Kind: captions Language: en hello everyone welcome to this live discussion for the eat to beat disease inflammation series uh i'm john burns the ceo of tb12 and today i'm joined by my friend dr william lee great to have you here thanks very much great always great to have a conversation with you yeah it's like to get a chance to talk to people about this so you've been providing a lot of great information to the community this week i know on our end we've received lots of questions about inflammation on a regular basis so i'm grateful to have the chance to talk to you uh from a scientist to doctor someone who's uh very well informed in the topic of inflammation and dive into this topic now before we get going i think it's very important uh for me to point out that we are not providing specific medical advice and you should seek your own advice from your own doctor uh but take what we're talking about today under advisement is generally good information that you can use to inform your health decisions um now so to get started will let's talk about inflammation what is inflammation such a great question because everybody sort of seems to have inflammation on the tip of their tongue it's actually an incredibly important topic because the idea that inflammation can be bad for your body is absolutely correct but what we all need to know is that inflammation is actually just a natural part of our body seeking its balance doing its thing healing from the inside out a little bit of inflammation is exactly what um happens when you have a cut in your finger or if you um scrape your knee when you're riding a bike basically immediately afterwards uh your body your immune system responds by sending inflammation to the site which are a series of reactions to clean up debris and bacteria just in case you got infected with that cut or the scrape and so that's why you get a little bit of swelling a little bit of redness maybe a little bit of pain and then and this is the key part after maybe a couple of hours maybe a day or two it goes away so a little bit of inflammation cleans up the mess then it goes away little inflammation good a lot of information bad and a lot of inflammation is what most people are actually concerned about when our body is raging with inflammation and that is the kind of inflammation we want to actually put down yeah i think as you describe it um i think to make it simple for for our audience and people who you know i speak with a lot i think what you're talking about is the difference between acute inflammation and then the chronic inflammation and acute is that incidentally you cut yourself you sprain your ankle but it's the chronic inflammation which is so problematic longer term for people yeah and you know john like almost all the chronic diseases that we that nobody wants that we all fear that we're all trying to figure out how to stay healthy to stay away from diabetes heart disease cancer dementia obesity you name it autoimmune diseases all of those are characterized they have a common denominator chronic inflammation so basically chronic inflammation is where that normal acute wound healing response basically doesn't get to be turned down it's like getting into a car turning on the volume as loud as you can and then not being able to shut it off or another example i give is you know uh if you were to um try to find your way out into the forest at night and you light a candle to figure out where you're going when you get to where you're going blow out the candle you're all set that's a little bit of acute inflammation just to get you from a to b but chronic inflammation is you drop the candle on the ground and it lights the forest and fire and now the whole place is burning you're not even going to be able to get to where you want to go that's chronic inflammation yeah and i've i've heard some very interesting things about chronic inflammation you mentioned some disease states that can be impacted by chronic inflammation but i've even heard recently about you know another concept neural inflammation and how inflammation in the brain can perhaps be a cause and lead to things like you know alzheimer's and parkinson's and other diseases as well yeah well so um it's absolutely true in almost any of those neurodegenerative diseases that you mentioned alzheimer's parkinson's ms a whole bunch of other ones we do see actually inflammation and that inflammation is not acute meaning that it didn't happen yesterday and it's not going away tomorrow that is sort of the smoldering fire of inflammation that's actually going on whether it's the cause or whether it's sort of an effect we don't really know but we do know that the more inflammations around you know the more of the forest actually gets to be burned and that's really why we want to actually take care to think about how we can lower inflammation in our bodies yeah i think that's a great analogy the forest analogy um so inflammation can be the cause of many serious disease states and conditions as an individual who is interested in their health and making better choices which i certainly feel like i am most of the time are some of the things that i can do proactively to combat inflammation and i read your book so i know there's a lot of food solutions but can we talk more about that yeah absolutely so you know um first let me just say as a as a physician as a doctor that if you talk to most of your doctors and and you ask them what do you do to help your patients get rid of inflammation they pull out their prescription pad and a pen and they say i write you a prescription for something like a steroid okay a steroid will turn off inflammation lickety-split and it's really powerful but it's got a ton of side effects as well and we sort of don't really want to go there we don't have to so really the question you're asking is that what can we do without having to resort to a prescription that where we can you know take actions ourselves to lower that sort of influence the risk of having chronic inflammation it's really the risk you know like we're not all walking around on fire most of us are capable of