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  • Is Creatine Safe and Efficient for High Homocysteine?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Is Creatine Safe and Efficient for High Homocysteine?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Those on a healthy plant-based diet who have elevated homocysteine levels despite taking sufficient vitamin B12 may want to consider taking a gram a day of contaminant-free creatine.

    The average blood levels of homocysteine in men are about 1.5 points higher than in women, which may be one of the reasons men tend to be at higher risk for cardiovascular disease. Women don’t need to make as much creatine as men since they tend to have less muscle mass. That may help explain “the ‘gender gap’ in homocysteine levels.” If you remember from my previous video and as seen below and at 0:36 in The Efficacy and Safety of Creatine for High Homocysteine, in the process of making creatine, our body produces homocysteine as a by-product. So, for people with stubbornly high homocysteine levels that don’t respond sufficiently to B vitamins, “creatine supplementation may represent a practical strategy for decreasing plasma homocysteine levels”—that is, lowering the level of homocysteine into the normal range. 

    It seemed to work in rats. What about humans? Well, it worked in one study, but it didn’t seem to work in another. It didn’t work in yet another either. And, in another study, homocysteine levels were even driven up. So, this suggestion that taking creatine supplements would lower homocysteine was called into question. 

    However, all those studies were done with non-vegetarians, so they were already effectively supplementing with creatine every day in the form of muscle meat. In that way, researchers were testing higher versus lower supplementation. Those eating strictly plant-based make all their creatine from scratch, so they may be more sensitive to an added creatine source. There weren’t any studies on creatine supplementation in vegans to lower homocysteine until now. 

    Researchers took vegans who were not supplementing their diets with vitamin B12, so some of their homocysteine levels were through the roof. A few were as high as 50 when the ideal is more like under 10, for example. After taking some creatine for a few weeks, all of their homocysteine levels normalized. You can see the before and after in the graph below and at 2:04 in my video

    Now, they didn’t normalize, as that would have been a level under 10, but that’s presumably because they weren’t taking any B12. Give vegetarians and vegans vitamin B12 supplements, either dosing daily or once a week, and their levels normalize in a matter of months, as you can see below and at 2:20 in my video. However, the fact that you could bring down homocysteine levels with creatine alone, even without any B12, suggests—to me at least—that if your homocysteine is elevated (above 10) on a plant-based diet despite taking B12 supplements and eating greens and beans to get enough folate, it might be worth experimenting with supplementing with a gram of creatine a day for a few weeks to see if your homocysteine comes down. 

    Why just a single gram? That’s approximately how much non-vegetarians do not have to make themselves; it’s the amount that erased vegetarian discrepancies in blood and muscle, as you can see in the graph below and at 3:01 in my video, and how much has been shown to be safe in the longer term. 

    How safe is it? We can take a bit of comfort in the fact that it’s “one of the world’s best-selling dietary supplements,” with literally billions of servings taken, and the only consistently reported side effect has been weight gain, presumed to be from water retention. The only serious side effects appear to be among those with pre-existing kidney diseases taking whopping doses closer to 20 grams a day. A concern was raised that creatine could potentially form a carcinogen known as N-nitrososarcosine when it hit the acid bath of the stomach, but, when it actually put to the test, researchers found this does not appear to be a problem. 

    Bottom line: Doses of supplemental creatine up to 3 grams a day are “unlikely to pose any risk,” provided “high purity creatine” is used. However, as we all know, dietary supplements in the United States “are not regulated by the US Food and Drug Administration and may contain contaminants or variable quantities of the desired supplement” and may not even contain what’s on the label. We’re talking about “contaminants…that may be generated during the industrial production.” When researchers looked at 33 samples of creatine supplements made in the United States and Europe, they found that they all actually contained creatine, which is nice, but about half exceeded the maximum level recommended by food safety authorities for at least one contaminant. The researchers recommend that “consumers give their preference to products obtained by producers that ensure the highest quality control and certify the maximum amount of contaminants present in their products.” Easier said than done.

    Because of the potential risks, I don’t think people should take creatine supplements willy-nilly, but the potential benefits may exceed the potential risks if, again, you’re on a healthy plant-based diet and taking B12, and your homocysteine levels are still not under 10. In that case, I would suggest giving a gram a day of creatine a trying to see if it brings it down.

    The reason I did this whole video series goes back to “Risks of Ischaemic Heart Disease and Stroke in Meat Eaters, Fish Eaters, and Vegetarians Over 18 Years of Follow-Up: Results from the Prospective EPIC-Oxford Study,” which found that, although the overall cardiovascular risk is lower in vegetarians and vegans combined, they appeared to be at slightly higher stroke risk, as you can see in the graph below and at 5:06 in my video

    I went through a list of potential causes, as you can see at 5:11 and below, and arrived at elevated homocysteine. What’s the solution? A regular, reliable source of vitamin B12. The cheapest, easiest method that I personally use is one 2,500 mcg chewable tablet of cyanocobalamin, the most stable source of B12, once a week. (In fact, you can just use 2,000 mcg once a week.) And, again, a backup plan for those doing that but still having elevated homocysteine is an empirical trial of a single gram a day of creatine supplementation, which was shown to improve at least capillary blood flow in those who started out with high homocysteine levels. 

    In sum, plant-based diets appear to “markedly reduce risk” for multiple leading killer diseases—heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and many common types of cancer—but “an increased risk for stroke may represent an ‘Achilles heel.’ Nonetheless, vegans have the potential to achieve a truly exceptional ‘healthspan’ if they face this problem forthrightly by restricting salt intake and taking other practical measures that promote cerebrovascular [brain artery] health…Nonetheless, these considerations do not justify nutritional nihilism. On balance, low-fat vegan diets offer such versatile protection for long-term health that they remain highly recommendable. Most likely, the optimal strategy is to adopt such a [plant-based] diet, along with additional measures—appropriate food choices, exercising training, judicious supplementation [of vitamin B12]—that will mitigate the associated stroke risk.” And try not to huff whipped cream charging canister gas. Leave the “whippets” alone.

    This concludes my series on stroke risk. If you missed any of the other videos, see the related posts below.

    I’m assuming that nearly everyone taking their B12 will have normal homocysteine levels, so these last two videos are just for the rare person who doesn’t. However, those on a healthy plant-based diet with elevated homocysteine levels despite taking sufficient vitamin B12 should consider taking a gram a day of contaminant-free creatine, which should be about a quarter teaspoon.

    Where do you get contaminant-free creatine? Since regulations are so lax, you can’t rely on supplement manufacturers no matter what they say, so I would recommend going directly to the chemical suppliers that sell it to laboratories and guarantee a certain purity. Here are some examples (in alphabetical order) of some of the largest companies where you can get unadulterated creatine: Alfa Aesar, Fisher Scientific, Sigma-Aldrich, and TCI America.

    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • The Best Pumpkin Spice Latte Recipe

    The Best Pumpkin Spice Latte Recipe

    Where I live, autumn inevitably brings cooler temperatures, fuzzy sweaters, an abundance of root vegetables and a frenzy for pumpkin-spiced everything – especially the pumpkin spice latte.

    Pumpkin spice, if you make it at home with actual spices, is an incredible mix of nutrient-dense aromatics like cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and nutmeg. Problem is, many of us aren’t actually using real spices for our pumpkin spice lattes, pumpkin pies or pumpkin baked goodies – or real pumpkin, either. Instead, we’re grabbing pumpkin-flavoured processed foods and cruising by coffee shops to grab a $7 pumpkin spice latte. (I also just learned the horrifying fact that pumpkin spice hair colouring is a thing. Make it stop!)

    Let’s take a look at a couple of coffee shop pumpkin spice latte menu items and see what we find.

    Exhibit A:

    Milk, Pumpkin Spice Sauce (Sugar, Condensed Skim Milk, Pumpkin Puree, Contains 2% or Less of Fruit and Vegetable Juice for Color, Natural Flavors, Annatto, Salt, Potassium Sorbate), Brewed Espresso, Whipped Cream (Cream {Cream, Milk, Mono and Diglycerides, Carrageenan}, Vanilla Syrup (Sugar, Water, Natural Flavors, Potassium Sorbate, Citric Acid), Pumpkin Spice Topping (Cinnamon, Ginger, Nutmeg, Clove, Sulfiting Agents).

    This is a concoction of sugar, preservatives, imitation flavours, and dairy – all of which we know are detrimental to our health. Processed white sugar is a highly addictive substance linked to weight gain, dental caries, blood sugar imbalance, diabetes, and cancer. Dairy, in all its conventional forms, can cause allergies, digestive issues, antibiotic resistance, and deplete our bone health. Carrageenan is inflammatory, particularly in the digestive tract, while those other ‘natural flavours’ and food additives are anything but natural.

    Exhibit B:

    Espresso, Pumpkin Spice Flavored Syrup (Fructose, Water, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Nonfat Milk, Annatto Extract {color}, Caramel Color, Potassium Sorbate {preservative}, Xanthan Gum, Salt, Sucralose), Whole Milk (Milk, Vitamin D Added).

    With the first example, at least there was some pumpkin puree and spices in the topping. Here, there isn’t any pumpkin puree or pumpkin spice at all – just a pumpkin-flavoured syrup loaded with fructose, artificial flavours and colours, and artificial sweeteners that are way, way worse for us than white sugar (you can read this post about artificial sweeteners for more info).

    We can definitely do better.

    Ultimate Pumpkin Spice Latte: The Spices

    Spices are an important part of any dairy-free pumpkin spice latte. I like to buy my spices in small amounts to ensure freshness, and purchase them whole and grind them myself wherever I can. Even though spices are dried, they will still contain volatile, potent compounds that can dissipate with age (or if you aren’t buying decent spices, they won’t be there in the first place).

