it's important because you have to get blood flowed to your your brain. And, you know, you've got these tiny, like 90% of the, of the brain vascular, vascular church surrounding the brain is made of these tiny, tiny blood vessels that are like the smaller than the size of hair in terms of diameter. And they have to get blood flow to them. So exercise helps that. But hypertension exacerbates the lack of blood flow going to those blood vessels. And what happens is they're so tiny, they start to sort of constrict and, and sort of fall fall off. And you get many strokes and many strokes, but also neurons don't get the nutrients and the oxygen they need. And so they need to start to lose neurons, right? And you get brain atrophy. And so there's this connection between hypertension and dementia. And, you know, I'm talking about potassium here because potassium does play an important role in the brain. Yeah. So there's magnesium, too. So there's magnesium. So there's magnesium. So the relaxation, and then exercise, of course, is one of the best things that you can do. I mean, in, in, in, in, in as a doctor, when a patient comes in with preeclampsia, which is a problem of high blood pressure pregnancy, or as pre-clamptic seizures, or the ins seizures, the treatment is intravenous magnesium. Right. Right. Think about it. And so like this is something with that, with uncontrollable high blood pressure, what do we do? We have intravenous magnesium because all the drugs don't work. I think there's some evidence also I've seen that vitamin D plays a role in preventing that as well. Yeah. And it was, it's funny, like when I was pregnant, I asked my OB-GYN for a vitamin D test. Do you want to know what his answer was? You don't need it. Why it's going to be low. Why is it going to be low? Why it's going to be, you're going to, it's going to be low. I mean, like, just, like, vitamins, it just taking it anyway. Are you kidding me? Right. Like, you're, you're telling me why do I need a test? It's just going to be low. You know, and I'm like, well, I want a test. And I, yes, I'm going to be supplementing, but I want to know with how, how much I'm going to be, you know, should be supplementing with. But it was just really astonishing to me that mentality, you know, and actually just recently, I went in for, I didn't go to my normal doc. I went into, it was like a, you know, sort of ER kind of urgent care doc. And I wanted to get my vitamin D levels measured. And he goes, you know, that's falling out of Vogue now. And I just, I just gave him this long lecture. I mean, I was like, I went in deep. I looked at it. And he goes, is this your area, to area of expertise? And I was like, yes, it is. I've done research on it. I published studies on it. And he kind of was like, okay, right. I mean, it's not their fault. I mean, I'm a physician. And, you know, I don't fault them. And my daughter's graduating medical school this year. And like zero nutrition, it is, it is. Like even micronutrients, like I don't even think they covered any of that. And, and it to me, it's like, this is the center of our biology. And if we don't, we don't understand how our bodies work and how to work with them and how to facilitate normal function. And, and it's not like the microtire just the only thing, but they're a very key foundational part of being healthy. And when you go through the litany of things that were deficient in, you know, it's, it's a lot of things. And, or insufficient in, and, and it's different degrees of insufficient in the population for different nutrients. But, you know, it was widespread, efficient, you know, iron, zings, lany, a lot of things that I die. And I mean, it's just, I see this all the time in our testing, my function health. And I'm like, kind of shocked. And I've done testing for, you know, a lot of patients who've come to see me over the decades. But this is like 110,000 people. I'm not like, I can see 10,000 people are 20,000 in my lifetime. But like, this is a huge amount of people. And it's sort of shocking to me. And, yeah, it's not really being talked about as a, as a sort of critical step in helping address our chronic disease epidemic. And what you're saying is that, yes, you can get deficiency diseases, like scurvy. But what's really the issue is how these contribute to our long latency, deficiency diseases like Alzheimer's and cancer and heart disease and diabetes and osteoporosis and all the muscle aging and all the things that we don't want, right? Yeah. And so, you know, one of the last papers that Bruce published is his second to last paper was called Lunggevity Vitamins. And, and it was about these vitamins like vitamin D and magnesium and omega-3 tarine or some other like essential amino acids that play a role in the way we age and, and slowing age-related decline. Yeah. And, you know, there was just a recent study that came out on vitamin D sufficient levels of vitamin D, people that supplemented with vitamin D were 40% less likely to have dementia. Yeah. You know, so the, the reality is is that, I mean, vitamins don't just quite expensive here. They don't, they don't, they don't, you know, these micronutrients are running everything in our body. And when you have insufficiency levels of them, you're not going to necessarily see it, although you probably feel it, you know, like, you might have symptoms, but you don't attach it to that. Right. You don't attach it to that. But it's causing this insidious damage, right? This insidious