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experiencelifemag.com
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Functional Wellness, Part 2: Hormones and Inflammation
Hormonal imbalances can lead to a host of serious health problems,
including inflammation, high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity,
cancer, dementia and more. Here’s how to get your body back in balance.
By Mark Hyman, MD |
July-August 2008 |
Bodies Out of Balance
Our Hunter-Gatherer Past
This Is Your Body on Insulin
Rebalancing Act
Investigate Your Insulin
The Fire Within - Where Hormones and Inflammation Intersect
The 7 Keys to UltraWellness
UltraSmart Weight Loss
Editors’ note: For more than 15 years, celebrated author and pioneering medical
visionary Mark Hyman, MD, has been practicing and promoting a revolutionary
healthcare concept known as functional medicine. It’s a patient-centered (vs.
disease-centered) approach that focuses on identifying and addressing the root
causes of chronic health challenges as opposed to merely treating symptoms.
Functional medicine also emphasizes incorporating nutrition and lifestyle
solutions rather than relying exclusively on pharmaceutical and surgical
interventions. Experience Life is proud to bring you this six-part series in
which Dr. Hyman describes the emerging practice of functional medicine and
explains how it can improve your well-being. Let me tell you about a patient of mine whose story may sound all too
familiar to you. James was a 46-year-old Wall Street executive who came to me
for a cardiac stress test. He was a hard-driving guy who was convinced he was
dying of heart disease. Every afternoon, he would experience the sudden onset of
sweating, a racing heart, anxiety and shortness of breath. James also
happened to be thick around the middle. After listening to his troubles, I said,
“You don’t eat breakfast, do you? And, you feel tired after eating, so that’s
why you skip food during the workday? And when you do feel sluggish, you go to
the vending machine for a quick sugar fix, and in a few minutes you feel better,
don’t you?” Shocked, he asked, “How did you know?” I explained that he was
fighting with his genes and was insulin resistant. In other words, his hormones
were severely out of balance. He couldn’t control his metabolism of
carbohydrates because he had too much insulin. Consequently, his blood sugar was
out of whack, which led to all of his symptoms — and was also taking him down
the slippery slope toward high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity, cancer,
brain aging, dementia and more.
Bodies Out of Balance
In fact,
most Americans are living out of harmony with their natural biological
rhythms, because the small molecules that help keep your body in balance have
gone haywire. These molecules — the hormone-messenger molecules of the
endocrine system and the neurotransmitter-messenger molecules of the brain
and nervous system — are involved in almost every function of the body, and they
are critical to our well-being. The hormone and neurotransmitter system is
yet another one of the body’s core systems we must address in order to prevent
disease and power our vitality (see “The 7 Keys to UltraWellness,” below).
Understand how and why these systems get out of balance and you will begin
to see why so many Americans walk around tired, depressed and overweight.
And why no amount of pharmaceutical intervention is going to solve the
problem. All of our hormones and brain-messenger chemicals must work together
in a finely orchestrated symphony to keep everything in balance. For example,
the hypothalamus and pituitary glands in your brain are the command-and-control
centers for all the endocrine (hormone) glands. They send signals to distant
parts of the body to control everything from your stress response through your
adrenal glands, your blood-sugar balance through your pancreas, your thyroid
hormone via your thyroid gland, and your sexual function through your
reproductive organs. They also control growth, sleep, mood and much more.
Neurotransmitters, meanwhile, send messages throughout the body to every
cell, organ and tissue and help you do everything from moving your arm to
feeling happy or sad. So it’s not hard to see why having an appropriate supply
of these chemicals is so essential to our well-being. Indeed, when our
hormones become imbalanced, the health consequences can be severe. There are
three big epidemics of hormonal problems in America today: too much insulin
(from sugar), too much cortisol and adrenaline (from stress), and not enough
thyroid hormone. These all interconnect with and affect the other major category
of hormones — our sex hormones. Imbalances or disturbances in any one of
these interconnected systems can influence the way our brains function and lead
to everything from depression and dementia to anxiety and attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). They also are linked to two other major epidemics
we currently face: obesity and inflammation.