    Another thing to watch out for in your spices is irradiation. Food irradiation is a growing problem as it damages the nutrients found in our foods, destroys helpful bacteria, and hasn’t been proven safe for human consumption. Ask your local grocer or health food store for non-irradiated spices, or purchase them online.

    If you love adding pumpkin spice to everything you make from October through December, try making your own batch of pumpkin spice mix and use it throughout the fall.

    DIY Pumpkin Spice Mix

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    Description

    DIY your own pumpkin-spiced creations with this simple spice mix


    • 2 Tbsp ground cinnamon
    • 1 Tbsp ground ginger
    • 1 tsp allspice
    • 1 tsp ground cloves
    • 1 tsp ground nutmeg
    • 1 tsp ground anise
    • 1 tsp turmeric (super optional and not traditional but I love it!)


    1. Measure out all ingredients.
    2. Add to a small mason jar and shake shake shake.

    • Prep Time: 5 mins
    • Category: Condiment

    Ultimate Pumpkin Spice Latte: The Pumpkin

    A good pumpkin spice latte has to include actual pumpkin! So many pumpkin recipes call for pumpkin puree and most of us hop over to the store and buy a can of pumpkin. But pumpkin doesn’t grow in cans. It grows from the ground and grows a-plenty locally. You’ll be surprised how easy it is to make your own pumpkin puree from scratch.

    Fresh pumpkin has an abundance of outstanding nutritional benefits. Pumpkin is:

    • Abundant in beta-carotene, an antioxidant that helps maintain our skin and vision and prevents oxidative damage.
    • Rich in carotenoids that help regulate blood sugar.
    • Rich in dietary fibre to keep us pooping regularly.
    • High in lutein and zeaxanthin. These funny-sounding guys are potent antioxidants that prevent free radical damage in the lenses of our eyes.
    • Rich in Vitamin C, which keeps our skin, hair, and nails glowing throughout the winter.
    • High in potassium – this is helpful for those concerned about blood pressure.
    • About 90% water, making pumpkin very hydrating.
    • You can even eat the flowers. If you grow your own pumpkin, make squash blossoms!

    Try roasting or cooking your own pumpkin – it doesn’t need to be a gigantic one, you can find smaller versions – and then save the puree in the fridge or freezer to use in pumpkin spice lattes, smoothies, soups, and even chili or hummus. One can of pumpkin is equivalent to about 2 cups of fresh pumpkin puree if you’re using a recipe that calls for the canned version.

    Here is one of my favourite dairy-free pumpkin spice latte recipes. With fresh pumpkin and spices, Dandy blend (a herbal coffee alternative), and natural sweeteners, this is a wonderful elixir that will fuel your day, rather than detract from your health.

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    Description

    A delicious pumpkin spice latte using whole and unprocessed ingredients.


    • 1 1/2 cups hot water (for a more decadent option, try almond milk or coconut milk)
    • 1/4 cup fresh pumpkin puree
    • 2 Tbsp Dandy Blend
    • 1 Tbsp raw honey or maple syrup
    • 1 Tbsp coconut oil or ghee
    • 2 tsp Pumpkin Spice Mix
    • Pinch of salt
    • For a chocolate version: add 1 Tbsp cacao powder
    • For extra decadence: add coconut whipped cream on top (recipe below)


    1. Add all ingredients into a blender and blend until smooth.

    • Prep Time: 5 mins
    • Category: Beverage

    Need more Elixir magic inspirations?

    Download my Ultimate Elixir Recipes Infographic, by simply entering your info below

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    Description

    You won’t miss cow’s milk at all when you dollop your elixirs with this dairy-free coconut whipped cream.


    • Coconut Cream (this is the thick solidified top layer from a chilled can of full-fat coconut milk).
    • 2 tsp honey or maple syrup
    • 1 tsp vanilla extract


    1. Chill your can of coconut milk for about 8 hours in the fridge, and then remove the thick cream from the top and place in a large mixing bowl.
    2. Add your sweetener and vanilla extract.
    3. Use an electric hand mixer or some serious muscle and a whisk until soft peaks start to form. If it’s too thick, you can add back some of the remaining liquid from your coconut tin, 1 Tbsp at a time.

    And, if you’re looking for more pumpkin inspiration:

    Images: iStock/nata_vkusidey , VeselovaElena

    Meghan Telpner

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  • Surprise Announcement From our Course Supervisor

    Surprise Announcement From our Course Supervisor

    Surprise Announcement: Summary

    In Surprise Announcement, Detective Ev introduces Elizabeth Gaines, the course supervisor for the Functional Diagnostic Nutrition (FDN) program, to discuss their unique ‘5in5’ workshop. This workshop is a comprehensive resource designed to allow participants to understand the FDN system without committing to the full course, offering high-level clinical education and foundational lab teachings. Elizabeth and Evan explain how this workshop helps potential practitioners gauge if the FDN course aligns with their interests and professional goals while showcasing its depth through practical case studies and extended Q&A sessions with experienced mentors and clinical advisors.

    The ‘5in5’ workshop revolves around examining lab results in detail, focusing on how various lab values correlate to a person’s overall health and lifestyle. The goal is to provide a well-rounded understanding of the FDN methodology, emphasizing the importance of context when interpreting lab data. Each day of the workshop builds upon the previous one, creating a cohesive narrative that ties the data back to a specific individual’s health journey. The workshop highlights the unique approach of FDN in looking beyond numbers on a lab report and considering factors such as diet, sleep, exercise, stress levels, and medical history.

    The case study for this particular 5in5 workshop involves ‘Jackie,’ a 48-year-old woman experiencing various health issues amidst personal upheavals. The hosts also stress the affordability and accessibility of this intensive, yet enlightening program, with permanent access to all session recordings. The 5in5 offers valuable insights to both potential FDN course participants and practicing health coaches or practitioners, enriching their understanding of personalized health recommendations and the broader definition of stress and its impact on health.

    Surprise Announcement: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to Elizabeth Gaines and FDN Content

    00:45 What is the 5in5 Workshop?

    02:14 The Importance of Context in Lab Values

    04:55 Details and Benefits of the 5in5 Workshop

    09:02 Case Study: Meet Jackie

    12:20 Practical Takeaways for Health Coaches

    15:42 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

    Event: 5 Labs in 5 Days – Functional Labs Workshop
    Purpose: To show the audience the FDN methodology – walking through a case study.
    Dates: September 16-19 (12 pm PT / 3 pm ET) 
    Dates: September 20 (9 am PT/12 pm ET)

    Click here for more information!

    Cost: $33
    Replays available? Yes. Each day’s replay will be sent out within 24 hours.

    Where: San Diego, CA

    When: October 17-19, 2024

    Join with others who are building their health businesses. Learn how to launch, scale, or expand your business. Gain insight through case studies, personal accounts, practical strategies and understand what you need to make your business a success in the functional health space.

    Click here for more information

    More About FDN

    Go to our Health Detective Podcasts for more informational and functional health-oriented podcasts like this one.

    LEARN MORE ABOUT US

    Try FDN for FREE! 

    COURSE OVERVIEW

    DRESS WORKSHOP

    STRESS & HORMONE WORKSHOP

    5in5 WORKSHOP

    MEDICAL DIRECTOR PROGRAM

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED (UPCOMING LIVES)

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED – FREE EXPERT LED TRAINING SESSIONS

    FDN METHODOLOGY

    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

    Source link

  • Are low carb diets associated with T2D? – Diet and Health Today

    Are low carb diets associated with T2D? – Diet and Health Today

    Introduction

    No sooner had I written the 700th Monday note – ending with how bad nutritional epidemiology is – my inbox started to fill up with the next piece of bad nutritional epidemiology.

    An Australian study grabbed the headlines in Australia and some of my supporters down under sent me links to the paper and/or articles about it. One of these kind people was Dr Peter Brukner who used to be the doctor for the Australian cricket team. Peter is also a friend and a fellow speaker on the diet and health circuit. He also helped Shane Warne, among other sports people, to understand the power of a low-carb diet for losing weight without loss of performance.

    The paper was called “Association of low carbohydrate diet score with the risk of type 2 diabetes in an Australian population: A longitudinal study” and it was by Kabthymer et al (Ref 1). A quick glance at the paper made me realise this was going to be an easy one to take apart.

    Zoe

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  • Combat Burnout: Strategies to Reclaim Your Health

    Combat Burnout: Strategies to Reclaim Your Health


    Combat Burnout: Summary

    In Combat Burnout, Becca Kyle, a certified FDN practitioner and holistic health practitioner, shares her expertise in helping entrepreneurs and professionals combat burnout and rejuvenate their nervous systems. She delves into her extensive background in gut health, hormones, genetic testing, and more, explaining how functional labs and personalized health roadmaps can fast-track individuals back to vibrant health. Becca emphasizes the importance of understanding and addressing biochemical stressors and works passionately to help clients take ownership of their health and wellness through strategic, holistic approaches.

    Becca also discusses her personal health journey, highlighting her struggles with unexplained health issues, fertility challenges, and eventually discovering her own tick-borne illness. She finds fulfillment in applying the functional health principles that significantly improved her life to her clients’ unique situations. This episode covers how chronic and acute stress, combined with hidden biochemical stressors like mold and toxins, contribute to burnout. Becca describes how accurately assessing these stressors and creating tailored protocols can restore balance and resilience.

