137. Ariana Thacker: Mold Toxicity, Treatment Protocols + Genetic Susceptibility
46 min
•Feb 10, 20264 months agoSummary
Episode explores mold toxicity as an overlooked driver of chronic illness, featuring Ariana Thacker, CEO of Moltko, who discusses how genetic susceptibility, multi-system symptoms, and environmental exposure create diagnostic challenges that conventional medicine misses. The conversation covers testing protocols, treatment approaches based on Dr. Shoemaker's research, and how Moltko democratizes access to mold-related illness diagnosis and treatment.
Insights
- Mold toxicity presents as multi-system illness affecting mitochondrial function, immune signaling, gut health, hormones, and neurological function simultaneously, making it invisible to standard medical testing
- Genetic susceptibility (HLA haplotypes) determines who becomes sick from mold exposure—approximately 24% of the population cannot effectively detoxify mold toxins, explaining why household members experience vastly different health impacts
- Diagnosis requires triangulation of symptom clusters, targeted biomarkers (MSH, MMP9, C4A, TGF-beta-1), and environmental testing rather than any single test, fundamentally different from conventional diagnostic approaches
- Healing requires simultaneous medical treatment and environmental remediation; treatment protocols fail if exposure continues, creating a unique dual-intervention requirement
- Accessibility barriers (cost, physician knowledge, diagnostic complexity) have created a market opportunity for telemedicine platforms offering affordable testing, clinical guidance, and treatment protocols
Trends
Rise of biotoxin illness recognition as a medical blind spot driving entrepreneurial solutions in healthcareShift toward multi-biomarker diagnostic approaches for complex, multi-system illnesses that evade conventional testingTelemedicine platforms democratizing access to specialized care for rare/overlooked conditions at 10-100x lower costGenetic testing integration into diagnostic pathways for environmental illness susceptibility assessmentEnvironmental remediation becoming recognized as essential medical intervention rather than optional home improvementPatient advocacy and self-diagnosis tools (symptom questionnaires, affordable home testing) empowering consumers to bypass gatekeepingExpansion of biotoxin illness protocols beyond mold to Lyme disease and long COVID as next frontier conditionsData aggregation (biospecimens, patient histories) creating proprietary datasets for research and treatment optimizationFunctional medicine practitioners adopting Shoemaker protocols as standard training, creating parallel diagnostic ecosystemPricing transparency emerging as competitive advantage in fragmented remediation industry with 7-8x cost variation
Topics
Mold toxicity and chronic inflammatory response syndrome (CIRS)HLA genetic susceptibility testing for mold illnessMulti-system symptom clusters in environmental illnessBiomarker testing (MSH, MMP9, C4A, TGF-beta-1) for mold exposureHome dust testing via MSQPCR analysisPrescription binders (colesevelam, cholestyramine) for mold toxin treatmentNasal biofilm clearance therapiesVasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) treatment protocolsEnvironmental remediation and water damage preventionTelemedicine delivery models for specialized careFemale reproductive health impacts of mold exposureGastrointestinal dysbiosis from mold toxicityMitochondrial dysfunction in biotoxin illnessDiagnostic gaps in conventional medicine for environmental illnessAffordable access models for specialized medical care
Companies
Moltko
Ariana Thacker's company providing telemedicine-based mold toxicity diagnosis, testing, and treatment at affordable p...
Conscience VC
Ariana Thacker's venture capital firm investing in science-driven startups, which she founded before starting Moltko
Mayo Clinic
Dr. Darshan Shah's training institution where he completed board-certified surgical training
LabCorp
Laboratory partner for Moltko's biomarker testing, with 2,000+ locations enabling accessible patient lab draws
IMA
Cellular health supplement company partnering with Dr. Shah, offering comprehensive micronutrient formula for cellula...
Oxford University
Research institution that partnered with IMA on clinical studies validating cellular health supplement efficacy
International Space Station
Research partner for IMA's cellular health supplement validation studies
San Francisco Research Institute
Research institution collaborating with IMA on supplement efficacy studies
Next Health
Dr. Shah's clinic offering mold toxicity assessment and treatment alongside other longevity-focused interventions
People
Ariana Thacker
Chemical engineer, venture capitalist, and CEO of Moltko; mold toxicity patient who founded company after personal he...
Dr. Darshan Shah
Host of Extend Podcast, board-certified surgeon, longevity expert, and founder of Next Health clinic
Dr. Ritchie Shoemaker
Pioneer in mold toxicity research, coined chronic inflammatory response syndrome (CIRS), treated 14,000+ patients, fo...
Dr. Scott McMahon
Medical director at Moltko, world expert in mold-related illness treatment, observed hormonal disruptions in 2/3 of f...
Quotes
"Mold related illness shows up as a multi-system illness in the body. It's not just one acute symptom, for example, a persistent migraine, but it shows up as several symptoms across several systems in the body."
Ariana Thacker
"24% of the population has a genetic susceptibility to where these defenders can't really fight off those molding those the microbial exposure. So how that shows up is your body can't distinguish friend versus foe."
