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Category: Nutrition

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  • Fennel & Cucumber Salad – Body Fusion

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    Serves 4

    Ingredients

    • 1 large fennel, finely sliced
    • 2 medium cucumbers, finely chopped
    • 4 radishes, finely sliced
    • 1 bunch dill, finely diced
    • 2 shallots, diced
    • 75g packet broccoli sprouts*

    Dressing:

    • 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
    • 1 lemon, juiced
    • 1 tsp Dijon mustard
    • 1 tsp wholegrain mustard
    • 1 tsp horseradish

    Method

    1. Wash and prepare all ingredients, then place them in a large bowl.
    2. In a separate cup, combine all dressing ingredients and mix well.
    3. Pour the dressing over the salad and toss to coat evenly.
    4. For a balanced meal, serve with a lean protein and some complex carbohydrates.

    Tatiana’s Serving Suggestions

    • Grilled salmon fillet with roasted sweet potato
    • Roasted chicken tenderloins with boiled quinoa
    • Hot smoked salmon fillet with mini tinned four-bean mix
    • Grilled lamb leg steak with a wholegrain wrap

    Broccoli Sprouts:
    These are rich in antioxidants like sulforaphane, which may help protect against oxidative stress, inflammation, and certain cancers by activating detoxifying enzymes. They also support heart health, immune function, digestion, and may help regulate blood sugar.

    Tatiana Bedikian – Accredited Practising Dietitian (APD)
    BODY FUSION – LANE COVE, HUNTERS HILL AND ROZELLE
    0422 297 721

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    Tatiana Bedikian

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  • Chlorohydrin 3-MCPD in Bragg’s Liquid Aminos | NutritionFacts.org

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    Chlorohydrin contaminates hydrolyzed vegetable protein products and refined oils.

    In 1978, chlorohydrins were found in protein hydrolysates. What does that mean? Proteins can be broken down into amino acids using a chemical process called hydrolysis, and free amino acids (like glutamate) can have taste-enhancing qualities. That’s how inexpensive soy sauce and seasonings like Bragg’s Liquid Aminos are made. This process requires high heat, high pressure, and hydrochloric acid to break apart the protein. The problem is that when any residual fat is exposed to these conditions, it can form toxic compounds called chlorohydrins, which are toxic at least to mice and rats.

    Chlorohydrins like 3-MCPD are considered “a worldwide problem of food chemistry,” but no long-term clinical studies on people have been reported to date. The concern is about the detrimental effects on the kidneys and fertility. In fact, there was a time 3-MCPD was considered as a potential male contraceptive because it could so affect sperm production, but research funding was withdrawn after “unacceptable side effects [were] observed in primates.” Researchers found flaccid testes in rats, which is what they were going for, but it caused neurological scars in monkeys.

    What do you do when there are no studies in humans? How do you set some kind of safety factor? It isn’t easy, but you can take the lowest observed adverse effect level (LOAEL) in animal studies, which, in this case, was kidney damage, add in some kind of fudge factor, and then arrive at an estimated tolerable daily intake (TDI). For 3-MCPD, this means that high-level consumers of soy sauce may exceed the limit. This was based on extraordinarily high contamination levels, though. Since that study, Europe introduced a regulatory limit of 20 parts per billion (ppb) of 3-MCPD in hydrolyzed vegetable protein products like liquid aminos and soy sauce. The U.S. standards are much laxer, though, setting a “guidance level” of up to 50 times more, 1,000 parts per billion.

    I called Bragg’s to see where it fell, and the good news is that it is doing an independent, third-party analysis of its liquid aminos for 3-MCPD. The bad news is that, despite my pleas that it be fully transparent, Bragg’s wouldn’t let me share the results with you. I have seen them, though, but I’m only allowed to confirm they comfortably meet the U.S. standards but fail to meet the European standards.

    This is just the start of the 3-MCPD story, though. A study in Italy tested individuals’ urine for 3-MCPD or its metabolites, and 100% of the people turned up positive, confirming that it’s “a widespread food contaminant.” But 100% of people aren’t consuming soy sauce or liquid aminos every day. Remember, the chemical results from a reaction with residual vegetable oil. When vegetable oil itself is refined, when it’s deodorized and bleached, those conditions also lead to the formation of 3-MCPD.

    Indeed, we’ve known for years that various foods are contaminated. In what kinds of foods have these kinds of chemicals been detected? Well, if they’re in oils and fats, then they’re in greasy foods made from them: margarine, baked goods, pastries, deep-fried foods, fatty snacks like potato and corn chips, as well as infant formula.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s limit for soy sauce is 1,000 ppb, but donuts can have more than 1,200 ppb, salami more than 1,500 ppb, ham nearly 3,000 ppb, and French fries in excess of 6,000 ppb, as seen here and at 4:03 in my video The Side Effects of 3-MCPD in Bragg’s Liquid Aminos.

    Most of us don’t have to worry about this problem, unless we’re consumers of fried food. Someone weighing about 150 pounds, for example, who eats 116 grams of donuts, would exceed the European Food Safety Authority’s TDI, even if those donuts were the person’s only source of exposure. That’s about two donuts, but the same limit-blowing amount of 3-MCPD could be found in only five French fries.

    Doctor’s Note

    Believe me, I pleaded with the Bragg’s folks over and over. It’s curious to me that Bragg’s allowed me to talk about where its level of 3-MCPD fell compared to the standards but not say the number itself. At least it’s doing third-party testing.

    Learn more about this topic in my video 3-MCPD in Refined Cooking Oils.

    You can also check out Friday Favorites: The Side Effects of 3-MCPD in Bragg’s Liquid Aminos and Refined Cooking Oils.

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    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • Struggling to Tolerate HRT? Chinese Medicine Can Help!

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    Struggling to Tolerate HRT: Summary

    In Struggling to Tolerate HRT, host Evan Transue, AKA Detective Ev, interviews Dr. Jannine Krause, a naturopathic doctor, acupuncturist, and host of the Health Fix Podcast. Dr. Krause shares her personal journey with hormone issues and how it led her to her current practice. 

    The conversation delves into the complexities of hormone replacement therapy (HRT), including its risks and benefits, particularly in the context of perimenopause and menopause. Dr. Krause emphasizes the importance of foundational health and regular testing when considering HRT. The discussion also touches on the rise of hormone and peptide clinics, where the approach can sometimes be overly liberal with prescriptions. Additionally, Dr. Krause talks about the effectiveness of acupuncture in addressing hormonal imbalances and other health issues. 

    The episode wraps up with practical advice from Dr. Krause on lifestyle adjustments and the importance of movement and play for overall health. Listener questions address specific concerns related to HRT, including its safety post-breast cancer and treatment options for managing side effects like acne from testosterone replacement therapy.

    Struggling to Tolerate HRT: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to the Health Detective Podcast

    01:22 Meet Dr. Jannine Krause

    02:08 Dr. Jannine’s Personal Health Journey

    04:53 The Hormone Replacement Therapy Debate

    06:30 Risks and Considerations of HRT

    09:38 The Role of Lifestyle in Hormone Health

    16:40 The Rise of Hormone Replacement Clinics

    23:50 Bioidentical vs. Synthetic Hormones

    25:44 Understanding Bioidentical Estradiol Creams

    26:55 The Organic Food Analogy

    28:35 Compounded Creams vs. Mainstream Pharmaceuticals

    31:11 Breast Cancer and Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)

    36:55 Acupuncture for Hormonal Imbalances

    42:16 Testosterone Replacement Therapy (TRT) and Acne

    44:33 Where to Find Dr. Jannine Krause

    46:44 Final Thoughts and Signature Question

    Where to Find Dr. Jannine Krause

    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

    FDN ADVANCED COURSES

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    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

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  • Prevention Starts on Your Plate: A Personal Story on Men’s Health – Body Fusion

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    This is my Dad, Frank. He cycles 100 km every week, is a non-smoker, and a non-drinker.

    In 2021, my dad was diagnosed with prostate cancer and underwent a prostatectomy during the middle of the COVID lockdown. After years of following a balanced diet and active lifestyle, in 2024, he underwent open-heart surgery just four weeks after completing the 100 km Sydney to Wollongong cycle.

    While a nutritious diet and consistent lifestyle habits reduced the severity of his conditions, it was early detection and regular health checks that truly saved his life.

    November is Men’s Health Awareness Month, a timely reminder that prevention and early lifestyle changes are key to reducing the risk of chronic conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, and certain cancers.

    1. Regular Check-Ups and Early Intervention

    Many men delay seeking medical advice until symptoms become severe. Routine health checks combined with diet reviews can help catch issues early and guide nutrition strategies for prevention.

    • Heart Foundation recommends a healthy heart check every 2 years after age 45
    • National Bowel Cancer Screening Program every 2 years from ages 45 to 74 years
    • Prostate screening after 50 years
    • DXA scan for bone health for men over 50 years with risk factors for osteoporosis, especially if calcium or vitamin D intake is low

    2. Nutrition and Lifestyle Foundations

    Healthy eating is about more than what’s on your plate — it’s about how and when you eat, and how consistent those choices are over time. Small, sustainable habits create lasting change.

    • Eat regularly: Avoid long gaps between meals to maintain stable blood sugar, focus, and energy.
    • Prioritise balance: Include a source of protein, complex carbohydrate, and colour (fruit/veg) at each meal.
    • Stay hydrated: Men need roughly 2.5–3L of fluids daily, more if active.
    • Plan ahead: Keep nutritious snacks like nuts, fruit, or yoghurt on hand to prevent reliance on takeaway.
    • Mind your portions: Even nutrient-dense foods can lead to excess energy intake if portions are too large.
    • Support recovery: Include lean protein after exercise to repair muscle and reduce fatigue.
    • Limit added salt, alcohol, and processed meats that increase cardiovascular risk.