Our Hunter-Gatherer Past
My patient James is hardly an unusual case. More than 100 million
Americans suffer from insulin resistance. That number has grown to epidemic
proportions for one simple reason: We have strayed from eating in harmony with
our genes. Historically, as a hunter-gatherer species, people ate the
equivalent of only 20 teaspoons of sugar a year (exclusively from fruits,
berries, tubers and the like). These days, each of us eats a whopping 158 pounds
per year — or about 50 teaspoons a day! There’s absolutely nothing in our
genetic makeup that could have prepared our bodies to handle this kind of
dramatic change, or many of the other similarly dramatic lifestyle changes to
which we’ve been simultaneously exposed. Think about it: Humans evolved in a
world without grocery stores and fast-food restaurants. For virtually all of
human history, our ancestors had to work to find food and had very limited
access to refined foods or excess calories. But with the appearance of
15,000 low-fat foods (a.k.a. high-sugar, high-calorie foods) on the market over
the last 15 to 20 years, and our increasingly sedentary — and stressful —
lifestyle, we have essentially abandoned the conditions for which our
historically conditioned metabolisms are well suited. And in the process, we’ve
created the perfect conditions for an epidemic of obesity, diabetes, heart
disease and brain disorders. Our bodies normally produce insulin in response
to food in our stomach, particularly sugar. And, since our genetic structure
evolved at a time when sugar was rarely consumed, our insulin response is
designed to handle vastly lower levels of sugar than what we eat today.
Our bodies respond to our new diet of low-fat, highly processed and refined
foods the only way they know how: They keep pumping out insulin — which, in
excess, happens to function as a pro-inflammatory substance. Eventually, we
become resistant to all this excess insulin in our blood, just as we would
become resistant to a drug. The body needs more and more of it to do the same
job it once did with far less. So our insulin-production system spirals out of
control, pumping ever more into our bodies, which become inflamed and
metabolically imbalanced. That’s bad, but it gets worse: Remember, hormones
are message carriers. And what is all this insulin saying to the rest of our
body? It’s rushing through our bloodstreams spreading the message that we are
starving. The result: We start craving foods with high sugar content — the very
same foods that caused the problem in the first place.
This Is Your Body on Insulin
Perhaps the situation wouldn’t be so bad
if insulin metabolized only sugar. We once thought that was insulin’s only
role — to help sugar enter your cells to be metabolized, transforming the stored
energy of the sun (in plant foods) and the oxygen we breathe into the energy we
use every day to run our bodies. But here is what too much insulin
really does to your body, your brain and your health: - Insulin is a
major switching station, or control hormone, for many processes. It dictates how
much fat the body will store.
- As long as your insulin
levels are high, you will fight a losing battle with weight loss. It acts on
your brain to increase appetite — specifically, an appetite for sugar and
refined carbohydrates.
- Insulin increases inflammation and
oxidative stress and ages your brain, leading to what is being called type 3
diabetes — also known as Alzheimer’s.
- Insulin increases LDL (“bad”)
cholesterol, lowers HDL (“good”) cholesterol, raises triglycerides and increases
your blood pressure. Insulin resistance causes 50 percent of all reported cases
of high blood pressure.
- Insulin stimulates the growth of
cancer cells.
- Insulin leads to mood and behavior disturbances such as
depression, panic attacks, anxiety, insomnia and ADHD.
- Insulin makes
your blood sticky and more likely to clot, leading to heart attacks and
strokes.
- Insulin causes sex-hormone problems and can lead to
infertility, facial hair growth, acne and scalp hair loss in women; in men, it
can cause low testosterone, breast growth and more.
Rebalancing Act
The good news is that balancing blood sugar and correcting insulin
resistance is well within our reach, and the effects are dramatic: Diseases
ranging from depression to dementia can be stopped and even reversed if
intervention occurs early enough. While there are some new medications that
can help, such as Glucophage, Avandia and Actos, they have side effects and are
only a band-aid approach to chronic conditions unless used with a comprehensive
nutritional, exercise and stress-management plan that balances your
neuro-endocrine system by helping it work the way it was designed. Here is
what to do to rebalance insulin, both nutritionally and through your
lifestyle: - Eat whole, real foods, mostly from plant-based sources. Our
bodies evolved and were designed to flourish on fruits, vegetables, beans, nuts,
seeds, whole grains, and lean animal protein such as fish, chicken and
eggs.
