Kind: captions Language: en this woman in front of me my patient her life is decimated now her life is decimated now she's in my office week after week sobbing begging me for help begging me to give her something that will make her pain go away and I'm like this diet might work like I'm giving her dozens of pills already and they haven't done [ __ ] if this diet might help her why not try it so that particular woman that I'm thinking of actually became hypomanic on on the Atkins diet meaning it took her from a super dark place to she was very excited very happy she was so she was a little too happy because I've read your book I know where this is going and I've been meaning to ask you about that so just to get people markers so you were struggling and you were in a depressive State you start coming out of it but for other reasons when you get diagnosed with um the metabolic disorder it ends up even clearing that up even more so you start trying it on yourself you try it on other people in your family you try it on patients it's working for a lot of them I don't know if it worked for everybody but it works for a lot of them yep we don't yet understand exactly what the mechanism of action is but then since I know from reading the book that there are people there are cells that are under firing and they're cells that are over firing If It Moves people from under firing into over firing how do we know this is a good thing like isn't isn't becoming hypomanic a sign that we actually haven't solved the fundamental problem it is so at the end of the day I'm arguing that all mental disorders and we may need to get into defining what is a mental disorder but I'm arguing all mental disorders are metabolic disorders of the brain and as you just said what that means it can mean a lot of different things depending on the developmental age of the person so a fetus growing in utero is going to have different consequences than an adult who might have different consequences than a very elderly person who is 10 years from death um but for most adults the the two primary things are that metabolic compromise to brain cells can result in under activity and overactivity and actually the exact same cell can do both I have very sound scientific reason to believe that the same cell could be under active 90 of the time and overactive ten percent of the time and that will result in different mental symptoms but at the end of the day it's really an issue of balance I know that sounds like so Eastern Medicine of me and I'm really kind of a western medicine kind of guy but it really is about balance in the brain that neurons need to fire when they are supposed to Fire and they need to abruptly and acutely stop firing when called to stop firing and if they are sluggish and getting going that is a problem if they are sluggish and stopping that is a problem and so it's about attaining balance and so anytime you introduce a treatment like a dietary intervention or an antidepressant or an antipsychotic or electroconvulsive therapy anytime you introduce a treatment that plays a powerful role in metabolism you you run the risk of overshooting or undershooting and if you overshoot or undershoot you're going to get new symptoms and the beauty of this Theory is it at least for me as a clinician and a scientist it helps me not panic when I see that somebody starts getting hypomanic I don't panic anymore I have a very clear vision of what's Happening overall it's a good thing it means that I'm delivering more energy to that person's brain that their brain is not yet healthy enough to manage that energy appropriately that's interesting so take me into the cell now so we for people that don't know what mitochondria are I think it will be a very helpful primer I've talked about it a fair amount on the show long time viewers listeners will have heard me refer to it as the PowerHouse of the cell but your book goes into details much more than that um why do people think it's a Powerhouse and why do you think it's far more than that so mitochondria being the powerhouses of the cell is based on the fact that mitochondria take most of the food they're really the only utilizer of oxygen in human body like everybody we need to breathe we need to breathe in oxygen breathe out carbon dioxide that's mitochondria mitochondria are using that oxygen and churning out carbon dioxide at the end of the day they are doing the processes that result in that so this is really fundamental stuff to living organisms it defines life itself in many ways um and there's no doubt mitochondria are powerhouses they do those things but the research over the last 20 years primarily in the metabolic health field but also in the Aging field so researchers who are trying to figure out what causes premature aging how can we slow it or delay it um there's been an explosion of research on mitochondria and all of the functions they do some cancer researchers are highly focused on mitochondria and then in the neuroscience and mental health fields this dates back to at least the 1980s in the 1980s we had the first mitochondrial theory of autism and in 2000 we got the mitochondrial Theory by polar disorder and since then we've had mitochondrial theories of lots of chronic mental disorders but it also applies to things like Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease so quick summary of well what else do mitochondria do they are primary regulators of neurotransmitter production and release including key neurotransmitters like dopamine and serotonin and Gaba and glutamate they are primary Regulators of steroid hormone production and release so this includes cortisol estrogen testosterone progesterone they are primary Regulators of inflammation they play a direct role in turning it both on and off they are primary Regulators of epigenetics in fact one study found that they are responsible for the expression of at least 60 percent of the genes from the cell nucleus mitochondria mitochondria so mitochondria are producing lots of this signals that play a role in the function of cells so mitochondria producing something called reactive oxygen species mitochondria are producing ATP but they also play a role in how much ADP and amp are in the cell those levels the levels of ATP to ADP to amp playful profound roles in cell function and cell health and gene expression mitochondria play a role in the levels of calcium in a Cell calcium is important to turn cells both on and off also plays a role in gene expression mitochondria are the primary Regulators of calcium levels in the cell yeah so first of all this is so such a radical limit I'm getting too nerdy this is incredible we're actually going to keep going deep but I I I had never heard anybody talk about mitochondria as being that multi-dimensional before and I've really looked into this stuff and so this is part of what freaked me out reading your book is you're very clear in the book I'm not saying any of this stuff for the first time but I'm the first one pulling it all together and so I had never heard of mitochondria talked about as anything other than then you've referred to it as a power cable you usually hear about it call the battery but I thought that was interesting so they are the power cable but you said that's actually not the most accurate way to think about them if you're going to use an analogy use the analogy of a motherboard in a computer that's when I was like what like I've I've just never heard that before so once you begin understanding the the like Wayback history is we at one point were a single-celled organism that consumed the mitochondria in inside of the cell so when you think of mitochondria as like its own living thing with its own DNA it is its own bacteria that's you've taken inside the body and you begin to understand are we really humans as we think about it or are we this fascinating collection of bacteria and when you begin to understand that from your microbiome to the biome on your skin in your mouth and inside of your cells you have all these different bacteria doing all this different stuff to have intelligence might not be the right word but that's where you begin to realize oh my God it now I begin to understand how it could be possible that all these very disparate things which don't feel like they could be connected with my layperson's brain anyway just they felt too disparate that once I understood how much mitochondria is involved in that if you begin to break that Machinery through diet we're going to need to go into why that ends up breaking it because I actually don't understand that part but then it's like okay if this really is the motherboard and you do something that disrupts the motherboard now you understand why it will sketch out your entire personality and that blew me away I I did not realize even to the point where and this I think is what you were just saying that mitochondria themselves will produce hormones but they also have receptors for hormones so they're like communicating to each other yes with all of these mechanisms that I think I represent a lot of people in that I imagine it still in that homunculoid way where there's like a guy in my brain and you know my brain is like dictating all these functions when in reality it's hyper distributed it's happening at the level of cell and they're communicating back and forth with these different Messengers is that all accurate the one thing I'm going to correct is that diet is the primary or only factor that can harm mitochondria so the most important message that I want to make sure people don't come away with is that Chris Palmer is saying poor diet is the cause of all mental illness how are you not saying that this is so interesting I'm not saying that at all and at the same time I am saying diet plays a powerful role in mental illness diet plays a powerful role in mitochondrial Health but it is not the only thing that plays a role the reason that is so critically important is because I can think of hundreds