The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett XX
[0] I'm absolutely convinced this will eradicate and cure Alzheimer's.
[1] Really?
[2] The data don't lie.
[3] And I'm a data guy.
[4] And the future of medicine and health care around the globe is going to be dependent upon this.
[5] Dr. Nathan Bryan is the biochemist whose cutting -edge research suggests how one crucial molecule can impact our health, brain function, and longevity.
[6] That molecule is nitric oxide.
[7] Nitric oxide is a signaling molecule in the human body which regulates things like blood flow and oxygen delivery.
[8] And the loss of nitric oxide production is the earliest event in the onset of progression of age -related chronic disease.
[9] So things like erectile dysfunction, diabetes, Alzheimer's, high blood pressure, which is the number one driver of cardiovascular disease, which is the number one killer of men and women worldwide.
[10] And 50 % of the...
[11] The patients that are treated with prescription medication don't respond with better blood pressure because they aren't targeted toward nitric oxide.
[12] But most people have never heard of this.
[13] They don't know that if you can't walk up a flight of steps or exercise moderately for 15, 20 minutes, then you're nitric oxide deficient.
[14] They don't know that most toothpaste and mouthwash is killing the oral microbiome that's partly responsible for production of nitric oxide.
[15] But no one is interested in curing human disease because medicine is a business.
[16] And the epiphany for me came because my dad had a car accident and he developed these non -healing wounds and i saw the failure of the standard of care to treat dad's wounds and so i just thought that there had to be a better way and simply by giving nitric oxide i've healed this wound within six months that's crazy so how do i improve my nitric oxide levels it's what you shouldn't be doing and we'll cover those step by step number one you have to avoid quick one before we get back to this episode just give me 30 seconds of your time Two things I wanted to say.
[17] The first thing is a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show week after week.
[18] It means the world to all of us and this really is a dream that we absolutely never had and couldn't have imagined getting to this place.
[19] But secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we're only just getting started.
[20] And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24 % of people that listen to this podcast regularly and follow us on this app.
[21] here's a promise I'm going to make to you.
[22] I'm going to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I can now and into the future.
[23] We're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to and we're going to continue to keep doing all of the things you love about this show.
[24] Thank you.
[25] Thank you so much.
[26] Back to the episode.
[27] Dr. Nathan Bryan, you have committed much of your life to writing about and educating people on a subject that I know absolutely nothing about.
[28] But from doing the research for today, I'm pretty shocked that I don't know more about this subject.
[29] So for those people who have just clicked to listen to this conversation, can you tell them the mission you're on and why it's so important?
[30] Yeah, well, thanks so much for having this conversation with me. I think that illustrates the problem.
[31] Someone as informed as you don't know anything or never heard of nitric oxide.
[32] It's important for us to just make a distinction between nitric gas that people inhale and if you played some of those racing car games, you press a button and the car goes really fast.
[33] Well, that's nitrous.
[34] Nitrous, yeah.
[35] These are two separate things.
[36] Yeah, very good point.
[37] So this is not nitrous oxide.
[38] Nitrous oxide is, I mean, in medicine, it's a dental anesthetic.
[39] It's a gas.
[40] It's called laughing gas.
[41] That's N2O.
[42] That's the chemical formula.
[43] What we're talking about is nitric oxide, or NO, one nitrogen, one oxygen.
[44] But yeah, they sound very similar, but they're completely different.
[45] This molecule is foundational for human health and longevity.
[46] So nitric oxide is a gas.
[47] It's a naturally produced molecule.
[48] It's a signaling molecule in the human body.
[49] And so it regulates things like blood flow and oxygen delivery, and it mobilizes our own stem cells to help us recover and repair and replace dysfunctional cells.
[50] It improves energy production inside the cell.
[51] And it regulates blood flow.
[52] You know, when we begin to exercise, if we want to recall memory, that's dependent upon adequate blood flow to the organs.
[53] If we're, you know, it's intimately involved in sexual activity and dilation of the sex organs for sexual function.
[54] So what we're finding is that...
[55] The older we get, the less nitric oxide we naturally produced.
[56] And now today, that's recognized as the earliest event in the onset and progression of age -related chronic disease.
[57] So my mission is to inform and educate the global population on how important, number one, what nitric oxide is, how it's produced in the human body, what goes wrong in people that can't make it, and then perhaps most importantly, how do we prevent that age -related decline in nitric oxide production so everybody...
[58] can be empowered to take control of their own health and prevent age -related disease.
[59] And that's what the science tells us.
[60] But as you illustrated, most people have never heard of this.
[61] I mean, this graph, which I'll put on the screen for anyone watching, kind of illustrates what you're talking about.
[62] And quite notably, this decline seems to start when you're 30 years old.
[63] Which is how old I am right now.
[64] Well, you know, if you look at population -based studies at different age groups, we see about a 10 % to 12 % decline in what we call endothelial function per decade.
[65] So that means, so nitric oxide is a gas.
[66] It's produced in the endothelium.
[67] So the endothelium is the single layer of cells that line every blood vessel throughout the body.
[68] So the function of these endothelial cells is to regulate vascular tone and to regulate...
[69] you know, solute exchange and extravasation or transport of molecules across that endothelial layer.
[70] And so when your endothelial cells can no longer make nitric oxide gas, they no longer dilate, so the blood vessels become constricted, you start to get inflammation, you get stiff arteries, plaque deposition, and that's what starts cardiovascular disease or atherosclerosis.
[71] So someone that's struggling with their nitric oxide levels at the moment, what kind of symptoms would they experience?
[72] Well, we know there's a hierarchy, right?
[73] So the first sign and symptom of nitric oxide deficiency is usually erectile dysfunction.
[74] And when you think about this, when we're stimulated or we're about to have intimacy with our partner, we have to dilate the blood vessels.
[75] So erections in both men and women are dependent upon dilation of the blood vessels to get engorgement, to get increase in blood flow, and that's what an erection is.
[76] But if those blood vessels can't make nitric oxide, the blood vessels don't dilate.
[77] So there's no increase in blood flow.
[78] There's no engorgement.
[79] And that's by definition what we call erectile dysfunction.
[80] And it's the same in men and women, right?
[81] Whether it's the penis or the clitoris or the labia, you have to have an increase in blood flow.
[82] And without nitric oxide, there's no increase in blood flow.
[83] So that's number one.
[84] And we call that the canary in the coal mine.
[85] Because for years, people thought it was a lifestyle disorder.
[86] Right?
[87] Well, erectile dysfunction.
[88] Yeah.
[89] But now it's recognized that it's a symptom of loss of nitric oxide and really an accelerated form of cardiovascular disease.
[90] So we have to focus on the vascular component of erectile dysfunction.
[91] What other diseases are linked to nitric oxide?
[92] Deficiency.
[93] So if you don't correct the ED, then what you start to see is an increase in blood pressure.
[94] And when you think about this mechanistically, so we have...
[95] You know, a finite volume of blood that's pumping throughout our body every day, every second.
[96] And if you can make nitric oxide, the blood vessels are more dilated.
[97] So now we're pumping that volume through, you know, more dilated blood vessels.
[98] But if we lose the ability to produce nitric oxide, now you don't get the dilation.
[99] Now you have smaller blood vessels.
[100] You're pumping that same volume of blood through smaller pipes.
[101] And simple physics tells us that blood pressure goes up.
[102] Okay, so you're going to have cardiovascular challenges.
[103] Well, you're going to have high blood pressure or hypertension.
[104] And at least in the U .S., and I think these statistics probably are worldwide, but two out of three Americans have an unsafe elevation in blood pressure.
[105] And 50 % of the people that are given prescription medications to treat their blood pressure do not respond with better blood pressure.
[106] It's because most of the drugs out there, whether they're ACE inhibitors, what's called angiotensin receptor blockers, calcium channel antagonists, the main classes of drugs that treat high blood pressure aren't targeted.
[107] toward restoration of nitric oxide.
[108] So that's why we call that resistant hypertension.
[109] They're resistant to traditional therapies.
[110] And the reason they're resistant is because it's a nitric oxide problem.
[111] And those drugs aren't designed to affect nitric oxide production or improve it.
[112] Was there an aha moment in your career where you became particularly interested in this subject?
[113] Because you could have committed your life to studying any facet of health or science.
[114] But for some reason, you chose nitric oxide.
[115] as the thing that you chose to focus on.
[116] What was that eureka moment?
[117] You know, for me, I was a student at LSU School of Medicine.
[118] This was the late 90s, maybe early 2000s.
[119] But a Nobel Prize had just been awarded for the discovery of nitric oxide.
[120] And the three U .S. scientists that were awarded the Nobel Prize in physiology and medicine in 1998.
[121] And I was very fortunate at the time.
[122] I was a young student, probably a first -year student.
[123] And Lou Ignaro had just won the Nobel Prize for the discovery of nitric oxide.
[124] came and spoke and gave a lecture before the student body.
[125] And I had a chance to have a conversation with him afterwards, and I was fortunate to be invited to have dinner with him that night.
[126] And he made a very poignant statement to me. He goes, if the scientific community can figure out how to restore the production of nitric oxide, it'll change the world.
[127] And it'll change the landscape of medicine.
[128] Because even then, what is that, 25, 26 years ago, that...
[129] It was recognized that a loss of nitric oxide production is leading to the onset and development of many poorly managed age -related chronic diseases.
[130] So I go, that's a very profound statement from a guy who just won the Nobel Prize.
[131] But that was the first kind of eureka moment for me that stimulated the interest.
[132] But then my dad, and I talk about it in the book, his dad is 76 years old.
[133] In 1984, he had a car accident.
[134] It left him paralyzed from the mid -back down.
[135] So the majority of my life, even as a kid, I was treating dad's wounds, decubitus ulcers, pressure ulcers on his feet, on his butt, and he developed these non -healing wounds.
[136] He was diabetic, he was paraplegic, poor blood flow, hypertension, and he developed a non -healing wound, and no wound care doc that I took him to could heal this wound.