- Remove toxic foods from your diet. Toxic foods, such as trans
fats, high-fructose corn syrup, and all processed foods with ingredients you
don’t easily recognize, interfere with your metabolism and create
blood-sugar imbalances.
- Eat organic. Pesticides, antibiotics and
hormones slow down your metabolism.
- Avoid sugar and flour products.
They slow your metabolism and contribute to inflammation.
- Eat early
and try to eat protein with each meal. Starting off the day with protein — nuts
or nut butters, eggs, a protein shake, or even leftovers from the night before —
jump-starts your metabolism and helps to avert overeating throughout the
day.
- Eat frequently. Fueling your body regularly throughout the day
speeds up your metabolism. Make it a priority to have three meals and a couple
of snacks every day.
- Finish eating at least two hours before bed. If
you fall asleep with food in your stomach, your body is more likely to store it,
not burn it.
- Sleep seven to eight hours a night. A lack of sleep
generates increased levels of ghrelin, the hunger hormone that triggers you to
crave and eat more refined carbs and sugar.
- Build and maintain muscle.
Your biggest metabolic engine is your muscle mass — basically, this is where
your metabolism lives — so use it or lose it. Working with weights, exercise
bands and resistance machines, and doing yoga all prevent your muscles from
wasting away.
- Exercise intelligently. Try including interval training
into your exercise program two or three days a week: Exercise at 90 to 95
percent of your peak heart rate for 30 to 60 seconds, then three to five minutes
at 60 to 65 percent of your peak heart rate, alternating for a total of 30
minutes. Exercising at this intensity will trigger a metabolic effect that will
cause you to burn more calories all day and while you sleep.
- Deeply
relax daily. Stress hormones such as cortisol increase blood sugar, amplify
appetite and cause weight gain around the middle, all of which promote insulin
resistance. Find some time each day to sit quietly, breathe deeply or
meditate.
Try this plan and see how it works for you. The goal is to make
your metabolism more efficient — to make your cells more intelligent and
cooperative, not resistant. As a result, you’ll need much less insulin to
accomplish the task of balancing your blood sugar. Best of all, once you
correct your insulin levels, you may find that many related,
inflammation-based health problems (see “The Fire Within,” below) and hormonal
imbalances subside.
Experience this, and you’ll be experiencing functional
medicine in action: It’s really about harnessing the power you have to reset
your metabolism and restore your body’s natural balance simply by stopping the
things that knock you off kilter. And by doing the simple things that empower
you to thrive. Mark Hyman, MD, is the medical director and founder of The UltraWellness
Center in Lenox, Mass., and the former medical director at Canyon Ranch
health resort. He has authored several best-selling books, including
UltraMetabolism: The Simple Plan for Automatic Weight Loss (Scribner, 2006),
UltraPrevention: The 6-Week Plan That Will Make You Healthy for Life (Scribner,
2003), and The UltraSimple Diet (Pocket Books, 2007). Dr. Hyman also is editor
in chief of the peer-reviewed journal Alternative Therapies and a leading expert
in functional medicine. For more information, see www.ultrawellness.com/blog.
Investigate Your Insulin
Could your insulin levels be out of whack? The more “yes” answers you provide
to the questions below, the more likely it is that you have problems controlling
your blood sugar. That means your body is pumping out dangerously high levels of
insulin (and, potentially, suffering other hormonal and inflammatory problems as
a result). - Do you feel dramatic mood and energy swings?
- Do
you crave sugar or salt?
- Are you overweight and putting on more
and more belly fat?
- If you are a woman, do you have premenstrual
syndrome, painful or heavy periods, and low sex drive?
- Are you
depressed?
- Do you sleep poorly?
- Do you feel tired but
wired?
- Do you rely on coffee in the morning and a few glasses of wine
at night just to wake up and calm down every day?