of examples in which people might develop a mental illness completely unrelated to diet somebody could be traumatized somebody could have a horrible traumatic abusive childhood somebody can have a hormonal imbalance somebody can smoke cigarettes somebody can do hallucinogens lots of hallucinogens and marijuana and develop a psychotic disorder those things are none of those are diet related people are consuming other things or other problems are occurring in their body and they can develop chronic crippling mental disorders as a result women hormones postpartum postpartum everything postpartum depression postpartum anxiety postpartum psychosis postpartum Mania those are real things it's not because women change their diet it's not because women started eating more carbs at the end of their pregnancy and that or they somebody gave them a box of chocolates and they ate those chocolates and that is what caused their postpartum psychosis it's not that simple and we can't make it that simple the reason this theory is so overwhelmingly exciting to me is because number one if you understand the science of mitochondria you can understand all of the symptoms of mental illness and all of the associations that we have known about for decades you can begin to understand neurotransmitter imbalances hormonal imbalances gut microbiome issues um all sorts of things under active overactive brain regions so by understanding mitochondria you can understand the phenomenon of Mental Illness but much much more importantly or equally importantly I guess it's equally importantly is when you look at all of the things that can adversely affect mitochondrial function like the things I just mentioned they're all well established risk factors for mental illness so what I'm saying in a nutshell is mitochondrial dysfunction ultimately is the cause of mental illness and if you ask the big picture question well what causes that diet is one of the things that can cause it and I'm happy to go into the details and Weeds on that if you want but it's not the only thing that can cause it trauma can cause it alcohol use can cause it marijuana use can cause it poor sleep can cause it high levels of stress hormonal imbalances insulin resistance all sorts of things that we know play a role in mental illness are known to directly impair mitochondrial function and that can result in all of the metabolic and mental disorders that we know of so if you you can take any one of those risk factors childhood trauma people who have a lot of trauma in childhood are more likely to develop a mental disorder which one all of them all of them it's not just post-traumatic stress disorder they're also more likely to develop depression anxiety disorders personality disorders bipolar disorder schizophrenia alcoholism opioid addiction they're more likely to develop every mental disorder was that part of your first clue that they had to have some similar underlying cause foreign it wasn't the first clue this was kind of like as I as I dove deeper you know in order to create this Theory I had to dive really deep into cell biology and mitochondria and mitochondrial function and all of The Cutting Edge research that's going on with them but at the same time I had to go out and see the forest from the trees and test my hypotheses test my theory I had to like make it work and it trust me I didn't do it overnight the first iteration did not make sense the first iteration I quickly found flaws in the way I was thinking about it flaws in the theory but I kept going back to the not to the drawing board but I kept going back to refine it well let me see if I can understand this in a different way let me see if I can add just one level of complexity to the theory to make everything fit what was some of the first roadblocks that you ran into you know the biggest roadblock that I ran into initially was the fact that psychiatric medications many of them cause metabolic harm we have lots of pills that we use that cause massive weight gain but they work is that why it was a conundrum they caused diabetes they cause cardiovascular disease and they produce symptoms of mental illness and when I when I recognize that I quickly recognize nobody's gonna believe this this theory is crap it's dead there's no way I can responsibly make this claim given that the pills we give are causing metabolic problems that doesn't make sense because I'm not going to go down the rabbit hole of conspiracy theorists and say all the trials are fraudulent none of the medicines actually work because as a clinician I know that's not true I've seen the medications work I have used them and I have seen them work and yet as I'm developing this Theory I have to be able to explain well then why would a metabolic toxin or a mitochondrial toxin which some of our medications are why would that reduce symptoms and that is what ultimately led me to refine and understand these two dichotomous states of metabolically compromised cells both under active and overactive so one cell when it's metabolically compromised requires energy to work and if it doesn't have enough energy it's not going to work as well that's the under activity most people get that if a car doesn't have enough energy it's just not going to go as fast or it may not go at all or maybe parts of it won't work under active functions all make sense the hyper excitability hyperactivity did not make sense initially but as I began to understand all of the complex roles of mitochondria the fact that they are sequestering calcium to turn the cell off and that if they fail to do that in an efficient manner that cell will become hyper excitable that was the thing that blew my mind that really got to the heart of it but again I so I didn't stop there I then step back and say let's see the forest from the trees test your theory Chris test your theory you should be able to test it with common sense already established observations if that's really true if that's really true think of all of the situations you can think of in which mitochondrial function is abruptly impaired and then ask yourself are those situations associated with brain hyper excitability meaning does it increase your risk for a seizure and lo and behold it works oxygen deprivation can cause seizures carbon monoxide poisoning carbon monoxide poison oxygen deprivation are very specific assaults to mitochondria because mitochondria are the only things using oxygen if somebody doesn't have enough oxygen or if somebody gets carbon monoxide poisoning all sorts of symptoms can emerge including all sorts of mental symptoms they can start hallucinating they can give them paranoid they can get depressed they can have brain fog they can have all sorts of things but they can also seize which is an unequivocal example of hyper excitability but then I went to mitochondrial toxins arsenic lead cyanide these well-known toxins are all targeting mitochondria that is their mechanism of action that is how they are toxins the truth is hitting your career goals is not easy you have to be willing to go the extra mile to stand out and do hard things better than anybody else but there are 10 steps I want to take you through that will 100x your efficiency so you can crush your goals and get back more time into your day you'll not only get control of your time you'll learn how to use that momentum to take on your next big goal to help you do this I've created a list of the 10 most impactful things that any High achiever needs to dominate and you can download it for free by clicking the link in today's description alright my friend back to today's episode and if you look at the consequences of poisoning with those seizures are a possible consequence so once again acute poisoning of mitochondria can result in hyper excitability of the brain I could go on and on and on but needless to say I didn't go into this lightly so I did my best to test this theory in every which way I could with available evidence to see does it even fit like I'm I'm presenting a picture that's the way I think about a theory so the way I think about developing a theory is that every research study is a piece of the puzzle the puzzle has to create a picture a coherent picture that makes sense it has to and the reason it has to is because humans exist we exist and we have flaws and we have mental illness and we have mental health and we have all of it the fact that it's working tells me there must be a coherent explanation and it's our job to figure it out so in my mind creating a theory is about taking all of the relevant research that we have all the studies that are all pieces of the puzzle and just putting them together but what I've had to do is rearrange some I've had to take pieces of the puzzle from the Obesity world and pieces of the puzzle from the metabolism world and pieces of the puzzle from the Aging world and all of the pieces of the puzzle from the mental health world and only then could I put it all together to create one coherent picture that actually allows us to make lots of predictions in the way that I just said well oxygen deprivation can cause essentially every mental symptom and seizures why why is that carbon monoxide poisoning can do the same arsenic poisoning can do the same why it's not serotonin it's not carbohydrates so why and when you understand the science and you see the forest from the trees you can then actually start to use Simple interventions like low carbo keto diets to help people heal from sometimes life-threatening devastating brain disorders and other health conditions okay so you just made a leap that I couldn't follow so we're looking at all of the different things that could cause somebody to seize up that tells you we can throw it into a hyper excited state so now you've solved for the I know I can be under and I know I can be over so I need to find that balance in the middle you look at all of the things that cause mental illness and all of them keep coming back to basically perturbations in