    These daily behaviours improve energy, mood, and long-term metabolic health — the building blocks of disease prevention.

    3. The Mediterranean Diet

    Men following a Mediterranean diet have up to a 30% lower risk of heart disease (PREDIMED study). The Mediterranean diet is also associated with reduced prostate cancer progression and better cognitive function in later life. This way of eating supports healthy ageing, reduces inflammation, and is easy to adapt for any lifestyle or cultural preference.

    As a Dietitian and someone who has supported Dad through his health journeys, I’ve seen how small, consistent actions — especially around nutrition — can make a powerful difference in men’s health.

    Nutrition is a cornerstone of prevention.
    Working with a dietitian can help tailor practical strategies to your lifestyle, preferences, and health goals.

    If you or a male figure in your life would like nutrition support, I’d love to help.

    Book an initial consultation at our Lane Cove, Hunters Hill, or Rozelle clinics, or online, to create a plan that works for you.

    Chyncia Salerno – Accredited Practising Dietitian and Sports Dietitian

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    Tatiana Bedikian

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  • Can a Microbiome Test Explain My 15 Years of Gut Health Issues—and Sluggish Workouts?

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    Published November 5, 2025 03:04AM

    I’ve dealt with chronic indigestion, painful burps, reflux, and bloating for the past 15 years. In 2010, I underwent a range of diagnostic tests—a colonoscopy, an endoscopy, a gastric emptying test, and some bloodwork—before I was diagnosed with Celiac disease. I subsequently cut out gluten. My symptoms improved for a few years, but despite eating a strict gluten-free diet, they reappeared a couple of years ago.

    In 2023, I visited a new gastroenterologist to see if another health condition may be affecting my gut. Yet again, I underwent a series of costly, time-consuming tests that ultimately determined my gastrointestinal (GI) system was in good shape, even though my symptoms suggested otherwise.

    Frustrated, I reached out to a nutritionist who suggested I do a GI-MAP test. This at-home stool test examines your microbiome, which is the community of bacteria, fungi, and viruses that naturally line your GI tract. These tests, often sold by private companies and can cost anywhere between $100 and $500, can tell you if there’s an overgrowth of specific organisms that could be triggering digestive problems and inflammation, she told me. Desperate for answers, I wired her $300, and she ordered me a test kit. Here’s what I learned about microbiome testing and how my gut impacts my overall health and performance.

    How Do Microbiome Tests Work?

    Growing evidence suggests the microbiome plays a role in the development of many chronic conditions—such as allergies and heart disease. “A balanced microbiome is linked to better mood, energy levels, and overall health, while an imbalanced one can contribute to inflammation, digestive issues, or even chronic disease,” says Arpana Church, a neurobiologist with expertise in digestive diseases.

    Microbiome kits claim they can help identify the bugs in your gut that may be contributing to health conditions like IBS, autoimmune diseases, skin issues like acne and psoriasis, brain fog, and even mental health problems like depression and anxiety.

    They’re also simple to use. My provider ordered the kit online. When it arrived, I filled a small tube with my poop, then mailed it off to a laboratory that examines the bacteria in my stool sample. My results, along with an interpretive guide, arrived within ten days.

    What My Microbiome Test Results Told Me

    According to the kit, I had Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), a bacterium that infects your stomach lining and causes inflammation and ulcers. There was also an abnormal growth of Staphylococcus aureus (the bacterium that causes staph infections) and Streptococcus spp., one of the bacteria responsible for strep throat. Both of these bacteria trigger intestinal inflammation and loose stools. The test also detected Methanobacteriaceae—a family of bacteria that produces methane gas and is linked to constipation, bloating, and IBS.

    My gastroenterologist’s (not the same person who ordered my kit) response to my test results? “I don’t make clinical decisions off of kits like these.” Furthermore, he had taken a biopsy of my intestines during a recent endoscopy and found no signs of H. pylori. He would rather go off that, a scientifically sound measure, than a relatively new test kit. Needless to say, I was disappointed and confused.

    Doctors Aren’t Sure How Accurate Microbiome Tests Are

    According to Church, there are a couple of reasons why clinicians don’t trust these kits quite yet.

    Science Hasn’t Pinned Down What a “Healthy” Gut Looks Like

    The first is that the science backing their usage is still in its infancy. The main reason for this is that there isn’t a universal definition for what a “healthy microbiome profile” even is, she says. “A microbe that looks ‘high’ on your report may be harmless—or even normal for you,” she says. Furthermore, our microbiomes are always changing—week to week and even day to day, according to Church. “What you ate, recent illness, travel, or antibiotics can shift results,” she says.

    I was determined to gain some actionable insights from my results. I interviewed Maggie Stanislawski, a biomedical researcher at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, to get her perspective. Did the overgrowth of methane-producing bacteria in my gut mean nothing? The answer is murky.

    Apparently, there are a variety of Methanobacteriaceae species that can have different effects, so it’s unclear what, if anything, this general overgrowth means, according to Stanislawski. Also, “Methanobacteriaceae isn’t a ‘bad’ bug,” she says. In fact, the bacterium helps break down carbohydrates, indirectly contributing to the production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), she says. SCFAs, for context, offer a range of health benefits. They’re anti-inflammatory and contain protective properties for our brain, heart, and immune systems.

    Everyone’s Microbiome Is Different

    But the H. pylori in my stool sample? Surely that’s a red flag, I thought. But again, no. Some of these kits can produce inaccurate results. One study found that when seven different microbiome tests were used to analyze the same stool sample, the results varied drastically.

    Just because H. pylori is detected doesn’t mean it’s an issue—“it could be present and not cause problems and that might even be healthy, especially if you’ve had it since you were very young,” Stanislawski says. These may be giving me issues, she says, but these levels may be normal—for me.

    So, Can Microbiome Test Kits Tell You Anything?

    Yes. These kits do a solid job of identifying infectious diarrhea-causing pathogens—such as  C. diff or Campylobacter—that standard medical tests also catch—and can be treated with antibiotics. But when it comes to all the other microbes? There, unfortunately, isn’t a clear-cut solution, Church says. “Those kits rarely lead to proven, tailored treatments that outperform good clinical care and diet basics,” Church says.

    While it may be too soon to gain specific takeaways and actionable steps from these kits, there may be a time in the near future when that changes. According to Church, we need more research that investigates how various treatment approaches, based on their results, impact people’s health outcomes.

    The best thing to do if you order a microbiome test is to work with a professional, Church says. These kits often contain recommendations for various herbs and probiotic supplements you can take to heal your microbiome (the goal being to increase beneficial bacteria and decrease harmful ones).

    If anything, Church hopes the kits help people focus on the steps known to improve gut health: eating a diet rich in fermented foods, such as sauerkraut, kimchi, and kefir, and low in ultra-processed foods. Then, incorporate a variety of fiber-rich and prebiotic foods—such as leeks, bananas, and oats—that microbes thrive on.

    How Athletes Can Benefit From Gut Health Testing

    For years, my GI pain has impacted my workouts. Acid reflux has sent sharp pains up my chest when I jog, often causing me to wrap up early. And, in certain instances, abdominal cramps and indigestion have prevented me from even being able to get out the door in the first place.

    Athletes can turn to tests for insights on how to improve their microbiome to reduce inflammation and enhance recovery, says Church. She says research suggests a healthy microbiome can help you extract energy from food, reduce inflammation, and recover faster from intense exercise. That means less pain and better performance. A more diverse gut microbiota may also help optimize energy metabolism, ultimately providing you with more fuel to crush your fitness goals.

    While the microbiome kit was unable to heal my gut, it did serve as a reminder to brush up on all of the little things that help my gut run smoothly.

    Want more Outside health stories? Sign up for the Bodywork newsletter. Ready to push yourself? Enter MapMyRun’s You vs. the Year 2025 running challenge.

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    aunderwood

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  • Treat the Cause | NutritionFacts.org

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    Treat the underlying cause of chronic lifestyle diseases.

    It’s been said that more than 2,000 years ago, Hippocrates declared, “Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food.” In actuality, it appears that he never actually said those words, but there’s “no doubt about the relevance of food…and its role in health and disease states” in his writings. Regardless, 2,000 years ago, disease was thought to arise from a bad sense of “humors,” as you can see here and at 0:32 in my video Lifestyle and Disease Prevention: Your DNA Is Not Your Destiny.

    Now, we have science, and there is “an overwhelming body of clinical and epidemiological evidence illustrating the dramatic impact of a healthy lifestyle on reducing all-cause mortality”—meaning death from all causes put together—“and preventing chronic diseases such as coronary heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and cancer.” But don’t those diseases just run in our family? What if we just have bad genes?

    According to the esteemed former chair of nutrition at Harvard, for most of the diseases that have contributed “importantly” to mortality in Western peoples, we’ve long known that non-genetic factors often account for at least 80% to 90% of risk. We know this because rates of the leading killers, like major cancers and cardiovascular diseases, vary up to 100-fold around the world, and, “when groups migrate from low- to high-risk countries, their disease rates almost always change to those of the new environment.” Modifiable behavioral factors have been identified, “including specific aspects of diet, overweight, inactivity, and smoking that account for over 70% of stroke and colon cancer, over 80% of coronary heart disease, and over 90% of adult-onset [type 2] diabetes”—diseases that can largely be prevented by our own actions.

    If most of the power is in our own hands, why do we allocate massively more resources to treatment than prevention? And speaking of prevention, “even preventive strategies are heavily biased towards pharmacology rather than supporting improvements in diet and lifestyle that could be more cost-effective. For example, treatment of [high] serum cholesterol with statins alone could cost approximately 30 billion dollars per year in the United States and would have only a modest impact on coronary heart disease incidence. The inherent problem is that most pharmacologic strategies don’t address the underlying causes of ill health in Western countries, which are not drug deficiencies.”