DNA damage, a little bit of oxidative stress, a little bit of inflammation. Well, just like it's sick all the time because my vitamin D's low. Right. Or you're getting sick. My muscles ache, you know, because I'm vitamin D's low or, you know, I've muscle cramps because my magnesium's low, right? So, or depression because my, you know, methylation vitamins are a lot like people have symptoms. They just don't correlate it with the nutrient efficiencies. Depression is interesting. There's a, there's a pretty classic study that no one ever talks about. Where healthy individuals were injected with lipopolysaccharide. So for those listening, this is a component of your back, bacterial outer cell membranes. It's present in our, in our colon because we have about, I don't know how many trillions of bacteria like so many bacteria in there, right? A lot of 50 trillion. Okay. For your 50 trillion, there's about a gram of lipopolysaccharide in our gut because those bacteria do die off. That means your bacterial toxins. This is what preses off your immune system to know it. It does. And when we have gut permeability, lots of things that cause that. It releases it, right. It also, noticely, you got elite, it leaches LPS into our bloodstream. Well, this study took healthy individuals and injected them with an amount of LPS that would be equivalent to something that you could get from intestinal permeability. Yeah. And it caused depressive symptoms in these individuals. Okay, one, that links inflammation to depression. Right. Two, if those individuals were given EPA. So this is one of the omega-3 fatty acids. It does play a major role in dampening inflammation through a variety of mechanisms like resolvins and merissons and the SPMs. These are all molecules that are resolving inflammation very quickly. They did not experience those precipitates symptoms. If they were injected with the LPS. If they got omega-3s. If they have omega-3s. So it comes down to like again, you know, omega-3s have been shown to actually help with depression. They have. And ADD. They have. Yeah. With depression, specifically EPA seems to be very important for depression. And I think that's because there's a really big inflammatory component to depression. Where, you know, there's, there's now studies showing that people that don't respond to classical SSRI. SSRI. So serotonin reuptake inhibitors. They're like that prosack. Exactly. People that don't respond to that. They typically have very, very high levels of sea reactor protein inflammation. So there's like a subset of people. Some people respond and it helps them. But there's a subset, a quite large subset of people that have very high inflammatory biomarkers and do not respond to SSRIs. And so logically the next question would be should be lower their inflammation. How can we let with her? I read some paper that was like hypothesizing that we should use TNF alpha blockers, the biologics for depression. In other words, these are drugs that massively suppress inflammation. The body is for serious autoimmune diseases. And they're talking about using her depression. I'm like, wait a minute. Like how about we find out why this inflammation the first place and get to the recause of it, which is really what we do in a functional medicine. I think what you're kind of hitting on, I just sort of prooffully, I want to sort of tie the tie the dots together is that when you don't have enough of the right nutrients and you don't have a proper functioning metabolism, there's a lot of downstream consequences. You get inflammation, you get oxo stress, and you get damaged mitochondria, and you get DNA damage. And you, you when you look at these processes, these are the fundamental things that have to be working for you to be healthy across every organ, across every disease state. And it's where we're now calling hallmarks of aging or including many of these things. And what you're talking about is and Bruce Ames figured this out. He went for those award hallmarks of aging. He figured out that these nutrients are critical in his pathways that degrade and become problematic as we age, whether we can offset that and actually take longevity nutrients and get up, quote, metabolic tune up. And he's even talking about things that I think are, we don't think of typically as essential nutrients that are we call conditionally essential nutrients, and whether it's carnitine or tornary or things that may not be kind of a typical deficiency disease, vitamin or mineral, but that are still really important for our biological function and we're still low on them. So I have this theory I want to come back to in a minute about that I kind of made up called symbiotic phyto adaptation, which is a big mouthful, but essentially it means that we've co-ovolved with plants to borrow their phytochemicals to regulate, keep pathways in our bodies so we can stay healthy. And then without them, we don't get a deficiency disease, like you don't get like, you know, like broccoli deficiency, but actually we kind of do because the phytochemicals like sulforvane or the glucosinolates or ionates, these are molecules that regulate key pathways in our body, for example, liver detoxification or removing heavy metals or whatever controlling oxidative stress, they work to actually facilitate these pathways. And so I kind of this theory that it's more than just like the central bite of the minerals, there's a whole bunch of stuff that's essential if you want to be really healthy. I