Ariana Thacker
"It's more of a checklist process. The labs give you one layer, the symptoms give you the other, and then whether exposure happened or not gives you that last layer on the cake."
Ariana Thacker
"Your symptoms are real mold does cause health issues. The lab show up in a fairly repeatable way if you want to verify that. And you're not crazy. Don't believe the gaslighting and stay persistent to advocate for yourself and your health."
Ariana Thacker
"Healing only works when medical treatment and environmental remediation happen together at the same time."
Dr. Darshan Shah
Full Transcript
Welcome to Extend with me, Dr. Darshan Shah. A podcast dedicated to cutting-edge science, research, tools, and protocols designed to help you extend your health span. Having become one of the youngest doctors in the country at the age of 21 and trained in board certified to the Mayo Clinic, I've accumulated three decades of practice as a board certified surgeon and longevity expert. Over that time, I've discovered that a mere 20% of health knowledge yields 80% of the results when it comes to your health span. We are living in a new era where we are creating a new healthcare system, no longer focused on disease management but achieving optimal health and vitality. Join me as a interview-world-renowned expert offering you a step-by-step guide to proactively avoid disease and most importantly, extend your health span. In today's episode, I'm sitting down with Ariana Thacker. She's a chemical engineer. She's a venture capitalist in the founder and CEO of a new company called Moltko. We're going to explore molt toxicity. It's one of the most overlooked drivers of chronic illness. Unlike so many patients who are struggling for years, without clear answers or any help from the traditional medical establishment. After founding Conscience VC, an early stage from investing in science-driven startups, Ariana's own health crisis caused by toxic mold exposure led her to build mold-ko. It's a platform dedicated to identifying and treating molt toxicity. Our journey reveals our environmental illness disrupt mitochondrial energy, immune signaling, gut health, hormones and neurologic function all at once. Why these patterns are so often missed by conventional care. We're going to dive into why mold illness rarely shows up in standard lab work and how genetics determine who gets sick even in the same household and why healing only works when medical treatment and environmental remediation happen together at the same time. We're going to learn so much about mold in this really important aspect of our health that's been ignored for way too long. Welcome to the podcast. Thank you so much for joining us. Thank you, Dr. Shaw, for drawing attention to session-important issue. Yeah, it's really an important issue. I'm really glad that you're here to talk about this very important topic. Before when I was in a traditional medicine, whenever someone came in with all of these vague symptoms all the time, they basically were ignored. We didn't know what to do with them. There wasn't really a pill that we could prescribe them. The lab worked and it didn't tell us anything of use. We just kind of said it's probably all in your head or it's something we can't do anything about. It's all waited out. Is that what happened to you? Pretty close. I could say that I don't blame standard medical practice for that approach without the right tools to figure out what the issue is. It's hard to come up with the treatment plan. Essentially my story was being ping-ponged to different specialists. You said earlier in the podcast, most of the lab showed up largely normal. It was even more confusing what was going on. What was the breakthrough moment for your Ariana where you figured out your symptoms were due to something else besides what traditional medicine had to diagnose and offer? I'm an engineer and a numbers person. I like data. After a lot of dead ends going to different specialists and doing labs and imaging tests, I had my life-old moment when a home inspector came and there were highly toxic levels of mold found in my home in Miami close to 35,000 spores per meter cubed. I don't think many people know what is the dangerous levels of that, but we'll get into that in a little bit. I really think before we talk about mold as a diagnosis or how to treat it, I'd love to hear from you the symptoms that you were suffering and that I'm sure you're talking to a lot of people with mold. What are the things that people are suffering with that lead you to maybe look into mold as a potential diagnosis? Yeah, absolutely. You touched on this briefly, but mold related illness shows up as a multi-system illness in the body. It's not just one acute symptom, for example, a persistent migraine, but it shows up as several symptoms across several systems in the body. That includes brain fog, fatigue, gastrointestinal issues, frequent urination. That's touching across different parts of the body, not just one symptom. That's just one of the signs biologically and then in your environment too. Some of the telltale signs includes visible mold, of course, but also an earthy musty odor, history of leaks, water damage, and flooding. Some of the less obvious signs also includes peeling, paint, warped floors, and cracking walls. These are just some of the signs in your built environment and in your body to look for. Yeah, and I think a lot of people, they're looking at their, first of all, their symptoms in their body and they don't know what they're due to. I see a lot of women that come to our clinic and they're in their mid-30s or 40s and they're experiencing like perimenopausal types of symptoms. I think a lot of times it gets discounted to maybe perimenopause or hormone deficiencies, nutrient deficiencies as well. You mentioned frequent urination is also a symptom. Yeah, frequent urination is a point where you're getting up in the middle of the night to use the bathroom. That's one of the telltale signs and 100% on the women's health issues. Dr. Scott McMahon, our medical director, has seen that across his patient population. He estimates roughly two-thirds of his female patients experience multiple miscarriages, misperiods, painful periods, heavy periods, as well as other hormonal disruptions too. Yeah. And so is there also a relationship with infertility? What is our guess based on what we're seeing so far? And we've also seen anecdotes too of once individuals are out of the mold environment and