    Ironically, the chronic diseases that are most amenable to lifestyle treatment are the same ones most profitably treated by drugs. Why? If you don’t change your diet, you have to pop the pills every day for the rest of your life. So, the cash-cow drugs are the very drugs we need the least. “Even though the most widely accepted, well-established chronic disease practice guidelines uniformly call for lifestyle change as the first line of therapy, physicians often do not follow these recommendations.” “By ignoring the root causes of disease and neglecting to prioritize lifestyle measures for prevention, the medical community is placing people at harm.”

    “Traditional medical care relies primarily on the application of pharmacologic and surgical interventions after the development of illness,” whereas lifestyle medicine relies primarily on “the use of optimal nutrition (a whole foods, plant-based diet) and exercise in the prevention, arrest, and reversal of chronic conditions leading to premature disability and death. It looks in a holistic way at the underlying causes of illness.”

    Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman, director of PharmedOut, a wonderful organization I’m proud to support, wrote a great editorial entitled “Doctors Must Not Be Lapdogs to Drug Firms.” “The illusion that the relationship between medicine and the drug industry is collegial, professional, and personal is carefully maintained by the drug industry, which actually views all transactions with physicians in finely calculated financial terms…The drug industry is happy to play the generous and genial uncle until physicians want to discuss subjects that are off limits, such as the benefits of diet or exercise, or the relationship between medicine and pharmaceutical companies…Let us not be a lapdog to Big Pharma. Rather than sitting contentedly in our master’s lap, let us turn around and bite something tender.”

    Doctor’s Note

    The organization I mentioned, PharmedOut, is a project of Georgetown University Medical Center.

    For more on Lifestyle Medicine, see related videos below.

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    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • 4 Kids, Endless Symptoms, and No Answers…Until FDN

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    4 Kids, Endless Symptoms, and No Answers…Until FDN: Summary

    In 4 Kids, Endless Symptoms, and No Answers…Until FDN, Detective Ev introduces Vanessa, a mother who has faced numerous severe health challenges, both personally and with her children. Vanessa recounts her lifelong battle with conditions such as stomach issues, migraines, and hormonal imbalances. which worsened after the birth of her fourth child. Despite consulting multiple healthcare providers over the years, Vanessa found relief only after discovering FDN. Her journey led her to enroll in the FDN training, through which she uncovered underlying health issues like h pylori, parasites, and hormone imbalances through various diagnostic tests.

    Vanessa’s children also faced significant health challenges, motivating her pursuit of greater knowledge and solutions. Her eldest child struggled with anxiety and depression, while another had severe stomach aches alleviated by a gluten-free diet but was later diagnosed with PANS/PANDAS. Her third child dealt with sleep issues and allergies, linked to histamine buildup and genetic factors. Utilizing FDN principles, Vanessa incorporated diet changes, stress reduction techniques, and gut healing strategies, significantly improving their health. A pivotal tool in their journey was the Rezzimax Pain Tuner, which aids in vagus nerve stimulation and has shown remarkable results in mitigating anxiety, inflammation, and even aiding in bone healing.

    Vanessa emphasizes the importance of stress reduction and nervous system regulation, noting these as crucial yet often overlooked components in healing. She shares how specific devices and techniques have helped her family manage their conditions effectively. Vanessa now serves other moms and children facing similar health challenges, advocating for a mindset shift towards seeing health challenges as opportunities for growth and learning. Her story highlights the transformative power of holistic and functional approaches to health.

    4 Kids, Endless Symptoms, and No Answers…Until FDN: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to the Health Detective Podcast

    00:33 Meet Vanessa: A Journey Through Health Challenges

    00:57 Vanessa’s Early Health Struggles

    01:55 The Turning Point: Discovering Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

    02:24 Vanessa’s Interview: Early Symptoms and Struggles

    04:17 The Impact of Health Issues on Daily Life

    09:31 Vanessa’s Children: Health Challenges and Discoveries

    17:42 Finding Answers: The Role of Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

    19:16 The FDN Experience: Labs and Discoveries

    23:34 Personal Health Journey and Gut Healing

    24:22 Systematic Approach to Health Improvement

    25:39 Children’s Health and Gut Healing

    26:04 Stress Reduction and Nervous System Regulation

    27:50 Theories on Neuroticism and Health

    34:12 Primitive Reflexes and Vagus Nerve Stimulation

    36:53 Rezzimax Device and Its Benefits

    42:30 Working with Kids and Moms

    43:53 Mindset and Nervous System Regulation

    46:16 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

    Where to Find Vanessa Roush

    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

    FDN ADVANCED COURSES

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    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

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  • Eggs, saturated fat & cholesterol – Diet and Health Today

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    In Summary

    * A study was published in July 2025, which aimed to examine the independent effects of dietary cholesterol and saturated fat on LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C).

    * The study was a cross-over study involving 61 adults doing three different five-week diets in random order. The diets were summarised as high dietary cholesterol/high saturated fat (the so-called control diet); high dietary cholesterol/low saturated fat (called the EGG diet) and low dietary cholesterol/high saturated fat (called the EGG-FREE diet). Eggs were used (along with many other foods) to try to achieve the high/low, cholesterol/saturated fat, designs.

    * The study had egg industry funding, collaboration and author declarations of interest.

    * The dietary cholesterol and saturated fat intakes that were aimed for were largely achieved.

    * The study claimed, “Saturated fat, not dietary cholesterol, elevates LDL-cholesterol.” That claim was based on comparing the EGG diet with the so-called control diet.

    * There were five fundamental issues with the study:

    1) There wasn’t a control diet.

    2a) The biggest change in LDL-C (an increase) occurred in the so-called control diet; 2b) The smallest change in LDL-C (a decrease) occurred in the EGG diet.

    3) But for the change in the so-called control diet there would have been no result for the EGG diet and thus no result for the diet trial overall.

    4) Even if there had been a control diet, the study didn’t test (an increase in) saturated fat. It could not, therefore, make conclusions about the impact of saturated fat. Arguably, it could try to make a claim about the impact of reducing saturated fat, but…

    5) The reduction in saturated fat in the EGG diet was accompanied by an increase in foods known to reduce cholesterol (plant sterols). It thus cannot be claimed that saturated fat impacted anything.

    * I’ve been in communications with the corresponding author about these issues.

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    Zoe

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  • Make your own Natural Hair & Scalp Mask for Hair Growth 

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    If you’ve been following me for a while, you know I have loved bentonite clay since when I was first super sick and going through healing. I first started using it 17 years ago by drinking it, soak in a bath with it, use it as a face mask and create a paste to apply to my neck where the tumor was (because the clay draws out toxins in a powerful way). There are so many ways we can use bentonite clay! 

    And another way we can use it is as a hair mask and scalp treatment, plus a hair rinse. So in this article I will share some recipes with you and why it works. Did you know bentonite clay is actually one of the cheapest hair mask treatments you can find on earth? 

    Bentonite clay is a natural healing clay formed from volcanic ash that has aged and absorbed minerals such as calcium, magnesium, and iron. It’s known for its powerful detoxifying properties and has been used for centuries in traditional medicine and skincare. When mixed with water, the clay becomes electrically charged, attracting and binding to toxins, heavy metals, and impurities, helping to draw them out of the body or skin. Internally, it can support gut health and assist with cleansing the digestive system; externally, it’s often used in masks, baths, and poultices to purify and rejuvenate the skin. Its ability to both detoxify and replenish minerals makes bentonite clay a valuable tool for natural healing and renewal.

    The brand I use is Redmond Clay. It comes from Utah, USA and I love it because it is food grade so this is the same clay that I drink. 

     

    Why Clay Is Amazing for Hair Health

     

    Our scalps are just like the skin on our faces — they need detoxing, nourishment, and balance. Over time, product buildup, environmental toxins, and hard water can clog pores and weigh hair down. If you wear a lot of product in your hair like hairspray I would recommend you do this clay mask at least once a month! If you use hairspray daily because of your work I would recommend doing a hair mask once per week. 

    Redmond’s Clay is an ancient, mineral-rich bentonite clay gently draws out impurities while replenishing the scalp with trace minerals that support healthy growth and shine.

    Some of the key benefits:

    • Detoxifies the scalp: Pulls out product buildup, oil, and impurities.
    • Balances oils: Helps regulate sebum production — perfect for both dry and oily scalps.
    • Strengthens roots: The minerals in clay support stronger, thicker strands.
    • Soothes irritation: Calms an itchy, flaky, or sensitive scalp naturally.
    • Adds natural volume + shine: Removes residue that dulls the hair, leaving it light and clean.
    • Adds minerals: Especially calcium, magnesium, potassium, and silica that nourishes hair follicles.

     

     

    DIY Bentonite Clay Hair Growth Mask

     

    This nourishing treatment deeply detoxifies the scalp, draws out impurities, and delivers essential minerals that promote healthy hair growth. It’s ideal when your scalp feels congested, after travel, or when you want to stimulate stronger, thicker strands. Castor oil is rich in ricinoleic acid, a fatty acid that helps increase blood circulation to the scalp, strengthen hair follicles, and promote faster, thicker hair growth. Rosemary essential oil also stimulates circulation, supports cellular regeneration, and has been shown to encourage new hair growth while reducing shedding and improving overall scalp health.

    You’ll need:

    • 2 tbsp Redmond Clay

    • 2 tbsp filtered water

    • 1 tsp Redmond Real Salt (adds minerals and gentle exfoliation)

    • 1 tsp castor oil (stimulates follicles and supports growth)

    • A few drops of rosemary (to boost hair growth) 

    ( double this if you have long hair)

    Directions:

    1. Mix all ingredients into a smooth paste with a wooden spoon. 

    2. Apply directly to your scalp, section by section, and work through to the ends.

    3. Leave on for 10–15 minutes — do not let it fully dry (a dry clay mask can pull on hair and scalp, causing breakage or irritation).