- Do you have thinning
hair or dry skin and feel sluggish in the mornings?
The Fire Within - Where Hormones and Inflammation Intersect
One of the most insidious consequences of hormonal imbalances, and insulin
resistance in particular, is inflammation, which is now thought to be at the
root of all chronic illness we experience — from heart disease, obesity and
diabetes to dementia, depression, cancer and even autism. Inflammation and
immune balance is yet another one of the body’s core systems we must address to
prevent disease and power our vitality (see “The 7 Keys to UltraWellness,” below). We may feel healthy, but if this inflammation is raging inside of us,
we’re in trouble. The real concern is not our acute inflammatory response to
injury or infection, but the chronic smoldering inflammation that slowly
destroys our organs, compromises our ability for optimal functioning and leads
to rapid aging. The real effects of statin drugs like Lipitor in reducing
heart disease may have nothing to do with lowering cholesterol and everything to
do with their unintended side effect of reducing inflammation. But is that the
right approach to address the problem? No. This treatment approach is a classic
example of what I call “downstream” medicine: Modern medicine tends to get
caught up in treating the symptom — inflammation, in this case — without
actually stopping to think: What is actually triggering this inflammation? Where
is it coming from? Common treatments such as anti-inflammatory drugs
(ibuprofen or aspirin, for example), or steroids like prednisone, though often
useful for acute problems, interfere with the body’s immune response and
inevitably lead to serious side effects. In fact, as many people die from the
side effects of taking excessive amounts of anti-inflammatory drugs like
ibuprofen as die every year from asthma or leukemia. In other words, stopping
the inappropriate use of these drugs would be the lifesaving equivalent of
finding a cure for asthma or leukemia. Hard to believe, but true. So, what is
the “upstream” medical approach to inflammation? First, identify the triggers
and causes of inflammation, such as sugar, processed foods, hidden food
allergens, environmental allergens, toxins, stress, being sedentary and hidden
infections. Then, remove as many as possible, and help the body’s natural immune
balance reset by providing the right conditions for it to thrive. Taking a
comprehensive approach to reducing inflammation at its source is one of the most
important things we can do to support the core systems of the body, and I
consider it a cornerstone to good health. In fact, the future of medicine
may no longer have specialties like cardiology or neurology or
gastroenterology, but new specialists like “inflammologists” who focus on
precisely these sorts of root causes of disease. In the meantime, it’s up to you
to keep a close eye on your own “fire within” — and to take the steps (like
those described above) that will keep them from smoldering out of control. For more on inflammation, see “Fighting Inflammation” in the July/August
2004 archives.
The 7 Keys to UltraWellness
Simply put, when your core systems are out of balance, they make fertile ground
for the roots of illness. When they are in balance, they become the keys to
creating wellness and vitality: Environmental Inputs (diet, lifestyle, toxins, stress and trauma) - Inflammation and Immune Balance (the hidden fire within)
- Hormone and Neurotransmitter Balance (insulin, thyroid, adrenal balance; sex
hormones and mood chemicals)
- Gut and Digestive Health (digestion,
absorption, assimilation, intestinal ecosystem and the gut-immune
system)
- Detoxification Imbalances and Function (getting rid of wastes and
dealing with toxins)
- Creating Energy (the source of life energy and metabolism — antioxidant
balance)
- Mind-Body/Body-Mind Connection (change your mind, change your
body; change your body, change your mind)
UltraSmart Weight Loss
Join Mark Hyman, MD, author of the New York Times bestseller
UltraMetabolism, and Experience Life editor in chief Pilar Gerasimo as they
present the essential elements of an “automatic” approach to lasting weight
loss and weight management at the UltraSmart Weight Loss Workshop, October
10–12, at the Omega Institute for Holistic Studies in Rhinebeck, N.Y. For more
information, visit experiencelifemag.com/ultrasmart-weight-loss.
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Functional Wellness, Part 2: Hormones and Inflammation
Hormonal imbalances can lead to a host of serious health problems,
including inflammation, high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity,
cancer, dementia and more. Here’s how to get your body back in balance.