oxygen and that points you to the mitochondria so you're looking at all the different ways that this goes wrong and you're seeing at that point that the only thing that it could be is mitochondria the the thing that led me down this path is a serendipitous finding so it was it was not only that I was noticing that the ketogenic diet or low carbohydrate diets could help people with depression and anxiety but it was in 2016 when I had a patient with schizoaffective disorder who had been my patient for eight years was tormented by his illness had tried 17 different medications they did not stop his symptoms he had seen numerous other mental health professionals and basically our field said well he's just got a really bad illness and he's gonna live a second-class life essentially we're really sorry we don't know what to do he asked for my help to lose weight I decided to try the ketogenic diet at that point I have no no conception whatsoever that this is gonna do anything for his illness because he's got schizoaffective disorder he that that's very different than depression and anxiety but I'm like but it's a good weight loss tool I'm gonna help the guy lose weight he wants to lose some weight I'll help him lose some weight within two weeks I'm noticing the powerful antidepressant effects I'm thinking wow it's even happening for him and he's got a really bad illness he's got this horrible debilitating schizophrenia bipolar thing um and the thing that upended everything that really set me on this journey was about two months in he spontaneously starts reporting his hallucinations are going away his paranoid delusions are going away he starts to realize that they aren't true and probably never have been true this man has now lost 160 pounds and kept it off so the weight loss thing goes well six years later almost seven years later now he but he was able to do things he hadn't been able to do since some of his diagnosis he was able to go out in public and not be paranoid perform improv in front of the live audience move out of his father's home it was that story that began in 2016. that completely shattered everything I knew as a psychiatrist and actually forced me back to your initial question why what what was the mechanism of action initially I was like who cares it works it's not my job to figure it out whatever nobody's going to take this seriously I need to stay on the down low with this anyway I'm a Harvard physician I cannot be talking about the Atkins diet for mental health nobody's going to take that seriously they're probably going to take away my license they'll fire me from my job I don't need any of that in my life and I'm just gonna shut up about this I'm gonna lay low when I saw it put essentially schizophrenia into remission at that point I knew I can't stay quiet about this this is too important millions millions of people's lives are devastated I can't shut up about this I cannot keep this quiet and at the same time I knew that I have to have science nobody's going to believe me that I already can hear them laughing I have to figure out how and why would this work and so I went on this journey the godsend for me was that the ketogenic diet is actually an evidence-based treatment for epilepsy it can stop seizures even when meds don't and we use epilepsy treatments in Psychiatry all the time so I'm like oh that's a nice gift I've got all these Decades of Neuroscience that I've never known about nobody had ever told me the ketogenic diet stop seizures I had trained in Psychiatry and neurology nobody ever told me that but I quickly figured it out and then I went on this deep dive to understand the Neuroscience of that but at the same time I'm trying to also piece it together with but wait this doesn't make sense because it made my metabolic syndrome go away how did that work and what does that have to do with mental illness it helps hundreds of thousands if not millions of people lose weight what does weight loss have to do with mental illness it helps people with type 2 diabetes put their type 2 diabetes and remission off medications what does that have to do with mental illness so quickly I realized I have a lot more work to do I have to understand well how the hell does this keto diet work for obesity and diabetes and epilepsy and all these other things and how can I pair that together with the science of the mental health field and very quickly you know initially the cursory review leads you to neurotransmitters and inflammation and hormones and other things but that's just all the kind of vague non-specific garbage we've been spewing out for decades it gets us nowhere and I realized no I no that's those are insufficient explanations because they don't deliver actionable new treatments that actually restore People's Health or lives so I need to go deeper than neurotransmitters what is causing the neurotransmitter imbalances and why do those neurotransmitter balances change why do they change from day to day from hour to hour because people who have hallucinations aren't hallucinating every day 24 7. they're hallucinating some of the time not all of the time so how can I understand this all of that led me to mitochondria and then the more I unraveled and learned about mitochondria the more I was like oh my God this is connecting not just the dots of why would the keto diet help my patients but this is connecting the whole freaking mental health field I'm like this is impossible what is the mechanism of action though is it like I can round it to it regulates and so it turns off when it's supposed to turn off and it turns on when it's supposed to turn on but why I think the easiest answer I can give you to the big picture question that you're asking is like what exactly is happening why are different people having different symptoms um the first thing I want to say is if this sounds like too much of a leap for people I just want to point out type 2 diabetes is supposed to be one and one distinct illness some people with type 2 diabetes get by just fine with diet and exercise and otherwise don't have any unreal otherwise related health conditions other people at the extreme end with type 2 diabetes not only have their type 2 diabetes for which they take massive doses of insulin to try to control their still uncontrolled blood sugars but they're also having heart attacks brain problems eye problems nerve problems gastrointestinal problems liver problems kidney problems and all sorts of problems we know all of those things are related to type 2 diabetes so why does one person have all of those things and the other person seemingly has a very mild illness it's a metabolic problem there are lots of factors that go into it some people with a metabolic problem can have very mild symptoms that are localized in specific ways other people can have wild out of control metabolic dysfunction this wreaking havoc on their entire body so that is that is just fact today at least the way most people think about type 2 diabetes it's a metabolic disorder and it can have widespread consequences on the whole human body including the brain so when I think about metabolic dysfunction in the brain what I'm really thinking of is specific brain cells or brain circuits that either have insufficient mitochondria or the mitochondria that are there are somehow defective and for people with chronic mental disorders it is one of those two things insufficient mitochondria and or defective mitochondria that are not performing their tasks and what that means is that those brain cells or that those brain circuits are then going to become under active or overactive which can then result in symptoms that we call mental illness the environment however plays a role so you have these cells that are vulnerable that's the way I think about them these are vulnerable cells they're not dead they're still alive they're still trying to do what they can do but they're malfunctioning intermittently so what would make the the malfunction more and what would allow them to function normally the beauty of this Theory again is let's just look at all the risk factors for symptom exacerbations of mental illness if a person is eating a good diet well rested non-stressed symptoms are going to be low or absent because the demands on those cells aren't great and or there are lots of available resources because this person is not stressed as soon as you apply a metabolic stress to this human being in the form of I'll give three but there are lots of others sleep deprivation really crappy diet and or um high levels of stress or trauma as soon as you do that those are all assaults on metabolism broadly not just the brain so if somebody already had a heart attack last year they are at higher risk of having another heart attack when they are sleep deprived when they experience high levels of stress or trauma or when their diet is way off but likewise people with mental disorders who have metabolic brain dysfunction same deal so with a heart attack it's parts of the heart or the arteries that feed the heart that are going to start to quote unquote malfunction or possibly the immune system cells that are going to you know and the coagulation cells that are going to coagulate or something something is going wrong under those stressful situations and the same deal in the brain that when the brain when the when the human being is stressed in these obvious known predictable ways it causes a stress response essentially and the stress response means that metabolic resources energy food oxygen are actually going to the defense system of the human organism and that means less metabolic resources are available to all of the other cells in the body most of the cells get by okay because we have Reserve capacity we have how if you have metabolic Health if you have resilience you're gonna be okay but if you have some brain cells or brain circuits like the anxiety cells in your brain when you had an anxiety disorder those cells are vulnerable under Good Times