actually getting into trouble if we're not careful about it so a couple of things that we can do first of all avoid the things that start the forest fire the start the chronic information that's one thing and then secondly do things that actually can help to calm it down to calm down the fire to help put it out and contain it you want the campfire not the forest fire and you also want to avoid things like pouring gasoline onto the fire so let's talk a little bit about that first of all what are the things that can actually spark inflammation you know it turns out that eating a lot of saturated fat eating a lot of ultra processed foods eating a lot of extra added sugar and even artificial sweeteners can actually contribute towards inflammation and the reason they do this is because your body is used to i mean your body can take a little bit of that stuff but if you keep on pounding it down okay really as sort of the lots of processed foods and you know all the things we know that aren't good for us here's the secret like underneath the the curtain you're actually seeing your body um uh reject the stuff it doesn't like and part of the way it rejects it is by turning on the inflammation and it keeps turning on the more you feed it the bad stuff the more it keeps on that going with that inflammation it wants to get rid of that the junk remember i told you inflammation is what happens when you have an injury and it tries to get rid of the bad stuff like the bacteria so in a way um dietary things that are not so good for you um are that now other things in your lifestyle can actually also increase your risk of inflammation one thing is not getting enough sleep not getting good quality sleep you're if you're pulling up if you're pulling all-nighters like you know i'm sure we all did when we were in college or much younger days i mean you know you felt like crafting he crap felt like crap the next day maybe you could even pull another all night or the next day but eventually it's going to catch up to you and that catching up that feeling crampy it's worse than a hangover right i mean it takes you weeks to really get to feel back to yourself that's inflammation going on as well so not getting upset and by the way here's another thing not getting enough of not getting enough exercise not having enough movement physical movement i want to talk about the only the couch potato watching netflix we're really talking about is somebody who just you know lives a lifestyle where they're not actually moving their joints or not flexing their muscles or not actually you know swinging their arms and legs humans you know like we are we are designed for movement that's why we have so many bones and joints and muscles in our body so one of the things that i think is so important for you know the folks um uh who who are part of tb12 to understand is that exactly what you guys espouse movement is central to helping your body lower inflammation yeah it's interesting too as i hear you talk you know about the choices you make of what you eat sleep movement am i correct in assuming that it's almost like our bodies and our biology are wired to have a system to basically reduce all that inflammation and to repair and recover yeah you know we call that a feedback loop right so basically a little bit is good a little bit more is even better a little bit more sends a signal to our body hey enough let's go down okay it's like the grade school teacher you know listening to the kids talk in the back of the class you know be creative hang out with yourselves now wait a minute now you're a little bit too loud okay now you got to sit in a corner so um so our body actually controls the volume continuously and um and so that feedback loop was really really important so it's here's here's the other thing that i think is really important for people to understand that that comes from science inflammation is not an on and off switch it really is kind of like a volume switch you turn it a little bit louder a little bit softer and again you always want to have the opportunity the option to have inflammation when you need it just a little bit not too much and not too long and then get back to baseline it's it's actually part of our immune defense system yeah so the other the flip side of avoiding the bad stuff is actually to you know try to take in some of the good stuff and you know the opposites of the things we just talked about regular exercise and by the way you don't need to work out you know you're not trying to be a bodybuilder you don't need to be a bodybuilder or an extreme sports person in order to lower inflammation you actually want to just have regular normal regular movement i mean if you if you think about it if you have a dog as a pet you're taking your dog in a walk every day that actually helps dog lower inflammation in their body you get a healthier animal that's going to be with your family much longer same deal with people if you get and sleep get good quality sleep you're lowering your inflammation and of course besides avoiding some of the harmful foods eating some of the foods that are naturally anti-inflammatory can also be helpful too yeah and i want to talk a little bit about the movement thing for a second because that's a very interesting topic to me i've been looking into you mentioned walking the dog there seems like there's even a lot of research just in the benefits of simply walking creating that movement dynamic versus you know on the other extreme and i had a period of my life where you know you're into these ultra marathons and ultra distance races and you might be running for five hours or you know riding your bike for 10. it's almost like you can take it too far actually and there's a lot of science that would suggest simply 20 minutes a day or 30 minutes a day of brisk walking can give you a good portion of the benefits to reduce inflammation am i correct absolutely and you know this it's so simple that anybody can do this no matter who you are where you live what you do what your circumstances are essentially um either just before dinner or after dinner you know depending