By Mark Hyman, MD | Features, July-August 2008 |
Bodies Out of Balance
Our Hunter-Gatherer Past
This Is Your Body on Insulin
Rebalancing Act
Investigate Your Insulin
The Fire Within - Where Hormones and Inflammation Intersect
The 7 Keys to UltraWellness
UltraSmart Weight Loss
Editors’ note: For more than 15 years, celebrated author and pioneering medical
visionary Mark Hyman, MD, has been practicing and promoting a revolutionary
healthcare concept known as functional medicine. It’s a patient-centered (vs.
disease-centered) approach that focuses on identifying and addressing the root
causes of chronic health challenges as opposed to merely treating symptoms.
Functional medicine also emphasizes incorporating nutrition and lifestyle
solutions rather than relying exclusively on pharmaceutical and surgical
interventions. Experience Life is proud to bring you this six-part series in
which Dr. Hyman describes the emerging practice of functional medicine and
explains how it can improve your well-being. Let me tell you about a patient of mine whose story may sound all too
familiar to you. James was a 46-year-old Wall Street executive who came to me
for a cardiac stress test. He was a hard-driving guy who was convinced he was
dying of heart disease. Every afternoon, he would experience the sudden onset of
sweating, a racing heart, anxiety and shortness of breath. James also
happened to be thick around the middle. After listening to his troubles, I said,
“You don’t eat breakfast, do you? And, you feel tired after eating, so that’s
why you skip food during the workday? And when you do feel sluggish, you go to
the vending machine for a quick sugar fix, and in a few minutes you feel better,
don’t you?” Shocked, he asked, “How did you know?” I explained that he was
fighting with his genes and was insulin resistant. In other words, his hormones
were severely out of balance. He couldn’t control his metabolism of
carbohydrates because he had too much insulin. Consequently, his blood sugar was
out of whack, which led to all of his symptoms — and was also taking him down
the slippery slope toward high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity, cancer,
brain aging, dementia and more.
Bodies Out of Balance (Back to Top)
In fact,
most Americans are living out of harmony with their natural biological
rhythms, because the small molecules that help keep your body in balance have
gone haywire. These molecules — the hormone-messenger molecules of the
endocrine system and the neurotransmitter-messenger molecules of the brain
and nervous system — are involved in almost every function of the body, and they
are critical to our well-being. The hormone and neurotransmitter system is
yet another one of the body’s core systems we must address in order to prevent
disease and power our vitality (see “The 7 Keys to UltraWellness,” below).
Understand how and why these systems get out of balance and you will begin
to see why so many Americans walk around tired, depressed and overweight.
And why no amount of pharmaceutical intervention is going to solve the
problem. All of our hormones and brain-messenger chemicals must work together
in a finely orchestrated symphony to keep everything in balance. For example,
the hypothalamus and pituitary glands in your brain are the command-and-control
centers for all the endocrine (hormone) glands. They send signals to distant
parts of the body to control everything from your stress response through your
adrenal glands, your blood-sugar balance through your pancreas, your thyroid
hormone via your thyroid gland, and your sexual function through your
reproductive organs. They also control growth, sleep, mood and much more.
Neurotransmitters, meanwhile, send messages throughout the body to every
cell, organ and tissue and help you do everything from moving your arm to
feeling happy or sad. So it’s not hard to see why having an appropriate supply
of these chemicals is so essential to our well-being. Indeed, when our
hormones become imbalanced, the health consequences can be severe. There are
three big epidemics of hormonal problems in America today: too much insulin
(from sugar), too much cortisol and adrenaline (from stress), and not enough
thyroid hormone. These all interconnect with and affect the other major category
of hormones — our sex hormones. Imbalances or disturbances in any one of
these interconnected systems can influence the way our brains function and lead
to everything from depression and dementia to anxiety and attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). They also are linked to two other major epidemics
we currently face: obesity and inflammation.