they're going to function fine and that means you're not going to have symptoms of anxiety but if somebody stresses you your anxiety is going to go through the roof in a disproportional way like so you know a lot this is where the stigma of mental illness comes from because then people think well you know that was a pretty mild stressor why are you freaking out why are you hyperventilating over that stupid stressor and that's where the stigma comes from because all the normal people are saying I I can manage that the teacher gave us an assignment yeah it's a little stressful but big deal but you're hyperventilating and having a panic attack over it like God get all the grip take some deep breaths yeah there's a meme on the internet that is brutal and it was there was a student in class the teacher called on him and after 30 seconds he said I'm not dumb I'm just panicking and I was like whoa yeah that is uh that's rough that to your point about the stigma of mental illness that it one it seems to be ratcheting up now that more and more that that Meme is a meme because so many people can relate to a small stressor causing them to panic and so there's a lot of things that can cause these problems you name three I think those three are pretty profound so you've got poor sleep poor diet trauma and stress trauma when you work with people because the book really focuses on the diet does the diet have a disproportionate soothing impact and if it does I have a guess why but is that true that the diet is just the thing that disproportionately sort of brings that the tax on the metabolic system down the diet I think a lot of people I really did not mean to focus in the book really I really did not but a lot of people reading the book Will Come Away with the ketogenic diet is the new thing I read about because they already know the other stuff they already know don't you know get good sleep yeah we already knew that avoid trauma and stress yeah we already knew that um uh don't use drugs and alcohol uh hormonal imbalances yeah yeah um everybody knew that I spent so much time in the book going through all of those known things because again this is a new Theory I had this show that all of our existing knowledge fits into it everything that we already know to be true fits into it but to answer your question why the does the diet play a special role in any of this I would argue that the ketogenic diet or fasting States or fasting mimicking States in particular play a profound role in healing and the reason is not because carbohydrates are the villain the reason is because fasting is the saving treatment now because of its impact on mitochondria so one thing we haven't talked about is mitophagy so for people that know autophagy where the cells are program cell death so the cell didn't die accidentally we see that it's deformed or it's not performing the way that it should there's enough stress on the body that we go in we break it apart and we shuttle those off fasting or fasting mimicking diets as I understand it trigger mitophagy where the mitochondria that are malfunctioning those are broken apart to make way for new mitochondria and that if I understand it again that the liver which is actually making the key the liver mitochondria which is making the ketones has to up ramp to keep up with the demand to make the ketones and so now you're up regulating the production of your mitochondria so you have basically put a a hermetic stress on the body through fasting or fasting mimicking that says hey hey we have to go anything that's malfunctioning it's got to be taken apart and we have to also generate more mitochondria new mitochondria and this might be where we start to get into the more holistic view of what you're talking about because you talk about exercise in the book talk about sleep sun exposure what is that perfect milieu to use a fancy word what does that perfect lifestyle look like what is up my friend Tom bilyu here and I have a big question to ask you how would you rate your level of personal discipline on a scale of one to ten if your answer is anything less than a ten I've got something cool for you and let me tell you right now discipline by its very nature means compelling yourself to do difficult things that are stressful boring which is what kills most people or possibly scary or even painful now here is the thing achieving huge goals and stretching to reach your potential requires you to do those challenging stressful things and to stick with them even when it gets boring and it will get boring building your levels of personal discipline is not easy but let me tell you it pays off in fact I will tell you you're never going to achieve anything meaningful unless you develop discipline all right I've just released a class from Impact Theory university called how to build Ironclad discipline that teaches you the process of building yourself up in this area so that you can push yourself to do the hard things that greatness is going to require of you right click the link on the screen register for this class right now and let let's get to work I will see you inside this Workshop from Impact Theory University and tell them my friends be legendary peace out it's all the common sense things that people know with the exception of a fasting mimicking diet so you know again the medical field right now says that's dangerous and Reckless and uh Jillian Michaels doesn't like it uh so lots of people hate the ketogenic diet lots of people in society hear that it's dangerous and toxic um but all of the other things that milia is all the common sense things that people already know and one of the pieces of feedback that I've been getting since the book came out from people is I'm already doing all of that Dr Palmer and I went on your keto diet and I'm not cured so what's the deal [Music] and when I talk to them I say okay do you smoke cigarettes or vape well yeah do you drink alcohol well yeah do you take benzos or antipsychotic medications that impair your metabolism well yeah but my doctor prescribes them how's your sleep oh well I can't sleep that's the problem it's not that I'm not trying to sleep I'm I'm trying to sleep but I'm not sleeping because I can't sleep so I take more pills but they don't always work and then they say so you really think you're doing my treatment when like all of these basic Common Sense milia Common Sense lifestyle strategies that I've already outlined in the book and why they are all harmful and why they are going to prevent you from recovering you're not doing any of them because you because what you thought the keto diet was going to be the cure-all in the context of you poisoning your brain and liver with massive doses of alcohol in the context of you smoking and vaping non-stop throughout the day in the context of you not sleeping you just thought the keto diet was gonna just poof like magically fix everything like what planet are you living on and you clearly didn't read or comprehend the book and so it's unfortunate because I know people are desperate and people want quick fixes and people want simple answers they want what but just the one thing Dr Palmer tell me the one thing that I need to do to cure my schizophrenia and the point I have tried so hard to make in the book you can get better you can get rid of your schizophrenia I really authentically believe that you can get rid of your depression you can get rid of your anxiety you really can I'm not lying I'm not making it up I have seen it countless times I know it works I know it can work but if you're looking for a one-size-fits-all simple solution just do the keto diet for three months and that'll fix you up it's not that simple does that mean I'm saying it's super complicated and impossible no you can think about your sleep you can think about removing all the toxins that you're putting into your body you can think about stress reduction practices you can think about you know all of those things maybe spending some time outside or spending some time with human beings instead of always on your screen you can think about these other things it's not going to be news you're going to have heard it a million times but if you're not doing it you're not doing the treatment yeah everybody does want the very simple answer there's no doubt and the good thing about your theory though is that Lisa draws a connection between all of this there's only one thing that you have to address it's just you have to address it in a dozen different ways talk to me about autism this is one of the more interesting sort of side comments that I've heard you make and my real question is can you reverse autism or is it just avoidable from somebody getting it because you've said depending on when you encounter the metabolic distress that warps your mitochondria it will have pretty profoundly different effects so if you have Disturbed mitochondria as a kid or in utro that's going to play out in your brain development yes how like when when autism first people started saying like oh diet can impact it it was like man people coming after you with billy clubs even for bringing it up so I'm not sure where the current state of the art is like how crazy a question that is but is this something that can go into remission or is it just here's how you avoid somebody getting it in the first place yeah it's a really important question and I've had some critics come out with that particular example because again they're taking away the simple message die Dr Palmer is saying that poor diet is causing all mental illness and that's why I kind of inserted no that's not what I'm saying and autism is the perfect example of this so autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder that occurs either in utero or early in life some children infants appear to be perfectly neurotypical early in life for like the first year or two they get an infection for instance and within three months of that serious infection start showing signs of autism spectrum