[137] So I started making a topical nitric oxide, and I've healed this wound within a period of four years of non -healing.
[138] I healed it within six months simply by giving nitric oxide.
[139] and getting blood flow to that wound, killing the infection in the wound.
[140] And this was in a 60 -something -year -old paraplegic, diabetic, sedentary old man. What you went through as a young man, to me, appears to be such an important sort of through line with all the work that you do and chose to do.
[141] There is this overarching question, which is even like, why did you go into medicine?
[142] Why did you want to help people?
[143] Where did that come from in you?
[144] And I feel like there's clues.
[145] in that to some degree, based on what I read about your family, your early upbringing, the divorce of your parents, and then ultimately your dad getting in a car accident and being paralyzed.
[146] Is that an accurate suspicion?
[147] You know, certainly it directed kind of my life because I witnessed the failure of the standard of care to treat dad with what I thought should be pretty simple.
[148] I mean, we have, again, the most...
[149] advanced technology, medical technology, best medical schools in the world, and yet we can't treat a wound, we can't address the hypertension, we can't address the diabetes medically.
[150] And so I just thought that there had to be a better way.
[151] It's still with you now, isn't it?
[152] Yeah, but I see...
[153] You know, Dad, when I think I'm having a bad day, I just think, look...
[154] I'm not in a wheelchair.
[155] I got my health.
[156] So no matter how bad I think I got it, it could always be worse.
[157] So I just wake up every day with a grateful heart, and some days are good, some days are bad, but I always realize it could always be better, but it could be a hell of a lot worse, so I don't complain.
[158] And who are you?
[159] What are all the reference points?
[160] What's the experience you've had in your career that have filled up your sort of buckets of knowledge that you bring forth today?
[161] What have you studied?
[162] Where have you been?
[163] I was in molecular and cellular physiology, got a PhD in molecular and cellular physiology.
[164] And that was, I was recruited by Fred Murad, one of the other guys who shared the Nobel Prize, to join the faculty at the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston, which is the world's largest medical center.
[165] But it's part of the University of Texas system.
[166] So I was recruited as a professor of molecular medicine, published probably, well, over 100 peer -reviewed scientific publications.
[167] I've edited several medical textbooks on the subject.
[168] I taught in medical school.
[169] And then I resigned from academia, I guess, several years ago during COVID to focus on the next phase of my career is taking this 25 years of science and research and discovery.
[170] And now bringing that to the fore for safe and effective product technology, drug therapies, to eradicate a lot of these poorly managed chronic diseases that we're faced with today.
[171] So let me get this straight.
[172] I'll repeat back to you what I think I understand about nitric oxide.
[173] And you tell me if it's accurate.
[174] So this nitric oxide is a chemical that is in all the blood cells of my body.
[175] And it allows my blood cells to basically expand, open up, so blood can flow through there.
[176] Well, it dilates the smooth muscle.
[177] It's not affecting the cells per se, but it's dilating the smooth muscle that surrounds the blood vessels, and that leads to relaxation and dilation.
[178] Fine.
[179] So my blood cells would then expand, and more blood would go through there.
[180] But if I'm deficient, that mechanism doesn't work, and my blood cells wouldn't ultimately expand through the relaxation of the muscles.
[181] That's right.
[182] And therefore, I would have higher blood pressure, which can lead to a series of...
[183] downstream diseases and consequences.
[184] And so when we look at the graph that I showed a second ago, where we're seeing, for anyone that can't see this graph because you're listening on audio, we're seeing nitric oxide levels in young people up to the age of roughly around 20 are optimal.
[185] And then from about 30 to 70, there's this tremendous sort of 80, 90 % drop.
[186] When I look at that graph, though, my question becomes, is that not just aging?
[187] Is that not just normal?
[188] Is that just inevitable?
[189] Well, yeah, there are a lot of things that occur with aging, right?
[190] We lose growth hormone with age.
[191] We lose, you know, many hormones.
[192] Nitric oxide is a hormone that we first discovered.
[193] Nitric oxide is a hormone back in 2007.
[194] But to understand aging, you have to understand what leads to aging.
[195] So aging, from my perspective, is the inability to repair and replace dysfunctional cells.
[196] Every day we wear ourselves out, and if we can repair and replace dysfunctional cells, then we combat or at least prolong the aging process.
[197] So what the science tells us in nitric oxide is that loss of nitric oxide production is the earliest event in the onset and progression of age -related chronic disease.
[198] So as that graph implies, it is part of the aging process, but it doesn't have to be.
[199] Right, because today we know we can shift that curve to the left or to the right.
[200] So we can accelerate it.
[201] And you see this today with 18, 20 -year -old kids that have high blood pressure.
[202] They have diabetes.
[203] They have erectile dysfunction.
[204] They have learning and cognitive impairment.
[205] And those are all symptoms of nitric oxide deficiency.
[206] And to the contrary, we see 50, 60, 70 -year -old patients that would fit on a 30 - or 40 -year -old scale on that graph.
[207] So this doesn't have to be the case.
[208] We know how to prevent this age -related decline in nitric oxide production.
[209] You know, I'm the best example.
[210] I'm 51 years old, but I've got the vascular age of a 36 -year -old because I employ these principles to prevent this age -related decline in nitric oxide production.
[211] And when you say you've got the vascular age of a 36 -year -old, how does one measure that?
[212] You look at the sort of vascular health of your...
[213] So there's several objective measures of biological age.
[214] Obviously, we can't affect our chronological age.
[215] But we can certainly affect our biological age.
[216] So what you can do, there's databases now of what we call carotid intima media thickness.
[217] So they take an ultrasound and look at your carotid arteries, and they can look at what's called smooth muscle hyperplasia or the thickness of the intima and compare it to a database of age -matched kind of relates.
[218] You're comparing against your colleagues.
[219] So that's one way.
[220] Another way is looking at what's called flow -mediated dilatation or endothelial function.
[221] And again, through database of hundreds of thousands or millions of patients, you can figure out where you fall on that spectrum on endothelial function.
[222] And then there's, you know, other markers looking at histone modification of the DNA, methylation profiles.
[223] There's a company or a technology called glycon age that looks at certain markers that can then define a biological age for each individual.
[224] So by age 40, we have lost about 50 % of our ability to produce nitric oxide in our blood vessels.
[225] And we lose 10 % to 12 % of nitric oxide production per decade.
[226] This is all according to your book.
[227] And by age 70 to 80, nitric oxide levels in blood vessels can be 75 % lower than in young adults.
[228] A Japanese study found a 75 % reduction in nitric oxide production in people aged 70 to 80 compared to 20 -year -olds.
[229] Interesting.
[230] So in terms of chronic disease that is downstream from me losing nitric oxide level, can you give me a bit of a menu of chronic disease that is associated with this nitric oxide deficiency?
[231] Yep.
[232] We've touched on them.
[233] So erectile dysfunction.
[234] 50 % of the men over the age of 40 self -report erectile dysfunction.
[235] That's in the US.
[236] So think about that.
[237] 50%.
[238] Self -report.
[239] I think the numbers are higher because most 40 -year -olds that I know are never going to admit that they have erectile dysfunction.
[240] So I think the numbers are even worse.
[241] So that's one.
[242] High blood pressure.
[243] Again, 50 % of the patients that are treated with prescription medication don't respond with better blood pressure.
[244] That's a huge problem because high blood pressure is the number one driver of cardiovascular disease, which is the number one killer of men and women worldwide.
[245] Number three, metabolic disease and diabetes.
[246] We published in 2011 that nitric oxide production is necessary for insulin signaling.
[247] If the cell can't make nitric oxide, you develop insulin resistance.
[248] So diabetes, a global pandemic.
[249] Nine out of 10 Americans are metabolically unfit.
[250] The other thing is exercise intolerance.
[251] If you try to start an exercise regimen and you can't walk up a flight of steps or exercise moderately for 15, 20, 30 minutes, then you're nitric oxide deficient.
[252] And then the other one is obviously Alzheimer's.
[253] Because Alzheimer's is a vascular disease.
[254] It's reduced blood flow to the brain, what we call focal ischemia.
[255] There's insulin resistance.
[256] You know, Alzheimer's has been called diabetes type 3.
[257] So you can't get glucose into the cell, and that's the primary energy source or substrate of the brain.
[258] Oxidative stress and immune dysfunction.
[259] And then you get misfolded proteins, and that shows up as the tau tangles and the amyloid plaque that we see in Alzheimer's patients.
[260] So if we can restore, and nitric oxide corrects every single thing we know about Alzheimer's.
[261] It improves blood flow to the brain.
[262] It improves glucose uptake, so it overcomes the metabolic aspect of Alzheimer's.
[263] It reduces inflammation.
[264] In fact, a number of my patents are on a method of reducing inflammation.
[265] It inhibits the oxidative stress we see in Alzheimer's neurological disease, and it prevents the immune dysfunction.
[266] And when you do that, when you restore blood flow and you get nutrients and oxygen in and you take out the metabolic waste products, There's no misfolding of protein.
[267] So you don't get the amyloid plaque.
[268] You don't get the tau tangles.
[269] So this simple molecule, nitric oxide gas, I'm absolutely convinced will eradicate and cure Alzheimer's.
[270] Really?
[271] Because it addresses every physiological root cause of Alzheimer's.
[272] If you can get it administered therapeutically to patients early enough?
[273] No, I think that's a very key because the success or failure of any clinical trial...
[274] Any drug in any clinical trial is dependent upon the design of the clinical trial and what patients, at what stage of disease that you enroll these patients.
[275] So what are the inclusion criteria and what are the exclusion criteria?
[276] And there's a stage in every disease, whether it's heart disease, kidney disease, Alzheimer's, where you've reached a point of no return.
[277] There's really no medical therapy that's going to reverse that disease because it's progressed to a state that's irreversible.