on the weather go out and go go for a walk around the block take 20 minutes um you know you got a coat put a coat on if it's warm go out um and and literally just walk around the block you know it does you don't have to count steps you don't have to count distance if you want to you can you know on your watch or whatever but the key is really probably time i think that if you actually go for out for about 20 minutes to a half an hour and you do want to move briskly so briskly you know isn't like staring at your phone while you're walking you know like that's not good you probably get you probably trip over something yeah you know what you don't want to do that i mean but i do think that what you want to do is you know like move your body the way it wants to move you know it's like it's like um you know it's like the junior high school dance right get on that dance floor and just swing move around you know like and that's basically you want to do briskly 20 minutes it's so easy like you know around my house if i walk around the block you know i've actually done a mile but you know and and you and you feel good afterwards you know so either before dinner or after dinner at the same time if you've got a partner family member children or even a dog you know that's a great opportunity to be able to do it yeah it makes a ton of sense and it's such such good advice let's come back to the food topic for a second because i know you know your book eat to be diseased had a lot of great information in it and i'm sure a lot of people in the community watching this you're curious about some real life practices and simple things that they can do um can you talk you know you talked about things to avoid but then things you could add let's talk about the things to add there's so much avoidance in the world of diets and eating let's talk about some of the things you suggest that we amplify and eat more of yeah well look my philosophy is to love your food to love your health you know um and and the reason that's so important is that you know when i was taking care of patients from the va the veterans administration these guys would always you know they'd be heavier on older people most mostly men and they'd be always bummed out like waiting for the doctor the other shoe to drop to tell them what they couldn't do in their life don't smoke don't drink don't eat this don't do that and like they were but when they came to me one of the things that i always told them is i said look i'm not going to do that for you what i want to you what i want to do is actually find out what's important to you what do you love to do what do you love to eat and so in my book eat to beat disease one of the things that i did is i actually wrote about more than 200 different foods i mean this is a pretty thick book it's got lots of of um it's got a lot of lots of foods that that cut across cultures you know whether it's comfort food whether it's mediterranean food whether it's asian food whether it's tex-mex can find stuff in almost every place that science tells us activates our bodies hardwired systems to be able to have that feedback you talked about lower inflammation keep our circulation really good help our regenerate our muscles keep our gut healthy too which is really really important for lowering inflammation protect us against oxidative stress you know which you know actually emotional stress does that to us as well and to build our immunity which has been so important in the last you know after we went through last year and so the idea of eat to be disease you know there's a couple of things you know like um and one of them is to actually to eat but eat the things that you love find those foods that you already prefer that are healthy for you and load them if you like you know if you if you like fruits and vegetables pick the ones that you already love that you already like because i always say that if you start with the ones that you naturally like then you're already ahead of the game because you it's not like you have to learn to like it you already like it yeah i think that's great advice one of the things i know i've told you this before but one of the things i love about your approach is it's a positive uh approach and you can control the outcome approach versus the um the motivation of deprivation which as you were saying before in the va house was like it's almost what all of diets and health you know leads back to you can't do this you can't do this you can eat that and you take a very positive approach which is one of the things i love about your work help me understand from a healthy food standpoint um have you come across are there foods that people generally regard as healthy but in actuality um you might say watch out for them um that you know people say hey these are you know i thought this was good for me but maybe it's like juice is an example like sometimes i feel like people drink a lot of juice they're like oh but it's natural it's organic juice i'm like yeah but you're drinking a 24 ounce glass of it you know it is such a great question i and my response to people is the gosh is in the details you know it's to clean it up and and and the and the fact of the matter is that things that you think that are healthy that you get because it's inexpensive it's convenient you can chug it down easy to store you know i always tell people please look at those details because uh commercial juices often are sweetened their sugar sweetened they add sugar to them and things that you think they're made out of like pomegranate juice which is good for you when you look on the side oh man there's like almost no pomegranate juice it's mostly sweetened grape juice or something else and so do look at the ingredients as one quick way you know like if you were buying a car or if you were buying a vacuum cleaner you're going to be checking out you're going to do your research on it right um you're going to be buying some athletic equipment you're going to be checking out exactly like whatever you can find about same thing with our food um by the way other things like olive oil so i didn't