completely a thousand percent agree. I think they just made this up. So I think that humans evolve to eat of plants and meat and things, but plants because of the phytochemicals, you know, there are, so you mentioned sulforvane, right? So sulforvane is present in a variety of cruciferous vegetables like broccoli. It's much more, it's not present, I'm sorry, the precursor to it, Google Raffinon is present in it and it gets converted into sulforvane when the plant matter is broken, chewed because it activates an enzyme called myrocinase, which converts glucorraphanate into sulforvane. Big mouthful of words, but essentially when you chew your broccoli, you get the cool chemicals that help your body. Exactly. And if you go even further and chew the young plant, the broccoli sprouts, there's about a hundred times more glucorraphanate in it. Damn, I kind of, I'm trying to grow broccoli sprouts and I keep trying and forget and then I think I got to get back on it. Yes, broccoli sprouts are really, really high and in glucorraphanate, I also take a supplement that's been used in a lot of clinical studies called Avmacall. I don't have any affiliation with them, but they're, they've got a really great method of stabilizing the myrocinase enzyme, which is very unstable. It's also very heat-sensitive. But before I get, before I get zyetracked, sulforvane is the most potent dietary activator of a, what's called transcription factor in our body? It's NRF2. And this is... NERF2. Yeah, it's a master regulator of, as you mentioned, detoxification enzymes, so they're called phase two detoxification enzymes. Also, phase one biotransformation enzymes. So those are enzymes that will convert procarcinogens into carcinogens. So NRF2 activation will blunt that. It'll stop that from happening. So think things like nitrites being converted into nitrosamines. Nitrites are present in a lot of processed meats. So NRF2 activation, typically it's like, it gets activated every 80 minutes or so inside of ourselves. But if you take sulforvane, it gets, sorry, it gets activated every 130 minutes. But if you take sulforvane, it gets activated like every 80 minutes. Something like that where it's like, you're getting like a 60% increase in the activation of this important transcription factor, which is regulating just hundreds of different genes that are antioxidant, involved in antioxidant function, anti-inflammation. Clinical studies showing that if you give someone broccoli sprout extract or sulforvane or glucorraphanin plus the enzyme arosanase, it increases glutathione in plasma and in the brain by FMRI. I mean, this is unsolvable. Glutathione, as you know, it's one of the major, major antioxidants that our body has. It's very important for the brain. Other studies in China, where there's a lot of air pollution show that people that take about 40 micromoles of sulforvane, they start to excrete some of the chemicals that are in air pollution like benzene, which is a carcinogen. They excrete it by 60% after 24 hours. Again, because the activation of the phase to detoxification and... I'm thinking about the people in L.A. right now. Exactly. It's very, so I've been telling all my friends in L.A. The toxins get released into the air, dioxin, and all the well-organic compounds and heavy metals and... Right. Plastics. I mean, it's just... it's pretty frightening. So I think people can protect themselves to some degree by up-regulating these pathways and taking the right foods and the right supplements. I think the phytochemicals, again, I'm 100% with you. I think we were supposed to eat these. These are pathways in our body that are activated by a little bit of stress. They're stress-response pathways. The phytochemicals provide that tiny bit of stress that activates them in a way that's powerful enough to not only deal with a little bit of stress, but to deal with the stress of aging. Yeah. Antosignans from blueberries. I mean, this is another one. We've got so many randomized controlled trials now on giving people blueberry extract powder with actual anthosignans versus like the... Just taste of it. So it's placebo. It improves cognitive function across the lifespan. Kids, adolescents, older adults. It lowers damage to DNA. It improves blood flow to the brain. You know, this is equivalent to like a cup of blueberries a day. So it's so important to get these phytochemicals. It's not only important to eat the fruits and the vegetables because of the micronutrients, but the phytochemicals as well. And Bruce would argue that. Like, these some of these phytochemicals, they're longevity vitamins. Yeah. We need them. Yeah. And he argues that. I mean, that sort of striking to me as I started dug into this, you know, 25, 30 years ago, was like, wait a minute. Like, how do these molecules know what to do? And how did they know to bind to this receptor? And what's this from a plant? Like, so why is it working in my body? And how's it regulating all these different enzymes or pathways that regulate, you know, immune function and your microbiome? I mean, just the list goes on and on. And so it occurred to me that, you know, we grew through evolution, consuming over 800 different plant species. And now I think we have three or the main staples, you know, corn, wheat, soy and rice, depending on where you live. And then another 12, it make up the total amount of vegetables. In class, we typically like onions and cabbage or whatever carrots and tomato. But like when you look at the false array