[278] So I think what we try to do is take Take patients early in the process, what we call vascular dementia, mild cognitive impairment, early Alzheimer's.
[279] Because what I want to be able to demonstrate is two things.
[280] Number one, can we stop the progression of disease?
[281] Once it's started, can we stop the progression?
[282] And then number two is we want to enroll patients far enough along to where we can show regression.
[283] So can you move the needle back?
[284] And so that's a very...
[285] kind of a specific and finite patient population, when you design a clinical study, number one, at the absolute worst, we want to stop progression.
[286] At the absolute best, we want to show that we can regress disease.
[287] And that's the goal of therapy, is that you understand the mechanism of disease to the extent that you can treat it, you can prevent it, you can reverse it, and you can cure it.
[288] Is there something you believe that the traditional world of medicine and maybe the traditional media...
[289] Don't believe.
[290] I believe in the truth.
[291] And I come from a very objective scientific background.
[292] So everything that we do is based on objective data.
[293] I say this because I was listening to your interview before.
[294] And there were several moments in the interview where you'd reference that.
[295] You'd say things like, they don't want you to know this or they won't tell you this.
[296] No, absolutely.
[297] Because, you know, the...
[298] We talk about epiphanies and eureka moments in science, but for me, one of the kind of complete change in paradigm in the way that I think was changed when I was in academia and teaching in medical school and doing research in an academic institution.
[299] And you start to think, in the scientific community, we've cured every disease.
[300] Every disease known to man, we've cured it in rats and mice.
[301] So then the question is, why isn't this translated into patient care?
[302] Why can't we do this in humans?
[303] Number one, in animal experiments, we control their environment.
[304] We control their food.
[305] We control their life cycle.
[306] We control everything about them.
[307] You can't do that.
[308] Everybody has a different diet.
[309] Everybody has different drug therapy that they're on or hygienic practices.
[310] But then what I realized was because when I was in academia, we wanted to create this consortium, a center of excellence for diseases.
[311] My thought process was, you know, Western medicine is siloed, right?
[312] If you have a heart problem, you go to a cardiologist.
[313] If you've got a GI problem, then you go to a gastroenterologist.
[314] If you've got a neurological problem, you go to a neurologist or psychiatrist.
[315] But none of these disciplines talk to one another.
[316] So if you go to that neurologist is going to treat that condition much different than the cardiologist would, much different than the GI doc would.
[317] But what if we're looking at the exact same root cause?
[318] And so my philosophy, well, let's create a center of excellence and let's bring everybody in the room.
[319] Let's bring the GI docs, the neurologist, the cardiologist, the geneticist, the pulmonary docs, the kidney docs, the renal docs.
[320] And let's understand this kind of wheel and cog because everything occurs at the mitochondria, subcellular level, and energy production.
[321] And then basically everything can manifest from that.
[322] But what I quickly realized when you go to, for instance, MD Anderson and trying to treat cancer.
[323] No one is interested in curing cancer.
[324] No one is interested in curing human disease.
[325] Because the epiphany for me came because medicine is a business.
[326] It's a for -profit business.
[327] In fact, it's the largest business and economic model in the world, trillion -dollar annualized market.
[328] And most of these drug companies who influence and pay and support scientific journals JAMA, New England Journal of Medicine, the major publications, the major journals, and they're influencing regulation and policy and FDA.
[329] And so when you figure out that there's undue influence by these for -profit companies, because the number one rule of business, as you know, as an entrepreneur and a business guy, is acquire a customer and keep that customer as long as you can.
[330] Call it lifetime value of that customer.
[331] And that's what medicine is.
[332] They acquire you as a customer.
[333] They put you on a drug.
[334] That drug has side effects.
[335] They have to put you on another drug to mitigate the side effects of that drug.
[336] Now you've got side effects from that polypharmacy.
[337] They have to put you on another drug to mitigate those side effects.
[338] And now you look up, and people who are 50 to 60 years old and older are on 10, 12, 18 different medications.
[339] That's the best financial model in the world.
[340] So it's a great financial model.
[341] But it's at the expense of our health and the health of everybody living in the world.
[342] And in the U .S., you know, we have the sickest population in the world.
[343] Now, for the first time in the history of Western medicine, have discussions between physician and patient, how do we wean you off this drug?
[344] That conversation has never had before.
[345] Because it's always, if this doesn't work, come back and I'll prescribe you more drugs.
[346] Let's do the opposite.
[347] You come back and let's understand the root cause of disease.
[348] Let's say, okay, well, if we are addressing this, you don't need this medication.
[349] And if you don't need this medication, you don't need this medication.
[350] And now for the first time, you start weaning patients off of drugs, and what happens?
[351] You're now impeding upon the market share of these multibillion -dollar drug companies who make their living buying influence, regulating policy, influencing policy, and the FDA is a stepping stone to a board seat of Big Pharma.
[352] Every former FDA official in the U .S. for the past...
[353] 20 or 30 years, goes on to become multimillion -dollar salaried employee from Big Pharma.
[354] It has to stop.
[355] Despite spending nearly 20 % of the United States' GDP on health care, the U .S. ranks last overall on health outcomes among high -income countries, including having the highest infant mortality rates and lowest life expectancy.
[356] It's, like, unbelievable.
[357] No, I mean, that's depressing.
[358] I mean, but those are the facts.
[359] And you have to understand those are indisputable data, right?
[360] And so when people hear that, they go, but when you look at kind of the system, and I don't blame doctors because doctors get into this field.
[361] I was on the admissions committee to UT Medical School for a number of years.
[362] So we interviewed a lot of these young kids, figured out what their motivation was.
[363] Will they have a successful career in medicine?
[364] And almost everyone, I mean, there's always the exception, but everyone gets into medicine because They want to make a difference.
[365] They're driven by curiosity.
[366] And most of them want to leave a lasting legacy and help people.
[367] That's what drives entry into health care.
[368] But when you look at the system in which they're trained in, it prevents them.
[369] It basically handcuffs them.
[370] Because when you figure out the pay, the economic model of medicine, once you make a diagnosis, now you've got a diagnosable disease to which you have a finite number of responses.
[371] If you make this diagnosis, that's called an ICD -10 code, which is reimbursable, and that's how you get paid.
[372] So once you make a diagnosis, you only have a finite list of things you can do.
[373] You can't ask that question and go, well, what's really causing this?
[374] And spend 90 minutes with that patient because most physicians have to see 60, 70, 80 patients a day to pay the bills, to cover their overhead.
[375] So it's a factory.
[376] You come in.
[377] You look at, you've got a transcriber, you make a diagnosis, okay, I'm going to prescribe this medication, come back in two weeks or six months, and we'll see where you are.
[378] And then it's just, it's a churn, it's a meal.
[379] But as you meant, the data don't lie, right?
[380] Sickest population, highest infant mortality, and the most industrialized nation in the world.
[381] And according to the data, Americans are spending about 13 years of their life living with disease, and that is significantly higher than many.
[382] other high -income Western countries.
[383] So although life expectancy, you know, might be 70, 80 years old, you're going to spend almost 15 years of that time living with disease.
[384] So your health span is really probably the more important thing to be focusing on, not your lifespan.
[385] And so when we talk about nitric oxide, I've heard you describe it as the molecule of longevity.
[386] For sure.
[387] Why do you say that?
[388] Why do you say that?
[389] Look, longevity is this emerging field that's driven by...
[390] How do we live longer?
[391] How do we increase our health spend and longevity?
[392] Because I think we can all agree that nobody wants to live to be 100 years old if we spend the last 25 of that year as incapacitated, in a diaper, unable to get out of bed.
[393] That's not living.
[394] So when I look at longevity, I look at kind of what are the hallmarks of longevity?
[395] What defines longevity?
[396] How do we live longer, healthier life free of disease?
[397] And really, there's three objective measures.
[398] There's stem cells.
[399] This whole field of regenerative medicine is based on mobilizing our own stem cells or deploying stem cells throughout the body to repair and replace dysfunctional cells.
[400] So these stem cells are cells that can basically act as like Band -Aids, repairs for any part of our body?
[401] Well, we call them pluripotent stem cells.
[402] Some of these are bone marrow derived.
[403] Some of these are what we call stromal vascular fraction that you get from the adipose tissue or the fat.
[404] Pluripotent would mean multiple.
[405] That stem cell can go and become a neuron.
[406] That stem cell can go to the heart and become a functional myocyte.
[407] It can go and become a macrophage or an immune cell, a white blood cell.
[408] So pluripotent means it can become many things, whatever it needs to be.
[409] In some cases, the amount of stem cells present in our bone marrow get smaller with age.
[410] The number of cells decrease with age.
[411] But fortunately or unfortunately, the older we get, the more fat we deposit.
[412] And so we have a number of stem cells in our fat, so we increase the number of stem cells in our fat.
[413] So the problem with aging and longevity is when we lose the ability to mobilize our own stem cells.
[414] We can't repair and replace dysfunctional cells.
[415] So we have what we call zombie cells or senescent cells.
[416] They're there, but they can't do their job.
[417] They're dysfunctional.
[418] And that's what leads to age.
[419] Number two, it's telomeres.
[420] And telomeres are the ends of the chromosomes of our DNA.
[421] And so they're the very end.
[422] So it's like the tips of the shoestrings, right, that prevent the shoestring from fraying.
[423] And those are like the telomeres.
[424] So as long as you have a functional telomere and it prevents it from getting shorter, then shorter telomeres, shorter lifespan.
[425] Longer telomeres, longer lifespan.
[426] So when telomeres get shorter, it decreases our lifespan and longevity.
[427] And then the third one is mitochondrial function.
[428] Every age -related chronic disease.
[429] you have a lower number of mitochondria per cell, and the mitochondria that are present aren't functional.
[430] So you get what's called an uncoupling of the electron transport chain inside the inner mitochondrial membrane, and you can no longer effectively produce cellular energy or ATP.