after treatment, they do end up being able to have children. So it's still very early to make that claim, but we're already seeing some promising signs. Amazing. And you mentioned gut health as well. Kind of what are some of the symptoms people experience with their gut? Yeah. It shows up as IVS type symptoms, so alternating constipation diarrhea, as well as food sensitivities. A portion of our patients also have elevated, antiquely added antibodies too, so they have a sensitivity to gluten. It's often recommended that we cut out gluten from our diet for some of our patients. So these are just some of the GI issues there's often as well abdominal pain too. Yeah. And then I think some of the more kind of obvious symptoms, or maybe not so obvious, are upper respiratory symptoms and asthma, inability to breathe, running nose, can you talk about that a little bit? Yeah. There is a study that attributed 21% of asthma cases to mold and dampness. So mold related illnesses, a different animal from the respiratory illnesses that we see such as asthma and fungal infections too. So there's also allergies when you have mold exposure. So mold related illness is more so the inflammatory response to mold in your environment. So your first line of defense, your immune system goes haywire, and then you experience this ongoing, even sometimes chronic inflammation in the body due to mold in your environment too. But there are some patients that have overlap with the respiratory illnesses as well as mold related illness. Got it. And you know, I think there's basically two different ways mold can affect you. And the way I look at it is actual colonization with the mold in your upper respiratory system so that you're molded organism. But then there's also the toxins from the mold as well, right? Could you talk about the difference between the two? Yeah. The analogy I use to explain how the toxins impact the body is. So your body is a castle. You have all these defense systems. And you have guards in your castle. So that's your immune system. And when you have these microbial invaders, it's not just mold when you have water damages also bacteria too, and particulate matter and VOCs and microtoxins and fragments of the cell wall. So there's this microbial suit in the air when you breathe the air in in a water damage building. So your body tends to respond to that in a number of ways. So for there's a there's a stat that 24% of the population has a genetic susceptibility to where these defenders can't really fight off those molding those the microbial exposure. So how that shows up is your body can't distinguish friend versus foe. So you have these invaders coming in and it looks a lot like your own security system. So the alarms are going off because it can tell that something's off, but it's just not sure why it. So that's that's what happens when you're exposed to toxins. Invaders come in. The immune system gets confused and dysregulated. And then there's a state of ongoing inflammation. So the alarm system not turning off. Yeah, absolutely. And then you get this almost chronic inflammatory response that's continuing for long periods of time and people when they experience chronic inflammation, it's show up in all sorts of different symptoms about the body and not to mention it can also lead to long term chronic diseases as well. So it's so important that to keep insisting that you go down the rabbit hole of trying to figure out what's going on if you're experiencing these symptoms. Absolutely. Yeah. So you know, one of the things that I think a lot of people have questions about is in the same household, you have maybe three, four or five people living, right? And one person can be severely affected by the mold. And the other people in the house are like, what's wrong with you? Why you sick all the time? And why is there a difference between why some people get affected and some people have no effect from the mold that's growing in their homes? Yeah, thank you for highlighting this. It's a common misconception around the health impacts of mold that it would impact everyone in the same in the household that is not quite the case for quite a few reasons. They call this the canary effect. So the canary and the coal mine and the reason for that is one that earlier genetics susceptibility stat. So the 24% of the US population that can't really effectively tag and detox the toxins that they're exposed to. That's one layer. If you're, you know, compromised, you're just a lot more susceptible to your environment. And three, everyone's health status is quite different. And that's tied to the food we eat, whether we have movement and exercise or not, as well as our own other biological factors that get baked into that. There could also be a scenario where one room has more acute exposure than the other rooms or certain individuals spending a lot more time in the household than the other. So there's just so many different factors that go into that recipe. Yeah, you're absolutely right. And it could be something as simple as if there's one person in the family that is traveling more than the others maybe for work. Or, you know, if people are working into different environments, they could have a double exposure from their work environment, also their home environment. It's just so there's so many different factors that play into your resistance to the symptoms of mold. And one of the things that I talk about a lot too is if there's one person in the family that's been diagnosed with mold toxicity, we usually end up testing the whole family because even though they might not be experiencing symptoms, they're still developing that inflammatory state. Exactly. And thank you for touching on travel to exposure can also happen in airports and hotels and often do. And testing the whole family is very smart as well because that genetics is a possibility. One part comes from mom, one part comes from dad. So testing the parents also very important and the siblings in the household. Yeah. I remember a few months ago I was traveling to do a talk in a Key West outside of Florida. And I walked into the hotel room. I'm like, I cannot stay here. Like I could tell, but I really started sneezing and blowing my nose and it smelled like mold and I had to find another hotel and so glad I did because, you know, the exposure, the amount of time you're exposed, it builds up pretty rapidly, especially with the number of spores in the environment. Yeah. Florida's very tough for traveling. I