    4. Rinse thoroughly and follow with your favorite natural conditioner or nourishing oil.

    Your scalp will feel revived, your roots lighter, and your hair refreshed and ready to grow strong and vibrant.

     

    Detox and Rose Shine Mask

     

    This soothing, mineral-rich mask adds softness, shine, and balance to both hair and scalp. The rose oil helps calm irritation while leaving your hair beautifully fragrant and naturally luminous. Each ingredient in this mask works together to deeply detoxify the scalp and hair while maintaining balance and nourishment. Redmond Clay binds to and draws out toxins, heavy metals, and product buildup from the scalp, leaving it purified and refreshed. Apple cider vinegar gently dissolves residue from styling products and hard water, restores the scalp’s natural pH, and boosts shine. Peppermint oil increases circulation, helping to flush out impurities and stimulate healthy new growth. Coconut milk or aloe vera add hydration and minerals that replenish the scalp after detoxification, ensuring softness instead of dryness.

    You’ll need:

    • 2 tbsp Redmond Clay

    • 2 tbsp Apple cider vinegar 

    • 1 tsp coconut milk or aloe vera gel (for moisture and shine)

    • A few drops of rose essential oil (to soothe and smooth the scalp)

    • A few drops of peppermint oil (to boost stimulation) 

    Directions:

    1. Mix all ingredients into a creamy consistency with a wooden spoon. 

    2. Apply to damp hair and scalp, massaging gently.

    3. Leave on for 7-10 minutes for a quick treatment.

    4. Rinse thoroughly with warm water and follow with a light conditioner or rosewater spray.

    This quick mask adds instant shine, softness, and a luxurious, fresh scent — perfect before an event or as a weekly self-care ritual.

    Important note: Never use metal utensils or bowls when mixing or storing bentonite clay — use wooden, plastic, or glass instead. Metal can react with the clay and reduce its ability to bind and detox effectively.

    Tip:

    If you’re traveling or prefer convenience, you can also use pre-made Redmond Clay paste — just mix in your chosen ingredients (like rosemary oil, rose oil, or aloe vera) for a ready-to-go, mess-free option.

     

     

    Additionally you can drink Bentonite Clay!

     

    One of the practices that helped me heal my health issues which included a golf ball size tumor and parasites in my blood, was drinking bentonite clay regularly. It supported my body from the inside out, and it’s something I still do to this day.

    If you haven’t done my 3-Day Cleanse, we actually drink it daily as part of the detox. Bentonite clay helps bind to toxins and heavy metals, gently cleanse the digestive tract, and support mineral balance in the body. You can get my 3-Day Cleanse here it’s free. 

    It’s really important to make sure the clay you use is food-grade and safe for internal use (like Redmond Clay). Always start with small amounts and drink plenty of water throughout the day.

     

    Why I Love Redmond

     

    What I love most about Redmond is that their products come straight from nature — unrefined, pure, and rich in trace minerals from the ancient sea bed in Utah. No fillers, no chemicals — just earth’s original ingredients that work in harmony with the body. I’ve been to the clay fields three times, and you can imagine being as passionate as I am about bentonite clay that it was one of the best experiences ever!  

    If you’re looking to naturally strengthen your hair, detox your scalp, and elevate your self-care rituals, Redmond Clay is the perfect addition to your beauty routine.

    Clean beauty starts from the inside out — and nature always knows best.

     

    Love Liana

     

    P.S Use code LIANA for 15% off your next Redmond purchase.

     

    This is a sponsored blog post by Redmond Clay. 

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  • Ideal vs. Normal Cholesterol Levels  | NutritionFacts.org

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    Having a “normal” cholesterol level in a society where it’s normal to die from a heart attack isn’t necessarily a good thing.

    “Consistent evidence” from a variety of sources “unequivocally establishes” that so-called bad LDL cholesterol causes atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease—strokes and heart attacks, our leading cause of death. This evidence base includes hundreds of studies involving millions of people. “Cholesterol is the cause of atherosclerosis,” the hardening of the arteries, and “the message is loud and clear.” “It’s the Cholesterol, Stupid!” noted the editor of the American Journal of Cardiology, William Clifford Roberts, whose CV is more than 100 pages long as he has published about 1,700 articles in peer-reviewed medical literature. Yes, there are at least ten traditional risk factors for atherosclerosis, as seen below and at 1:11 in my video How Low Should You Go for Ideal LDL Cholesterol?, but, as Dr. Roberts noted, only one is required for the progression of the disease: elevated cholesterol.

    Your doctor may have just told you that your cholesterol is normal, so you’re relieved. Thank goodness! But, having a “normal” cholesterol level in a society where it’s normal to have a fatal heart attack isn’t necessarily good. With heart disease, the number one killer of men and women, we definitely don’t want to have normal cholesterol levels; we want to have optimal levels—and not optimal by current laboratory standards, but optimal for human health.

    Normal LDL cholesterol levels are associated with the hidden buildup of atherosclerotic plaques in our arteries, even in those who have so-called “optimal risk factors by current standards”: blood pressure under 120/80, normal blood sugars, and total cholesterol under 200 mg/dL. If you went to your doctor with those kinds of numbers, you’d likely get a gold star and a lollipop. But, if your doctor used ultrasound and CT scans to actually peek inside your body, atherosclerotic plaques would be detected in about 38% of individuals with those kinds of “optimal” numbers.

    Maybe we should define an LDL cholesterol level as optimal only when it no longer causes disease. What a concept! When more than a thousand men and women in their 40s were scanned, having an LDL level under 130 mg/dL left them with atherosclerosis throughout their body, and that’s a cholesterol level at which most lab tests would consider normal.

    In fact, atherosclerotic plaques were not found with LDL levels down around 50 or 60, which just so happens to be the levels most people had “before the introduction of western lifestyles.” Indeed, before we started eating a typical American diet, “the majority of the adult population of the world had LDLs of around 50 mg per deciliter (mg/dL)”—so that’s the true normal. “Present average values…should not be regarded as ‘normal.’” We don’t want to have a normal cholesterol based on a sick society; we want a cholesterol that is normal for the human species, which may be down around 30 to 70 mg/dL or 0.8 to 1.8 mmol/L.

    “Although an LDL level of 50 to 70 mg/dl seems excessively low by modern American standards, it is precisely the normal range for individuals living the lifestyle and eating the diet for which we are genetically adapted.” Over millions of years, “through the evolution of the ancestors of man,” we’ve consumed a diet centered around whole plant foods. No wonder we have a killer epidemic of atherosclerosis, given the LDL level “we were ‘genetically designed for’ is less than half of what is presently considered ‘normal.’”

    In medicine, “there is an inappropriate tendency to accept small changes in reversible risk factors,” but “the goal is not to decrease risk but to prevent atherosclerotic plaques!” So, how low should you go? “In light of the latest evidence from trials exploring the benefits and risks of profound LDLc lowering, the answer to the question ‘How low do you go?’ is, arguably, a straightforward ‘As low as you can!’” “‘Lower’ may indeed be better,” but if you’re going to do it with drugs, then you have to balance that with the risk of the drug’s side effects.

    Why don’t we just drug everyone with statins, by putting them in the water supply, for instance? Although it would be great if everyone’s cholesterol were lower, there are the countervailing risks of the drugs. So, doctors aim to use statin drugs at the highest dose possible, achieving the largest LDL cholesterol reduction possible without increasing risk of the muscle damage the drugs may cause. But when you’re using lifestyle changes to bring down your cholesterol, all you get are the benefits.

    Can we get our LDL low enough with diet alone? Ask some of the country’s top cholesterol experts what they shoot for, “and the odds are good that many will say 70 or so.” So, yes, we should try to avoid the saturated fats and trans fats found in junk foods and meat, and the dietary cholesterol found mostly in eggs, but “it is unlikely anyone can achieve an LDL cholesterol level of 70 mg/dL with a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet alone.” Really? Many doctors have this mistaken impression. An LDL of 70 isn’t only possible on a healthy enough diet, but it may be normal. Those eating strictly plant-based diets can average an LDL that low, as you can see here and at 5:28 in my video.

    No wonder plant-based diets are the only dietary patterns ever proven to reverse coronary heart disease in a majority of patients. And their side effects? You get to feel better, too! Several randomized clinical trials have demonstrated that more plant-based dietary patterns significantly improve psychological well-being and quality of life, with improvements in depression, anxiety, emotional well-being, physical well-being, and general health.

    For more on cholesterol, see the related posts below.

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    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • How to Rebuild Your Health While Building a Business

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    How To Rebuild Your Health While Building A Business: Summary

    In How to Rebuild Your Health While Building a Business, Kailey Campos, a Functional Diagnostic Nutrition Practitioner, yoga and Pilates instructor, and founder of re’nud holistics shares her transformative health journey that began in her teenage years with hormonal changes and gut health issues, leading her to discover a yeast overgrowth. Through trial and error, Kailey found relief by modifying her diet, eliminating alcohol, and using macro-based nutrition, which she now implements with her clients to support gut health, hormone balance, and sustainable lifestyle changes. 

    Kailey also highlights the importance of personal accountability in health and the mindset shift required to take control of one’s well-being. She emphasizes the significance of the Health Integration Exchange (HIX) conference, where she courageously networked with professionals, leading to significant career opportunities, including nutritional protocol work at a naturopathic clinic and marketing support for wellness brands. 

    Her story demonstrates the impact of bold decisions, embracing continuous learning, and adjusting one’s environment, both socially and geographically, to support health and professional goals. Kailey also stresses the importance of a wind-down routine before bed, offering it as a critical daily practice for overall wellness and better sleep.