[431] So nitric oxide is the foundational longevity molecule because nitric oxide is the signal in the body that tells our stem cells to mobilize and differentiate.
[432] Without nitric oxide, you have less number of circulating stem cells.
[433] Nitric oxide activates the enzyme telomerase, which prevents telomere shortening.
[434] Without nitric oxide, you don't get activation of telomerase, telomere shortening.
[435] And then nitric oxide is the signal in the cell that tells the cell, I need more mitochondria, and I need these mitochondria to be more efficient, generate more cellular energy with less oxygen.
[436] So when you restore nitric oxide, you address all three aspects of longevity.
[437] And there's no other molecule in the body that does that.
[438] You know Brian Johnson, don't you?
[439] Yes.
[440] What do you think of Brian Johnson?
[441] You know, I would never replicate or try to do what he does.
[442] I don't think it's the proper approach.
[443] You know, and I don't mean to criticize people because this whole field of biohacking.
[444] You know, you get people who have no science background, no medical background, no biochemical background, and yet they're out there influencing millions of people that follow them.
[445] And many times they're giving really bad advice, not intentionally.
[446] It's because of ignorance.
[447] They just don't know.
[448] They don't know the science.
[449] They don't know the medicine behind it.
[450] So before you go and follow any influencer or biohacker, number one, look at their credentials.
[451] And if they don't have any science background, if they're...
[452] you know, formal technologists or, you know, come from anything besides science and medicine, you really need to do a little bit of deep dive and make sure that what they're giving you is scientifically valid or recommending.
[453] He seems to be a fan of the role of nitric oxide as it relates to longevity there.
[454] He seems to have said positive things about nitric oxide and its impact on improving your cardiovascular health.
[455] Yeah, I think as we advance the science and we do more to communicate the complex science into you know, layman's terms where the non -scientists, non -medical professionals can understand it and appreciate it.
[456] I think more people are going to pick up to that.
[457] But there's also some well -known biohackers with influences of, you know, millions of people that still say that nitric oxide is a toxin that inhibits mitochondrial respiration and it should be avoided.
[458] Is there such thing as having too much nitric oxide though?
[459] Because if people hear this conversation today and they rush out and they, I don't know, overdo their nitric oxide by doing a bunch of...
[460] therapies.
[461] Is that a risk?
[462] Absolutely.
[463] You know, we know water is essential, right?
[464] But we can drink too much water and kill ourselves.
[465] You see it on the news a couple times a year called hypotonic lysis.
[466] So yeah, dose dictates poison.
[467] And so what we have to do is make sure, maintain the integrity of the field to make sure that if there are nitric oxide products out there, that number one, you don't overdo it and lead to health issues or kill a consumer, kill a patient, because that could kill the entire field.
[468] But we also understand that there's only two signs of toxicity for nitric oxide.
[469] So it's really pretty straightforward.
[470] Number one, if you take too much nitric oxide, you're going to get an unsafe drop in blood pressure.
[471] Just think about this.
[472] If you take nitric oxide or you're enhancing nitric oxide production through whatever means, it's going to lead to systemic vasodilation.
[473] Now you've got that same volume of blood pumping through much larger pipes.
[474] and you're going to have a drop in blood pressure.
[475] And if you lose perfusion pressure, you're not going to be able to perfuse the brain because you've got a pump against gravity, and you're going to get lightheaded and you'll pass out.
[476] And if that's prolonged, it leads to ischemic end organ damage and organ failure, and it can be deadly.
[477] So that's number one.
[478] And then number two is a condition called methemoglobinemia.
[479] And that's a big word, meaning that it oxidizes the iron of hemoglobin and reduces your oxygen -carrying capacity.
[480] So you'll become cyanotic.
[481] You'll get blue around the lips.
[482] Your extremities will turn, you know, white from lack of perfusion or lack of oxygen.
[483] But you never see that.
[484] I mean, you really never see clinical methemoglobinemia.
[485] Fortunately, your blood pressure will drop to an unsafe level long before you get any accumulation of methemoglobinemia.
[486] So on this point of longevity then, one of the points you mentioned there was telomere length.
[487] And I've heard about telomere length because I've heard about studies they've done in rats and I think other rodents around telomere length.
[488] So it was discovered that individuals with shorter telomeres had a death rate nearly twice of those with longer telomeres.
[489] And you're telling me that there has been research done that shows how nitric oxide can increase telomere length.
[490] Absolutely.
[491] So we understand.
[492] At the DNA level, at the nuclear level, that nitric oxide co -localizes with estrogen receptor to allow for the cell to turn on transcription and translation of the telomerase enzyme.
[493] So it's not only affecting the genetic transcription of that protein, but it's also regulating the function of the enzyme.
[494] So without nitric oxide, you have less telomerase enzyme.
[495] and that telomerase enzyme isn't functional.
[496] Okay, so nitric oxide has an impact on the telomerase...
[497] Telomerase enzyme, that's right.
[498] Telomerase enzyme.
[499] So what happens with each cellular division, those telomeres can get shorter.
[500] Yeah.
[501] Right?
[502] But as long as that telomerase enzyme is active, it prevents the shortening of the very ends of the chromosome.
[503] Okay, and just for people that don't understand, with every replication, as we age, we're continually replicating ourselves to restore and repair them.
[504] But in that replication process...
[505] harm is a cut sometimes.
[506] Yeah, and different cell types have different replication rates, right?
[507] So the epithelium of the gut is highly regenerative, right?
[508] It's replicatable.
[509] You're replacing these cells all the time because it's the outside environment that you're having to continue to replace those cells.
[510] Neurons, to the exact opposite, aren't regenerative by nature.
[511] So we don't typically make, I mean, we can.
[512] It was once thought that you can't regenerate neurons, but today we know we can't.
[513] But yeah, so it affects different organ systems.
[514] But the data are clear, shorter telomeres, shorter lifespan.
[515] The other thing that I wanted to talk to you about before we really get into the heart of how do I improve my nitric oxide levels or keep them at a healthy range while I age is nitric oxide's relationship with the oral microbiome.
[516] I had a conversation on this podcast not too long ago about the oral microbiome.
[517] Again, another subject I hadn't thought much about.
[518] But is there a relationship there?
[519] No doubt.
[520] I mean, this is probably 20 -year -old science.
[521] where we find that, you know, probably 20 years ago, the microbiome project was complete.
[522] And what that means is that the bacteria that live in and on our body were completely mapped out.
[523] And these communities were identified in the gut, started in the gut, the gastrointestinal tract.
[524] And then, you know, you can culture the skin flora.
[525] There's bacteria that live on our skin.
[526] There are bacteria that live in our colon.
[527] There are bacteria in women that...
[528] reside in the vagina.
[529] And so all of these different ecologies of bacteria that live in and on the body are there to do things to help the human host.
[530] We call this symbiosis.
[531] We're providing benefit to the bacteria and the bacteria are providing benefit to the human host.
[532] And so if we use antibiotics or antiseptics to kill the bacteria that live in and on our body, you get human disease.
[533] I mean, that's clear.
[534] And the best example is that there's no physician in the world that would recommend you or I take an antibiotic every day for the rest of our lives.
[535] Right?
[536] Do you agree with that?
[537] Yeah.
[538] And why is that?
[539] Because the antibiotics are killing the good bacteria.
[540] They kill the infectious pathogen bacteria, but they also destroy the entire microbiome.
[541] And when you disrupt the microbiome, you get systemic disease.
[542] You get vascular disease, you get Alzheimer's.
[543] You get leaky gut syndrome.
[544] You get autoimmune disease.
[545] You get high blood pressure.
[546] You get yeast infections.
[547] You get overgrowth of candida.
[548] You get parasites.
[549] So the bacteria are really the police of the human kind of surveillance, right?
[550] So we have 10 times more bacteria cells that make up the human than we have human cells.
[551] So we're 10 times more bacteria than we are human.
[552] And so if you destroy that microbiome, then it leads to systemic disease.
[553] We live in a culture where we're constantly trying to kill bacteria, right?
[554] We're like, especially post -pandemic, we're using all kinds of hand washes and antiseptics.
[555] And obviously the big, I guess, chemicals that we all typically use are things like mouthwashes, which are, again, trying to just clean out all the bacteria from our mouths.
[556] How would you caution someone on using these things?
[557] Even the antibacterial...
[558] Yeah, it's bad news.
[559] Really?
[560] Yeah.
[561] We give it to our children because we want our kids to be clean and not to have...
[562] Kids need to be dirty.
[563] And again, you look at epidemiological data.
[564] Kids who grow up in a rural area, they're out in the environment, they're rolling in dirt, they get dirt on them, and they're inoculated with a lot of bacteria.
[565] Those kids are the healthiest people.
[566] And you look later in life, they have lower incidence of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, they have better immune dysfunction, less autoimmune disease.
[567] So there's this whole hygienic principle or hygienic hypothesis of disease.
[568] And I don't think it's a hypothesis anymore.
[569] I think it's proven out.
[570] So for me, I go back and I go, why are we doing this?
[571] Why are we using fluoride rinses in dental offices?
[572] Why is there fluoride in our toothpaste?
[573] Why is there fluoride in the municipal water of 72 % of municipalities in the U .S.?
[574] When fluoride is a known antiseptic, it's a chemical toxicant, it's a thyroid toxicant, it kills your thyroid, and it's a neurological toxin.
[575] And so when you go back and look at the history of dentistry, over 100 years ago it was first identified that oral bacteria can be found in the plaque that killed someone from an acute heart attack.
[576] Right?
[577] People who died from sudden cardiac death, they'll take the thrombus or the embolus that occluded that coronary artery, and they basically biops it, and they find oral bacteria in that plaque that caused the heart attack or stroke.
[578] So that told us there's an oral systemic link.
[579] There's bacterial translocation of the pathogens.
[580] That's why bleeding gums are a problem.
[581] Because you've got bacteria in the mouth, you've got bleeding gums, there's open blood vessels for those bacteria to get into our blood supply.