Our Hunter-Gatherer Past (Back to Top)
My patient James is hardly an unusual case. More than 100 million
Americans suffer from insulin resistance. That number has grown to epidemic
proportions for one simple reason: We have strayed from eating in harmony with
our genes. Historically, as a hunter-gatherer species, people ate the
equivalent of only 20 teaspoons of sugar a year (exclusively from fruits,
berries, tubers and the like). These days, each of us eats a whopping 158 pounds
per year — or about 50 teaspoons a day! There’s absolutely nothing in our
genetic makeup that could have prepared our bodies to handle this kind of
dramatic change, or many of the other similarly dramatic lifestyle changes to
which we’ve been simultaneously exposed. Think about it: Humans evolved in a
world without grocery stores and fast-food restaurants. For virtually all of
human history, our ancestors had to work to find food and had very limited
access to refined foods or excess calories. But with the appearance of
15,000 low-fat foods (a.k.a. high-sugar, high-calorie foods) on the market over
the last 15 to 20 years, and our increasingly sedentary — and stressful —
lifestyle, we have essentially abandoned the conditions for which our
historically conditioned metabolisms are well suited. And in the process, we’ve
created the perfect conditions for an epidemic of obesity, diabetes, heart
disease and brain disorders. Our bodies normally produce insulin in response
to food in our stomach, particularly sugar. And, since our genetic structure
evolved at a time when sugar was rarely consumed, our insulin response is
designed to handle vastly lower levels of sugar than what we eat today.
Our bodies respond to our new diet of low-fat, highly processed and refined
foods the only way they know how: They keep pumping out insulin — which, in
excess, happens to function as a pro-inflammatory substance. Eventually, we
become resistant to all this excess insulin in our blood, just as we would
become resistant to a drug. The body needs more and more of it to do the same
job it once did with far less. So our insulin-production system spirals out of
control, pumping ever more into our bodies, which become inflamed and
metabolically imbalanced. That’s bad, but it gets worse: Remember, hormones
are message carriers. And what is all this insulin saying to the rest of our
body? It’s rushing through our bloodstreams spreading the message that we are
starving. The result: We start craving foods with high sugar content — the very
same foods that caused the problem in the first place.
This Is Your Body on Insulin (Back to Top)
Perhaps the situation wouldn’t be so bad
if insulin metabolized only sugar. We once thought that was insulin’s only
role — to help sugar enter your cells to be metabolized, transforming the stored
energy of the sun (in plant foods) and the oxygen we breathe into the energy we
use every day to run our bodies. But here is what too much insulin
really does to your body, your brain and your health: - Insulin is a
major switching station, or control hormone, for many processes. It dictates how
much fat the body will store.
- As long as your insulin
levels are high, you will fight a losing battle with weight loss. It acts on
your brain to increase appetite — specifically, an appetite for sugar and
refined carbohydrates.
- Insulin increases inflammation and
oxidative stress and ages your brain, leading to what is being called type 3
diabetes — also known as Alzheimer’s.
- Insulin increases LDL (“bad”)
cholesterol, lowers HDL (“good”) cholesterol, raises triglycerides and increases
your blood pressure. Insulin resistance causes 50 percent of all reported cases
of high blood pressure.
- Insulin stimulates the growth of
cancer cells.
- Insulin leads to mood and behavior disturbances such as
depression, panic attacks, anxiety, insomnia and ADHD.
- Insulin makes
your blood sticky and more likely to clot, leading to heart attacks and
strokes.
- Insulin causes sex-hormone problems and can lead to
infertility, facial hair growth, acne and scalp hair loss in women; in men, it
can cause low testosterone, breast growth and more.
Rebalancing Act (Back to Top)
The good news is that balancing blood sugar and correcting insulin
resistance is well within our reach, and the effects are dramatic: Diseases
ranging from depression to dementia can be stopped and even reversed if
intervention occurs early enough. While there are some new medications that
can help, such as Glucophage, Avandia and Actos, they have side effects and are
only a band-aid approach to chronic conditions unless used with a comprehensive
nutritional, exercise and stress-management plan that balances your
neuro-endocrine system by helping it work the way it was designed. Here is
what to do to rebalance insulin, both nutritionally and through your
lifestyle: - Eat whole, real foods, mostly from plant-based sources. Our
bodies evolved and were designed to flourish on fruits, vegetables, beans, nuts,
seeds, whole grains, and lean animal protein such as fish, chicken and
eggs.