disorder um so and and we have clear ways to understand all of that so a lot of people are going to say well what does this have to do with metabolism or mitochondria so the first thing I want to point out is I am not at all the first to be claiming that metabolism and mitochondria play a direct role in the cause of autism spectrum disorders the first mitochondrial theory of autism dates back to 1985. whoa so this is I I do not at all try to claim credit for the other pioneering researchers have done this researchers have looked at the brains of people with Autism Spectrum disorders and have noticed all sorts of metabolic and mitochondrial problems low levels of ATP and brain cells higher levels of brain inflammation higher levels of reactive oxygen species other things so all of those point to wait this is a metabolic or a mitochondrial problem for those who don't know rates of autism have skyrocketed in the last 40 years over the last 20 years rates have tripled whoa 20 years triple the rate of autism a lot of people are like well that can't possibly be true well the researchers who are studying it and the people who are doing the household surveys are saying it's true so either keep your head in the sand and be in denial about it or open your eyes to this is happening one of the global kind of observations that I just want to make that we haven't overtly stated is that we have a skyrocketing Mental Health crisis in the world how do we know this isn't just an increase in diagnosis and it's always been this way and we're just now diagnosing it more I think I think source of information would be looking at um looking at the household surveys where researchers funded primarily by the United States government go door to door to a random sample of households throughout the United States ask the people who answer the door a series of long list of questions about mental health conditions and make estimates of how many people are suffering from different mental disorders the rates are increasing they're particularly increasing in the young population a a much harder Med kind of variable that is indisputable is the rate of death from mental illness which we probably the most comprehensive figure that we have is something called the deaths of despair which includes suicides but also overdoses on drugs and alcohol that rate has doubled over the last 20 years God damn in the population that's really brutal the rate has doubled people aren't faking their deaths they're not whining and complaining so there's a lot of skepticism about mental health because there's no objective tests and everybody thinks oh everybody thinks they've got autism these days everybody's just complaining about being autistic because they want sympathy well guess what folks the rates are really skyrocketing and we can't keep our heads in the stand so how can we understand that in the context of the brain energy theory if the brain energy theory is really true how can we understand that um and what I would say is I will share a couple of observations but the most important ones women who are giving who are pregnant if they are obese and also have poorly controlled diabetes such as gestational diabetes they have a three to four-fold increased risk of having an autistic child whoa if you are a man with obesity compared to a man who is a healthy weight the obese man has double the risk of having an autistic child whoa so people are asking this question where the hell is all this autism coming from that's impossible autism is supposed to be genetic well look at statistics like that look at some common sense observations is obesity increasing in our population right now are the rates of diabetes increasing in our population right now does this apply to childbearing women does this apply to men who are about to become fathers so to get very clear and concrete with my theory so people who are overweight or diabetic are more likely to have autistic children why what I'm arguing is that people who are overweight or diabetic have a mitochondrial problem they have a metabolic problem somewhere in their brain or body that is what is causing their obesity and that is what is causing their diabetes or their insulin resistance that obesity and diabetes are symptoms obesity and diabetes are not causes they are symptoms they are symptoms of metabolic derangement somewhere in the body or brain and that means that these people already have a mitochondrial problem somewhere in their body or brain that mitochondrial problem is getting transferred to their gametes those gametes are going on to create a child that child is at higher risk again this is not absolute it's not it's double the risk it's not the majority of overwhelming majority of children born to obese women are not autistic um but it increases the risk because you're increasing the risk of transmitting a mitochondrial problem or a metabolic problem or an epigenetic metabolic problem to that child and that then results in a problem the other strong possibility so that's gametes and maybe some epigenetic signals but the other strong possibility in particular with the women because the women are not only contributing an egg the women are growing this child and that means that the women's hormones play a role in the growth and development and neurodevelopment of this child that means a woman's stress levels play a role that means a woman's diet is playing a role levels of glucose in her bloodstream are getting into that fetus that is affecting that fetus's development so to to go back to your other question so can we fix autism autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder and what that means is that you know the primary symptom of Autism they're really two buckets of symptoms one bucket is social skills impairment or social skills differences um that people who are autistic relate to other humans in a different way they might have trouble interpreting nonverbal social cues for instance um the other bucket is that by definition they have to have some kind of OCD symptoms as well so if we focus on the social skills social skills are hardwired into the human brain we are all hardwired to develop appropriate social skills as parents we are hardwired to transmit this information to children children are hardwired to get this information store this information and utilize it effectively meaning I have to get Mom and Dad to do what I need them to do to take care of my needs and make sure I don't die um meaning when the child's old enough to start going out to school or the playground I have to figure out how to navigate all these other human children and get along with them or at least not be bullied and teased by them or navigate conflict if they've got a ball and I want the ball how do I manage that situation um those are being acquired over time it's not you know you come out of the womb and you've got those skills you don't actually have those skills at all so a metabolic assault at any point in the timeline of the acquisition of those skills could impair the acquisition of those social skills and result in what we call an Autism Spectrum Disorder how does that relate to mitochondria and Metabolism mitochondria are critical to neurodevelopment they are critical to the differentiation of cells and they are critical to something called neuroplasticity so the branching of neurons to create new connections and synapses with others they are critical to those processes so if a if a fetus or a young child has an impairment in mitochondrial function those areas of the brain that are supposed to be acquiring social skills may be impaired and that may result in them not getting them the challenge with reversing that or correcting that is that if if I take an extreme case give me a 30 year old person who is autistic now can I change their autism can I make it go away can I somehow help them acquire social skills that are neurotypical my strongest gas is no [Music] and the reason I say no is because neurodevelopment has Windows of opportunity they're called neurodevelopmental windows and the window opens and then parts of the brain grow and Thrive and Branch out and connect and do all sorts of things and then the window closes you don't get to go back and redo it so my strong guess is that social skills actually do undergo neurodevelopmental windows and that humans need to acquire these skills in the right ways at the right times now the caveat to that is it does not say that neuroplasticity is impossible so neuroplasticity is could we get the brain to somehow form those connections that are missing could we get that to happen it's conceivable to me but it probably will not be a simple intervention it won't be go on keto for three months and that'll fix you up it that's not going to do it the ketogenic diet might even play a role we've had studies of the ketogenic diet for autism they can correct some of the cognitive problems they can certainly correct the seizures that often accompany autism they can also correct some of the mood disorder symptoms that can accompany autism so they can have a powerful treatment role for quality of life and ability to function but as far for the most part most of the studies have not found any Improvement in social skills which is the reason I say what I just said which is I think the developmental window closed and it wasn't enough the interventions that I think could work or if if we Prime the brain for mitochondrial biogenesis and mitophagy so we're going to try to get rid of old defective mitochondria and we're going to try to increase the number of mitochondria in brain cells if we do an intervention like the ketogenic diet but maybe some supplements maybe even mitochondrial transplantation that's happening nowadays so I mean there's all all sorts of possible interventions that I could conceive how do you give somebody a mitochondrial infusion not a transplant how that um researchers are working on it this is an IV drip and they're primarily they're