usually don't look forward to my Florida trips. You don't live in Florida anymore. No, I had to get out. I did a lot of home hopping to try to find a clean environment. It's extremely tough in Florida. Yeah. I'm key to talk a little bit more about like what are the areas in the United States that are more likely to have mold in the home environments or the work environments and why is that? Yeah. It beyond just whether you're in like a tropical area with high humidity or in a coastal region, other factors to pay attention to is frequent flooding. Besides having a natural event happening to your home, there's also leaks, hype bursts that can happen, common during the winter, winter time and it could also, you can also have water intrusion through something as innocuous as heavy rainfall or a loose nail head on your roof. So I wouldn't filter it so much as, oh, I'm in the coast or not in the coast or I'm in the desert or not. There's just so many different factors to consider and there's large studies done, one study which I cite often 12,800 plus homes surveyed. Roughly half of those homes had mold, dampness or high humidity in the home or water damage that can cause mold. I've seen status highest 70% of homes have mold alone. That's all too high, but in that range is likely the level of impact. So one of the things I hear a lot from nasares of the mold toxicity hypothesis is that humans have been living around mold since we lived in caves. And I just wonder, what is your response to people that say that? Yeah, I mean, it's cited in the Bible and the Bible even has a mold remediation plan in Leviticus. So yeah, I would say that a lot of the research in the last 30 years has better defined the problem, but it's not a new problem. It's a problem that's been around for a while. Yeah, and I think the people that say that are like, well, humans are meant to live around mold. And I always say, well, it's in the Bible, like they say to burn your house down if you get different mold. So this has been a problem for a while in human history. Yeah, that's an interesting way to exactly. It's not just because we've been around it for a long time. It doesn't mean it's not a problem. Humans have been suffering from too much mold exposure. So moving on to like testing for mold, not in a human, not in the house yet. Were you tested for mold when you were having your symptoms? Not initially, it wasn't until I was treated by a shoemaker certified physician that we looked into the key biomarkers, which I'm sure you're very familiar with the inflammatory and immune markers that are commonly dysregulated. Some of those include MSH, MMP9, Vajav, C4A, TGF beta one. So these are the classical shoemaker labs that I was tested for eventually. Initially, no, I remember having over 100 plus different markers tested and it didn't include any of those labs. Yeah, and I think that's what's important. All the lab markers that you just mentioned are not standard laboratory measurements that doctors are doing. And most doctors don't even know that some of these measurements exist. And so you really have to go to someone that's used to looking for mold. And shoemaker is a big fan of these inflammatory biomarkers in the blood. There's also urine tests available for mold toxins as well. And I know there's controversy around some of these. What are you feeling about like urine laboratories for mold toxins? Yeah, so doctor shoemaker and doctor Scott's take on the urinary microtoxin test is that you're not able to distinguish ingested versus inhaled microtoxins. So it's not really giving you a clear signal. And just because the test is high doesn't mean that's necessarily a bad sign. It could mean that your body's just effectively detoxing what's in your gut. So it's not really giving you a clear signal. And it answers a question that exposure happened, but a more interesting question to answer is what are the health impacts from that exposure? So that's what these other markers help answer more effectively. Yeah. And the way I look at it is is that you need to paint a picture around the patient about, you know, from the history, what's going on with their symptoms. Does it fit a mold related pattern? Is there reasons to suspect exposure at the home or the work or the travel environment combined with what are the systemic effects from blood markers? And are there urinary signs or metabolites of mold toxins as well? And so we just paint a picture and there's not just one test. And that's what's really difficult about mold. And by so many people don't end up getting diagnosed for a long time. There's not one test that says you have mold toxicity. It has to be a picture that you're painting. And what I always tell people is is that we can paint the picture. But at the end of the day, we have to test your environment and we have to do see what happens when you're not in that environment. Is he if you get better, right? And so that's kind of where we end up usually. Yeah, it's more of a checklist process to your point. The labs give you one layer, the symptoms give you the other, and then whether exposure happened or not gives you that that last layer on the cake. So there's other illnesses to where it's more of a checklist process. So this is just one of those illnesses. Right. And there's, you mentioned genetic risks a few times. What are some of the genetic risks for mold? And I know you guys have a genetic test for these markers as well. Can you talk about those a little bit? Yeah, it's tied to HLA haplotypes on chromosome six. That's a lot of jargon, but essentially there's certain types of patients that take these tests. And it gives you a result of three different alleles. One of those outcomes would be like 11352B, for example. So that's one of the most susceptible HLA types. And what we've seen in the research that roughly, and the Dr. Schumakers and Dr. Scott's research that roughly 90% of patients that get quite sick. So patients that develop, serves, ends up having one of these HLA haplotypes. Well, serves is chronic inflammatory response syndrome. Yeah. Right. And those, you also test for those that syndrome as well. Right. So that's where you're testing for like TGF beta one and MMP nine. And some of these markers that tell you if you have that chronic inflammatory kind of response, right? So we have a serves panel. And we also have a complete panel to technically get the serves diagnosis. You do need that checklist with the provider, but that provides the labs