    To effectively overcome burnout, Becca suggests starting with foundational health habits like adequate morning sun exposure, balanced nutrition, and sleep hygiene. She underscores the value of rest and play in one’s daily routine. Additionally, Becca shares her methods for maintaining mental wellness, including creative and physical play, setting time buffers, and establishing clear boundaries. Listeners are encouraged to explore specific emotional and biochemical root causes of burnout through professional guidance to achieve comprehensive healing and empowerment.

    Combat Burnout: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to Becca Kyle

    01:29 Becca’s Personal Health Journey

    06:32 Understanding Burnout

    14:11 Hidden Stressors and Biochemical Imbalances

    18:47 The Role of Functional Labs

    28:24 Understanding Burnout and Soil Depletion

    29:31 The Impact of Modern Farming Practices

    30:57 Symptoms as Communication from the Body

    32:05 Type A Personalities and Chronic Disease

    33:55 Foundations for Addressing Burnout

    35:33 The Importance of Rest and Play

    48:44 Personalized Healing Journeys

    52:51 Connecting with Holistic Obsession

    Where to Find Becca Kyle

    Event: 5 Labs in 5 Days – Functional Labs Workshop
    Purpose: To show the audience the FDN methodology – walking through a case study.
    Dates: September 16-19 (12 pm PT / 3 pm ET)
    Dates: September 20 (9 am PT/12 pm ET)

    Click here for more information
    Cost: $33
    Replays available? Yes. Each day’s replay will be sent out within 24 hours.

    Where: San Diego, CA

    When: October 17-19, 2024

    Join with others who are building their health businesses. Learn how to launch, scale, or expand your business. Gain insight through case studies, personal accounts, practical strategies and understand what you need to make your business a success in the functional health space.

    Click here for more information

    More About FDN

    Go to our Health Detective Podcasts for more informational and functional health-oriented podcasts like this one.

    LEARN MORE ABOUT US

    Try FDN for FREE! 

    COURSE OVERVIEW

    DRESS WORKSHOP

    STRESS & HORMONE WORKSHOP

    5in5 WORKSHOP

    MEDICAL DIRECTOR PROGRAM

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED (UPCOMING LIVES)

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED – FREE EXPERT LED TRAINING SESSIONS

    FDN METHODOLOGY

    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

    Source link

  • Creatinine to Normalize Homocysteine in Vegetarians?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Creatinine to Normalize Homocysteine in Vegetarians?  | NutritionFacts.org

    What are the consequences of having to make your creatine rather than relying on dietary sources?

    “Almost universally, research findings show a poor vitamin B12 status among vegetarians” because they aren’t taking vitamin B12 supplements like they should, which results in an elevation in homocysteine levels. This may explain why vegetarians were recently found to have higher rates of stroke, as you can see in the graph below and at 0:30 in my video Should Vegetarians Take Creatine to Normalize Homocysteine?.

    Of course, plant-based eating is just one of many ways to become deficient in vitamin B12. Even nitrous oxide (laughing gas) can do it in as little as two days, thanks to the recreational use of whipped cream canister gas. (I just learned about “whippits”!)

    When researchers gave vegetarians and vegans as little as 50 daily micrograms of cyanocobalamin, which is the recommended and most stable form of vitamin B12 supplement, their homocysteine levels, which had started up in the elevated zone, normalized right down into the safe zone under 10 mmol/L within only one to two months. Just 2,000 micrograms of cyanocobalamin once a week gave the same beautiful result, as you can see in the graph below and at 1:15 in my video

    Not always, though. In another study, even 500 daily micrograms, taken as either a sublingual chewable or swallowable regular B12 supplement, didn’t normalize homocysteine within a month, as shown below and at 1:24. Now, presumably, if the participants had kept it up, their levels would have continued to fall as they did in the 50-daily-microgram study.

    If you’re plant-based and have been taking your B12, but your homocysteine level is still too high (above 10 mmol/L), is there anything else you can do? Well, inadequate folate intake can also increase homocysteine, but folate comes from the same root as foliage. It’s found in beans and leaves, concentrated in greens. If you’re eating beans and greens, taking your B12, and your homocysteine level is still too high, I’d suggest taking 1 gram of creatine a day as an experiment, then getting your homocysteine levels retested in a month to see if it helped.

    Creatine is a compound formed naturally in the human body that is primarily involved with energy production in our muscles and brain. It’s also formed naturally in the bodies of many other animals. So, when we eat their muscles, we can also take in some of the creatine in their bodies through our diet. We only need about 2 grams of creatine a day, so those who eat meat may get about 1 gram from their diet and their body makes the rest from scratch. There are rare birth defects where you’re born without the ability to make it, in which case, you have to get it from your diet. Otherwise, our bodies can make as much as we need to maintain normal concentrations in our muscles.

    As you can see in the graph below and at 2:54 in my video, when you cut out meat, the amount of creatine floating around in your bloodstream goes down.

    However, the amount in your brain remains the same, as shown in the graph below and at 2:57. This shows that dietary creatinine doesn’t influence the levels of brain creatine, because our brain makes all the creatine we need. The level in vegetarian muscles is lower, but that doesn’t seem to affect exercise performance, as both vegetarians and meat eaters respond to creatine supplementation with similar increases in muscle power output. If vegetarian muscle creatine were insufficient, then presumably an even bigger boost would be seen. So, all that seems to happen when we eat meat is that our body doesn’t have to make as much. What does all of this have to do with homocysteine?

    As you can see below and at 3:36 in my video, in the process of making creatine, our body produces homocysteine as a waste product. Now, normally this isn’t a problem because our body has two ways to detoxify it: by using vitamin B6 or a combination of vitamin B12 and folate. Vitamin B6 is found in both plant and animal foods, and it’s rare to be deficient. But, vitamin B12 is mainly found in animal foods, so its level can be too low in those eating plant-based who don’t also supplement or eat B12-fortified foods. And, as I mentioned, folate is concentrated in plant foods, so it can be low in those who don’t regularly eat greens, beans, or folic-acid-fortified grains. Without that escape valve, homocysteine levels can get too high. However, if you’re eating a healthy plant-based diet and taking your B12 supplement, your homocysteine levels should be fine. 

    What if they aren’t? We might predict that if we started taking creatine supplements, our level of homocysteine might go down since we won’t have to make so much of it from scratch, producing homocysteine as a by-product, but you don’t know until you put it to the test. I’ll cover that next. 

    This is the eleventh in a 12-video series exploring stroke risk. If you missed the last two, see Vegetarians and Stroke Risk Factors: Vitamin B12 and Homocysteine? and How to Test for Functional Vitamin B12 Deficiency.

    This whole creatine angle was new to me. I had long worried about homocysteine levels being too high among those getting inadequate B12 intake, but I didn’t realize there was another potential mechanism for bringing it down other than with vitamin B. Let’s see if it pans out in my final video of the series: The Efficacy and Safety of Creatine for High Homocysteine

    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • Can I Drink Diet Soda on my Weight Loss Journey? – Healthy Nest Nutrition

    Can I Drink Diet Soda on my Weight Loss Journey? – Healthy Nest Nutrition

    Research suggests that diet soda may actually hinder your scale goals and harm your health.

    Twigs From the Nest: Our holistic nutritionist answers client’s most common questions. 

    Can drinking one Diet Coke a day be bad for you if you’re trying to lose weight? What about artificial sweeteners? Does diet soda cause sugar cravings? We crack the can on the latest research surrounding diet soda and weight loss.

    Diet soda was first introduced in the 1950s for people with diabetes. Though it was later marketed to people trying to control their weight or reduce their sugar intake. Today, almost every popular sugar-sweetened beverage on the market has a “light” or a “diet” version — Diet Coke, Coke Zero, Pepsi Max, Sprite Zero, etc. Instead of sugar, artificial sweeteners such as aspartame, cyclamates, saccharin or sucralose are used to sweeten these fizzy drinks. The health effects of these sweeteners remain fairly controversial.

    Sure, diet drinks are advertised as a healthier option to their full-sugar counterparts, but are they really helping with our weight loss journeys? Research suggests that diet sodas may actually hinder your scale goals and harm your health.

    Here’s what we know:

    • Diet soda is essentially a mixture of carbonated water, artificial or natural sweetener, colors, flavors and other additives.
    • Diet soda intake has been associated with an increased risk of developing chronic diseases, including metabolic syndrome, a cluster of symptoms that raises your risk of heart disease and diabetes, along with contributing to belly fat and high blood sugar.
    • A study involving 749 adults found that the waist circumference gain of people who consumed diet soda daily was nearly four times greater than non-consumers over a 10-year period.
    • Sweet-tasting foods, even when they don’t contain calories like Diet Coke, can stimulate the dopamine pathways in the brain associated with pleasure and reward. Some people may crave more sweet foods after drinking diet soda because the brain is primed for sweetness but doesn’t get the expected energy (calories).
    • Artificially sweetened drinks may also disturb gut bacteria balance, and alter blood sugar regulation.
    • The carbonation in Diet Coke can cause bloating or discomfort in some people, but this usually doesn’t have a direct impact on fat loss.
    • There’s some evidence that regular consumption of artificially sweetened beverages may alter the body’s response to sweetness. This may potentially impact metabolism and blood sugar regulation. These changes could make it harder for some people to lose weight, although more research is needed to understand the full impact.

    The Verdict

    Years of research suggest that diet drinks aren’t the waistline-friendly choice that they’re made out to be. Drinking Diet Coke in moderation likely won’t sabotage your weight loss, especially if it helps you avoid higher-calorie alternatives. However, it’s essential to monitor how it affects your overall appetite, food choices, and cravings. Staying hydrated with water and focusing on whole, nutritious foods will be key in supporting your weight loss goals.