primarily focused on people with very rare mitochondrial disorders the challenge transplantations you have to get the mitochondria in the right cells in the right way exactly so so most people have heard of stem cell transplants yep stem cells are one of the primary donators of mitochondria to metabolically impaired cells interesting everybody thinks stem cells are all about oh you get a brand new cell and it'll just replace the bad defective South stem cells are actually going around connecting creating these little nanotubes with other cells metabolically compromised cells and transferring healthy mitochondria into these defective cells that is one of the primary roles of stem cells so so it could be stem cell transplantation to spread some healthy mitochondria around so there are ways to do it so back to autism if I do this intervention I'm priming the human brain the human body for neuroplasticity let's rev up mitochondrial biogenesis let's rev up mitophagy I would rather and I you know I would much rather use it do it using natural methods like a diet or exercise or something else as opposed to injecting stem cells in one location and the reason is because the body is really good at healing itself we just need to give it a chance it knows what to do if we inject stem cells into like a specific part of the brain maybe those stem cells are needed there but maybe they're needed somewhere else that we don't even know about also if you don't fix a problem it's just going to revert back yeah but so if we do this neuroplasticity kind of priming treatment at the exact same time we have to deliver the training for social skills this human being would need intensive immersion on how to interact in a neurotypical way right because social skills are both about biology and brain circuits but also about the acquisition of those skills somebody has to teach that human being interesting those skills so we know this from like Romanian orphans were probably born relatively healthy for the most part but they were left in cribs never picked up never touched by other humans and many of them had horrible horrible Neuropsychiatric outcomes as a result um and all sorts of neurological problems but all sorts of mental disorders as well including autism dramatically High rates of autism and I don't think about that as well they had a mitochondrial problem for Mom and Dad or maybe those parents who gave their kids up for adoption were all overweight or diabetic that's not the way I'm thinking about it the parents gave the child up for adoption that child probably had a chance at a normal life and normal neurodevelopment but because they were so neglected and so maltreated and not given the ability to learn how to be human they did not I think that's it though because that feels like it would be the world's most stressful environment so going back to your earlier statement it's not just going to be diet there's going to be a whole host of things because I've heard you talk about this before and the orphans at some point start banging their heads against their crib just to feel something no one's touching them that is an unimaginable amount of stress especially since I know about the whole idea of failure to thrive where if you don't touch and cuddle and love an infinite may just die yeah so Lisa Feldman Barrett said something to me which I thought was utterly fascinating we have a nature that requires nurture because she was like you have to stop trying to tease these two things apart like they were just inextricably connected and hearing about the Romanian orphans that was the first thing that came to mind which is uh the amount of dysfunction you're gonna get when you have biology that's screaming out for interaction that hey I am programmed to learn through this interaction touch love affection cues close up your face my face I do this you respond in this way and cool now my brain wires in I've got it like I've figured all this out and if you don't have that it is just trauma it is there's no doubt about that trauma is a huge part of it and stress is a huge part of it when an infant is screaming at the top of his or her lungs it is highly stressful when they are not picked up it is highly stressful to that infant stressful as everybody else around too um more on an airplane um but uh so there's no question that those children had massive trauma massive stress responses and probably malnourishment and all sorts of other things that were playing a role in their neurodevelopment we do have research though some people hate this research especially animal rights people but there is research on monkeys that supports what I've said that researchers took groups of monkeys fed them normally but deprived them of maternal love and support and um and all sorts of problems ensued yeah that is uh it's a very interesting part of our biology the way that we're so interconnected and how far down the mammalian train that goes I want to talk about obesity so I imagine that some of the uh pushback that you get especially when it comes to autism is hey parents you're increasing the likelihood of your child being autistic just by being obese but I also heard you say that there was recently an obesity conference where the brightest Minds in the field of obesity were like we don't actually know what causes obesity and I thought you were going to be like that's laughable but you were like actually yeah we don't how is that possible like so here's my overly simplistic prior to reading your book take on all of this obesity anyway uh obesity is largely driven by what you're doing to your microbiome based on what you eat uh certainly sleep because of all its massive impacts on metabolism uh light exposure and then diet and if you if you said Tom I need you to mess somebody up and make them obese but you can either affect their sleep affect their sun exposure affect their stress or affect their diet I'll take diet every time and I'm gonna [ __ ] them up oh my God so predictably and I would say I will do exactly one thing I'm going to get them to eat Ultra processed food that's high in sugar and if you let me do that and if you won't let me Ultra process the food then I'm just going to go with things that are high in sugar and I will win every time I will be able to metabolically dysregulate them and to a very distressing degree because of that I feel like we know what causes obesity so how so let me let me push back a little bit just to ask for clarification because this is such a contentious issue yes so Ultra processed food high in sugar how exactly in your mind does that cause obesity okay so I'm the layest of laypeople ever but I love to spout off so I'm gonna give myself uh so the reason that I'm gonna highly process things is I need to damage the molecules that your cells are going to be made of so the easiest one is trans fats not the only there's going to be a whole host of things but that's the one I understand the best so you take a fat molecule which is normally nice and flexible and Squishy uh through frying it basically you make it rigid and stiff but your cells are still going to uptake that fat so now you're making your cells brittle you talked earlier about hey we have these metabolically damaged cells and I'm just going to call them vulnerable so I'll say the same thing is happening when you're ingesting these highly processed foods you literally are what you eat your cells are made up of the things that you intake so one one is that I'm now changing the structure of the molecules that are going to make up your cells and not in a way that the body is used to dealing with and so brittle cell membranes is one example of I'm sure a whole host of things then what you eat is going to be largely impacted by what you absorb what you absorb is going to be largely based on your microbiome and by the way the just level of inflammation that I can get by breaking the epithelial lining of your gut which is only a cell thick so all I have to do is get bacteria in there that's going to claw that away break those Junctions now I can actually get partially digested food into your bloodstream get your body to attack itself with an autoimmune response all hell is going to break loose also by getting the sugar into your bloodstream I'm obviously raising your glucose I'm spiking the [ __ ] out of your insulin and now I'm just assaulting your body and your glucose levels sugar molecules stick to things in your blood so now I'm creating all of the metabolic disaster that is having a gummy system I know I'm giving this in like the least scientific description so now I'm [ __ ] up your arteries I'm creating a inflammatory response in your body I'm from the elevated glucose levels from the things crossing the barrier in your gut and in all of that I'm also making your cells insulin resistant so they're trying desperately to pull the sugar out of your bloodstream because the difference between a normal person and a diabetic is a quarter teaspoon of sugar in your blood so while the sugar is very useful like you said in the beginning it's all a balance if you have too little sugar you're going to have seizures and you're dead if you have too much sugar you basically burn alive from the inside so can't have either of those you need to have everything in the sweet spot but now I'm making your your fat cells essential any cell that's going to use glucose I'm making it insulin resistant so insulin is trying to get the sugar into those cells but the cell's like [ __ ] off like there's just too much so now it's staying in my bloodstream all the things that people know about a type 2 diabetic where they're losing their eyesights because the sugar is basically burning the eye to Pieces losing their limbs you get neuropathy of the nerve endings it can't even feel the fact fact that they're effectively getting necrosis of their limbs and they end up having to be cut off so while I get that I'm not giving that from a scientific standpoint it's you can