of plants out there, we ate all these plants. And those molecules are not there for us. Like those plants didn't say, oh, gee, I'm going to, I'm going to make this like cell chlorophytes so I can help my little human friend over there. They're the plants defense mechanisms. So they're actually there to help the plants protect themselves against damage predators, you be radiation from the sun. Like pretty much they're their immune system. And so they are a little kind of can be a little toxic, right? But that's what you're saying. It's that little kind of tiny stress, the zeta hormesis kind of concept where you're taking some form thing and stressing your body with like a sauna or a cold plunge or being up at altitude or being, you know, under the sea level, hyperverisher, but these are all stresses on the body that activate our bodies own and ate healing response. And so that's kind of how I see these phytochemicals. Exactly. Exactly. They're the antioxidant response element. You were talking about DNA having there's a sequence in our DNA genes in our DNA called antioxidant response elements that respond to this NRF2 activation, right? So it is we it's evolved into our DNA and there's ways to do it. Zeno hormesis, you're talking about plants and phytochemicals, exercise, all these different like, you know, ways that were meant to to basically stress ourselves a little bit, right? And not just sit and be sedentary and have all the calories we want and, you know, consume all the ultra-process foods. I mean, it's it's the instacard all these terrible. I mean, it's crazy. You don't actually have to leave your house with Amazon instacard, you know, like Uber E's or whatever. You don't need to go anywhere. Yeah. And we really do need to move. I mean, it's not an add-on. It has to be something that's part of your hygiene that you do every day, like brushing your teeth. You have to do it. Like, it's not like even if it's just 10 minutes of exercise, like, you have to do it. It makes a difference. And our bodies need it. Like, you're depriving your body of it if you don't. Okay. So, so let's kind of back up a little bit. We were talking about all these incredible things. And yes, exercise 100%. But that's another podcast. This one is about micronutrients that widespread deficiency we have in the population. It's undagnosed. It's not tested for that people walk around with. That's fixable for pennies a day at levels that are relatively inflant, test-limate small. Like, when you, for example, eat a piece of chicken breast, it's four ounces. That's 30 grams. We're talking about milligrams or sometimes microgram doses, like tiny little bits of stuff in micronutrients can have profound effects on our well-being and our health and our mental health are risk for chronic diseases. And yet, most of us are walking around in this invisible cloud of insufficiency or deficiency and have no clue. And they know doctor and a practitioner, but you're like a PhD doctor, not like an MD doctor. What do you recommend? And does it have to be difficult and onerous and expensive? How do you sort of stack the deck so you're like getting the basic things you need and not running into this trouble? Yeah, I do have some of the basic things that I think well, that I take, but also that I think that would help a majority of people that are insufficient and a lot of these micronutrients. And first and foremost, vitamin D supplement. And again, I think generally speaking, vitamin D, 4,000 I use a day. Pretty, pretty, for the most part, gets people to a sufficient ish level. You have to do a blood test to really know for certain. You may have to take a little more, but starting out 4,000 I use a day, which is the upper tolerable in the safe is safe. And it's this is a business actually by the National Academy of Sciences saying this is a safe level. Exactly. Number two, omega-3 fatty acids. And this is something where Bill Harris has published studies, published studies looking at, how do you get someone who is low omega-3 index? So 4%, omega-3 index up to 8%. Turns out it takes close to about two grams a day. So, oh, of EPA in DHA. So so when you get just for clarification purposes, if you get a pill and it says a gram of fish, it might not have a gram of EPA in DHA, it would be like 300 or 200 milligrams. So you have to look at the concentration of EPA in the milligram amounts on the label. Otherwise, you know, it might take one pill or it could take five pills. Exactly. So that I think is a pretty simple solution. So one to two grams? 1.5 to two grams. You get most people that are in a 4% low range to an 8%. And the balance of EPA in DHA does it matter? Not really. Usually it's like a 2 to 1 ratio. EPA to DHA. Yeah. For the most part, something close to that. Okay. But I wouldn't sweat the small stuff. Like number three, and number four kind of tie by I think I think a multi-vitamin is a really good insurance because you know, there's so selenium, you know, boron. Yeah, there's, you know, the E vitamins, that you know, you're getting there's vitamin A, there's so many different micronutrients, and that really covers a lot of the bases. So I think a pretty high quality multi-vitamin is good along with magnesium. So magnesium, because such a large percentage of people are not getting enough magnesium, magnesium, it is so important for a variety of, you know, processes, DNA damage, brain function, muscle function, you know, people that are physically active, they sweat out