    It’s best to reduce your intake of artificially sweetened drinks as much as possible. If you’re used to having several diet drinks per day, slowly start replacing them with sparkling water.

    For help finding your personalized nutrition plan, schedule a complimentary consultation with a holistic nutritionist. See if Healthy Nest is right for you!

    Sources: Healthline, National Library of Medicine

    Healthy Nest Nutrition

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  • Healthy Nest: An Evolution in Personalized Nutrition – Healthy Nest Nutrition

    Healthy Nest: An Evolution in Personalized Nutrition – Healthy Nest Nutrition

    It’s been 15 years since Robin Hutchinson launched Healthy Nest Nutrition (HNN), a private nutrition therapy practice in Denver. Robin’s vision of helping people eat better to feel better unfolded with a newly minted degree in holistic nutrition therapy. With all three kiddos happily in school, Robin worked hard from 8:30am to 2:30pm for years. Then, she’d dash to pick up the kids, run carpool and make dinner. Those were very busy years. We’ve been working towards an evolution in personalized nutrition ever since.

    Food as Medicine

    It took a minute to connect the dots and learn how to talk about food as medicine, but that became a cornerstone for the practice. There are a couple of other important guiding principles that have made Healthy Nest stand the test of time. Personalized nutrition is key. No one’s life is the same as their neighbor’s. Their body needs, schedules, likes and dislikes, etc. are different and that translates to different food needs. Also, meeting people where they are and nudging them toward more delicious homemade real food is key. The notion of food as fuel — and also honored for its cultural significance — acknowledging that we use food for many things, including celebrations. 

    We’ve realized it’s not about making perfect food choices all the time, but rather more of the time, and being happy for the sweet and salty foods that are not perfect, but certainly feed us in other ways. Put these important factors together and it is a gentle way to create food changes that most people respond to beautifully.

    A Shift in Focus

    In the early years, the practice focus was geared toward women and health, weight loss + maintenance, digestive health and family nutrition. Fast forward to today, with a small team of dedicated food-obsessed nutrition researchers—still led by Robin—and all three kids in college or beyond, Healthy Nest is busy. And now, as Robin has grown and matured, so have her curiosities. No longer talking about picky eaters in the house, the emphasis has shifted slightly to what she currently struggles with. Middle age health and wellness, specifically menopausal weight loss and maintenance, are in sharp focus. The weight thing is STILL such an issue for LOTS of people, but we’re also focused on staying strong in mind and body and aging gracefully.

    Weight Loss Evolved 

    Using technology to help guide personalized nutrition priorities, getting help in the kitchen in many different forms, watching the body’s numbers—all kinds of numbers from exercise, to circulating glucose to tests like cholesterol panels, hormones and HbA1C—we get as precise with food as possible for the best possible outcomes. We don’t lose sight of the fact that food is supposed to be fun, delicious and easy. If we just looked at the numbers, we’d feel like robots. So, keeping the yum is part of our special sauce. We’ve gotten pretty good at figuring out a well-rounded approach that includes detailed plans for the omnivore, vegetarian and pescatarian. We continue to do weight loss in a big and positive way.

    Testing

    Many times, people come to us with stubborn weight loss, or wanting more energy, more focus and clarity, more memory, more sleep and less bloating. Changing foods can help with all of these things. Sometimes, food changes alone will help, but not solve the whole problem. Sometimes you need more info. That’s what testing is used for at Healthy Nest. There are fantastic evolved food sensitivity panels, detailed hormone panels, micronutrient tests, and comprehensive microbiome panels that we can use.

    Vitamins + Supplementation

    Also, there are bioavailable supplementation answers for hormone health and balance, gut bacteria reinoculation and support, micronutrient targeting, digestive assistance, and generally feeling good. We tend to suggest supplementation as an added work horse to be used in addition to food changes. 

    So, in 15 year’s time, we’ve learned a lot and have adapted to Robin’s focus and clients’ needs. We’re still talking about weight loss and weight maintenance in a meaningful way. We’re also talking about other age-related issues, because SO many of them are impacted by diet in a positive and negative way. And we STILL believe that finding your best diet is a worthy life-long gift.

    We LOVE solving your issues with food changes. Let us help you eat differently and toward your better health. Reach out for a complimentary consultation to see if Healthy Nest Nutrition is right for you.

    Healthy Nest Nutrition

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  • Easy Fall Recipes – Healthy Nest Nutrition

    Easy Fall Recipes – Healthy Nest Nutrition

    Fast, easy fall recipes for whipping up dinner using the ingredients you have on hand.

    Hope everyone had a nice summer filled with love, laughter, adventure and fun. As we settle into fall, the days get shorter, mornings get chillier, and schedules change. Midweek patio gatherings drop off, travel winds down and the kids start school. All of those things bring new routines — and new easy fall recipes!

    For me, fall means more continuity of schedule including scheduled workout classes on Monday and Wednesdays. It means a sweatshirt and leggings more than a t-shirt and shorts. Foodwise, It means heartier salads, maybe with some roasted veggies included. Tomato and basil platters give way to roasted cauliflower. Because I tend to have less ‘extras’ taking me out of the house at dinnertime in the fall, I can focus, plan, cook more and eat at home more. Fall is a happy place for me.

    Throw-Together Meals + Half-Made Prepping

    When I spend more time in the kitchen, I tend to have more grocery ingredients in the fridge and pantry. I tend to have a plan for quick, whole-food easy throw-together meals. Throw-together meals are colorful, easy and take little time to put on the table. 

    At Healthy Nest, we use in-season ingredients. Here’s why: you never get bored. It’s a deliberate goal. And it’s easy to do, if you’ve planned, shopped and maybe even prepped a little ahead of time. HOW do you get better at this? Look 24 hours ahead. When you’re making and cleaning up dinner, do a quick prep for the next day. Add another pan to the stove and saute some onions or make some quinoa. Roast the potatoes or cauliflower (to reheat tomorrow). Add spice to chicken. Wash lettuce, chop carrots, etc. That way, you’ve half made the meal, and it comes together quickly the next day. This half-making is so helpful and it’s very easy to do with fall cooking.

    Here are a couple of fall recipes I’ve started making:

    Teriyaki Bowl

    Modified from The Clean Plate, Paltrow
    Fresh, great flavors and an easy throw-together with make-ahead components.

    Make Ahead: Marinate chicken + grate + roast cauliflower. Make teriyaki sauce (or pick one up).

    Chicken Marinade:
    1 ½ pounds chicken thighs (breasts or tofu may be subbed)
    2 garlic cloves, chopped
    2 tsp fresh ginger, small chopped
    ¼ cup tamari (gf) or soy sauce 

    Bowls:
    1 head cauliflower, grated (or 2 pkgs frozen cauliflower, riced)
    2 tsp toasted sesame oil
    2 scallions, chopped
    ½ cup lettuce, chopped
    ½ cup kimchi, chopped
    2 carrots, grated
    1 cucumber, sliced
    2 tbsp fresh cilantro, chopped

    Teriyaki Sauce:
    ½ cup gf tamari or soy sauce
    2 limes, juiced
    1 tsp chopped ginger
    2 tbsp toasted sesame oil
    1 tsp sesame seeds

    Grill chicken for about 5 minutes per side on a grill or saute pan with a little oil. Chop into pieces. Roast cauliflower (preferably ahead), by tossing with a little oil, salt and pepper. Roast on 375 for 20 minutes. Or until soft and getting brown on the edges. Turn once. 

    Build the bowls: Add lettuce, roasted cauliflower, kimchi, carrot and cucumbers. Top with chicken and sauce, cilantro and sesame seeds.

    Hearty Fall Black Bean + Corn Salad

    Modified from Once Upon A Chef, Segal
    Hearty and satisfying, this is a great fall dinner you can make mostly the night before.

    Make Ahead: Can use leftover proteins and make this ridiculously easy. Chicken, steak, edamame, shrimp, or, because it’s satisfying enough on its own, you can serve as a vegetarian dinner with a side of homemade tortilla chips.

    Salad:
    2 ears fresh corn
    1 cup finely chopped red onion
    1-15 ounce can black beans, drained and rinsed
    1 red bell pepper, seeded and small chopped
    ½ cup loosely packed fresh cilantro, chopped
    1 avocado
    3 tbsp pumpkin seeds, dry pan toasted

    Dressing:
    2 tbsp red wine vinegar
    Juice of 1 lime (about 2 tbsp)
    2 tbsp honey
    ¼ cup avocado oil
    1 garlic clove, minced
    ¾ tsp ground cumin
    ¾ tsp salt
    ¼ tsp ground pepper
    ¼ tsp dried oregano
    2 small chipotle chiles in adobo sauce (from a can) 

    Simmer corn for about 10 min. Meanwhile, add red onion to cold water. Let sit for 10 min. This will help take the bite out of the onion.

    Make the dressing: In a blender add all dressing ingredients and process until smooth. 

    Assemble the salad: Cut kernels off the cob into a medium-sized bowl. Add beans, onion, bell pepper and cilantro to the corn. Pour dressing over salad and mix well to combine. Cover and refrigerate for at least an hour, or preferably overnight. Right before serving, cut the avocado into chunks and add to the salad. Top with cilantro, a little more lime juice and pumpkin seeds. 