realize this but olive oils many of the commercial ones aren't all olive oil they've taken canola oil they've got flaxseed oil they mix them all together and they sell it at extra virgin olive oil so again you know i think um sort of uh being sold to you cheap fat vegan is always good but actually to pay attention to the details but that said i mean it's also very individual so for example you know if you're on a blood thinner uh for example um you want to be careful about some of the foods that you might eat if you're on uh if you've got if you've got um uh insulin uh uh issues you got to be careful about the fruits that you eat as well so you might want to eat some of them but you might not want to eat as much if you are pregnant uh and you want to be healthy you know seafood with healthy omega-3 fatty acids are good but maybe you want the mercury that's found in stupid and get your own healthy polyunsaturated fatty acids from another source maybe a plant-based source so again i think there's a lot of individuality as well and that's why getting to know yourself in your circumstance at the time that you're making that decision is really important getting in touch with ourselves is something that um it's the most grounding thing that you can do for your health you know getting to to sort of think about where you are in your life and what circumstances you're dealing with and i think some of the choices that you can make and the things that you you know suggest i think there's some that probably take a little bit of a longer time to have an impact but there's some that you start feeling you'll start feeling better immediately like i'll walk around the block after dinner you'll feel better than if you didn't do it that night you will feel better yeah well i'll tell you even and even some foods can do it there was a study used looking at kiwis right so you know little brown furry things you cut them in half it's like emerald i love kiwis so here's the thing research has been done showing that eating a couple of kiwis just eating two kiwis will change your gut bacteria in 24 hours and in 24 hours you've made more the fiber in the kiwi and vitamin c has helped make more good gut bacteria what does that gut bacteria do lowers inflammation helps you lower your inflammation so you know it's sort of this when we put something into our body our body will respond to it and it can do it quickly and then there's this chain reaction of good things that can actually happen so that's why making the right choices are really so important we do it for our pets we do it for our children we should do it for ourselves yeah well i had just a couple more questions i want to touch on it um one i want to go back to something you said a moment ago and i just feel like it would be a miss if we didn't discuss it just briefly um the impact of your emotional well-being and your mood on inflammation in your body particularly you know coming out of this whole culvert experience for everyone it's been really really hard on people of all ages how much does your mood and your emotional state impact systemic inflammation in your body and or just different inflammation in different parts of your body yeah you know much more than anyone ever realized because our brain is not just for thinking and cogitating and our emotions are sort of the outcome of a lot of things that are going on as well and if our emotions are off balance i mean we all know what it feels like to be more in balance and we also know what it feels like i mean all of us do to feel out of control and lessen balance when our brain is not in balance the hormones that our brain secretes basically are also not in balance and so it's basically like you know somebody going to the car dash and turning all the switches on on and off and up and down and like everything is going crazy your fan's blowing your music's going your heater's going on and off you know it and that's what emotional um that's what when stress emotional stress does to you so look um every human on the planet underwent emotional stress last year but it's so important for us to get back in touch with ourselves and really try to do things that can help lower our stress and guess what the interconnectedness is that exercising movement can actually lower stress um being with people that you like and love can also lower stress laughing you know i mean laughter is a great medicine it actually makes you know everybody feels better after they've laughed about something like funny right and that's why by the way if i'm laughing it makes you smile it's infectious in the most positive sense of the word and eating healthy foods as a community with people that you care about another good way to have that health powwow you know and you're speaking not only to your friends about it but you're speaking to your own body your brain will communicate to your body and if your body is better it also helps to control the emotions in your brain as well yeah i think that's great advice i mean it's hard uh in this day and age especially with everything going on to remember that we're really social beings and there's a reason everyone likes to come together over food is a great example as you say um you know i i wanted to ask you just because we deal so much with athletes of all ages um and whether it's tom brady and professional athletes like tom you know crossfit champions or you know people like you or i or others who might consider themselves athletes because they like to play tennis or run or golf or do whatever they do um for those athletes that are really really invested in their training they might be you know trying to win a crossfit event or they might be trying to play professional sports and they're putting an extraordinary load on their body in some fashion through volume or weight or speed i imagine they're subject to even additional inflammation risk what advice would you give those athletes yeah so this has actually been studied you know sort of in the lab and and and also in in people including in ultra marathoners in people who are extreme athletes um olympians you know people that