piece of that recipe. Can you talk about the checklist? Yeah, absolutely. So one having dysregulated labs. So our serves panel does a great job for building that out. And a dysregulated lab could also include that genetic susceptibility to to meeting the symptom clusters is what it's called. So there are several different symptoms associated with chronic inflammatory response syndrome. It is called the symptom clusters. But having eight of those boxes checked if you're an adult, six if you're a child, so under the age of 18. And then the last piece is having that environmental exposure. So that makes up a serves diagnosis. That definition has evolved over time, but that's the the latest way that it's being assessed in the field. Right, exactly. And that symptom cluster questionnaires, that somebody that anyone can take or how does someone take that answer those questions? Yeah, it's pretty easy to do without having to even see a doctor. You can just pull up a symptom cluster's chart and see how many of the symptoms map to your experience. Usually you want to select symptoms that have been around for at least 30 days. Like if you're just feeling off for that week and it could be the flu, that doesn't really count, but really trying to find these symptoms that have been sticky, that stuck around for a while. And a single symptom, just a rule, a single symptom in the box counts as that box. So you don't need to have every single symptom in that box checked to then select that box. Right, right. And people can find these symptom cluster questionnaires online, and they can take them themselves. And that's something that people can do for free and see if they at least have the symptoms. And that can then leave them to then getting the blood test done. And I think you have the blood test. These can be ordered directly through mold co, right? And do you send them to their home or do they have to go to a lab to get these? Or how does it work? Some of our labs are sent directly to the patient. And then the other set of labs are done at lab corp. So super easy. There's around 2000 lab corp in the country. And the labs are also fairly affordable. We offer the starter panel at around cost. We even lose a little bit of money on that. So it's only a $99 panel for patients. Yeah, that's a really good way to kind of get the next the next item that they need in this diagnostic pathway. And then the last piece you mentioned is actually getting your home environment tested, right? So can you talk about that and how that works? Because I know there's a lot of ways to do that. Yeah, on people if you talk to them, like you have to have a professional come out for thousands of dollars to do it. Can you take us through kind of your pathway on testing your home from home? Yeah, my favorite approach is dust testing. And that's something done by, I would say, the far majority of shoemaker certified physicians too. So the way that works is you get a swiffer pad in the mail. You wipe down different surfaces in the home. You try to keep it to a single swiffer pad per room. So you don't want to wipe down your entire home with a single pad. And it's then sent to a lab where MSQPCR or the PCR method specific for mold is the analysis done and you get a report with the molds that are present and how prevalent those molds are. And also included in that report is whether that score is low medium or high. And the way that that data was collected was across a thousand different homes. So that's that's what's informing that score. And I love that so much for so many reasons. When it's very low cost, you can do it yourself. It doesn't take much time. And it gives you a clear read on whether exposure is happening in the home or not. The downside of that test though is that it's a historic fingerprint of what's been going on in that room. So if you've had remediation since that test was done, it's not going to give you an accurate signal. Oh, I see. Got it. So if you already have remediation, how long do you have to wait before retesting? It's more so that historic mold could be settled in the dies. So if there wasn't a well done cleaning job after the remediation, it won't give a clear signal. So if if everything was like very tidy after the remediation and all the dust was clean, then I think that would be a clear signal. But if not, then you run that risk. Got it. Got it. And so what can people do in general for their home environment to prevent the mold colonization in home? Like what are some of the things that people can do just preventatively, assuming say they do a test and there's no mold in their home, but they want to make sure they don't get mold. What are some of the things they can do? Yeah, some of the easy ones are high-end or humidity monitoring for that, keeping that below 70% ideally, something else you can do as well as run air purifiers, just to maintain clear air in the home. Something else that can be done is being aware of leaks or water damage and addressing those issues fairly rapidly before the water gets to sit there beyond 24 to 48 hours. So just responding very quickly to water damage events in the home. Right. Right. And then say we have, say you've noticed mold on a wall, right? Can someone clean that themselves? Does it need to be removed with a professional mold remediator? What are your thoughts around that? Yeah, it depends on how extensive the damage is. We're a little bit more cautious with our patients just because they're coming to us quite sick. So we prefer if a certified inspector ideally with like, nor me or IIC or C or ACAC, a certification comes in and assesses the issue. So we would just prefer a professional to check it out. Typically though, we don't recommend the use of chemicals or biosides for the removal or preferences to cut out the material and replace the material. Got it. Yeah, I mean, I think one of the reasons that I think a lot of people don't get their home checked for mold is expensive, right? And so it's expensive both to get someone in there to test for it. It's also expensive to do the remediation. I think people are fearful of that of discovering something that I want to deal with, right? And so yeah, absolutely. And I think that's where there's a lot of opportunity for entrepreneurs to come in and just help innovate the space. Like it is a fairly ancient industry. That's very, yeah. So there's just so much opportunity to improve all that for patients. And I'm excited to see some of the new companies coming out