    Easy + Kinda Fancy Baked Tortilla Chips:
    Much better for you than the bagged chips.
    7 yellow corn tortillas
    2 tablespoons avocado oil, more for greasing baking sheet
    1 tablespoon lime juice
    salt

    Preheat oven to 375. Brush two large baking sheets with oil. In a small bowl, mix 2 tablespoons of oil and 1 tablespoon of lime juice together. Brush oil on whole tortillas. Sprinkle salt all over tortilla pieces. Bake for 8 to 12 minutes, or until the tortillas are golden. Let cool before serving. Tortillas should be crispy. Break into chip size as you eat. 

    Green Shakshuka with Avocado + Chile

    From Dinner in One, Clark
    A fantastic way to up your leafy green intake! And so versatile; you can serve for breakfast, lunch or dinner.

    Make Ahead: Wash and chop all veggies and herbs. Make rice if applicable.

    Shakshuka:
    3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 
    3 garlic cloves, sliced
    Pinch of red pepper flakes
    ¼ tsp coriander ground
    3 leeks, white and light green parts, thinly sliced into half moons
    10 ounces greens: chopped spinach, arugula, kale, or combo
    1 cup mixture of chopped fresh herbs: basil, parsley, cilantro or a combo 
    Salt and pepper to taste 
    1 lemon
    4-8 eggs
    Avocado slices as a topper
    ¼ cup feta (optional-if dairy is tolerated) as a topper

    May be served alone, or on a bed of rice for a more substantial meal.

    Heat oven to 375. In a large ovenproof skillet, heat oil over medium heat, add garlic, coriander, and red pepper flakes and cook until garlic starts to brown. Add the leeks and cook until softened ~5 ish minutes. Next, stir in the greens and cook until wilted. Lastly, add the herbs and salt and pepper. Toss to coat. 

    Grate the lemon’s worth of zest and lemon juice into the pan. Create a divot into the pan and veggies for as many eggs as you’re cooking. Carefully crack the egg into each divot. Transfer the skillet to the oven and cook for 7-10 min. Until the eggs are cooked to your liking. Serve on top of rice if using. Top serving of shakshuka (greens and eggs) with avocado slices and feta.

    Visit our blog for more seasonal recipes and healthy eating tips.

    Healthy Nest Nutrition

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  • Exercise, Glucose Consumption & Decreased Cancer Incidence

    Exercise, Glucose Consumption & Decreased Cancer Incidence

    Exercise: Summary

    This Science Matters about exercise explores recent scientific findings on the relationship between high-intensity exercise, glucose consumption, and decreased cancer incidence. The hosts discuss studies supporting the idea that ongoing exercise not only contributes to overall metabolic health but also plays a key role in preventing the progression and spread of cancer. 

    The primary focus is on research showing that high-intensity aerobic activities can create a metabolic shield in the body’s organs, demanding substantial energy and thereby starving cancer cells of the glucose they need to grow and metastasize. The findings suggest that incorporating high-intensity interval training (HIIT) into exercise routines can reduce the risk of metastatic cancer by up to 72 percent in both human and animal models. The episode also contrasts these effects with other forms of exercise and treatments, emphasizing that while exercise should not replace conventional cancer treatments, it is a critical component of a comprehensive approach to cancer prevention. 

    The discussion concludes by highlighting the broader implications for personalized medicine and the potential for optimizing cancer prevention strategies through tailored physical activity recommendations based on individual health profiles and family histories.

    Exercise: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to Exercise and Cancer Prevention

    00:36 Deep Dive into Recent Research

    05:58 Exercise-Induced Metabolic Shield Against Cancer

    07:23 Scientific Findings and Practical Implications

    13:57 Key Takeaways and Final Thoughts

    15:49 Conclusion and Upcoming Topics

    Previous Episodes

    Grab a copy of the studies and catch up on previous episodes by CLICKING HERE

    Scientific Literacy Course

    In a world propelled by science and technology, understanding the fundamental principles of science is no longer just an advantage—it’s a necessity. To thrive in tomorrow’s world, become equipped not just with scientific knowledge, but with the ability to critically engage. Grab the Scientific Literacy Course offered by FDN by CLICKING HERE

    More About FDN

    Go to our Health Detective Podcasts for informative, functional health oriented podcasts.

    LEARN MORE ABOUT US

    Try FDN for FREE! 

    COURSE OVERVIEW

    DRESS WORKSHOP

    STRESS & HORMONE WORKSHOP

    5in5 WORKSHOP

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  • How to Structure Your Packagaes as a Health Coach and FDN

    How to Structure Your Packagaes as a Health Coach and FDN


    Structure Your Packages: Summary

    The discussion centers around the pitfalls of health coaches following traditional personal training business models, particularly when charging by the session. The speakers shared their early experiences with hourly and bundled sessions, recognizing that this approach often led to burnout and suboptimal client results. 

    They emphasize that meaningful health transformations require significant time and ongoing support, making it impractical to achieve these through a few isolated sessions. Consequently, they argue for structuring health coaching services into comprehensive packages rather than one-off sessions, as this not only provides necessary client support but also ensures a sustainable business model for coaches. By transitioning to higher-priced packages, health coaches can dedicate more time and resources per client, leading to more profound and lasting transformations. 

    The speakers also offer practical advice on assessing the value of these packages, ensuring they cover the time and effort invested both during and outside of sessions. They conclude with real-world examples and success stories of coaches who employed this model, encouraging others to consider higher-value packages to better serve clients and maintain professional and personal balance

    Structure Your Packages: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to Health Coaching Pricing Models

    02:02 Challenges with Hourly Sessions

    03:04 The Math Behind Sustainable Income

    03:54 Transitioning to High-Ticket Packages

    05:26 Real-Life Experiences and Success Stories

    07:38 Interactive Q&A with Viewers

    08:06 Benefits of High-Ticket Packages for Clients

    18:02 Practical Advice for Setting Up Packages

    26:12 Conclusion and Next Steps

    Where to Find Lucy McKellar and AFDNP

    Where: San Diego, CA

    When: October 17-19, 2024

    Join with others who are building their health businesses. Learn how to launch, scale, or expand your business. Gain insight through case studies, personal accounts, practical strategies and understand what you need to make your business a success in the functional health space.

    For more information Click Here!

    More About FDN

    Go to our Health Detective Podcasts for more informational and functional health-oriented podcasts like this one.

    LEARN MORE ABOUT US

    Try FDN for FREE! 

    COURSE OVERVIEW

    DRESS WORKSHOP

    STRESS & HORMONE WORKSHOP

    5in5 WORKSHOP

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    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED – FREE EXPERT LED TRAINING SESSIONS

    FDN METHODOLOGY

    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

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  • Protein Is Essential for Athletes. Can Too Much Damage Your Kidneys?

    Protein Is Essential for Athletes. Can Too Much Damage Your Kidneys?

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    Protein has always been my safe space in the diet wars. As the pendulum swings back and forth between “carbohydrates are going to kill you” and “fat is going to kill you,” everyone agrees that protein is good for your muscles, satiating, and non-lethal. Everyone except nephrologists, that is.

    Back in 1982, a nephrologist—that is, a kidney doctor—named Barry Brenner, co-author of one of the definitive textbooks on nephrology, published a paper in the New England Journal of Medicine suggesting that eating too much protein over a long period of time might overwork the kidneys and eventually lead to chronic kidney disease and even kidney failure. This idea has been hotly debated ever since, with opinions loosely settling into two distinct camps: nephrologists think too much protein is a problem, and sports nutrition researchers think it isn’t.

    As someone who pays a lot of attention to the sports nutrition literature and very little attention to the latest nephrology news, I haven’t worried much about Brenner’s hypothesis. But a recent review paper by three nephrologists in Sports Medicine—in my world, in other words—caught my attention.

    Alberto de Lorenzo of HM Sanchinarro University Hospital in Madrid, along with two colleagues, argues that chronic kidney disease might be “the real finish line” for athletes and bodybuilders on a high-protein diet. Given all the articles I’ve written about the joys of protein, I figured it was worth digging into.

    Why Kidney Specialists Worry About Too Much Protein

    Most of the protein you eat is broken down into amino acids which are then used to build or repair muscle. If there’s any extra protein, it will be burned to produce energy. One of the byproducts of burning protein is a waste product called urea. The job of filtering out waste products like urea from your bloodstream is handled by your kidneys, which send the unwanted waste to be excreted in your urine. The more protein you eat, the more urea you’ll produce—and, consequently, the harder your kidneys will have to work.

    It’s reasonably well established that eating more protein will lead to an increase in kidney filtration rate, presumably to handle the higher waste load. This is accompanied by dilation of the blood vessels leading to the kidney and an increase in the pressure on the filtering units. Similarly, eating less protein reduces the filtration rate. For this reason, people who already have chronic kidney disease but aren’t on dialysis are often advised to keep their protein intake relatively low.

    What some nephrologists fear is that, even in people with healthy kidneys, this increased blood flow and pressure will eventually damage the delicate filtering structures in the kidney—which in turn will force the remaining kidney structures to work even harder, triggering a kidney death spiral.

    The evidence for this sequence of events is clear for people (and animals) who already have kidney problems. But it’s basically non-existent for people with normal kidney function. That means it becomes a question of weighing different kinds of indirect evidence.

    Why Sports Nutritionists Don’t Worry About Protein

    The International Society of Sports Nutrition, in its official position stand on protein and exercise, is unequivocal: “no controlled scientific evidence exists indicating that increased intakes of protein pose any health risks in healthy, exercising individuals.” Moreover, the position stand cites a series of studies led by Jose Antonio, the cofounder of the ISSN, in which athletes consumed as much as 4.4 grams of protein per kilogram of body mass each day, more than five times the recommended daily allowance of 0.8 g/kg/day, without any ill effects.