    How To Rebuild Your Health While Building A Business: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to the Health Detective Podcast

    00:18 Meet Kailey Campos: Functional Diagnostic Nutrition Practitioner

    01:26 Kailey’s Personal Health Journey

    02:17 The Turning Point: Taking Responsibility for Health

    06:46 From Personal Healing to Professional Training

    10:08 The Impact of HIX Conference

    14:35 Networking and Opportunities at HIX

    19:48 Blending Marketing with Wellness

    21:37 The Importance of Financial Mindset

    23:37 The 10X Mindset for Success

    25:10 Balancing Health and Ambition

    28:17 Changing Your Environment for Better Health

    30:36 Natural Separation and Personal Growth

    35:19 The Power of Foundational Labs

    41:02 Kailey’s Ideal Clients and Final Advice

    Where to Find Kailey Campos

    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

    FDN ADVANCED COURSES

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    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

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  • Everyone’s Obsessed with Protein, But According to Nutritionists Here’s What Your Body Really Needs

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    Published October 30, 2025 03:00AM

    From cereal, chips, popcorn, water, to even your favorite Starbucks latte, protein is being added to virtually everything. Even though protein absolutely deserves a top spot in a well-balanced diet—it’s essential for building and repairing muscle, supporting recovery, and preserving lean mass as we age—but it’s often treated like the whole story. In reality, when it comes to actually powering training performance, adequate carbs, sleep, and a consistent plan are the major contributors.

    As a personal trainer, strength and conditioning specialist, and nutrition coach, I eat my fair share of protein and recommend it to clients, but I don’t love paying extra for protein bars or shakes when the consequences of substituting them for balanced meals chip away at performance and diet quality.

    With the protein craze taking a firm grasp of social media feeds, fast-food menus, and grocery carts, I think it’s important to examine what people truly need, where fortified products can help in real life, and where they slide into pricey ultra-processed convenience with a health halo.

    What’s Driving the Protein Boom?

    Though protein-boosted foods are cropping up more now than ever, diets where a single nutrient becomes shorthand for “better choices” have been around since the 1920s, according to advertising and food historian Elizabeth Nelson.

    The protein craze really took off in the 1980s thanks to the Atkins Diet, which pushed fat and protein with minimal carbs. The low-carb era made a simple case that protein is “good” and carbohydrates are “bad,” a framing that stuck because it let people eat indulgent foods and still feel virtuous, Nelson explains.

    Now, the protein frenzy is part of a bigger trend centering on “wellness” and longevity as ideal goals. In uncertain times, research shows people often gravitate toward health-control behaviors, so focusing on diet and well-being has become a way for many to regain control.

    Consuming Too Much Protein Can Backfire

    When a single macronutrient becomes the darling of your dinner plate, it can mean tradeoffs—some that are even counterproductive, especially if you’re choosing packaged protein-added foods over whole sources.

    Performance Drops When You Cut Carbs to Boost Protein

    People seek protein in part because of its performance and recovery-boosting prowess, but there’s a caveat. If protein is prioritized over carbs, performance and recovery will suffer, especially if your preferred activities demand a lot of energy. If you already get adequate protein, pushing above your usual targets or tacking on protein during or post-workout fuel doesn’t improve endurance performance when you’re getting enough carbs; the main benefit of protein during long efforts is reduced muscle damage and soreness.

    Active people should focus on getting enough carbs to fuel performance, which looks different depending on goals. “Endurance athletes, like cross-country runners as an example, require a lot more carbs,” says Jeffrey Jackson, a physical therapist, comparing them to athletes like football players, who must maintain more muscle mass, thus require more protein.

    Jackson recommends whole-food protein sources, partially because if you’re relying on protein-infused foods to power your training, you can end up depleted. “Most bars and ready-to-drinks will have some carbs, but a lot of them are now more focused on protein at the expense of carbs,” says sports dietitian Jessica Garay, a nutritionist and a sports dietetics specialist. This leaves you feeling depleted ahead of your next workout.

    Protein-Fortified Snacks Are Considered Ultra-Processed

    It’s more than a bit ironic that the war on processed foods is in full force while protein-added goods are booming. Bars, protein waters, cereals, and many ready-to-drink (RTD) shakes may look sporty and health-focused, but at their core, they’re industrial recipes built from whey isolates (purified whey protein) and additives such as flavorings and sugars for better taste, which makes them ultra-processed foods (UPF).

    When active people rely on protein snacks packed with artificial sweeteners, they “feel bloated while training or even must make frequent trips to the bathroom, which impairs performance,” Jackson says. Not exactly training fuel.

    How Ultra-Processed Foods Impact Health

    The bigger picture here is that higher intake of ultra-processed foods is associated with poor health outcomes. For example, a 2024 review links higher UPF intake with greater risks of cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and certain cancers. In a 2019 study, adults ate about 500 more calories per day from carbs and fat when offered ultra-processed meals than when offered minimally processed meals, even though the menus were identical in terms of calories, macros, sugar, sodium, and fiber content.

    How Much Protein Do You Actually Need?

    The recommended daily allowance (RDA) is 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight, which is a floor set to cover the needs of most healthy adults so they don’t become deficient. So if you weigh 150 pounds, you should aim to get 54 grams of protein each day.

    However, most active people and athletes do better in the 1.4 to 2.0 g/kg/day lane (so that same 150 pound person would need to eat roughly 95 to 136 grams of protein each day), especially when training is regular and intense, the higher end is more practical during heavy training or if you’re in an energy deficit—eating fewer calories than you burn during weight loss—according to the International Society of Sports Nutrition (ISSN). Garay suggests splitting protein into 20 to 40 grams per meal, choosing the higher end if you live in a larger body, are older, or have just trained intensely.

    As a nutritionist, I keep it simple. I’d rather see you eat yogurt and a sandwich after training than chug protein water (yes, that’s a thing) that shortchanges carbs. But I agree with Garay when she says, “Fed is best. A bar or RTD-protein shake is better than nothing.”

    But honestly, there’s no need to jump on this craze. If history holds, and it most definitely will, the pendulum will swing again, and we’ll be onto the next nutrition trend.

    Want more Outside health stories? Sign up for the Bodywork newsletter. Ready to push yourself? Enter MapMyRun’s You vs. the Year 2025 running challenge.

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    aunderwood

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  • Salmon Puttanesca – Body Fusion

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    Serves 6

    Ingredients

    Salmon

    • 1–1.5kg salmon side
    • ¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
    • 10 anchovies, finely chopped
    • 2 tbsp tomato paste
    • 2 tsp oregano
    • 5 garlic cloves, crushed
    • 1 large lemon, thinly sliced
    • 250g cherry tomatoes
    • 2 leeks, chopped

    Salsa (to serve)

    • 20 whole pitted kalamata olives
    • 4 tbsp capers
    • Handful fresh basil, roughly chopped
    • Handful fresh parsley, roughly chopped
    • ½ lemon, juiced

    Method

    1. In a small pan, heat olive oil and anchovies for a few minutes until softened.
    2. Stir in tomato paste and add a splash of water to form a thin sauce.
    3. Remove from heat, stir in oregano and garlic. Let cool completely.
    4. Prepare salsa ingredients in a bowl and set aside.
    5. Preheat oven to 200°C.
    6. Line a baking tray with baking paper.
    7. Arrange lemon slices on the tray, place salmon skin-side down on top.
    8. Scatter cherry tomatoes and leeks around the salmon.
    9. Spoon and spread tomato mixture over salmon.
    10. Bake for 20 minutes or until just cooked through.
    11. Remove from oven, top with salsa and serve.

    Serving suggestion

    Serve with a salad or steamed greens and your choice of complex carbohydrates such as potatoes, rice or pasta.

    Tatiana Bedikian – Accredited Practising Dietitian (APD)
    BODY FUSION – LANE COVE AND HUNTERS HILL
    0422 297 721

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    Tatiana Bedikian

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  • The Newest Endurance Supplement Is a Broccoli Shot. But Does It Work?

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    Published October 29, 2025 02:45PM

    Andreas Almgren, who streaked to a new European half-marathon record of 58:41 earlier this month, swears by it. So does Cole Hocker: “Yeah, I ripped a shot before the 5K,” he said after taking gold in that event at the track and field world championships in Tokyo in September. Mads Pederson, former world cycling champion, credits it with spurring him to his best-ever 90-minute ride.

    “It” is a supplement called Nomio, a concentrated shot extracted from broccoli sprouts that has emerged as the hottest new performance-enhancer among elite endurance athletes (as Velo’s Jim Cotton recently reported). The tagline printed on the box and splashed across the company’s website is that it’s “a natural compound that reduces lactate buildup during intense physical activity.” The promise to lower lactate is reminiscent of claims about baking soda, which has swept through endurance sport over the past few years. That’s what is drawing athletes in—but the actual science behind Nomio, preliminary though it remains, suggests a more complicated and perhaps more interesting picture.

    Nomio as a Lactate Fighter

    The active ingredient in Nomio is isothiocyanates, or ITCs, which are found in cruciferous vegetables such as broccoli, kale, and cabbage. The product was developed by scientists at Sweden’s Karolinska Institute and the Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences—by some of the same scientists who did pioneering research into the endurance-boosting abilities of the nitrates found in foods such as beets. Beet juice has turned out to be one of the very few purported sports supplements backed by robust evidence, one of just five that the International Olympic Committee gives a thumbs-up to. That parallel is encouraging: maybe another vegetable extract is ready to join the list.

    The claims on the Nomio website are all over the map. Not only will it reduce lactate, it will also lower oxidative stress and inflammation, enhance training response to create more mitochondria, and accelerate post-exercise recovery. Oh, and it will also make your legs feel lighter. That sounds suspiciously like a magical pill that makes all your wishes come true—a bargain at $28 for four doses.

    The “Science” tab on Nomio’s website offers three references for these claims:

    The first is a 2023 study led by Filip Larsen, one of Nomio’s co-founders, in which volunteers took a shot of Nomio (or a placebo) twice a day for a week while completing intense interval workouts on an exercise bike every day. The supplement reduced oxidative stress and lowered lactate levels during exercise, improved regulation of blood glucose, and extended time to exhaustion by about 12 percent in a VO2 max test (though it didn’t actually change VO2 max).