[582] Now they become systemic.
[583] cause inflammation, plaque rupture, and heart attack and stroke.
[584] So 100 years ago, with reason, with good reason, they go, well, let's treat with an antiseptic.
[585] We have to kill all the bacteria in the mouth, so if you have bleeding gums, there's no translocation of that in systemic circulation, and we can prevent heart attack or stroke.
[586] That was 100 years ago, and we've learned a lot in those 100 years.
[587] Number one, it wasn't recognized that we have a microbiome.
[588] on our body, in our body.
[589] So now, when I ask dentists all the time, why do you use fluoride?
[590] And they go, well, it's been used for 100 years.
[591] And I go, I don't care what the question is, that's the worst answer you could provide, just because we're doing it because that's the way we've always done it, right?
[592] So now we have to understand, how do we selectively kill the pathogens while maintaining a healthy microbiome?
[593] And so this field started probably in the, I mean, some of the first papers were published probably in the 90s.
[594] showing that if you use mouthwash, it destroyed the microbiome, and we saw an increase in blood pressure.
[595] These papers were published in the late 2000s.
[596] We published on this probably in 2008, 2009.
[597] We created what's called an association.
[598] So people who had the healthiest and most diverse bacteria in their mouth had the best blood pressure.
[599] People who had the least diverse oral microbiome, and we could not culture any of these nitric oxide -producing bacteria, appeared to have the highest blood pressure.
[600] So that's what we call association.
[601] It's not causation, but it's a nice association.
[602] So in 2019, we published a paper showing, okay, now let's see if we do, if we take normal intensive patients, young, healthy people with good nitric oxide, good blood pressure, and we just give them mouthwash twice a day for seven days to kill the entire oral microbiome.
[603] And then we do tongue scrapings to see if we're killing the bacteria.
[604] and we do blood pressure measurements.
[605] And so we do that twice a day for seven days.
[606] Seven days we bring them back in, we measure their blood pressure, and then we stop for four days.
[607] We say, okay, don't take mouthwash for four days.
[608] Then come back, let's remeasure your blood pressure, and let's do tongue scrapings and figure out what's happening to these bacterial communities.
[609] And what we found was that if you eradicate the bacteria, within seven days your blood pressure goes up.
[610] So if you use mouthwash, Within seven days, your blood pressure goes up.
[611] I think it occurs earlier.
[612] But we looked at seven days.
[613] We only looked at day one at baseline, seven days, and then four days after stopping the mouthwash.
[614] But in one 21 -year -old kid, his blood pressure went up 26 millimeters of mercury.
[615] Which is, put that in context for me. That's clinically hypertensive.
[616] So for every one millimeter increase in blood pressure, that increases your risk of cardiovascular disease by 1%.
[617] So within seven days, we increased this kid's risk of cardiovascular disease by 26 % simply by giving him mouthwash.
[618] And explain to me in layman's terms the mechanism now.
[619] What's going on?
[620] Well, we're still trying to understand mechanism.
[621] Again, we're at the observational level that's really indisputable.
[622] Because these bacteria, there's what we call nitrate -reducing bacteria.
[623] And humans do not have this enzyme.
[624] So nitrate is what's found in green leafy vegetables.
[625] These plants assimilate nitrogen in the soil in the form of nitrate.
[626] We consume these vegetables.
[627] The nitrate is taken up in the gut.
[628] It's concentrated in our salivary glands.
[629] And the bacteria perform this metabolism of nitrate into nitrite and nitric oxide.
[630] And humans do not have the functional enzyme to do this.
[631] We're 100 % dependent upon the bacteria.
[632] So then now, because nitrate is inert in humans, We rely on the bacteria to metabolize this molecule into a usable form where we can make nitric oxide.
[633] So when you're killing the bacteria, now the nitrate is just being recirculated, but you're urinating because it's filtered across the kidneys.
[634] You poop it out and you sweat it out.
[635] So it's completely unchanged unless you have the right bacteria.
[636] And what we're finding is that that oral production of nitride and nitric oxide being produced in the acid environment of the stomach is somehow regulating resistance arteries and dilation to normalize systemic blood pressure.
[637] So if I don't have a healthy oral microbiome, then...
[638] You have an elevation in blood pressure.
[639] And much of the things you're talking to me about today in terms of dietary changes won't have any effect anyway because I need...
[640] the bacteria, to convert it into nitric oxide?
[641] As it relates, there are many benefits of many nutrients in foods, particular plants, that confer some health benefits.
[642] But when we focus specifically on the benefits of nitric oxide from your diet, if you don't have the right oral bacteria, you get zero nitric oxide benefits from your diet.
[643] Now, you're going to get, you know, obviously, hopefully vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin D from foods, fiber, other phytonutrients.
[644] But in terms of the blood pressure lowering effects of, for instance, a plant -based diet, if you don't have the right bacteria, you get zero benefits of that.
[645] Have you seen a link between oral health and cancer?
[646] Yes, absolutely.
[647] What have you seen?
[648] People that have dental infections, root canals, cavitations from previous extraction sites.
[649] have typically cancer.
[650] It sets the stage for cancer cell growth and proliferation.
[651] I made a controversial statement on a previous podcast where I say, number one, I'm not an oncologist, but people who have terminal metastatic disease who aren't ready to die, who are sent home to die on hospice, somehow find me and go, can you help me with this cancer?
[652] So the first thing I always send them to is a dentist to see, do you have any active oral infections?
[653] that may have led to the development of the primary tumor in the first place.
[654] But obviously, it's metastatic, meaning that it's now everywhere.
[655] It's migrated outside that primary tumor.
[656] But almost always, without fail, they have an active oral infection.
[657] And it may be a symptomatic infection to where they know it and they have a toothache, or it may be an asymptomatic infection where they don't even know they got a dental infection.
[658] What percentage of cancer patients that you see that you then refer to a dentist have an oral infection?
[659] People with primary tumors.
[660] Solid tumors.
[661] So we categorize these in blood -borne cancers, something like lymphoma, leukemia, multiple myeloma, which is a blood -borne cancer, and those that have a solid tumor, a primary tumor that starts in the breast, the colon, the prostate, the lungs, or the liver.
[662] Without fail, 100 % of them have dental infections.
[663] But cause and effect is not possible to establish here, right?
[664] Cause and effect?
[665] No, I don't think we're there yet.
[666] I think probably as the science advances and people start to look at this.
[667] Because you may imagine, if you have cancer, and you've been to the best cancer doctors in the world, and you've done surgery, you've done chemo, you've done radiation, you've gone through the standard of care, and the cancer comes back, it's terminal, it's metastatic, and when I tell people, well, you need to go see a dentist.
[668] I mean, many people laugh, and they go, what in the hell did you just say?
[669] I've got cancer, I don't have a dental problem.
[670] And I go, well, perhaps you do.
[671] Because, again, if you go back, and I always look back, what's held true throughout ages?
[672] And if you look at Ayurvedic medicine, if you look at traditional Chinese medicine, if you look at acupuncture, and if you go back and you look, if you don't know what to look for, you're never going to find it.
[673] If you know what to look for, it's out there.
[674] It's in the published literature.
[675] But every tooth in the body is connected to an organ system, right?
[676] And so these are the meridians, the acupuncture meridians.
[677] you know, the analogy is they're circuit breakers.
[678] So if you trip a breaker in your home, there's no electricity going through that circuit.
[679] So your oven doesn't work, your refrigerator doesn't work, your lights go out.
[680] Well, the body is electric, right?
[681] And how do we diagnose death?
[682] No electrical activity, right?
[683] Either through an EKG or an EEG.
[684] So the body is electric and we're batteries.
[685] And so...
[686] If that red light comes on on our phone, it says we have a low battery.
[687] Everybody panics and goes and plugs it in and charges, right?
[688] And the human body is the exact same.
[689] We lose voltage over time.
[690] And if you've got a trip breaker from an infected tooth, there's no voltage, there's no circuitry going to that meridian that feeds individual organs.
[691] So the best example is if you've got a root canal and 100 % of root canal teeth are infected.
[692] And when you think, and people go, well, that's not true.
[693] Well, think about what a root canal is.
[694] You had a toothache at some point because of an infection.
[695] So you go to the dentist and they pull the nerve root out of that tooth.
[696] So you don't feel the pain anymore because there's no nerve root there.
[697] And they pull the blood supply out of that tooth.
[698] Now you have no blood supply to that tooth.
[699] And a tooth is a crystalline structure.
[700] It's a living organ.
[701] With no blood supply and no nerve root, that's a dead tissue.
[702] So if you were to go in and we'd disconnect your gallbladder, for example, and just cut the blood supply to it, the nerve supply to it, within seven or 10 days, you'd be dead from sepsis.
[703] Nobody leaves dead tissue in the body.
[704] And so then what happens is, when you leave the dentist, what do they do?
[705] They put you on an oral antibiotic.
[706] But they must have forgotten they took out the blood supply to that infected site, so an oral antibiotic isn't going to reach the site of infection.
[707] I mean, to me, when you sit back and think about this and go, Who the hell does this, and why do they do it?
[708] Well, it's because of what we've always done.
[709] So then what happens is these anaerobic bacteria, they don't need oxygen.
[710] They're sitting there in an anaerobic, low -oxygen environment, and they're just eating away at your jawline.
[711] They're just like us do.
[712] They metabolize.
[713] They take stuff in.
[714] They poop waste out.
[715] Those waste products accumulate.
[716] It shuts down voltage, and they eat away at your jawline.
[717] So then you've got osteonecrosis, osteomyelitis, and you don't even know it.
[718] And an x -ray will not show it.
[719] And most dentists, unfortunately, still use x -rays instead of a higher resolution CT.
[720] It's really interesting.
[721] I was doing some research in preparation for this conversation around the subject of oral microbiome and cancer and the link there.
[722] And one particular study that was done and published in the New York Post, but done by a team of researchers, found that this was done at New York University as well.