    De Lorenzo and his colleagues aren’t impressed by these studies, or by the larger body of studies in healthy non-athletes. The sample sizes were small, and their durations ranged from six weeks to a year, which might not be long enough to observe a decline in kidney function. The tests used to estimate kidney filtration rate are designed for use with kidney disease patients, and are less accurate in people with healthy kidneys, particularly if they have high muscle mass. There were no true low-protein-diet control groups. The authors have ties with sports nutrition companies that sell protein supplements, and none of them were nephrologists.

    These critiques are all worth considering, but you have to weigh them against the strength of whatever other evidence is available—which, in this case, is not much. I dug up a few of the individual studies and metaanalyses to look at more closely, and my general impression was that it was basically a Rorschach test. Depending on which outcomes you look at and what threshold you use to define a clinically significant change, you can convince yourself that high protein intake has a strong effect on kidney function or has no effect on kidney function.

    How Much Protein is “Too Much”?

    Half a century after Brenner’s original warning, I still don’t see any compelling evidence that healthy people need to worry about eating too much protein.  I can’t rule it out, though. So it’s worth considering some numbers. The protein RDA is 0.8 g/kg/day, which for a 150-pound person works out to about 55 grams of protein per day. That’s a couple of 5-ounce cans of tuna.

    De Lorenzo’s paper defines a “high-protein diet” as more than 1.5 g/kg/day. The ISSN suggests that “the majority of exercising individuals” should aim for 1.4 to 2.0 g/kg/day, though it notes some “preliminary evidence” that higher doses even above 3 g/kg/day might help build muscle. A major meta-analysis in 2018 concluded that muscle- and strength-building gains max out at around 1.6 g/kd/day on average.

    The average daily protein intake among Americans, as of 2015-2016, was 97 grams for men and 69 grams for women. Depending on weight, that’s in the range of 1.0 to 1.5 g/kg/day. In broad strokes, then, I suspect that the average person could probably still benefit from upping their protein intake.

    In particular, focusing on getting more protein throughout the day rather than cramming in a huge load at dinner might (though not necessarily) help build more muscle. But I’d pause before pushing too far into the extremes, like 3 or 4 g/kg/day—not because there’s strong evidence that it’s dangerous, but because it’s conceivable that there might be downsides and not clear that there are significant upsides.

    As it happens, that balancing act is evident in another new study that was published last month looking at protein intake and mortality in older adults who already have chronic kidney disease—in other words, the group that we know will be hurt by too much protein. The results were the opposite of what you’d expect: the more protein subjects ate, the less likely they were to die during the study. Higher protein intake is associated with all sorts of interconnected benefits in older people: more muscle, stronger bones, less frailty, lower rates of heart disease, and so on. In this cohort, these benefits outweighed whatever theoretical harm protein might inflict on the kidneys. For muscle-challenged endurance athletes like me, that’s a message to keep in mind.


    For more Sweat Science, join me on Threads and Facebook, sign up for the email newsletter, and check out my book Endure: Mind, Body, and the Curiously Elastic Limits of Human Performance.

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  • Testing for Vitamin B12 Deficiency  | NutritionFacts.org

    Testing for Vitamin B12 Deficiency  | NutritionFacts.org

    Many doctors mistakenly rely on serum B12 levels in the blood to test for vitamin B12 deficiency.

    There were two cases of young, strictly vegetarian individuals with no known vascular risk factors. One suffered a stroke, and the other had multiple strokes. Why? Most probably because they weren’t taking vitamin B12 supplements, which leads to high homocysteine levels, which can attack our arteries.

    So, those eating plant-based who fail to supplement with B12 may increase their risk of both heart disease and stroke. However, as you can see in the graph below and at 0:47 in my video How to Test for Functional Vitamin B12 Deficiency, vegetarians have so many heart disease risk factor benefits that they are still at lower risk overall, but this may help explain why vegetarians were found to have more stroke. This disparity would presumably disappear with adequate B12 supplementation, and the benefit of lower heart disease risk would grow even larger.

    Compared with non-vegetarians, vegetarians enjoy myriad other advantages, such as better cholesterol, blood pressure, blood sugars, and obesity rates. But, what about that stroke study? Even among studies that have shown benefits, “the effect was not as pronounced as expected, which may be a result of poor vitamin B12 status due to a vegetarian diet. Vitamin B12 deficiency may negate the cardiovascular disease prevention benefits of vegetarian diets. To further reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, vegetarians should be advised to use vitamin B12 supplements.” 

    How can you determine your B12 status? By the time you’re symptomatic with B12 deficiency, it’s too late. And, initially, the symptoms can be so subtle that you might even miss them. What’s more, you develop metabolic vitamin B12 deficiency well before you develop a clinical deficiency, so there’s “a missed opportunity to prevent dementia and stroke” when you have enough B12 to avoid deficiency symptoms, but not enough to keep your homocysteine in check. “Underdiagnosis of this condition results largely from a failure to understand that a normal serum [blood level] B12 may not reflect an adequate functional B12 status.” The levels of B12 in our blood do not always represent the levels of B12 in our cells. We can have severe functional deficiency of B12 even though our blood levels are normal or even high.

    “Most physicians tend to assume that if the serum B12 is ‘normal,’ there is no problem,” but, within the lower range of normal, 30 percent of patients could have metabolic B12 deficiency, with high homocysteine levels. 

    Directly measuring levels of methylmalonic acid (MMA) or homocysteine is a “more accurate reflection of vitamin B12 functional statuses.” Methylmalonic acid can be checked with a simple urine test; you’re looking for less than a value of 4 micrograms per milligram of creatinine. “Elevated MMA is a specific marker of vitamin B12 deficiency while Hcy [homocysteine] rises in both vitamin B12 and folate deficiencies.” So, “metabolic B12 deficiency is strictly defined by elevation of MMA levels or by elevation of Hcy in folate-replete individuals,” that is, in those getting enough folate. Even without eating beans and greens, which are packed with folate, folic acid is added to the flour supply by law, so, these days, high homocysteine levels may be mostly a B12 problem. Ideally, you’re looking for a homocysteine level in your blood down in the single digits.

    Measured this way, “the prevalence of subclinical functional vitamin B12 deficiency is dramatically higher than previously assumed…” We’re talking about 10 to 40 percent of the general population, more than 40 percent of vegetarians, and the majority of vegans who aren’t scrupulous about getting their B12. Some suggest that those on plant-based diets should check their vitamin B12 status every year, but you shouldn’t need to if you’re adequately supplementing. 

    There are rare cases of vitamin B12 deficiency that can’t be picked up on any test, so it’s better to just make sure you’re getting enough.

    If you do get your homocysteine tested and it’s still too high, up in the double digits despite B12 supplementation and eating beans and greens, I have a suggestion for you in the final videos of this series, which we’ll turn to next with: Should Vegetarians Take Creatine to Normalize Homocysteine? and The Efficacy and Safety of Creatine for High Homocysteine.

    How did we end up here? To watch the full series if you haven’t yet, check the related posts below. 

    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • 10 Essential Health Habits for Fall

    10 Essential Health Habits for Fall

    It’s going to get chilly out there soon, friends. This time of year is always bittersweet – we hate saying goodbye to the sunshine, but we love saying hello to warm soups, cuddles by the fireplace, and crunchy leaves under our feet. You might be thinking it’s too soon to talk about essential health habits for fall, but we’ll be in the thick of it before you can blink and it’s always worthwhile to be prepared.

    When the seasons change, it’s a great opportunity for us to take stock of where we’re at and where we’re going. Maybe you feel amazing after weeks of raw foods, sunshine and playing outside, and you’re a teensy bit nervous about carrying those habits into the cooler months.

    Fear not. As the weather changes, so should our routines – your autumn healthy lifestyle may look a bit different than your summer one, but that’s to be expected. Staying in tune with the seasons is key to being happy and healthy all year round.

    Try out these essential health habits for fall. If you begin by adding two new practices to your routine each week, by the time autumn is fully present you’ll be very well-equipped!

    10 Essential Health Habits for Fall

    Heat Up Your Smoothies

    Dairy-Free Pumpkin Spice Latte

    You know it’s getting chilly out when you wake up in the morning, take one look at your blender and realize the last thing you want is an ice-cold smoothie. But by swapping your ice cubes for hot water, you can turn a summer staple into an autumn favourite. You can even incorporate vegetables into your blended drinks, like my pumpkin spice latte.

    Swap your smoothies for hot blender drinks using this recipe inspiration:


    Serve Up Some Soup

    Celery Root and Apple SoupCelery Root and Apple Soup

    If your soup-making routine fell by the wayside this summer, now’s the perfect time to get back on the wagon. There’s nothing more comforting than a hot bowl of soup, especially one made from scratch in your own kitchen.

    Try these comforting soups on for size:


    Don’t Forget to Drink Water (or Tea)

    Ginger Tea RecipeGinger Tea Recipe

    We tend to focus more on hydration during the summertime when it’s hot, but we need to stay equally hydrated throughout the fall and winter months. Aim to drink at least 6 to 8 glasses of water daily, or you can opt for herbal teas.