really have to push themselves so number one you know um uh the athletic um world is remarkable because it really shows you the pinnacle of human ability right that's what we all celebrate at a game at a competition you know no matter what it is you know wrestling boxing skiing um you know where or even even riding horses is quite athletic that's actually showing the human body um performing at its pinnacle now here's the thing that we've been talking about which is balance balance is not staying at the pinnacle all the time it's about getting to the top chilling out and get reloading and you can get back to the top if you want it's it's the kind of it's the cycle it's the tide coming in going out you know and that's a really important thing for uh athletes to do is to realize you can push yourself but what you want to do is to recover as well as important it is to push is is the importance of actually recovery and that's basically if you think about it if you took a professional athlete and all you did every single day is a play that game you play the super bowl every single day all right you're gonna you're gonna wear out the muscles and what's happening is that muscles put to that extreme over that period of time it starts to become inflamed and and and it's a natural reaction because you know your muscles accumulate lactic acid there's breakdown to build new muscle you need to remove old muscles are there schmutz in your body that your immune system needs to clean out it's all fine and all normal except if you don't if you don't allow that downtime to recover then then you start building up things and that building up that junk builds up inflammation even more so they when they study this in people who are like um marathoners like or runners um if you're actually a jogger okay um you know you you do actually get a little bit of inflammation as your muscles working out um but then it goes down and then your muscles are building up they're regenerating and that's how you get stronger and stronger if you're a marathon or training for a marathon you know as you get closer to race day you know your lean body weight you know your your your you're you're hyped up you're like alert ready for that race you're like everything is tense ready for that competition you know you're in a state of inflammation in fact it might even take that state of information to push through the ultra marathon but at the end of the day your body needs a rest big time to load to calm turn that volume down you know every everybody's actually turned up their favorite song you know on radio for a little while to listen to it but if you don't ever turn that thing down you're going to blow out your eardrums same thing for athletes and so how can athletes do this i mean number one you know pro athletes have the have luxury of having you know physiotherapy and you know they have a nutritionist they have a team doc you know they have schedules i think it's it's almost riskier um john for the kind of the non-pro athletes that push themselves because we don't actually have that somebody to really kind of coach us for the off switch with a turn down switch and that's where i think if you're planning to you know do anything that is um pushing yourself you want to actually balance that for your health for the good of your health by actually recovering and i think about recovery not as wimping out no absolutely not when you're recovering is when you're actually regenerating and building your muscles so in fact you get stronger while you're resting it's only when you actually keep pushing yourself you don't give your body that chance um to regenerate so they actually found showed that when you're when you're resting uh like not working out that's when stem cells can come out to rebuild and when you're sleeping that's when stem cells rebuild your body as well so you want to get good sleep you want to have a little downtime and of course nutrition is really important as well because you want to um you know as you actually burn through your energy you know your energy expenditure when you're working out you need to actually build up your stores again your your fuel tanks need to be filled back up yeah and replenish that well you know it's great it's great advice and um you know i will say this as we close will i always enjoy talking to you because i take away something new every time and at least in this conversation you reminded me how much i like kiwis and i'm going to drop a couple kiwis into my morning smoothie tomorrow and it sounds like other people should as well so we'll start that tomorrow that's great well listen it's always great to speak to you i i you know i think one of the reasons that you know we've we always have great conversations is that you know we're not we're not extreme people we're pretty reasonable people what we do the question is you know how do we uh how do we keep thinking about the things that are important to us and i think that's really what we've shared in this conversation is inflammation is something that we do want to be mindful of we want to actually make sure that we stay in motion you know like that old saying a body in motion stays in motion and that's absolutely true true and it's something that i think tb12 um really kind of stands for and is so good for health yeah and i just i really appreciate your comments around recovery because that's you know a big part of what we talk about here at tb12 and uh we take it one step further and even say it's about active recovery right so as you said it's not about wimping out it's actually investing in the recovery process you know eating right you know hydrating properly even moving a little bit the day after a hard workout you know you don't want to do a two-hour bike ride then just lay on the couch all day the next day your body doesn't flush out all the toxins so go for that go for a longer walk that that next day so i think so much what you say resonates so closely with us here at tb12 so sincerely appreciate you taking the time my pleasure it's always great to be there great talking to you all good talking john good