    The second study hasn’t yet been published, but is available as a preprint while it undergoes peer review. It’s also from Larsen’s group, led by Michaela Sundqvist. This time it’s a one-shot test: take a broccoli shot, then three hours later do some exercise. Once again, lactate levels were lower at a given speed or power output compared to with a placebo.

    The third study is a little more arcane. It involved stimulating individual muscle fibers in a test tube to simulate exercise. In the presence of ITCs, there was a dramatic increase in training response leading to lower oxidative stress and the creation of more mitochondria, the cellular “powerhouses” that are key to aerobic exercise. This was an independent study by David Hood, a prominent muscle physiologist at York University. And it really was independent; when I contacted Hood, he’d never heard of Nomio. But he confirmed the study’s findings: “The results were dramatic for us,” he said. His group is now running a training study in live mice with and without ITCs, with results expected in January.

    These studies are certainly suggestive, but two things are missing, from my perspective. One is direct evidence that ITCs enhance performance. Nobody wins a medal for best mitochondria or lowest lactate levels; all we really care about is whether the supplement makes athletes faster. The other is a coherent explanation of why we should expect ITCs to make athletes faster. I’ll come back to the question of evidence below, but let’s start with the why.

    Nomio’s Other Origin Story

    When I got in touch with Larsen (whose research I’ve written about previously), he explained the evolution of his thinking about ITCs in a way that made more sense to me. It’s not about lactate, or at least it wasn’t initially.

    In Larsen’s telling, the starting point was a 2021 study on overtraining. They had volunteers progressively ramp up their training over the course of three weeks, with the final week pushing them into overtraining. At that point, their mitochondria were no longer working as well, their blood sugar control was compromised, and they were slower. “This aligns well with how athletes typically feel when they train harder than they can adapt: muscles feel heavy and unresponsive, and they don’t recover between sessions as they should,” Larsen says. The culprit appeared to be a signaling pathway called Nrf2, which is a key regulator of the body’s antioxidant defenses and (as David Hood and others have shown) how it responds to training.

    With those results in mind, Larsen and his team wondered whether boosting Nrf2 might counteract the effects of overtraining. There was already a robust literature showing that ITCs boost Nrf2. “Based on that,” Larsen says, “we simply asked: ‘What happens if we give people ITC (from broccoli sprouts) while they train really hard?’”

    That question is what led to the 2023 study mentioned above. As hypothesized, ITCs seemed to protect people from oxidative stress during heavy training. But the other benefits—better blood sugar control, and especially lower lactate during exercise—were surprising. That’s what prompted the second study, where even a single dose of ITCs—as much as you’d get from about six pounds of raw broccoli, packed into a shot glass-sized container—lowered lactate during exercise.

    Larsen and his colleagues still aren’t sure why ITCs lower lactate; there are a few possible biochemical explanations, but none has been proven yet. The effects are most apparent when lactate concentrations are in an intermediate range between about 3 and 8 millimolar, which corresponds to moderately hard but not all-out paces of the type you’d see in efforts lasting between about ten minutes and a few hours. (In contrast, the biggest benefits of baking soda are thought to accrue in shorter, more intense efforts between about one and ten minutes.)

    Before these lactate findings popped up, though, the original reason for trying ITCs was to fight the oxidative stress caused by hard training. This raises a dilemma, because there’s a well-established body of evidence suggesting that taking high doses of antioxidant supplements can actually blunt the benefits of training. The basic idea is that oxidative stress is a signal that tells your body to adapt and get stronger, so suppressing that signal by taking antioxidants results in less training adaptation.

    That’s a genuine concern, Larsen says. But in this case, ITCs aren’t really antioxidants. In fact, they’re mild pro-oxidants, just like exercise itself. In both cases, generating a small amount of oxidative stress causes the body’s own antioxidant defenses, controlled by Nrf2, to kick into higher gear. So instead of eliminating training’s adaptive signal with an antioxidant, Nomio is trying to amplify that signal. Still, Larsen says, that means it’s really only useful if you’re training reasonably hard. “We also recommend that athletes only take it before hard sessions or during tougher training blocks,” Larsen says, “not before easy sessions or on rest days.”

    More specifically, the company’s recommended usage plan has two components. For the acute benefits, take one shot three hours before a race or hard workout. For the chronic adaptive benefits, take one shot daily during hard training blocks, three hours before your main workout, then take a second shot before bed on hard workout days, and no shots on rest or easy days. Given the body’s finely tuned antioxidant balance, Larsen says, “I don’t think ITC intake is useful for healthy people who don’t train.”

    But Does It Actually Work?

    Here’s where things get sticky. In the scientific papers published so far, all we have is that subjects lasted a little longer in a VO2 max test, which isn’t really comparable to a race. Emil Sjölander, one of Nomio’s co-founders, connected me with a few scientists who have done or are doing performance testing either in academia or professional cycling, but none were willing to publicly share the results of their testing.

    When I reached out to others who work with professional endurance athletes, the responses were mixed. Everyone had heard of it, and most were at least intrigued. “Their work thus far looks well-done and credible… just not a lot of it yet,” said Trent Stellingwerff, the chief performance officer at the Canadian Sports Institute Pacific, who hasn’t yet worked with any athletes using Nomio. The most skeptical person I spoke to (who asked not to be named) said the data so far seemed “weak and unconvincing,” but they are nonetheless planning a study of Nomio’s effects this fall—which is an expression of interest, if nothing else.

    The list of athletes using it, both with and without the company’s cooperation, is long and growing. Among the unpaid names Sjölander mentioned: Conner Mantz, Clayton Young, Sarah Hall, and Graham Blanks. I asked Young about his experiences, and he admitted sharing my initial confusion about what the product’s main goal is. “After reading the research papers, it seemed like much of the science targeted changes in mitochondria,” he wrote in an email. “I was then surprised to see that it was marketed more towards reducing lactic acid levels. Almost as if they wanted to simplify the marketing and label it more as a bi-carb [i.e. baking soda] alternative.”

    Still, based on the positive experiences of some of his friends and training partners, Young gave it a shot in the lead-up to the World Championships marathon in Tokyo last month, where he placed ninth despite a hard fall early in the race. “My Tokyo build was one of the best I’ve ever had, if not the best,” he wrote. “My workouts, especially my speed workouts on the track, seem to be better than ever. That being said, there are so many factors that go into training, and it’s hard to say that it all came from Nomio.”

    Elite cycling tends to be more data-driven than marathoning, and the most detailed feedback I got on Nomio was from a coach working with a UCI World Tour team, who I agreed not to name. To this coach, the promise of lower lactate was not what interested him. “Biomarkers are one thing, but to know if something really works, it’s hard to get much out of lactate testing,” he said.

    Instead, the coach was interested in how the team performed in real-world field trials, which included a mix of moderate and all-out intervals. They didn’t notice an obvious decrease in lactate levels, but most of the riders reported “a feeling that it worked,” and many notched objectively high power outputs compared to their usual training. Proof? Not really. But the team isn’t waiting for further evidence. “If we wait, somebody else will try to use the advantage,” the coach says. “So in our world, you have to be able to work even when you don’t have clear answers.”

    It’s hard to say anything more definitive than that for now. The anecdotal evidence is intriguing, but who among us can really say for sure why we’ve had a particularly good or bad day? “The first principle is that you must not fool yourself—and you are the easiest person to fool,” as Richard Feynman once said. That’s why we do studies with placebos and control groups and so on. There’s enough interest in Nomio that those studies will come—or, if they don’t, that their absence will become increasingly glaring. Until then… broccoli season continues.


    For more Sweat Science, join me on Threads and Facebook, sign up for the email newsletter, and check out my new book The Explorer’s Gene: Why We Seek Big Challenges, New Flavors, and the Blank Spots on the Map.

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    awise

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  • Fasting and Plant-Based Diets for Migraines and Traumatic Brain Injuries  | NutritionFacts.org

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    What effects do fasting and a plant-based diet have on TBI and migraines?

    An uncontrolled and unpublished study purported to show a beneficial effect of fasting on migraine headaches, but fasting may be more likely to trigger a migraine than help it. In fact, “skipped meals are among the most consistently identified dietary triggers” of headaches in general. In a review of hundreds of fasts at the TrueNorth Health Center in California, the incidence of headache was nearly one in three, but TrueNorth also published a remarkable case report on post-traumatic headache.

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that more than a million Americans sustain traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) every year. Chronic pain is a common complication, affecting perhaps three-quarters of those who suffer such an injury. There are drugs, of course, to treat post-traumatic headache. There are always drugs. And if drugs don’t work, there is surgery, cutting the nerves to the head to stop the pain.

    What about fasting and plants? A 52-year-old woman presented with a highly debilitating, difficult-to-manage, unremitting, chronic post-traumatic headache. And when I say chronic, I mean chronic; she experienced pain for 16 years. She then achieved long-term relief after fasting, followed by an exclusively plant-foods diet, free of added sugar, oil, or salt.

    Before then, she had tried drug after drug after drug after drug after drug—with no relief, suffering in constant pain for years. Before the fast, she started out in constant pain. Then, after the fast, the intensity of the pain was cut in half, and though she was still having daily headaches, at least there were some pain-free periods. Six months later, she tried again, and eventually her headaches became mild, lasting less than ten minutes, and infrequent. She continued that way for months and even years, as you can see below and at 1:45 in my video Fasting for Post-Traumatic Brain Injury Headache

    Now, of course, it’s hard to disentangle the effects of the fasting from the effects of the whole food, plant-based diet she remained on for those ensuing years. You’ve heard of analgesics (painkillers). Well, there are some foods that may be pro-algesic (pain-promoting), such as foods high in arachidonic acid, including meats, dairy, and eggs. So, the lowering of arachidonic acid—from which our body makes a range of pro-inflammatory compounds—may be accomplished by eating a more plant-based diet. So, maybe that contributed to the benefit in the fasting case, since many plant foods are high in anti-inflammatory components. In terms of migraine headaches, more plant foods and less animal foods may help, but you don’t know until you put it to the test.