demolish the body pretty fast just by spiking glucose now because I know that the calorie in calorie out people are in the comments right now just lighting me on fire I will say that yes if you have somebody reduce their calories enough even if they're eating sugar uh they won't manifest all of the symptoms as quickly but I still think they're going to be metabolically dysregulated I'm going to guess and this is a guess that I can still real especially somebody developing I can [ __ ] up their brain even by reducing their calories so they're not getting fat but I can completely disrupt their um the appropriate functioning of the brain by just inundating them with trash when they're a kid even if I'm keeping their calorie count low I don't think that obesity is the only sign that something is going wrong I think that obesity is probably adaptive in that your body's just like fine [ __ ] like I'll pull this all out of the bloodstream I will cram it into your fat cells and so getting obese you might be better off getting obese it might actually delay some of the symptoms of a bad diet so that is why I feel like it is way complicated I understand that and I am grossly oversimplifying but because if I want to mess you up I really only need the lever of your diet at some point to me it's like I I get in the purest of pure ways we don't understand maybe that all the mechanisms of action but at a blunt force trauma like if you just let me just give me control of sugar and I will completely ruin somebody or get them healthy ER there's so many micro things that we would also need to take care of I get I can completely solve all the problems but man if you let me control sugar I'm gonna go a long way and if you let me control processed and sugar I've got you covered I think I don't disagree at all with anything you said anything you just said I also don't disagree with the solution get rid of sugar get rid of ultra process um I actually think in the way that you describe like these toxic fat molecules can be incorporated into your cell membrane I think the real money is to focus on mitochondria and I know people will call me a mitochondria act or they will call me crazy or they will think I'm a that's the real answer or they'll think I'm delusional or whatever the reason is because mitochondria actually control the regulation of blood glucose that's so crazy hearing you talk about a mitochondria basically does everything yeah when I was developing this Theory I actually felt that way and when I like started looking at what are different things that can poison the human body quickly and what is their mechanism of action what is their precise mechanism of action yeah I listed them before arsenic cyanide others Tylenol poisoning like what exactly is happening all of those poisons Target mitochondria Tylenol targets mitochondria Tylenol charges mitochondria alcohol targets mitochondria alcohol poisoning is due to mitochondrial disruption and impairment and so when somebody dies of alcohol poisoning the cause of death is poisoning the mitochondria is it because they can no longer process oxygen what so so at the well so at the end of the day initially I was like two I was like this can't pop this can't be am I just like seeing mitochondria everywhere I look like maybe I'm going crazy like what what is going on here when you take a step back when you look at the big picture of life cells in the human body are all there to perform a function but they all need nutrients they need nutrients to create replace the parts that need to be replaced and or create energy in the form of ATP without nutrients you're dead we can I'll Define oxygen as a nutrient as well oxygen is part of the process of making energy and essentially at the end of the day what I'm saying is that in order to in order to understand why cells in the human brain or body malfunction we have to go all the way to the basics of biology which is every living cell at the end of the day depends on metabolism or energy and it's the only way to connect the dots but like obesity researchers have zeroed in on mitochondria in specific brain circuits that control appetite and feeding behaviors and they've looked at what causes those neurons to turn on or off it's mitochondria when they look at the cells and the pancreas that release insulin what causes the cell to actually release the insulin what is the critical signal that causes insulin to get released mitochondria mitochondria are actually sensing the amounts of glucose creating reactive oxygen species and response and that sets off a Cascade that results in the release of insulin um and then mitochondria respond as the glucose levels come down stop you know either make more Ros or less Ros or whatever they're doing and that then results in the pancreas not releasing insulin and so on one hand is enormously complex to say it's mitochondria some researchers are going to be like well duh big deal so what but on the other hand it is a major leap in the mental health and metabolic health field because guess what we could do number one we can look at a lot of our treatments that are causing mitochondrial toxicity and we can uh start using those very sparingly and try to get people off those and try to allow people to heal and recover that's a huge thing that I'm actively doing with lots of patients um so I think we need an Abrupt wake-up call in the mental health field because I do think we are doing harm to people long term but even in the food supply there's so much debate what's causing the Obesity epidemic oh everybody's just overeating delicious foods it's the calories it's the calories they're eating more calories that's what it is there's a huge study that just did an assessment of the entire food supply in the United States from the 1970s to the present and they actually calculated how many calories are in this entire food supply divided by the number of people in the population and the researchers concluded the calorie consumption of the United States population has not significantly changed really over the last 30 years the calorie consumption has not significantly changed calories of our food supply is relating largely stable and obesity rates have skyrocketed shocked by that what that means is that the metabolic rate of the human population is going down and what does that mean what do I mean when I say the metabolic rate I mean the mitochondria and the human species is being poisoned what are the likely culprits Ultra processed foods high amounts of sugar and other artificial ingredients but we need to look at environmental toxins the microplastics and all of the environmental toxins the forever chemicals that are accumulating in our fat cells in our brain cells like those might be poisoning mitochondria lots of small pilot studies of strongly suggested they are and if we're poisoning the mitochondria it means that the metabolic rate is going down so yes calories in calories out energy balance yeah yeah sure if you're into physics and that means and anything to you sir that still applies but what I'm arguing is that the Obesity epidemic is likely because the metabolic rate of the human species is being poisoned that's really really interesting uh I want to push on that so earlier we talked about that a cell could be either under active or overactive so why isn't that that metabolism can go either way either as it gets poisoned it dials up or as it gets poisoned it dials down why is it only getting dialed down or am I missing something and then some people it really is going up so the the going up and going down is not metabolic rate overall so what I'm saying what I'm arguing for the brain cells is that if you have let's say you only have 60 percent of the healthy mitochondria needed for a brain cell to function properly 60 percent so that cell if we do a neuroimaging study on it we'll have something that we call glucose hypo metabolism meaning that it is not producing enough ATP from glucose the primary energy source why because it doesn't have enough healthy mitochondria and that could either be because the total number of mitochondria is decreased and or the number of healthy functional mitochondria has decreased that cell will have insufficient ATP low metabolic rate lower metabolic rate it doesn't have enough ATP as a consequence of not having enough ATP it can become under active which again is intuitive to most people and at the same time that 60 ATP cell can become hyper excitable you can think about it as this frail vulnerable cell this spasming if that helps if that analogy helps no very much so um so it's it's like the elderly person who has really weak muscles and those muscles begin to spasm that is hyper excitability the muscle is not strong the hyper excitability doesn't mean too much metabolism it actually is still too little metabolism that it results in erratic activity of the cell and once you understand that it's mitochondria then you have to under then you have to ask that big picture question what the hell is going on then why do we have skyrocketing rates of all these diagnoses the easiest sound bite answer is because we are somehow poisoning mitochondria in the human species where could the poisoning be occurring to result in obesity it could actually be occurring in several places too easy answers are the brain because the brain brain circuits control eating behaviors brain circuits tell you when you are full brain circuits tell you when you are hungry if those brain circuits have impaired mitochondrial function it means that those brain circuits aren't going to function normally if they're not functioning normally it means that person is going to feel hungry when they should otherwise not be feeling hungry because it's just not working right it's under active um and could it become overactive or could other circuits become overactive absolutely and that might help us understand something like binge eating disorder the other thing that some of these brain circuits do is