- Remove toxic foods from your diet. Toxic foods, such as trans
fats, high-fructose corn syrup, and all processed foods with ingredients you
don’t easily recognize, interfere with your metabolism and create
blood-sugar imbalances.
- Eat organic. Pesticides, antibiotics and
hormones slow down your metabolism.
- Avoid sugar and flour products.
They slow your metabolism and contribute to inflammation.
- Eat early
and try to eat protein with each meal. Starting off the day with protein — nuts
or nut butters, eggs, a protein shake, or even leftovers from the night before —
jump-starts your metabolism and helps to avert overeating throughout the
day.
- Eat frequently. Fueling your body regularly throughout the day
speeds up your metabolism. Make it a priority to have three meals and a couple
of snacks every day.
- Finish eating at least two hours before bed. If
you fall asleep with food in your stomach, your body is more likely to store it,
not burn it.
- Sleep seven to eight hours a night. A lack of sleep
generates increased levels of ghrelin, the hunger hormone that triggers you to
crave and eat more refined carbs and sugar.
- Build and maintain muscle.
Your biggest metabolic engine is your muscle mass — basically, this is where
your metabolism lives — so use it or lose it. Working with weights, exercise
bands and resistance machines, and doing yoga all prevent your muscles from
wasting away.
- Exercise intelligently. Try including interval training
into your exercise program two or three days a week: Exercise at 90 to 95
percent of your peak heart rate for 30 to 60 seconds, then three to five minutes
at 60 to 65 percent of your peak heart rate, alternating for a total of 30
minutes. Exercising at this intensity will trigger a metabolic effect that will
cause you to burn more calories all day and while you sleep.
- Deeply
relax daily. Stress hormones such as cortisol increase blood sugar, amplify
appetite and cause weight gain around the middle, all of which promote insulin
resistance. Find some time each day to sit quietly, breathe deeply or
meditate.
Try this plan and see how it works for you. The goal is to make
your metabolism more efficient — to make your cells more intelligent and
cooperative, not resistant. As a result, you’ll need much less insulin to
accomplish the task of balancing your blood sugar. Best of all, once you
correct your insulin levels, you may find that many related,
inflammation-based health problems (see “The Fire Within,” below) and hormonal
imbalances subside.
Experience this, and you’ll be experiencing functional
medicine in action: It’s really about harnessing the power you have to reset
your metabolism and restore your body’s natural balance simply by stopping the
things that knock you off kilter. And by doing the simple things that empower
you to thrive. Mark Hyman, MD, is the medical director and founder of The UltraWellness
Center in Lenox, Mass., and the former medical director at Canyon Ranch
health resort. He has authored several best-selling books, including
UltraMetabolism: The Simple Plan for Automatic Weight Loss (Scribner, 2006),
UltraPrevention: The 6-Week Plan That Will Make You Healthy for Life (Scribner,
2003), and The UltraSimple Diet (Pocket Books, 2007). Dr. Hyman also is editor
in chief of the peer-reviewed journal Alternative Therapies and a leading expert
in functional medicine. For more information, see www.ultrawellness.com/blog.
Investigate Your Insulin (Back to Top)
Could your insulin levels be out of whack? The more “yes” answers you provide
to the questions below, the more likely it is that you have problems controlling
your blood sugar. That means your body is pumping out dangerously high levels of
insulin (and, potentially, suffering other hormonal and inflammatory problems as
a result). - Do you feel dramatic mood and energy swings?
- Do
you crave sugar or salt?
- Are you overweight and putting on more
and more belly fat?
- If you are a woman, do you have premenstrual
syndrome, painful or heavy periods, and low sex drive?
- Are you
depressed?
- Do you sleep poorly?
- Do you feel tired but
wired?
- Do you rely on coffee in the morning and a few glasses of wine
at night just to wake up and calm down every day?
- Do you have thinning
hair or dry skin and feel sluggish in the mornings?