    Researchers figured a plant-based diet may offer the best of both worlds, so they designed a randomized, controlled, crossover study where those with recurrent migraines were randomized to eat a strictly plant-based diet or take a placebo pill. Then, the groups switched. During the placebo phase, half of the participants said their pain improved, and the other half said their pain remained the same or got worse. But, during the dietary phase, they almost all got better, as you can see here and at 3:11 in my video.

    During that first phase, the diet group experienced significant improvements in the number of headaches, pain intensity, and days with headaches, as well as a reduction in the amount of painkillers they needed to take. In fact, it worked a little too well. Many individuals were unwilling to return to their previous diets after they completed the diet phase of the trial, thereby refusing to complete the study. Remember, the participants were supposed to go back to their regular diets and take a placebo pill, but they felt so much better on the plant-based diet that they refused. We’ve seen this with other trials, where those trying plant-based diets felt so good, they often refused to abandon them, harming the study. So, plant-based diets can sometimes work a little too well.

    All my videos on fasting are available in a digital download here.  

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    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • The Planetary Diet – it’s more than diet – Diet and Health Today

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    In Summary

    * This is the third of three notes looking at the October 2025 Planetary Health Diet (PHD) publication (Ref 1). The first note reviewed the many nutritional deficiencies in the recommended diet. The second note looked at the finding that the diet was set “solely in light of health recommendations” and not for climate reasons, but that, notwithstanding this, the document was very anti-meat and anti-ruminant in the name of both health and climate. This note looks at the PHD in a global context.

    * The October 2025 report specifically mentioned (three times) the Sustainable Development Goals, the Paris Agreement, and the Kunming–Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Most people don’t know what these goals, agreements and frameworks are, let alone the impact that they are having on us.

    * Such global initiatives are taking place above elected governments, by unelected people and organisations.

    * This note briefly looks at The Great Reset, the Sustainable Development Goals and the C40 Initiative a) to make you aware of these, if you aren’t already and b) to flag some concerns as to how these are being used to drive forward a plant-based diet agenda and c) to put the PHD in a bigger context.

    Introduction

    This ended up being a trilogy (Ref 2). This wasn’t planned from the outset. I wanted to review the nutritional deficiencies in the revised Planetary Health Diet, but the fact that these had not been addressed made me wonder if this was due to ignorance or malfeasance. Further reflection and review of the revised report got me thinking about the clear agenda in the report and the realisation that it did not try to hide the much bigger agenda.

    Last week we looked at the anti-meat and anti-ruminant agenda. Thanks to Professor Frank Mitloehner, we know that The Planetary Diet was set “solely in light of health recommendations” (Ref 3):

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    Zoe

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  • Saving Our Children – A Chat with the President of Weston A. Price

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    Saving Our Children: Summary

    In Saving Our Children, host Evan Transue interviews Sally Fallon Morell, the founding president of the Weston A. Price Foundation. Morell discusses the importance of traditional diets, particularly emphasizing nutrient-dense animal fats and raw milk. She debunks common myths around fat consumption and highlights how traditional diets high in animal fats and organ meats contribute to optimal health by providing necessary vitamins and minerals often lacking in modern diets. Morell shares her journey in discovering the principles of Weston A. Price and applying them to raise her four healthy children.

    The conversation also touches on the decline of certain diseases before the introduction of vaccines and argues that modern sanitation and better living conditions played a significant role. Morell advocates for not vaccinating children, citing concerns about ingredients like aluminum in vaccines, which she claims could cause neurological damage and other health issues. She emphasizes the need for preparing for pregnancy with a nutrient-rich diet and offers practical advice for those struggling with breastfeeding, endorsing a homemade baby formula in such cases.

    Additionally, the podcast highlights the resources available through the Weston A. Price Foundation, such as local chapters that provide information on where to find nutrient-dense, traditionally prepared foods. Morell also promotes their annual Wise Traditions Conference, which offers a platform for learning more about traditional diets and holistic health practices. This episode underscores the foundation’s mission to help people find and adopt traditional foods for better health outcomes.

    Saving Our Children: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to the Health Detective Podcast

    00:33 Meet Our Special Guest: Sally Fallon Morell

    01:21 The Weston A. Price Foundation and Its Mission

    03:15 The Importance of Traditional Diets

    15:16 The Role of Animal Fats in Health

    25:19 The Benefits of Raw Milk

    27:34 Debating the Necessity of Milk Consumption

    28:22 Resources for Parents on Diet and Pregnancy

    29:21 Controversial Views on Vaccination

    31:49 Historical Context of Disease Decline

    40:57 Audience Questions and Expert Advice

    44:33 Joining Local Chapters and Supporting the Cause

    48:38 Final Thoughts and Signature Question

    Where to Find Sally Fallon Morell

    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

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    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED (UPCOMING LIVES)

    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED – FREE EXPERT LED TRAINING SESSIONS

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    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

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  • Make your own Natural Hair & Scalp Mask for Hair Growth 

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    I wanted to share one of the most simple and effective natural hair care tips on earth: a bentonite clay hair mask. 

    if you’ve been following me for a while, you know I have loved bentonite clay since when I was first super sick and going through healing. I first started using it 17 years ago by drinking it, soak in a bath with it, use it as a face mask and create a paste to apply to my neck where the tumor was (because the clay draws out toxins in a powerful way). There are so many ways we can use bentonite clay! 

    And another way we can use it is as a hair mask and scalp treatment, plus a hair rinse. So in this article I will share some recipes with you and why it works. Did you know bentonite clay is actually one of the cheapest hair mask treatments you can find on earth? 

    Bentonite clay is a natural healing clay formed from volcanic ash that has aged and absorbed minerals such as calcium, magnesium, and iron. It’s known for its powerful detoxifying properties and has been used for centuries in traditional medicine and skincare. When mixed with water, the clay becomes electrically charged, attracting and binding to toxins, heavy metals, and impurities, helping to draw them out of the body or skin. Internally, it can support gut health and assist with cleansing the digestive system; externally, it’s often used in masks, baths, and poultices to purify and rejuvenate the skin. Its ability to both detoxify and replenish minerals makes bentonite clay a valuable tool for natural healing and renewal.

    The brand I use is Redmond Clay. It comes from Utah, USA and I love it because it is food grade so this is the same clay that I drink. 

     

    Why Clay Is Amazing for Hair Health

    Our scalps are just like the skin on our faces — they need detoxing, nourishment, and balance. Over time, product buildup, environmental toxins, and hard water can clog pores and weigh hair down. If you wear a lot of product in your hair like hairspray I would recommend you do this clay mask at least once a month! If you use hairspray daily because of your work I would recommend doing a hair mask once per week. 

    Redmond’s Clay is an ancient, mineral-rich bentonite clay gently draws out impurities while replenishing the scalp with trace minerals that support healthy growth and shine.

    Some of the key benefits:

    • Detoxifies the scalp: Pulls out product buildup, oil, and impurities.
    • Balances oils: Helps regulate sebum production — perfect for both dry and oily scalps.
    • Strengthens roots: The minerals in clay support stronger, thicker strands.
    • Soothes irritation: Calms an itchy, flaky, or sensitive scalp naturally.
    • Adds natural volume + shine: Removes residue that dulls the hair, leaving it light and clean.
    • Adds minerals: Especially calcium, magnesium, potassium, and silica that nourishes hair follicles.

     

     

    DIY Bentonite Clay Hair Growth Mask

    This nourishing treatment deeply detoxifies the scalp, draws out impurities, and delivers essential minerals that promote healthy hair growth. It’s ideal when your scalp feels congested, after travel, or when you want to stimulate stronger, thicker strands. Castor oil is rich in ricinoleic acid, a fatty acid that helps increase blood circulation to the scalp, strengthen hair follicles, and promote faster, thicker hair growth. Rosemary essential oil also stimulates circulation, supports cellular regeneration, and has been shown to encourage new hair growth while reducing shedding and improving overall scalp health.

    You’ll need:

    • 2 tbsp Redmond Clay

    • 2 tbsp filtered water

    • 1 tsp Redmond Real Salt (adds minerals and gentle exfoliation)

    • 1 tsp castor oil (stimulates follicles and supports growth)

    • A few drops of rosemary (to boost hair growth) 

    (double this if you have long hair)

    Directions:

    1. Mix all ingredients into a smooth paste with a wooden spoon. 

    2. Apply directly to your scalp, section by section, and work through to the ends.

    3. Leave on for 10–15 minutes — do not let it fully dry (a dry clay mask can pull on hair and scalp, causing breakage or irritation).

    4. Rinse thoroughly and follow with your favorite natural conditioner or nourishing oil.

    Your scalp will feel revived, your roots lighter, and your hair refreshed and ready to grow strong and vibrant.

     

    Detox and Rose Shine Mask

    This soothing, mineral-rich mask adds softness, shine, and balance to both hair and scalp. The rose oil helps calm irritation while leaving your hair beautifully fragrant and naturally luminous. Each ingredient in this mask works together to deeply detoxify the scalp and hair while maintaining balance and nourishment. Redmond Clay binds to and draws out toxins, heavy metals, and product buildup from the scalp, leaving it purified and refreshed. Apple cider vinegar gently dissolves residue from styling products and hard water, restores the scalp’s natural pH, and boosts shine. Peppermint oil increases circulation, helping to flush out impurities and stimulate healthy new growth. Coconut milk or aloe vera add hydration and minerals that replenish the scalp after detoxification, ensuring softness instead of dryness.