    Source Seasonal Foods

    Balsamic Roasted VegetablesBalsamic Roasted Vegetables

    There are so many fantastic reasons to eat seasonal foods, but fall is an especially important time to load up on them. Eating seasonally is incredibly beneficial to your health because seasonal foods provide the best nutrients we need at that specific time of the year. Fall and winter vegetables have nutrients that support our immunity for cold and flu season. Seasonal foods will depend on where you live, but for me, a few that I count on are:

    • Onions
    • Garlic
    • Winter Squashes
    • Sweet Potatoes
    • Carrots
    • Celery Root
    • Beets
    • Rutabaga
    • Parsnips
    • Kale
    • Brussels Sprouts
    • Apples
    • Pears

    Support Your Immune System

    Immune Power BrothImmune Power Broth

    Now’s the time to start supporting your immune system so you stay healthy all season long. These are some of my absolute favourite cold and flu remedies, as well as the things you might want to avoid like sugar and alcohol. (Now is the time to start your batch of Fire Cider, so it will be ready!)

    Try these immune-supportive recipes:

    Lifestyle practices also play an important role in immunity, such as:

    For more, listen to my podcast episode about How to Supercharge Immunity.


    Eat a Health-Building Breakfast

    health habits for fallhealth habits for fall

    With fewer overall hours of sunlight and dark mornings, we may find ourselves waking up later and/or skipping breakfast. Try not to do this! Consume a fueling meal that includes protein, fat, and fibre. Remember: your breakfast doesn’t have to be an enormous meal to satisfy these essential requirements. In the winter, I often start my day with a fat-filled hot elixir.

    More breakfast recipe inspiration:


    Meal Prep Something!

    health habits for fallhealth habits for fall

    Many animals in the wild have elaborate preparations and healthy habits for fall. Us humans used to do the same, but many of us have lost those homesteading skills. You don’t have to can everything in sight or buy an extra freezer for your freezer meals, but I do recommend doing some kind of light meal prep every week to make your busy days easier.

    Some suggestions (you don’t have to do all of these every week; pick one or two):

    Many of these items freeze well, so you can double your recipes and freeze them for later. If you’d like to learn additional meal prep skills and recipes, consider my short course Everyday Culinary Nutrition.


    Put Down Devices 1 Hour Before Bed

    Safer cell phone practicesSafer cell phone practices

    I get it: when the sun goes down at 4:30 pm, you turn to your phone, iPad or laptop to keep you entertained. That’s A-OK – but ensure you put your devices away at least an hour before bedtime to help you regulate your circadian rhythm and to help you sleep better. I am quite sensitive to using devices at night, so I personally try to put everything away several hours before bed.


    Practice Gratitude

    Gratitude PracticeGratitude Practice

    Gratitude has so many health benefits, including improving your mood, immune health, relationships, and sleep. And it’s one of those essential fall health habits that’s easy to do! Gratitude is something you can practice anywhere in both small and large ways. Visit this post for the full rundown on how to get started on your gratitude today.


    Focus On The Exhale

    health habits for fallhealth habits for fall

    There’s nothing like that back-to-school energy to turn your relaxed summer attitude upside down, but staying calm is key to staying healthy. Incorporate breathing and relaxation techniques into your routine now before the holiday season stress starts. This is an important part of your self-care.

    If you’re not into yoga or meditation, even taking 5 deep breaths in the morning, or when you feel worried or stressed, can be a huge help.

    I know this seems like a long list of things to do to maintain health habits for fall, but each one is straightforward and many of these take minimal time. Once you get into the habit of doing them, they will seem like less effort, with maximum benefit.

    What health habits for fall will you be doing in the next couple of months?

    Essential health habits for fallEssential health habits for fall

    On My Mind Episode 18: 10 Essential Health Habits for Fall

    Subscribe today on your favourite podcast app and never miss an episode.

    Health Habits for FallHealth Habits for Fall

    Meghan Telpner

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  • Parkinson’s Disease – The Hidden Battle in Your Gut

    Parkinson’s Disease – The Hidden Battle in Your Gut

    Parkinson’s Disease: Summary

    In this podcast about Parkinson’s disease, Martha Carlin, a transformational leader and citizen scientist, discusses her journey from business operations to becoming a pioneer in microbiome research after her husband, John, was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. She founded the BioCollective to study the microbiome’s impact on human health and launched the BiotiQuest brand of targeted probiotics. 

    Carlin’s work has been recognized by the National Institutes of Health and the White House Microbiome Initiative. She shares insights about their probiotics, focusing on gut health and innovative approaches, and highlights groundbreaking research on endotoxins’ role in diseases like diabetes and Parkinson’s, and their connection to environmental toxins like glyphosate and lifestyle factors like cold exposure and circadian rhythms. 

    Additionally, Carlin elaborates on the spiritual and trauma-related aspects of chronic illnesses, explaining how fear and stress can exacerbate conditions like Parkinson’s, and emphasizes the importance of achieving peace for overall well-being. She also discusses future projects, including collaborations aimed at addressing autoimmune diseases through targeted probiotics.

    Parkinson’s Disease: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to Martha Carlin

    01:30 Martha’s Journey into Microbiome Science

    03:22 Endotoxins and Their Impact on Health

    07:53 Environmental Toxins and Gut Health

    14:19 Cold Therapy and Gut Bacteria

    18:14 Circadian Rhythms and Microbiome

    21:56 Glycocalyx and Endothelial Health

    27:59 Spiritual and Emotional Health in Parkinson’s

    34:10 BiotiQuest Product Line

    37:58 Future Research and Closing Remarks

    Where to Find Martha Carlin

    When: September 11th at 1 pm PT / 4 pm ET

    Purpose: Business workshop taught by Jenn Malecha to help viewers find clients
    Landing page: functionaldiagnosticnutrition.com/sp/3-keys-to-finding-enrolling-client-sept-2024/
    Cost: $9
    Replays available? Yes. Replays will be sent by Monday, September 16

    Where: San Diego, CA

    When: October 17-19, 2024

    Join with others who are building their health businesses. Learn how to launch, scale, or expand your business. Gain insight through case studies, personal accounts, practical strategies and understand what you need to make your business a success in the functional health space.

    More About FDN

    Go to our Health Detective Podcasts for more informational and functional health-oriented podcasts like this one.

    LEARN MORE ABOUT US

    Try FDN for FREE! 

    COURSE OVERVIEW

    DRESS WORKSHOP

    STRESS & HORMONE WORKSHOP

    5in5 WORKSHOP

    MEDICAL DIRECTOR PROGRAM

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED (UPCOMING LIVES)

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED – FREE EXPERT LED TRAINING SESSIONS

    FDN METHODOLOGY

    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

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  • What I’ve learned after 700 Monday notes – Diet and Health Today

    What I’ve learned after 700 Monday notes – Diet and Health Today

    Introduction

    This is the 700th Monday note. The first one was written in January 2011, although I had been doing some news type letters in The Harcombe Diet® club even before then. In May this year, I received a suggestion for a Monday note from a long term supporter (Jannes from the Netherlands). I thought it would make a good note to do for a landmark number of notes and 700 is a bit of a landmark.

    Jannes suggested “Name 5 things you’ve learned in the last 5 years that surprised you the most, food and health wise.” Jannes added that for him, it was that ultra-processed foods are not as bad as we all thought. That was a good one. I shared Jannes’ surprise when I first looked into the NOVA classification system and the impact of ultra-processed foods on CVD (not as much as I expected) (Ref 1).

    I’ve had some big projects/roles running alongside doing these 700 notes, which are worthy of mention. When I started the notes, I was an independent board member of the Welsh National Health Service (NHS) and Cardiff Metropolitan University and so I learned a lot about health and education at the highest level. I did a PhD between September 2012 and March 2016 and learned a lot about academia from the student, rather than board member, perspective. The Professor Tim Noakes tweet trial also ran in parallel between 2014 and the final appeal victory in June 2018. The Mail on Sunday articles were published in March 2019 and that case is still not fully resolved. I often wonder how I managed to keep writing a note a week during all of this.

    I didn’t limit myself to five learnings, not least as it hasn’t been five years. I’m going to share personal experiences in this note, which I haven’t previously shared, in the interests of giving real examples. In order of explaining one point before the other (as opposed to in order of biggest learning), here are nine things that I’ve learned…

    Zoe

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  • What About Homocysteine, Vitamin B12, and Vegetarians’ Stroke Risk?  | NutritionFacts.org

    What About Homocysteine, Vitamin B12, and Vegetarians’ Stroke Risk?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Not taking vitamin B12 supplements or regularly eating B12-fortified foods may explain the higher stroke risk found among vegetarians.

    Leonardo da Vinci had a stroke. Might his vegetarian diet have been to blame? “His stroke…may have been related to an increase in homocysteine level because of the long duration of his vegetarian diet.” A suboptimal intake of vitamin B12 is common in those eating plant-based diets (unless they take B12 supplements or regularly eat B12-fortified foods) and can lead to an increased level of homocysteine in the blood, which “is accepted as an important risk factor for stroke.”

    “Accepted” may be overstating it as there is still “a great controversy” surrounding the connection between homocysteine and stroke risk. But, as you can see in the graph below and at 0:57 in my video Vegetarians and Stroke Risk Factors: Vitamin B12 and Homocysteine?, those with higher homocysteine levels do seem to have more atherosclerosis in the carotid arteries that lead up to the brain, compared to those with single-digit homocysteine levels, and they also seem to be at higher risk for clotting ischemic strokes in observational studies and, more recently, bleeding hemorrhagic strokes, as well as increased risk of dying from cardiovascular disease and all causes put together. 

    Even more convincing are the genetic data. About 10 percent of the population has a gene that increases homocysteine levels by about 2 points, and they appear to have significantly higher odds of having a stroke. Most convincing would be randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials to prove that lowering homocysteine with B vitamins can lower strokes, and, indeed, that appears to be the case for clotting strokes: Strokes with homocysteine-lowering interventions were more than five times as likely to reduce stroke compared with placebo.