to address that problem. I agree. It shouldn't be as expensive as it is. And I think that definitely there's room for innovation and getting your home cleaned properly from old if you have it there. Hi, Dr. Shah here. I want to take a minute to talk to you about cellular health. So in my clinics, I've actually seen 30-year-old people with cells that look like they're pushing retirement. And I've also seen 60-year-olds with cells that look like they're 40 years old. So what's the difference? It's really about how fast their telomeres are breaking down. Your cells, you see, are like phones and they have limited cell phone battery. Poor sleep, stress, process foods, all of these things can drain that battery way faster than it should. So this is the reason why I partnered with IMA. IMA powers that cellular battery. It's not just another multivitamin. It's a comprehensive 92 ingredient formula designed specifically for cellular health in longevity. I'm talking 900 milligrams of vitamin C. That's like 20 oranges worth DNA protection. The clinical dose of CoQ-10 that you need to power your cellular engine. You also get zinc, selenium, vitamin E, alpha-lipoc acid, all of these works synergistically for cellular repair and protecting your telomeres. So instead of taking a handful of pills every day and all these supplements, IMA actually gives you everything that you need in one scientifically formulated system. And this isn't just a theory anymore. IMA had partnered with Oxford University, the International Space Station, San Francisco Research Institute, and they've done studies, and they've gotten this NSF certified to truly power your health. Most people are aging twice as fast as they should, unfortunately. You don't have to be one of them. Try IMA. I actually have a discount secured for you if you go to Dr. Shaw.com slash IMA or go to IMAidHealth.com slash discount slash Dr. Shaw and you can get 20% off with my discount code Dr. Shaw. You can also find the link below. Anything else on the home testing front that you want to mention? You know, you mentioned a couple of organizations there. Can you talk about those and what they are, why they're important to know about? Yeah, those are dandered training programs for inspectors and remediators. There are certain codes to follow and certain training that that should be done. Important things to look for is someone that is actually trained in mold you and you'd be surprised how many folks kind of just enter the field without formal training or without that being their specialization. So it's just a way to filter out the right inspector and and remediator for you. Yeah, absolutely. So say you're, you do your blood test. We get a mold code blood test. It shows that there are signs of mold toxicity. You know, you fill out a questionnaire. There's definitely a symptom cluster. What's the next step? Yeah, great question. So we take patients through the care journey. We have our own clinical team. We assess patients even more deeply to confirm that they have the signs of mold related illness or mold toxicity. We look deeply at their symptoms, their environmental exposure, their medical history. We also have a concedures care model too. So patients can message us at any time and we deliver the medications to patient stores. And that's a personalized and programmatic journey that we take patients on. It's a few different steps for treatment and it's typically done over this span of several months. We see symptoms improvement and resolution typically in the first three months though, but we really encourage patients to go through the whole protocol because all the steps are important. Yeah. And you have doctors guiding people through the protocol? Yes, yeah, exactly. We have nurse practitioners licensed in the state and then we have our medical director who's one of the world experts helping oversee the patient cases. And that's through telemedicine? Yeah, it's all virtual care. And we're currently in 16 states for care. We'll be in all 50 states by the summer of this year. That's fantastic. It's making this type of care so much more accessible. People have such a hard time finding care for mold. Yeah, it's definitely a unique challenge. And what gets me excited is the affordability piece. So creating something that's a tenth or even a hundredth the cost of what patients who do end up finding the right solutions pay through their journey. Yeah, I love that. And you're also providing medications. You said, can you talk a little about the medical treatment of mold exposure? Yeah, so the medications that we offer are a prescription binder. That's everything has a medical professional overseeing and prescribing every step, by the way. We also have a nasal spray that helps clear some of the problematic bacteria and biofilm and the nasal passages. And we also have a peptide, which is part of the shoemaker protocol, basal and intestinal polypeptide or VIP included. So all three steps are shipped directly to the patient's stores. Wow, that's amazing. So you're clearing the biofilm, which is the colonization of the mold and upper respiratory pathways. That's a nasal spray, what's the name of the nasal spray? It's our it's our own formulation. It's called mold co clear. Oh cool. Yeah. And then and then you're using binders as well. Yeah, we're using prescription binders. So what you may see online is the use of natural binders like charcoal. We haven't seen success with those binders. We see just a lot more success and symptoms resolution with the prescription binders. And what are the prescription binders that you're using? We use colicevillam, another common one is colostaramine. Yes, exactly. And then VIP is part of the shoemaker protocol. And keep talking about Dr. Shoemaker and who he is. We've been to them a couple times for the audience. Yeah. Yeah, I'm a huge obviously huge fan of Dr. Shoemaker. I attribute feeling like myself again to him. So credit him with with a lot of appreciation. So he's he's the he's our founding physician one and he coined the term chronic inflammatory response syndrome. He led the research in the space. So he's the pioneer to find this illness to find the biomarkers, to find the treatment. And he's personally treated over 14,000 patients himself. And his story is just so unique. It started over 30 years ago now in this space. And he sent spilled I'd say a cottage industry like he's helped spend up multiple companies and train providers and provide a tremendous amount of