[723] So it was published by the New York Post and done at New York University.
[724] They analyzed saliva samples of over 160 ,000 participants over 15 years.
[725] Are you familiar with this study?
[726] and they identified over a dozen bacteria species linked to a high risk of head and neck cancers, with certain bacteria increasing the risk by 50 % of getting a cancer, which is pretty shocking.
[727] Literally, I feel like texting my assistant and asking us to book an oral hygienist and to change my mouthwash.
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[747] They've shown that wearing Vivo Barefoot shoes for six months can increase foot strength by up to 60%.
[748] vivobarefoot .com slash DOAC and use code DOAC20 for 20 % off.
[749] That's vivobarefoot .com slash DOAC.
[750] Use code DOAC20.
[751] A strong body starts with strong feet.
[752] If I've just listened to everything you've just said there and I want to improve my oral microbiome, what should I be doing?
[753] Well, I think the most important thing we've learned is what you shouldn't be doing.
[754] Yeah.
[755] So it's not what should we do, it's what we shouldn't be doing.
[756] Number one, we have to get rid of fluoride.
[757] You know, just this past weekend, I was speaking at a dental conference in Salt Lake City, and there were people there from the National Toxicology Program, which in the U .S. is the organization tasked with if there's any kind of risk of exposure of environmental toxicant, they're charged with doing the toxicology studies to see if there's an increased risk.
[758] What is the risk?
[759] And is there a safe level that is without risk?
[760] And what they report is that fluoride...
[761] There's no benefit of fluoride, and it's all risk.
[762] It lowers IQ in kids by as much as seven points.
[763] And it shuts down your thyroid function.
[764] And it's a neurotoxin.
[765] And as I mentioned before, most toothpaste has fluoride in it.
[766] And if you read the back of your toothpaste, it will tell you, at least in the U .S., I don't know about in other countries, but it says if you swallow this, call poison control.
[767] Because it's a poison.
[768] They're putting poison in toothpaste.
[769] And then if you also pay attention, it says only put a pea -sized amount of toothpaste on your toothbrush.
[770] A pea -sized.
[771] But everybody that I know fills the entire bristle of the toothbrush with toothpaste.
[772] So that's about 10 or 15, sometimes 20 pea -sized amounts of toothpaste.
[773] And a pea -sized amount of toothpaste contains about half a milligram of fluoride.
[774] Now, if you're using...
[775] 10, 20 times more than that pea size, now you're exposed to 5 milligrams, 10 milligrams of fluoride.
[776] And you don't even have to swallow it.
[777] This is a very small molecule, a molecular weight of 19.
[778] So it's absorbed directly across the buccal mucosa, the oral cavity, and it becomes systemic.
[779] I'm not going to use it anymore.
[780] No, you shouldn't.
[781] What should I use instead?
[782] You have to use a non -fluorinated toothpaste.
[783] And what about things like tongue scrapers?
[784] Now, tongue scrapers, the data, again, that's time tested.
[785] That's an ancient practice.
[786] And even in our study, we found that people who do tongue scraping have a more diverse oral microbiome and they seem to have better oral health.
[787] Why is this?
[788] My girlfriend's been banging on to me. She's always bloody right.
[789] My girlfriend's been banging on to me about tongue scraping for the last two years.
[790] And I've kind of just ignored her.
[791] I've just kind of, yeah, babe, sure.
[792] And when she's not in the bathroom, I'm not using her tongue scraper.
[793] Because it just looks strange.
[794] For me, based on what I knew about the oral microbiome and the microbiome generally, I'm like, should I be scraping off all my bacteria?
[795] Well, if you're going to plant a garden, do you plant a garden on untilled soil?
[796] Listen, I know nothing about gardening.
[797] That's kind of the wrong guy.
[798] So maybe, yes.
[799] I grow my own food.
[800] Okay.
[801] So you have to till the soil, right?
[802] You've got to break up the soil so the seeds actually can be aerated.
[803] And you break up that...
[804] That biofilm.
[805] Yeah, you take the back of the dorsal tongue, I mean, almost to the point of the gag reflex, and you just pull that ideally copper tongue scraper forward, and you're going to see this goop coming in there.
[806] But it's kind of like tilling the soil, and it's increasing the diversity of the dorsal part of the tongue, the microbiome.
[807] So my girlfriend was right.
[808] In that regard, yes.
[809] But what we found was in that one kid, we saw the greatest increase in blood pressure.
[810] If you tongue scrape, and use antiseptic mouthwash, that's the absolute worst scenario.
[811] Interesting.
[812] Just think about this.
[813] You're tongue scraping, you're opening up the pores, and now you're using mouthwash.
[814] It's better to easily penetrate deep in the crypts of the tongue and more effectively kill the bacteria.
[815] So you want to tongue scrape and then use a toothbrush without fluoride toothpaste?
[816] Absolutely, and no antiseptic mouth rinse.
[817] Okay.
[818] And what about going to dental hygienists and things like that?
[819] Do you think that's an advisable idea?
[820] Because once every quarter or so, I'll go and see a dental hygienist just to get everything sort of cleaned out.
[821] No, I think that's a good proactive practice.
[822] But, you know, because you need to look at the health of the gum tissue and the gingival tissue and a routine clean and scraping the plaque off the teeth and making sure you have good mineralization of the enamel of the tooth is good.
[823] never let them do a fluoride rinse on you.
[824] Okay.
[825] Is there anything else on the subject of your microbiome and its relationship with nitric oxide that I need to be aware of before we move on?
[826] Yeah, there's also data showing that if you use mouthwash, you lose the cardioprotective benefits of exercise.
[827] So think about this.
[828] We know that diet and exercise is the best medicine.
[829] And many people aspire to do that.
[830] They go and they try to eat good.
[831] They avoid the temptations of sugars and sweets.
[832] They exercise every day to try to increase their longevity and cardiovascular health.
[833] If you do that and you're using mouthwash, you no longer get the benefits from exercise.
[834] And we've already established you don't get the nitric oxide benefits from diet.
[835] So two out of three Americans wake up every morning and use mouthwash.
[836] And two out of three Americans have an unsafe elevation in blood pressure.
[837] What's the mechanism there?
[838] Well, because you're killing the oral microbiome that's partly responsible for production of nitric oxide.
[839] And nitric oxide.
[840] Without nitric oxide, you get constriction of blood vessels, and it leads to high blood pressure.
[841] That's crazy.
[842] And is there a link between our hormone levels, things like my testosterone levels, and the nitric oxide?
[843] Yeah, so this is a two -way street.
[844] So in men, testosterone activates nitric oxide production.
[845] Okay.
[846] In women, estrogen activates and stimulates nitric oxide production.
[847] Okay.
[848] So as long as we have optimal sex hormones, and as long as the enzyme in the lining of the blood vessel can functionally produce nitric oxide, that explains the cardioprotective benefits of hormone replacement therapy.
[849] Got you.
[850] So taking testosterone or estrogen therapies helps to increase myonidric oxide levels?
[851] As long as the enzyme is functional and coupled.
[852] which means that we have to understand the enzymology and the biochemistry of that reaction to where when it's exposed to testosterone, the cell can actually make nitric oxide in response.
[853] And there's a two -way relationship as well with exercise then, because I've read in your book that exercise activates and stimulates nitric oxide production, but you also just told me that if you want to get the great benefits of exercise, you need nitric oxide in the first place, because else your blood cells are going to be very narrow.
[854] less oxygen traveling through you're going to do a worse workout as well presumably well think about i mean there's other agonists too like vitamin d i mean most americans are deficient in vitamin d people with low testosterone have erectile dysfunction and why is that because they're not stimulating nitric oxide production and they're not dilating the blood vessels so they develop ed so all of this no matter what it is whether it's related to vitamin d deficiency which is activating or stimulating nitric oxide if it's low hormones if it's a poor diet sedentary lifestyle, all of that can be explained by insufficient nitric oxide production.
[855] When I think about the role that food plays in my nitric oxide production, what should I be eating to increase my nitric oxide levels or to keep them at a healthy level?
[856] I think the same answer is for that too.
[857] It's not so much what we should be eating, it's what we should not be eating.
[858] Okay.
[859] So we'll cover those step by step.
[860] Number one, you have to avoid sugar and high glycemic index foods.
[861] Because sugar is a toxin, it's a poison.
[862] And let's think about what sugar is.
[863] So when we eat sugar or drink sugar beverages, right, whether it's sucrose, whether it's fructose, whether it's high fructose corn syrup, the end result inside the human is we see an increase in glucose.
[864] So elevation in blood sugar or blood glucose.
[865] is diabetes, right?
[866] And now there's continuous glucose monitors that you can get anywhere.
[867] And everybody does this.
[868] So if you eat something and it causes an increase in your blood sugar, blood glucose, then you should avoid that.
[869] Because glucose, as the name applies, is glue, right?
[870] It's sticky.
[871] And if you have a soda and you spill it on your countertop, you come back the next day, it's sticky, right?
[872] That's what happens inside the body.
[873] That sugar sticks to everything.
[874] It sticks to proteins.
[875] It sticks to enzymes.
[876] It binds to hemoglobin.
[877] And sugar stuck to hemoglobin is what we call hemoglobin A1C.
[878] And what is that?
[879] It's a marker of long -term glucose control.
[880] If you have hemoglobin A1C of greater than 5 .7, you're diabetic.
[881] So it's not just hemoglobin it sticks to.
[882] It sticks to the enzyme that makes nitric oxide.
[883] And in biochemistry and enzymology, enzymes have to be able to undergo conformational changes, right?
[884] So it transfers electrons from one donor to an acceptor, and that's how biochemistry is done.
[885] But if sugar is stuck to that enzyme, it locks it in some conformation and it can't do its job.
[886] For instance, it can't make nitric oxide.
[887] So sugar is an absolute poison, and it kills many enzymes and binds to everything.