    Ironically, one of the arguments against the role of homocysteine in strokes is that, “assuming that vegetarians have lower vitamin B12 concentrations than meat-eaters and that low vitamin B12 concentrations cause ischaemic stroke, then the incidence of stroke should be increased among vegetarians…but this is not the case.” However, it has never been studied until now.

    As you can see in the graph below and at 2:16 in my video, the EPIC-Oxford study researchers found that vegetarians do appear to be at higher risk.

    And no wonder, as about a quarter of the vegetarians and nearly three-quarters of the vegans studied were vitamin B12-depleted or B12-deficient, as you can see below and at 2:23, and that resulted in extraordinarily high homocysteine levels.

    Why was there so much B12 deficiency? Because only a small minority were taking a dedicated B12 supplement. And, unlike in the United States, B12 fortification of organic foods isn’t allowed in the United Kingdom. So, while U.S. soymilk and other products may be fortified with B12, UK products may not. We don’t see the same problem among U.S. vegans in the Adventist study, presumably because of the B12 fortification of commonly eaten foods in the United States. It may be no coincidence that the only study I was able to find that showed a significantly lower stroke mortality risk among vegetarians was an Adventist study.

    Start eating strictly plant-based without B12-fortified foods or supplements, and B12 deficiency can develop. However, that was only for those not eating sufficient foods fortified with B12. Those eating plant-based who weren’t careful about getting a regular reliable source of B12 had lower B12 levels and, consequently, higher homocysteine levels, as you can see below and at 3:27 in my video.

    The only way to prove vitamin B12 deficiency is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease in vegetarians is to put it to the test. When researchers measured the amount of atherosclerosis in the carotid arteries, the main arteries supplying the brain, “no significant difference” was found between vegetarians and nonvegetarians. They both looked just as bad even though vegetarians tend to have better risk factors, such as lower cholesterol and blood pressure. The researchers suggest that B12 deficiency plays a role, but how do they know? Some measures of artery function weren’t any better either. Again, they surmised that vitamin B12 deficiency was overwhelming the natural plant-based benefits. “The beneficial effects of vegetarian diets on lipids and blood glucose [cholesterol and blood sugars] need to be advocated, and efforts to correct vitamin B12 deficiency in vegetarian diets can never be overestimated.”

    Sometimes vegetarians did even worse. Worse artery wall thickness and worse artery wall function, “raising concern, for the first time, about the vascular health of vegetarians”—more than a decade before the new stroke study. Yes, their B12 was low, and, yes, their homocysteine was high, “suggest[ing] that vitamin B12 deficiency in vegetarians might have adverse effects on their vascular health.” What we need, though, is an interventional study, where participants are given B12 to see if that fixes it, and here we go. The title of this double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized crossover study gives it away: “Vitamin B-12 Supplementation Improves Arterial Function in Vegetarians with Subnormal Vitamin B-12 Status.” So, compromised vitamin B12 status among those eating more plant-based diets due to not taking B12 supplements or regularly eating vitamin B12-fortified foods may explain the higher stroke risk found among vegetarians.

    Unfortunately, many vegetarians resist taking vitamin B12 supplements due to “misconceptions,” like “hold[ing] on to the old myth that deficiency of this vitamin is rare and occurs only in a small proportion of vegans.” “A common mistake is to think that the presence of dairy products and eggs in the diet, as in LOV [a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet], can still ensure a proper intake [of B12]…despite excluding animal flesh.”

    Now that we may have nailed the cause, maybe “future studies with vegetarians should focus on identifying ways to convince vegetarians to take vitamin B12 supplements to prevent a deficiency routinely.” 

    I have updated my recommendation for B12 supplementation. I now suggest at least 2,000 mcg (µg) of cyanocobalamin once weekly, ideally as a chewable, sublingual, or liquid supplement taken on an empty stomach, or at least 50 mcg daily of supplemental cyanocobalamin. (You needn’t worry about taking too much.) You can also have servings of B12-fortified foods three times a day (at each meal), each containing at least 190% of the Daily Value listed on the nutrition facts label. (Based on the new labeling mandate that started on January 1, 2020, the target is 4.5 mcg three times a day.) Please note, though, that those older than the age of 65 have only one option: to take 1,000 micrograms a day. 

    We started this series on what to eat and not eat for stroke prevention, and whether vegetarians really have a higher stroke risk. Check related posts for the last few videos that looked at specific factors.

    Stay tuned for: 

    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • How to Easily Find & Enroll Clients with the FDN Approach

    How to Easily Find & Enroll Clients with the FDN Approach


    Easily Find & Enroll Clients: Summary

    In Easily Find & Enroll Clients, Jenn Malecha, a health business advisor with extensive experience in business and project management, Functional Diagnostic Nutrition, and transformational coaching, shares her journey and insights with Evan. Jenn has successfully guided numerous functional health practitioners in building profitable practices that enable them to provide effective care while maintaining work-life balance. Through her Holistic Health Boss brand, she empowers health-conscious individuals by providing access to essential lab tests and resources, helping them solve their health puzzles and regain their well-being.

    Jenn emphasizes the importance of authenticity and leveraging one’s unique experiences and qualities to connect with and attract ideal clients. She illustrates this with personal anecdotes and practical examples, such as her high school sports experience, which highlighted her natural leadership skills. Jenn explains the significance of niching down to a specific 3 percent of the marketplace, understanding psychographics, and avoiding the pitfalls of being a generalist to build trust and effectively serve clients.

    Jenn announces upcoming training sessions, including a special training on September 11th for FDN practitioners and a keynote at the HIX conference. She discusses the importance of designing a business that supports personal well-being and encourages practitioners to identify and prioritize their needs to create a sustainable and thriving practice. The conversation also touches on the misconceptions around business saturation in the wellness industry and the growing opportunities in personalized and functional medicine.

    September 11, 2024: The 3 Keys to Finding And Enrolling Clients: An Easy And Effective Profitable Practice Playbook with Jenn Malecha

    Easily Find & Enroll Clients: Topics

    00:00 Introduction and Guest Bio

    00:38 Jenn’s Dual Role in Health and Business

    01:26 Upcoming Events and Trainings

    02:23 Jenn’s Journey to Business Coaching

    03:15 The Importance of Teamwork and Leadership

    05:39 Transition to Fitness and Corporate Wellness

    07:11 Challenges and Success in Business

    10:35 The Growing Wellness Industry

    16:20 Finding Your Unique Voice

    25:56 Recommended Reads for Marketers

    26:32 The Pitfalls of Generalized Care

    27:44 The Importance of Niching Down

    28:18 Understanding Psychographics

    32:35 Effective Sales Strategies

    37:36 Upcoming Training and Workshops

    45:21 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

    Where to Find Jenn Malecha

    When: September 11th at 1 pm PT / 4 pm ET

    Purpose: Business workshop taught by Jenn Malecha to help viewers find clients
    Landing page: functionaldiagnosticnutrition.com/sp/3-keys-to-finding-enrolling-client-sept-2024/
    Cost: $9
    Replays available? Yes. Replays will be sent by Monday, September 16

    Where: San Diego, CA

    When: October 17-19, 2024

    Join with others who are building their health businesses. Learn how to launch, scale, or expand your business. Gain insight through case studies, personal accounts, practical strategies and understand what you need to make your business a success in the functional health space.

    Use code HDP200 for $200 off tickets til September 7th! For more information Click Here!

    More About FDN

    Go to our Health Detective Podcasts for more informational and functional health-oriented podcasts like this one.

    LEARN MORE ABOUT US

    Try FDN for FREE! 

    COURSE OVERVIEW

    DRESS WORKSHOP

    STRESS & HORMONE WORKSHOP

    5in5 WORKSHOP

    MEDICAL DIRECTOR PROGRAM

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED (UPCOMING LIVES)

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED – FREE EXPERT LED TRAINING SESSIONS

    FDN METHODOLOGY

    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

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  • Dr Ben Bikman talks about the use and effects of GLP-1 Agonists (Semaglutide – Ozempic and Wegovy) – Diet and Health Today

    Dr Ben Bikman talks about the use and effects of GLP-1 Agonists (Semaglutide – Ozempic and Wegovy) – Diet and Health Today

    In this episode, I chat with Dr Benjamin Bikman about GLP-1 agonists, a class of drugs used for weight loss and diabetes management. These are more commonly known as Semaglutide – Ozempic and Wegovy. We discuss the role of GLP-1 in metabolism, the effects of GLP-1 agonists on weight loss and insulin sensitivity, and the potential side effects and limitations of these drugs.

    Andy

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  • Simplify Your Next Getaway

    Simplify Your Next Getaway

    The best way to pack for a last-minute adventure? Go light and snack smart with a protein-rich boost from Isopure Infusions. Emily Blanchard has some great tips on how to pack for minimalist travel so your stuff doesn’t limit your fun:

    1. Choose multipurpose items
    2. Snack smart
    3. Use a smaller bag
    4. Pack with compression cubes
    5. Embrace the art of DIY laundry

     


    Part of Glanbia Performance Nutrition, Isopure features a wide range of products to address all kinds of nutritional needs, with offerings such as Zero/Low Carb Protein Powder, Zero Carb Unflavored Protein Powder, Infusions Protein Powder, and Collagen Powder. Isopure aims for the highest standards of protein, made with simple ingredients—all without sacrificing taste. Isopure products can be found nationwide in specialty and mass retail stores, gyms and fitness centers, and most online retailers. To learn more, visit theisopurecompany.com and follow the brand on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

    elessard

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