educational resources for patients. So I just think he's absolutely incredible. Yeah, he's really been a lifeline for people that have been suffering for mold and nowhere to go. I know a lot of functional physicians get trained in the shoemaker protocols as well. And so it's really really important to keep spreading the message. But it just can spread fast enough. And so your company really provides access. And also I would say access at a more affordable price range and what's typically available. Sometimes people spend thousands and thousands every year getting treated for mold. Yeah, absolutely. Is that kind of what led you to developing mold co is just democratizing the care. What's the mission of mold co? Yeah, our mission is to address the biggest medical blind spots. Mold is a big one. Next up, we want to dress lime. And then after that long COVID. So these illnesses across the biotoxin illness pathway, which is currently almost unaddressed or very minimally addressed in standard medical practice. So exciting to hear that you're doing this, especially around long COVID. It's such a huge problem. We see it all the time. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And people are suffering and they don't know what to do next. And there's not a lot of good treatment protocols available. But I see a massive opportunity there. And hopefully it's something that you can launch here pretty soon. Yeah. And we've been tracking a lot of it. You know, I say our research extends beyond Dr. Shoemaker's initial work. So we've amassed the world's largest data set for the mold health connection. So thousands of biospecimens close to 10,000 patient history forms were tracking the research of other groups too. So we're just looking for the best in class biomarkers and treatment approach to help bring that to patients very efficiently and affordably. So I'm just really excited about some of the promising research coming out by groups even outside of our company too. You know, this fantastic is is Dr. Shoemaker involved with your company as well. Yeah. So he's our founding physician. Amazing. Yeah. Very cool. Very cool. And you and you also have a couple of the physicians that you're working with that are deep in the field as well. Yeah. So we brought on the world experts in this space and not just on the clinical side on on the scientific side too. The vision is to expand the R&D within this field. It's so needed. And I really hope that mainstream medicine does adopt mold care. It should be part of the annual screening visit, right? We should be screening for mold exposure in the home. We should be screening for the common signs and symptoms because of such a preventable illness. If it's just flagged early on and communicated to patients. Absolutely. Yeah. And you hit on the top three. They're mold. Lime and long COVID. I think those three are such blind spots in medicine right now. And people get so frustrated when they can't get anyone to first of all, even acknowledge that they have a problem. It's a lot of gaslighting involved. A lot of blaming it on psychological issues when there really is a problem there. And then finding treatments even harder. Yeah. Or it's a misdiagnosis. They're getting treatment for something just totally different to what their root problem is. Yeah. You mentioned research. Are you guys conducting research on mold and the patients that are being treated as well? And kind of, you know, I know you're using evidence based approaches to your care. But are those evolving? Is that research evolving your care of mold? Yeah. We are constantly keeping our ear to the ground of what's new in this space. The group of shoemaker certified physicians are conducting their own R&D separate from what we're doing too. And we started sequencing our biobank to better understand the impact of mold on human health. So this is the first of its kind analysis. And we'll be publishing those results soon. But it's really something we want to double down on later this year. After we've expanded to all 50 states and continue to delight our patients, it's really more our secondary goal. The primary goal is serving patients today. And then after that, we can serve patients tomorrow. I love that. I'm so excited by your company and really democratizing Dr. Shoemaker's protocols and just the whole system. I think it's such a simple system the way you've set up mold, go to understand diagnostics, home testing, clinical access, and then providing the treatment. And it makes total sense. Oh, thank you. I appreciate that. Yeah. Do you guys also provide resources for remediation of mold in the home? Yeah. So in our concierge care portal, we have our preferred inspectors and remediators. So when patients ask us for resources or when they mention they're looking into inspectors or remediators, we give them our top picks. I think it is something we do want to publish and make accessible to even our non-members to you. So that's something we're discussing internally. Great. And then is there a way to even provide pricing and what people should expect to pay? And even is there a way to like, you know, because what I find is a lot of times when you call one mold remediator, it costs $10,000 and you call another one is x minus y thousands of dollars. And the pricing just seems to be all over the place and be great to have some level of transparency about what things should cost as well. I would love that pricing transparency too. I'm like be wildered by how different these prices are to your point. I had one of our patients get quoted at 1,200 as their lowest quote and 9,000 as their highest quote for a simple inspection. And it seemed like roughly the same report at the end of the day. So I'm just a little confused by the pricing there too. Exactly. Ariana, how long did it take for you to feel better and feel like yourself again after first getting started with treatment? Yeah, it was a process. I would say I felt like I got my brain back earlier in the process and then the energy levels and ability to exercise came later. So it took, I would say it took roughly two years to get back to feeling like myself again. But within the first two months, I felt like I had incredible symptoms relief too. So it was more of this like process over time where I had some layer of the symptoms relieved and then later on more of the symptoms relieved. So and we see that with our with our patients as well. I agree. That's pretty much been my experience. It takes a few