[888] And it lowers nitric oxide production?
[889] Absolutely.
[890] That's why diabetics have a 10 -time higher incidence of heart attack, stroke, all -cause mortality.
[891] That's why they develop neurological or peripheral neuropathy.
[892] That's why they have non -healing wounds.
[893] There's no nitric oxide.
[894] That's why they're developing diabetic retinopathy, macular degeneration, pancreatitis.
[895] I mean, all of that can be traced back to a lack of nitric oxide production because the sugar is stuck to the enzyme.
[896] The sugar destroys the oral microbiome and completely changes the ecology of the bacteria and completely shuts down nitric oxide production.
[897] Just a bit of a tangent there.
[898] You mentioned that's why they have open wounds that don't heal.
[899] Yeah, diabetic ulcers.
[900] Okay, so nitric oxide's playing a healing role in wounds and scars?
[901] Absolutely.
[902] So I've got this scar on my head.
[903] I was playing football the other day.
[904] Someone ran into the back of my head, and they passed out and got taken away by an ambulance.
[905] But I was just left with this big scar on the back of my head, which I've had glue stitched.
[906] So I'm wondering.
[907] I'm like, if I...
[908] Apply the nitric oxide serum.
[909] It'll stimulate blood flow to that.
[910] It'll improve cellular turnover and heal that wound and basically remediate the scar.
[911] And how do I do that?
[912] Yeah, so you take one pump from each side.
[913] So one pump from this side.
[914] Turn it around, one pump from the other.
[915] Yeah.
[916] And now if you apply that and mix it together, as soon as you mix it together, it starts to generate nitric oxide gas.
[917] So then that gas will diffuse into that tissue.
[918] It's going to increase blood flow.
[919] And it's going to mobilize stem cells.
[920] And it's going to improve cellular turnover and completely remodel that and heal that.
[921] And if it were an infection in there, it would kill the infectious bacteria.
[922] Okay, well, we shall see if that works.
[923] So back on this point of food then.
[924] So sugar's bad.
[925] Sugar's bad.
[926] Yeah, you've got to eliminate sugar.
[927] And I think the benefits of a straight ketogenic diet or a straight vegan vegetarian diet is just the elimination of sugar and carbs.
[928] Yeah.
[929] Right?
[930] But I think...
[931] To answer your question, what should we be eating?
[932] I think you've got to eat a balanced diet in moderation.
[933] You know, Americans are overfed.
[934] All you've got to do is walk around and see the epidemic of obesity.
[935] Good high -quality protein, good quality fats, and little or no carbs.
[936] And it's really that simple.
[937] And why did you write a book about beetroots?
[938] Beets, yeah, the beets hit really the airwaves back in 2012 in the London Olympic Games.
[939] There was a lot of data coming out at the time of the benefits of beetroot juice on enhancing athletic performance.
[940] And there was a benefit of the nitric oxide being produced that could explain the improvement in athletic performance.
[941] The problem is these athletes were drinking liters and liters of beetroot juice and causing a lot of gastric discomfort, causing diarrhea.
[942] Their urine and their feces would turn red, and a lot of people misinterpreted that as gastric bleeds or urinary bleeds.
[943] And then when I started looking at the products on the market, most of the beet products, the desiccated beet powders, provided zero nitric oxide benefit.
[944] They didn't contain any nitrate, no nitrite.
[945] They were just, we called them dead beets.
[946] They're a dead beet product.
[947] And so I thought if consumers are out there looking for beets because they've been shown to enhance their performance, but that enhancement in performance was dependent upon the bead's ability to improve nitric oxide production in the body, then the non -scientists out there wouldn't know what to look for, right?
[948] They're buying products that aren't providing any benefit to them.
[949] And so years ago, we would do randomized placebo -controlled clinical trials, and we would take some of these commercial bead products that you can go to your local nutrition store or pharmacy, buy off the shelf, and we would use those as placebos in our clinical trials because it's the perfect placebo.
[950] So what I tried to do in that book is educate, okay, what is it about beets that are so important?
[951] What's the mechanism and what is necessary in those beets that can improve nitric oxide production?
[952] So again, everything I do is intended to educate and inform the consumer so that they know how to make informed, educated choices on the products they're taking or the foods they're eating or their oral hygienic practices.
[953] I'm trying to find the page in your book, but there was a page in your book where you describe beetroot as the most underappreciated food in the history of eating.
[954] Yeah, that may be in the Beat the Odds.
[955] I thought it was in this book.
[956] But if you go back to historical times and you look at the hieroglyphics on caves of the ancient cavemen, you know, people thought they were drinking wine because they would have these red stuff in this before battle.
[957] But what these ancient Egyptians were doing was they were drinking beet juice to improve their performance before they went into battle so that they were ready, they were energized, they improved their circulation.
[958] So that's the historical study on beets.
[959] And obviously, these were beets grown at a time when there were no herbicides, pesticides, and the soil was probably fertile.
[960] So these beets were full of nutrients, probably full of nitrate that provided the benefits of that.
[961] But unfortunately today, the beets that are grown, at least in America, really are nutrient depleted just like most of the food.
[962] So would you recommend people eat beetroots?
[963] No, because as we, again, through our survey that we published in 2015, we realized that you really can't eat enough beets to get enough nitrate to improve your performance.
[964] And the other caveat is that if you're using mouthwash, you've got fluoride in your toothpaste or fluoride in your drinking water that you're mixing the beet powder in, you're not going to get a nitric oxide benefit from it.
[965] There's a graph in front of me here, which I printed off, which shows the rise in antacid medications.
[966] Oh, yeah, from 2004 to a 20 -year period, we're seeing, what is that, almost a quadrupling of the use of antacids.
[967] And this is globally, or is this in the US?
[968] That's worldwide, I believe.
[969] Yeah, worldwide.
[970] Now, this is the problem.
[971] I mean, these antacids...
[972] What is an antacid?
[973] So it's a medication that's given...
[974] orally to suppress stomach acid production.
[975] And as a biochemist and physiologist, I can't think of nothing more damaging than to inhibit stomach acid production.
[976] Because stomach acid is required to break down proteins into amino acids, whether you're eating animal protein or plant -based protein.
[977] It's required for nutrient absorption.
[978] You need stomach acid to absorb B vitamins.
[979] You need stomach acid to absorb selenium, chromium, iodine.
[980] magnesium, iron.
[981] I mean, most nutrients, micronutrients are absorbed in the lumen of the stomach.
[982] And if the stomach is not making stomach acid, then these nutrients are not absorbed.
[983] And most Americans, 75 % of Americans are deficient in magnesium.
[984] 95 % of Americans are deficient in iodine.
[985] I mean, it's a huge problem.
[986] These are the brands like Gavascone.
[987] No, these are like the Prilosec, the Prevacids, the Nexium, the prescription medications are Omeprazole, Pantoprazole.
[988] Today in the U .S., I think it's probably worldwide, you don't even need a prescription for these from your physician.
[989] You can go to your local drugstore and you can buy these what we call proton pump inhibitors or PPIs.
[990] What about Tums?
[991] So there's a difference.
[992] So Tums and things like baking soda are a buffer.
[993] right, sodium bicarb or calcium carbonate, and it's a buffer, right?
[994] So if you have an acute bout of hypersecretion of acid, you can take a Tums or some buffer, some base alkaline substance to neutralize the acid.
[995] Neutralizing acid is completely different than inhibiting its natural production in the pyloric cells of the stomach.
[996] So what is the difference between some, have you heard of Gaviscon before?
[997] Yes.
[998] Yeah.
[999] What's the difference between like a Gaviscon?
[1000] Well, there's certain classes of antacids.
[1001] There's what we call H2 blockers.
[1002] There's proton pump inhibitors.
[1003] And then there's the natural buffers that are just kind of neutralizing the acid environment in the stomach.
[1004] Gaviscon, I'm trying to think what class that falls under.
[1005] I don't think it's widely used here in the U .S. I mean, the main drugs used here are Prilosec, Nexium, Prevacid.
[1006] Those are the over -the -counter.
[1007] And then the main prescription medications are the omeprazole and the pentoprazole.
[1008] Gaviscon is a commonly used antacid brand, and the active ingredients are aluminium hydroxide and magnesium carbonate.
[1009] Oh, so Gaviscon, so number one, it's got aluminium in it, which should absolutely be avoided.
[1010] But yeah, it looks like a buffer.
[1011] It's got aluminium hydroxide, which is a strong base, so it's neutralizing the stomach acid production.
[1012] But it's...
[1013] It's a neutralizing agent, but anything that contains aluminum, you should absolutely avoid.
[1014] I mentioned it a few times today, but my girlfriend's a breath practitioner.
[1015] She runs a business called BaliBreathWork .com, hashtag ad.
[1016] And one of the things she's talked to me a lot about is mouth breathing.
[1017] And I know there's a relationship between nitric oxide and how we choose to breathe, whether it's through our nose or through our mouths.
[1018] Can you explain to me that link?
[1019] You know, when we talk about the enzyme that's found in the lining of the blood vessels, when we started this segment, that same enzyme is found in our epithelial cells, in our upper airways, in our sinuses.
[1020] So just like exercise can activate nitric oxide production in the lining of the blood vessels, deep breathing, nasal breathing activates that enzyme in the epithelial cells of our sinuses.
[1021] And so when we do nasal breathing, it's activating the enzyme to make nitric oxide.
[1022] And now we're delivering that nitric oxide gas into the bronchioles, the lower airway.
[1023] It's dilating those bronchioles.
[1024] Moreover, it's dilating the pulmonary arteries.
[1025] So now we're improving oxygen uptake, oxygen delivery.
[1026] And that's why nasal breathing and deep breathing has been shown to lower blood pressure.
[1027] This is a pretty crazy graph I took from Google as well, which shows just how interested people are now getting in the subject of mouth breathing.
[1028] Oh, yeah.
[1029] Again, going over the past 20 years.