    You’ll need:

    • 2 tbsp Redmond Clay

    • 2 tbsp Apple cider vinegar 

    • 1 tsp coconut milk or aloe vera gel (for moisture and shine)

    • A few drops of rose essential oil (to soothe and smooth the scalp)

    • A few drops of peppermint oil (to boost stimulation) 

    Directions:

    1. Mix all ingredients into a creamy consistency with a wooden spoon. 

    2. Apply to damp hair and scalp, massaging gently.

    3. Leave on for 7-10 minutes for a quick treatment.

    4. Rinse thoroughly with warm water and follow with a light conditioner or rosewater spray.

    This quick mask adds instant shine, softness, and a luxurious, fresh scent — perfect before an event or as a weekly self-care ritual.

    Important note: Never use metal utensils or bowls when mixing or storing bentonite clay — use wooden, plastic, or glass instead. Metal can react with the clay and reduce its ability to bind and detox effectively.

    Tip:

    If you’re traveling or prefer convenience, you can also use pre-made Redmond Clay paste — just mix in your chosen ingredients (like rosemary oil, rose oil, or aloe vera) for a ready-to-go, mess-free option.

     

     

    Additionally you can drink Bentonite Clay!

    One of the practices that helped me heal my health issues which included a golf ball size tumor and parasites in my blood, was drinking bentonite clay regularly. It supported my body from the inside out, and it’s something I still do to this day.

    If you haven’t done my 3-Day Cleanse, we actually drink it daily as part of the detox. Bentonite clay helps bind to toxins and heavy metals, gently cleanse the digestive tract, and support mineral balance in the body. You can get my 3-Day Cleanse here it’s free. 

    It’s really important to make sure the clay you use is food-grade and safe for internal use (like Redmond Clay). Always start with small amounts and drink plenty of water throughout the day.

     

    Why I Love Redmond

    What I love most about Redmond is that their products come straight from nature — unrefined, pure, and rich in trace minerals from the ancient sea bed in Utah. No fillers, no chemicals — just earth’s original ingredients that work in harmony with the body. I’ve been to the clay fields three times, and you can imagine being as passionate as I am about bentonite clay that it was one of the best experiences ever!  

    If you’re looking to naturally strengthen your hair, detox your scalp, and elevate your self-care rituals, Redmond Clay is the perfect addition to your beauty routine.

    Clean beauty starts from the inside out — and nature always knows best.

     

    Love Liana

    P.S Use code LIANA for 15% off your next Redmond purchase.

    This is a sponsored blog post by Redmond Clay. 

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  • Should We Fast for IBS? | NutritionFacts.org

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    More than half of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) sufferers appear to have a form of atypical food allergy.

    A chronic gastrointestinal disorder, irritable bowel syndrome affects about one in ten people. You may have heard about low-FODMAP diets, but they don’t appear to work any better than the standard advice to avoid things like coffee or spicy and fatty foods. In fact, you can hardly tell which is which, as shown below and at 0:27 in my video Friday Favorites: Fasting for Irritable Bowel Syndrome.

    Most IBS patients, however, do seem to react to specific foods, such as eggs, wheat, dairy, or soy sauce, but when they’re tested with skin prick tests for typical food allergies, they may come up negative. We want to know what happens inside their gut when they eat those things, though, not what happens on their skin. Enter confocal laser endomicroscopy.

    You can snake a microscope down the throat, into the gut, and watch in real-time as the gut wall becomes inflamed and leaky after foods are dripped in. Isn’t that fascinating? You can actually see cracks forming within minutes, as shown below and at 1:03 in my video. This had never been tested on a large group of IBS patients, though, until now.

    Using this new technology, researchers found that more than half of IBS sufferers have this kind of reaction to various foods—“an atypical food allergy” that flies under the radar of traditional allergy tests. As you can see below and at 1:28 in my video, when you exclude those foods from the diet, there is a significant alleviation of symptoms.

    However, outside a research setting, there’s no way to know which foods are the culprit without trying an exclusion diet, and there’s no greater exclusion diet than excluding everything. A 25-year-old woman had complained of abdominal pain, bloating, and diarrhea for a year, and drugs didn’t seem to help. But, after fasting for ten days, her symptoms improved considerably and appeared to stay that way at least 18 months later. It wasn’t just subjective improvement either. Biopsies were taken that showed the inflammation had gone down, her bowel irritability was measured directly, and expanding balloons and electrodes were inserted in her rectum to measure changes in her sensitivity to pressure and electrical stimulation. Fasting seemed to reboot her gut in a way, but just because it worked for her doesn’t mean it works for others. Case reports are most useful when they inspire researchers to put them to the test.

    “Despite research efforts to develop a cure for IBS, medical treatment for this condition is still unsatisfactory.” We can try to suppress the symptoms with drugs, but what do we do when even that doesn’t work? In a study of 84 IBS patients, 58 of whom failed basic treatment (consisting of pharmacotherapy and brief psychotherapy), 36 of the 58 who were still suffering underwent ten days of fasting, whereas the other 22 stuck with the basic treatment. The findings? Those in the fasting group experienced significant improvements in abdominal pain, bloating, diarrhea, loss of appetite, nausea, anxiety, and interference with life in general, which were significantly better than those of the control group. The researchers concluded that fasting therapy “could be useful for treating moderate to severe patients with IBS.”

    Unfortunately, patient allocation was neither blinded nor randomized in the study, so the comparison to the control group doesn’t mean much. They were also given vitamins B1 and C via IV, which seems typical of Japanese fasting trials, even though one would not expect vitamin-deficiency syndromes—beriberi or scurvy—to present within just ten days of fasting. The study participants were also isolated; might that make the psychotherapy work better? It’s hard to tease out just the fasting effects.

    Psychotherapy alone can provide lasting benefits. Researchers randomized 101 outpatients with irritable bowel syndrome to medical treatment or medical treatment with three months of psychotherapy. After three months, the psychotherapy group did better, and the difference was even more pronounced a year later, a year after the psychotherapy ended. Better at three months, and even better at 15 months, as you can see here and at 3:58 in my video.

    Psychological approaches appear to work about as well as antidepressant drugs for IBS, but the placebo response for IBS is on the order of 40%, whether psychological interventions, drugs, or alternative medicine approaches. So, doing essentially nothing—taking a sugar pill—improves symptoms 40% of the time. In that case, I figure one might as well choose a therapy that’s cheap, safe, simple, and free of side effects, which extended fasting is most certainly not. But, if all else fails, it may be worth exploring fasting under close physician supervision.

    All my fasting videos are available in a digital download here.

    Check the videos on the topic that are already on the site here. 

    For more on IBS, see related posts below. 

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    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • The Truth About Tick-Borne Infections

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    The Truth About Tick-Borne Infections: Summary

    The Truth About Tick-Borne Infections highlights Jennifer Lanie, a functional health practitioner, who shares her journey from suffering debilitating health issues—including endometriosis, lupus, and Lyme disease—to embracing holistic health practices. With a background in biology and over a decade of coaching in CrossFit, Jennifer’s profound healing journey began after enrolling in the Functional Diagnostic Nutrition (FDN) program, where she discovered the root causes of her ailments and made life-changing adjustments. 

    Currently, she specializes in treating Lyme disease, tick-borne co-infections, and autoimmune conditions, advocating for a holistic, root-cause approach to healing. Jennifer describes her personal journey into chronic illness management, recounting how her symptoms first appeared in middle school and escalated to severe health conditions. Her story includes overcoming a series of misdiagnoses and mistreatments, which ultimately led her to functional medicine and holistic health. A pivotal moment in her health journey occurred when she adopted a paleo diet and CrossFit, which drastically improved her well-being. However, a tick bite in 2020 led to a resurgence of symptoms, ultimately resulting in her discovery of lingering co-infections like Bartonella and Babesia. This realization prompted her to deeply explore functional diagnostic methods, eventually enrolling in and completing the FDN program. 

    As a functional health practitioner, Jennifer now utilizes her expertise to help others with similar chronic conditions. She highlights the limitations of Western medicine in diagnosing and treating chronic Lyme and co-infections, emphasizing the need for comprehensive and integrative approaches. Jennifer outlines her protocol for addressing these complex health issues, including diet changes, nervous system support, opening detox pathways, and a slow, methodical approach to pathogen eradication. She underscores the importance of living in the moment and utilizing intuition in one’s health journey, offering hope and practical guidance for those suffering from chronic illnesses.

    The Truth About Tick-Borne Infections: Topics

    00:00 Introduction to the Health Detective Podcast

    00:33 Meet Jennifer Lanie: A Journey Through Health Challenges

    02:05 Jennifer’s Early Health Struggles

    03:52 The Diagnosis of Endometriosis

    08:46 The Struggles with Lupus

    10:38 Turning Point: Discovering Holistic Health

    18:54 The Role of Intuition in Health Decisions

    19:32 The Impact of Tick-Borne Illness

    23:30 Deciding to Take Control of My Health

    23:48 Discovering FDN and Enrolling in the Program

    24:57 Losing My Job and Accelerating My Studies

    25:41 Launching My Practice and Initial Success

    26:02 The Importance of Lab Tests in FDN

    26:52 Discovering My Health Issues Through Lab Tests

    28:10 Making Lifestyle Changes and Traveling

    29:19 Dealing with H Pylori and New Health Challenges

    30:21 Identifying Tick-Borne Co-Infections

    34:30 Understanding the Complexity of Tick-Borne Illnesses

    38:09 The Importance of Comprehensive Testing and Herbal Treatments

    42:43 Final Thoughts and Advice for Those Struggling with Chronic Illness

    Where to Find Jennifer Lanie

    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

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    HEALTH SPACE UNMASKED – FREE EXPERT LED TRAINING SESSIONS

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    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition

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