months. And then once the symptoms go away, people just start feeling so much happier because it's kind of like that emotional weight of just feeling like there's nothing you can do about this. You have to live like this forever kind of goes away. Yeah, and you're able to go outside again, see friends again, exercise, do your hobbies have more space and energy in the day. You're not just out a few functional hours in the day. So I'm showing up in that way every day just compounds over time. Agreed. Agreed. What do you want people out there to know that are trying to advocate for themselves in this whole field of mold? And they know they have mold exposure. They're trying to figure it out. Like what's some advice you can give to them? I would love to just validate their experience. It's something that many of these patients rarely receive and your symptoms are real mold does cause health issues. The lab show up in a fairly repeatable way if you want to verify that. And you're not crazy. Don't believe the gaslighting and stay persistent to advocate for yourself and your health because there is a path to better health. Absolutely. And I think you put a lot of the power back into the patient's hands by, first of all, people can just look up online how to take a symptom questionnaire and show that you look, I have these symptoms based on this questionnaire. And secondly, now they can get for $99 a test on your website that shows the biomarkers of mold as well. They can test their home as well. How much is that home test cost by the way, the wipe test that you talked about? Yeah, it's less than 200 bucks. It's so much more affordable than an inspector. And we really try to make it not a heroic journey because that's what it's felt like today. You have to be almost super human reading all the publications and all the online forums and essentially getting your mini MD to try to treat yourself and try to find doctors to believe you and even prescribe the medications and give you the lab. So it's just too much. So removing all of those hurdles and having it not be such a harrowing journey for patients is something we're excited to deliver on. Yeah, it's a really exciting product that you put together. And I really applaud you for it. And thank you for doing it because more people need to know that this is now doesn't need to be a big enigma out there to them, whether or not they have mold. They can easily find out for themselves if it's affecting their biology, if they have it in their home, and they can do something about it now. Yeah, thank you. How can people find out more about the products and you? Yeah, so moldco.com has pretty much everything you need. If you have questions beyond what's on our website, we also have support at moldco.com. So that's the email address. I read a lot of those emails, by the way, I even sometimes jump in and respond to those emails. You can send us an email there. We're also on Instagram too. We get quite a few DMs and comments there. So that's at the mold company for our handle. And yeah, those are a few ways you can reach out. Ariana, thank you so much for coming on the podcast, on Extend. And I look forward to continue the conversation with you. And maybe next we'll be talking about limco or long progo, whatever you decide to name it. Thank you, Dr. Shy. I really enjoyed the conversation. Thank you. Here are my top five takeaways from this awesome episode on mold with Ariana. Number one, mold toxicity is a systemic illness, not just a single symptom. Mold exposure doesn't show up in just one organ or one lab marker. It's disrupting you at a cellular level, affecting mitochondrial energy production, immune signaling, neurological function, gut health, and even your hormones all at the same time, making it kind of an invisible diagnosis. And conventional medicine is really hard at diagnosing mold exposure because of this. Number two, genetics determines a set of ability, not just exposure alone. Roughly 24% of the population has a genetic vulnerability in their HLA genes that impair their ability to clear mold toxins. This explains by one person in a household can become severely ill while others remain seemingly unaffected. Number three, standard medical testing misses mold almost entirely. Most physicians don't test mold specific markers, meaning patients are often told that they're fine despite having real symptoms. Acrid diagnosis actually requires a triangulation of what's called symptom clusters, usually found by questionnaires, targeted labs, and environmental testing. Number four, healing requires treating the body and the environment. Unlike many other diseases out there, no protocol works if the exposure continues. Treatment has to pair with medical interventions. So binders, nasal spray therapies, immune support, all of that's going to work only if environmental remediation and prevention strategies are done simultaneously. Number five, patients must advocate for themselves and they're not wrong. Many mold patients are dismissed or misdiagnosed for years. There's so much gaslighting that happens when someone has all of these symptoms. This episode reinforced a critical truth. Symptoms are real, mold causes testable physiological damage and accessible tools now exist to help patients take control of their health. I invited Ariana to be on this podcast when I found out about her company, moldco. She did not pay me to be on the podcast. I was just so inspired by what they did. Finally, for mold, where people have access to testing, to good advice, to medical specialists and to treatments all under one roof, and at a much more affordable price point than most previously available. If you think you might be suffering from mold, moldco is a great place to start and you can also come to one of our clinics at next health and we can help you through it. Thank you. Thank you so much for listening to the podcast today. Please remember to subscribe if you like this episode and give us a good review and share a link with your friends. It really helps to support all of our efforts. I also want to remind you that the information shared on this podcast is for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult with your healthcare provider or physician before making any decisions or taking any action based on what you hear today, especially if you have any underlying health conditions or on any medications. Your doctor knows your personal health situation the best and is always important to seek their guidance.