[1030] Yeah, no, I think there's a lot of people.
[1031] I mean, obviously your girlfriend, there's a Patrick McEwen in the UK.
[1032] He came into Dragon's Den.
[1033] I made him an offer in Dragon's Den.
[1034] Yeah.
[1035] No, I think the benefits of that are pretty well, and mechanistically we understand the benefits of it.
[1036] So the mouth breathers are not only bypassing this natural nitric oxide production pathway, but when you mouth breathe, it completely changes the microbiome.
[1037] And so you're not only bypassing the nitric oxide producing in the upper airway, but you're inhibiting nitric oxide production in the mouth from the microbiome because you're fully oxygenating the mouth.
[1038] It's changing the pH of the saliva and completely changes the microbiome and completely shuts down nitric oxide production.
[1039] Interesting.
[1040] Interesting.
[1041] So you have to, I mean, I'm a big fan of mouth taping.
[1042] But for me, and I watch my kids, but sometimes there's anatomical issues where there's obstructive airways and airway obstruction that has to be corrected by dental appliances or sometimes surgery.
[1043] But the worst thing you can do is tape your mouth and your airway be constricted and you suffocate.
[1044] So before you do mouth taping, you need to get...
[1045] you know, some imaging done from your dentist to make sure that your airway is open to where if you're forced to breathe through your nose, you can actually have oxygen exchange.
[1046] And is there anything else that I could and should be doing to increase and improve my nitric oxide levels that we haven't talked about yet?
[1047] Humming, you know, there are certain frequencies.
[1048] We've done this in looking at nitric oxide coming out of the exhaled breath when you're humming.
[1049] So certain frequencies can activate this enzyme.
[1050] And it's dependent upon the volume of the nasal sinuses.
[1051] So there's not one frequency that would work in every single person.
[1052] Because the volume of your airways and oral cavity and sinuses was probably much different than mine.
[1053] Give me an example.
[1054] Show me. Well, if you just, you know, like ohms, like you do in meditation or just simple humming, you could actually, so if I had my ozone or gas phase analyzer here, I could hum.
[1055] And I could detect nitric oxide coming out of my exhaled breath.
[1056] Because of the frequency of the...
[1057] Because of the frequency and activating the nitric oxide synthase enzyme.
[1058] But if you take older patients, and we've demonstrated this, it's published years ago, other groups have demonstrated this.
[1059] Older patients, that their enzyme isn't making nitric oxide, whether they do nasal breathing or whether they do humming, there's no nitric oxide coming out.
[1060] So again, this is an activator and a stimulator, but it's dependent upon the function of the enzyme that makes nitric oxide.
[1061] If your enzyme is broken...
[1062] Humming, nasal breathing exercise isn't going to produce any nitric oxide.
[1063] Is there anything else that I should be aware of if I'm trying to improve my nitric oxide levels?
[1064] I think it's doing the things that disrupt it.
[1065] Get rid of fluoride.
[1066] Get rid of mouthwash.
[1067] Stop using antacids.
[1068] Stop eating sugar.
[1069] Anything that leads to an elevation in blood sugar.
[1070] A balanced diet in moderation.
[1071] Moderate physical exercise.
[1072] 20 -30 minutes of sunlight a day.
[1073] Sunlight?
[1074] Sunlight.
[1075] There are certain...
[1076] At both ends of the visible spectrum, both are...
[1077] the UV spectrum, and the full -spectrum infrared.
[1078] So those frequencies and vibrations, again, stimulate nitric oxide release.
[1079] So the UV has enough energy to where it'll knock nitric oxide bound to a cysteine thiol and protein, and then the UV spectrum will release nitric oxide bound to metals.
[1080] So you mean go out in the sunshine, but also those red light?
[1081] Beds and stuff?
[1082] Yeah, I have a red light bed.
[1083] I have an infrared sauna that uses red lights in it, and I use it every day.
[1084] For nitric oxide production?
[1085] Yeah.
[1086] And there's other benefits of light.
[1087] You know, it can stimulate mitochondrial biogenesis.
[1088] It improves energy production.
[1089] It can lower blood pressure.
[1090] But yeah, lots of benefits of light therapy.
[1091] And yet...
[1092] We're programmed to not go outside.
[1093] If we go outside, put on SPF 60 and intoxicate ourselves with these cancer -causing chemicals in sunscreen, it makes no sense.
[1094] What is the most important thing we haven't talked about that we should have talked about today, Dr. Nathan?
[1095] You know, I think the future of...
[1096] Well, I don't think.
[1097] I know.
[1098] You know, there's three levels of conviction.
[1099] You think, you believe, and you know.
[1100] I'm at the point of knowing now that the future of medicine and health care...
[1101] around the globe is going to be dependent upon nitric oxide product technology.
[1102] Because I think we can inform and instruct people to stop doing things or start doing things, but the most difficult thing to do is to change people's habits and to get people out of their comfort zone and stop drinking sugar soda waters, eliminate sugar to the best extent possible, get 20, 30 minutes of exercise a day, and completely change your diet.
[1103] Compliance is an issue.
[1104] People don't do that.
[1105] We're programmed to want to take a pill to overcome everything.
[1106] Nitric oxide is very important, but it's not a silver bullet.
[1107] It's not going to overcome all your bad habits, but what it is going to do, it's going to correct a lot of the things that your bad habits are leading to a deficiency of.
[1108] Well, it's a good thing we have a lot of people that are devoted to finding new solutions.
[1109] old problems and you're certainly one of those people and it's super fascinating because as you say as i said at the start of this conversation i had no idea about any of this stuff beforehand i had no idea i'd not really even heard the word nitric oxide and maybe i'd heard it in passing but um maybe i was confusing it with that nos gas that people talk about and that some people inhale and maybe because i hadn't added context and story and understanding to it Maybe I'd heard it in passing, but didn't know what it was or meant.
[1110] So it's really wonderful that you're leading the charge and educating the world on nitric oxide, because it's clearly a really, really important molecule in the broader picture of our health.
[1111] And the more we understand it, the more we ask questions about it and have curiosity about it, the higher the probability that we're going to be able to build some of these therapies that prevent us from...
[1112] Ending up in a state, as we've seen in some of these graphs, where we're deficient in nitric oxide and then have to deal with the downstream consequences of that.
[1113] So thank you for all the work that you're doing.
[1114] It's really, really important.
[1115] I'm going to ask you one final question, which is the question left by our previous guest.
[1116] They don't know who they're leaving it for and they write it into this diary.
[1117] So the question that's been left for you is, are you happily or unhappily mated and why?
[1118] happily or unhappily mated.
[1119] You know, one of my biggest challenges in life is maintaining balance, right?
[1120] Because I've been so focused on, you know, discovery and research and leaving a lasting legacy and making innovations and doing things in the scientific and medical community that many people said couldn't be done.
[1121] And so my problem is, is there's always a deficiency.
[1122] You know, I've got young kids.
[1123] I spend a lot of...
[1124] a lot of time away.
[1125] And, you know, that's, you know, I'm happily mated, but there's deficiencies, right?
[1126] Because, again, my challenge is always maintaining balance, work, home life, kind of maintaining, you know, my spiritual, my, you know, it's mental, it's physical, and it's spiritual health.
[1127] I'm trying to do better at that now, but, you know, you can't, there's always sacrifice, right?
[1128] And we just have to pick our sacrifices and So I've got to choose to do better.
[1129] Yeah.
[1130] Everything has a trade -off, as many of my guests have told me. Thank you so much for the work that you do.
[1131] If people want to find out more about you, if they want to read more, they should certainly get this book which you've just released called The Secret of Nitric Oxide.
[1132] I'll link it below for anyone that wants to have a read of this book.
[1133] I highly recommend you do because it gives an even more comprehensive understanding of everything we've talked about today.
[1134] And it's incredibly accessible, which is always critically important to me. But if they want to find out more, if they want to understand the products that you sell and anything else, where do they go?
[1135] Well, I mean, obviously, I'm here to educate an informal nitric oxide.
[1136] You know, this latest book, The Secret of Nitric Oxide, Bringing the Science to Life, really chronicles both my kind of...
[1137] journey through science and medicine, as you revealed kind of my early years and kind of what motivated me to go in this space.
[1138] But I think more importantly, it tells the story of nitric oxide, what it is, what led to a Nobel Prize for its discovery, what you can do to prevent the loss of this molecule.
[1139] So you can go to nathansbook .com or you can get it anywhere books are sold, Amazon, Barnes and Noble.
[1140] I've got a YouTube channel, Dr. Nathan S. Bryan Nitric Oxide, where we provide education, information, latest scientific information on nitric oxide.
[1141] You can find me on social media, Instagram, Dr. Nathan S. Bryan.
[1142] And then for those who want to follow our product journey and bringing forth safe and effective product technology, that's n101 .com.
[1143] So it's the letter N, the number one, letter O, number one .com.
[1144] But we make products that release nitric oxide.
[1145] Dr. Nathan Bryan, thank you so much for your time today and being so incredibly generous.
[1146] But thank you so much for educating the world in such an articulate and accessible way on a subject that few of us knew very little about.
[1147] It's incredibly important work, and it's inspired me to think again about my diet and about the decisions I make, the habits I have about exercise, about sunlight exposure, about my oral microbiome, all of these things.
[1148] So thank you so much for that.
[1149] It's a real gift, and I appreciate you taking the time today.
[1150] Thank you so much.
[1151] Pleasure being with you.
[1152] This has always blown my mind a little bit.
[1153] 53 % of you that listen to this show regularly haven't yet subscribed to this show.
[1154] If you like the show and you like what we do here and you want to support us, the free simple way that you can do just that is by hitting the subscribe button.
[1155] And my commitment to you is if you do that, then I'll do everything in my power, me and my team, to make sure that this show is better for you every single week.
[1156] We'll listen to your feedback, we'll find the guests that you want me to speak to, and we'll continue to do what we do.
[1157] Thank you so much.