The Fire Within - Where Hormones and Inflammation Intersect (Back to Top)
One of the most insidious consequences of hormonal imbalances, and insulin
resistance in particular, is inflammation, which is now thought to be at the
root of all chronic illness we experience — from heart disease, obesity and
diabetes to dementia, depression, cancer and even autism. Inflammation and
immune balance is yet another one of the body’s core systems we must address to
prevent disease and power our vitality (see “The 7 Keys to UltraWellness,” below). We may feel healthy, but if this inflammation is raging inside of us,
we’re in trouble. The real concern is not our acute inflammatory response to
injury or infection, but the chronic smoldering inflammation that slowly
destroys our organs, compromises our ability for optimal functioning and leads
to rapid aging. The real effects of statin drugs like Lipitor in reducing
heart disease may have nothing to do with lowering cholesterol and everything to
do with their unintended side effect of reducing inflammation. But is that the
right approach to address the problem? No. This treatment approach is a classic
example of what I call “downstream” medicine: Modern medicine tends to get
caught up in treating the symptom — inflammation, in this case — without
actually stopping to think: What is actually triggering this inflammation? Where
is it coming from? Common treatments such as anti-inflammatory drugs
(ibuprofen or aspirin, for example), or steroids like prednisone, though often
useful for acute problems, interfere with the body’s immune response and
inevitably lead to serious side effects. In fact, as many people die from the
side effects of taking excessive amounts of anti-inflammatory drugs like
ibuprofen as die every year from asthma or leukemia. In other words, stopping
the inappropriate use of these drugs would be the lifesaving equivalent of
finding a cure for asthma or leukemia. Hard to believe, but true. So, what is
the “upstream” medical approach to inflammation? First, identify the triggers
and causes of inflammation, such as sugar, processed foods, hidden food
allergens, environmental allergens, toxins, stress, being sedentary and hidden
infections. Then, remove as many as possible, and help the body’s natural immune
balance reset by providing the right conditions for it to thrive. Taking a
comprehensive approach to reducing inflammation at its source is one of the most
important things we can do to support the core systems of the body, and I
consider it a cornerstone to good health. In fact, the future of medicine
may no longer have specialties like cardiology or neurology or
gastroenterology, but new specialists like “inflammologists” who focus on
precisely these sorts of root causes of disease. In the meantime, it’s up to you
to keep a close eye on your own “fire within” — and to take the steps (like
those described above) that will keep them from smoldering out of control. For more on inflammation, see “Fighting Inflammation” in the July/August
2004 archives.
The 7 Keys to UltraWellness (Back to Top)
Simply put, when your core systems are out of balance, they make fertile ground
for the roots of illness. When they are in balance, they become the keys to
creating wellness and vitality: Environmental Inputs (diet, lifestyle, toxins, stress and trauma) - Inflammation and Immune Balance (the hidden fire within)
- Hormone and Neurotransmitter Balance (insulin, thyroid, adrenal balance; sex
hormones and mood chemicals)
- Gut and Digestive Health (digestion,
absorption, assimilation, intestinal ecosystem and the gut-immune
system)
- Detoxification Imbalances and Function (getting rid of wastes and
dealing with toxins)
- Creating Energy (the source of life energy and metabolism — antioxidant
balance)
- Mind-Body/Body-Mind Connection (change your mind, change your
body; change your body, change your mind)
UltraSmart Weight Loss (Back to Top)
Join Mark Hyman, MD, author of the New York Times bestseller
UltraMetabolism, and Experience Life editor in chief Pilar Gerasimo as they
present the essential elements of an “automatic” approach to lasting weight
loss and weight management at the UltraSmart Weight Loss Workshop, October
10–12, at the Omega Institute for Holistic Studies in Rhinebeck, N.Y. For more
information, visit experiencelifemag.com/ultrasmart-weight-loss.
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July 29, 2008
Valerie B. says:
Everything in this article makes sense but one thing, "hunter-gatherer...ate the equivalent of only 20 teaspoons of sugar a year." 20 teaspoons is 80 grams and a banana contains 15 grams of sugar or approx. 4 teaspoons of sugar. So are you saying historically we only at about 5 bananas a year?