magnesium. So you might need anywhere between 10 to 20% more than the RDA. And stress and coffee also. Stress, complete alcohol. Exactly. So you're like, what is the American life? Stress, coffee and alcohol. Exactly. That's why we're all deficient. We're literally peed out. Yes. And so you want to make sure you're getting an organic salt. So that would be something like magnesium citrate, magnesium malle, magnesium glycinate and... Citrate if you're constipated. Right. So those, so those are the organic salts which are more biobailable. Tell a funny story. I just, aside, I was in the hospital recently for a back surgery, and I wanted to get magnesium, and I talked to the hospitalist, and he gave me magnesium oxide. And I'm like, that's not biobailable. And I started went through this with him. And like, you just, yeah, I wasn't as confrontational as that. But, but he was like, oh, you're right. I look it up. And actually, no, true. I'm like, yep. So, but that's the main nutrient of form of magnesium that you get in, in a lot of the supplements you buy with the counter, because it's the cheapest form. So magnesium oxide. If you see that on the label, just skip over. Right. So that would be another one. And then I add to my essentials, the sulfuricane. I use to sprout. And I no longer do that because... Life is busy. My excuses. Yeah, I'm, I'm, you know, so... You get the telling the world how to eat better and be healthy. Like the worst thing you can do for your health. But I, I, I trust the, the science that I've read looking at the supplement that I take, which again, it's, it's a really good supplement album. I call them. They have about the advanced formula is what I take. I take about two to four day, depending on the link in the show notes for that. They're great. And they're like public studies on them, improving autism. So it's affecting the brain. So it's a proved autism spectrum disorder in kids with autism, adolescents with autism. But it's a very strong activator of glutathione. Right. So NRF 2 pathway. So that's my, my phytochemical. I actually brought a blog about glutathione years ago. If anybody wants to sort of find out more about glutathione, go to Hyman and glutathione, and you'll find it. And it, it's kind of the master detox fire, the master in the accident, the master immune regulator. It's like, it, it's so critical. And you get it through some of these plant foods. You get it by sulfur containing the amino acids, you know, which are found often in animal foods or weight proteins, great source. It is. Yeah. So it's, it's, it's a major, major antioxidant in, in the body. So I think those are really some of the, they're... Vitamin D, fish oil, vitamin D 4000, fish oil, one of two grams of the actually EPDHA, a multivitamin and high quality. High quality, meaning it shouldn't be blue or purple or green or yellow. I have a teller. Anium and dyes and should be just, you know, the right, and end the biovaluability, the form of the nutrient matters. I mean, I, I think you and I both done a lot of work on this and be looking to get around. But it's, it's not just like go to get your, you know, Walgreens or CBS, multivitamin. Right. A little more judicious. And then magnesium. And how much magnesium? You know, it depends. So some people get a laxative effect and they want that. That's what's great. Even with, even with higher doses of other forms, they can. But yeah, so, I mean, I think it depends on your diet. Like if you're not eating a lot of plants, Shamonio, you need to increase that. But, you know, you, about three, two hundred and fifty, three hundred milligrams, you know, is a good, is a good range. Now, if you're trying to treat like migraines and stuff, you might have to go higher, like some studies show like 600 milligrams. And then there's the form of magnesium, magnesium, three and eight that's thought to cross the blood brain barrier more effectively for brain health. Because magnesium doesn't cross the blood brain barrier very well. But magnesium, three and eight isn't essentially, is it, it's not necessarily going to do the DNA damage repair aspect of magnesium. So make sure you're getting both if you're doing, doing that. Yeah. So like for me, I take like about two hundred and fifty milligrams, may three hundred milligrams. Yeah, it depends on you. I remember I remember I had a big magnesium aha. When I had a patient, you know, decades ago, who's a radiology resident. So I read you shan't call you resident, male clinic. And she had debilitating migraines. Like, I mean, she saw the best doctors at Mayo Clinic. She says everybody, she tried every drug. She'd done everything. And she came see me and took a, a history amazing thing to do in medicine these days. This is to take an in-depth medical history. But it's like critical. I'm being facetious, but life, they don't, Dr. William, you don't really cost. Yeah. I mean, I have a 32-page questionnaire. So I was like, Oh, you're constipated. Oh, you have muscle twitches and muscle cramps. And we have headaches and you have anxiety and you have insomnia and you have palpitations. Hmm. This sounds like pretty severe magnesium deficiency. So why don't we load you up? And so we gave her like twelve hundred milligrams of magnesium, like migraines just went away and she was fine and everything else is kind of corrected. And so she had all these quote different problems, right? Everything constipation to insomnia to palpitations, which you don't think are related, but they're all connected. There's the body's one system. And that's what I'm talking about. These nutrients have so many different functions and they're so critical. So anybody listening to you, you know, you can't really get away from the fact that we live in a nutritionally depleted world no matter how hard you try. Even the foods if you're eating organic may not have the nutrients that they did 50 years ago. And you know, most of us, you know, should test. And that's why I created function health with my co-founders to allow people access to this data because they weren't getting it. Like you said, doctors like, Oh, you don't need vitamin D. You know, why bother testing? That's people are facing. And then, you know, just take a multivitamin, a visual vitamin D magnesium. And then, you know, maybe a broccoli pill. Yeah. Then there's a bunch of other things you could add to that list as that you're going to get. That's really like that. That's a dollar or two a day, you know, and that's not an insignificant amount of money. But, you know, given the benefits, you know, the the most benefit cost-benefit ratio is pretty good on this. It's amazing. I mean, I think I think it's a it as Bruce would say, you know, it's a really it's it's affordable. It's it's easily correctable for pretty cheap. And it will have a huge difference in the way you age. Yeah. This is amazing. So we're going to link to a lot of these studies from Bruce Ames, from your work. I want people to follow you to learn about what you're doing to listen to your rate podcast. Family fitness. You've got a great website. Tell us all the places that we can find you and learn more about your work and keep up with your science. Okay. Great. Thank you. So I have a podcast is called Found My Fitness. I'm on, you know, YouTube, which I hope to be on someday. Yeah. Great. One of my aspirations. Let me know when you're in CTAGAL. Okay. All right. So found my fitness. It's on YouTube. It's on Apple Podcasts. Spotify. I have a website foundmyfitness.com. And I also I'm on, you know, social media, Instagram, X as found my fitness or you can look up around a Patrick. I have some free guys out there. I've won on omega three. We talked a lot about it. So how to choose a good omega three supplement. So I kind of have a guide on that. And in terms of like, and I talk about some of the science of omega three. So you can find that at omega three guide.com. And then I have three guys on how to do this and go a year detail. I have the scientific papers. And then I have another free guide on, on improving brain health through brain drive neurotrophic factor and a variety of exercise protocols and polyphenol protocols that have been published to improve brain health. And that's bdnf protocols.com. You can find that there. You said, I have a new guide out how to train from all the exports that I've had on the podcast. Oh, I want to see that one. It's a good one. It's how to train. So it's like to improve VO2 max. We talked about that. How to train to improve muscle mass, strength, function. And it's according to all the incredible experts that I've had on my podcast. And that is the how to train guide.com. So those are all just free information that people can get by going and download in the guide. So thank you so much, Mark, for having me on the podcast. Very interesting discussion. We share a lot of common passions with nutrition and micronutrients. Totally. Tell me. And you know, we didn't cover a thousand topics from protein to exercise to her mesas. So I think I can see three or four more podcasts. I love to have you back to talk about these things. Because there's so many people out there who are quote, health influencers who don't have a degree who, they'll maybe educated it some better than others. Not saying you need a degree to be smart or having an opinion. But there's a lot of noise out there. And if people want signal, I mean, want to kind of juicy truth. Go to Ronda. Appreciate it. Thank you, Mark. If you love this podcast, please share it with someone else you think would also enjoy it. You can find me on all social media channels at Dr. Mark Hyman. Please reach out. I'd love to hear your comments and questions. Don't forget to rate, review, and subscribe to the Dr. Hyman show wherever you get your podcasts. And don't forget to check out my YouTube channel at Dr. Mark Hyman for video versions of this podcast and more. Thank you so much again for tuning in. We'll see you next time on the Dr. Hyman show. This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the ultra wellness center, my work at Cleveland Clinic and function health where I am chief medical officer. This podcast represents my opinions and my guests opinions, neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests. This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided with the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey, please seek out a qualified medical practitioner. And if you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, visit my clinic, the ultra wellness center at ultra wellness center.com and request to become a patient. It's important to have someone in your corner who is a trained licensed health care practitioner and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health. This podcast is free as part of my mission to bring practical ways of improving health to the public. So I'd like to express gratitude to sponsors that made today's podcast possible. Thanks so much again for listening.