change metabolic rate in response to eating so when you you know we all overeat at some point or another we all overeat at Thanksgiving and usually our metabolism Burns off that excess we actually might feel hot or we might get more fidgety or we might want to just go out and take a walk or something to feel better um or we have a suppression of appetite and we wake up the next day and we're we still feel full or stuffed and we just eat a smaller meal and it all balances out my wife will actually sweat through the Sheets if she overeats I just get fatter which really that's interesting deeply distressed so that's interesting so she's got she's got a system that's going to stimulate her mitochondria to produce heat that sense you've got too many calories going around get rid of them you'll literally be able to wring out her shirt we don't want to store it as fat let's burn it off just burn it because mitochondria produce heat in the human body that is where heat is produced um and but the other location that we could have a problem for obesity is in the fat cells themselves so fat you know there are three kind of buckets of fat cells that a lot of people have heard of there's white fat which is bad bad white fat there's Brown fat grade good good Brown fat Brown Fat's good for you because it's kicking off heat has more mitochondria that's what makes it brown right and then there's beige fat and the only difference between those types of fat is the number of mitochondria in the cell Brown fat has a higher density of healthy mitochondria white fat has a very low density of mitochondria and what I what I fear might be happening is that you know some of these environmental toxins that I mentioned are lipophilic meaning they tend to go to places where there's a lot of fat in the human body and stay there though that means two locations primarily fat cells and the Brain unfortunately so if the mitochondria and fat cells are being poisoned it means that they are going to have a harder time sensing signals to release that fat and then actually releasing the fat because the mitochondria actually are involved in the process of releasing the fat from the fat cell so that fat cell is going to become dysfunctional or under active in particular in its capacity to release it may still be able to receive nutrients and store them but when called for it may just be a little sluggish and releasing and that may then stimulate hunger that then drives the person because it may stimulate lower blood sugars or something else and then that may stimulate the person to go and eat um but at the end of the day what you said is correct we had this obesity conference world renowned obesity experts many of them have their strong opinions some of the low carbers were it's carbohydrates carbohydrates are causing the Obesity epidemic if we just got rid of it other people I mean you know all the arguments and everybody's just as passionate the vegans will say if animal sourced Foods they're causing the Obesity epidemic if we just got rid of animal sourced Foods everybody would be fine and they're winning their argument right now politically at least they are running the dietary guidelines they are in in control yeah what does that make you think feel not not specifically that I won't even make you take a position on that but it makes me really unnerved when I think about the government being in control of what we can and can't eat that that is really scary to me I think the thing that is Criminal is that the people who make the decisions about what the health and wellness of the United States population should be the overwhelming majority of them have very strong ties to commercial Enterprises that make Ultra processed foods and so they settle on simplistic arguments like energy balance doesn't matter if you're getting your 200 calories from a piece of salmon or a donut it's 200 calories a calorie ebm it's basic physics doesn't matter what you eat as long as you're counting your calories you can be just fine so maybe one easy place to start would be to actually just make it a rule make it a law whatever it needs to be that number one only Healthcare professionals are going to sit on these committees and only Healthcare professionals who have zero conflicts of interest over the last 10 or more years can sit on the Committees and if you want to work for big food if you want to work for big Pharma that's great but you don't have any business in making dietary recommendations for the health and wellness of the entire population of the United States given that you have clear bias that that may sound extreme to some people that the clearest example is I mean Tufts tough School of nutrition came out with this kind of list of foods that are healthy for you and foods that are not healthy for you and they include brand names cereals on their list Lucky Charms is good for you Lucky Charms is better for you than eggs wow lucky charms is better for you than whole milk Lucky Charms is better for you than cheddar cheese interesting with dietary advice like that it really that surprising that we have an epidemic of obesity and diabetes and mental illness and other health problems in our population I mean I actually do believe that is Criminal it's not criminal for those people to make money off of big food and big Pharma if they want to be Consultants go ahead do it but you shouldn't be issuing guidelines as though they are unbiased guidelines you just shouldn't brand name foods have no place in dietary guidelines and recommendations they just don't I I don't I I mean obviously it's infuriating it's heartbreaking I don't know how to get I don't know how we get through to the politicians that need to make those decisions let's start by telling them what is your breakdown of a good ketogenic diet so for somebody that struggles whether it's anxiety depression schizophrenia obviously see your doctor obviously don't stop taking your meds without medical supervision all of that but how do you do that particular diet well so it really depends on the condition that I'm treating I I don't I know this is frustrating for some people again people want one-size-fits-all Solutions so you gotta be able to be flexible and modifiable as a rule of thumb rule number one is exactly what you've already said get rid of this [ __ ] food have real Whole Foods foods that are great grandparents heard of and consumed if your great grandparents did not hear of or consume this food thing then don't eat it if it comes in a box with fancy packaging and a a plastic insert probably not on the healthy food list um you know great grandparents could have been consuming Coca-Cola that had cocaine and so on no don't drink that so it's not you know again we've got like all sorts of exceptions to the rules I'm gonna say um but eat real whole food start there for some people that's enough and I really mean that for some people that's all they have to do they can they don't have to be counting calories they don't have to be managing carbohydrates or protein or anything else they just get rid of all the junk eat real food I mean that's the whole paleo you know or you know other kind of food dietary movements that what they're based on is let's just eat real food and for some people that's enough if you then want to restrict carbohydrates start to get rid of all grains flowers through all of this I should have said get rid of all sugar sugar artificial sugars artificial sweeteners I'm now based on one animal study I am now going to say get rid of artificial sweeteners so one animal study came out in one of the nature magazines Make nature journals recently showing that aspartame um which is an artificial sweetener can cause anxiety in mice and causes anxiety in mice and then those mice can transmit that propensity for anxiety to their children Jesus their children can transmit the propensity for higher rates of anxiety to their children that's bananas and the researchers used normal amounts of aspartame that a normal human being who's drinking lots of diet soda would consume yeah they were talking before they weren't poisoning them with ridiculous massive doses of aspartame that was my big breakthrough with my anxiety was I was drinking diet monster and I always feel bad throwing them under the bus because I love Diamond I loved drinking it but man oh man did it give me anxiety so there you go yeah as soon as I cut it out I'd say drop by 70 research to support that and um but unfortunately it's resulting in epigenetic changes Jesus that can persist so and again but the good news what's in charge of epigenetics mitochondria primarily how can so can we do interventions that will influence them yes so back to your question what other diets so get rid of all sugars sweet things you still have fruit everything else if you're doing a paleo diet um you can have potatoes if you're doing a paleo diet you can fry those potatoes in olive oil you can have delicious foods it's not like I'm saying you can't have delicious foods you can have delicious foods they won't taste delicious when you're giving up your Ultra processed foods they won't taste delicious when you're giving up your diet monster they will you'll be like oh but I'm hooked on my diet monster I need my diet monster and yet my anxiety is almost gone um and then if you go to Keto you know the first step for people with anxiety or depression is just get into any level of ketosis do blood monitoring do urine strips do something look for an objective biomarker of ketosis I don't care what level you're at see if that does the trick for you it might for some people it does for people that I work with who have serious chronic debilitating mental disorders like bipolar disorder or schizophrenia I've universally found low levels of Ketone like a ketogenic diet is not effective that's what I found Maybe I'm Wrong maybe I don't have enough of a sample population maybe there are people out there that would respond beautifully to low levels of ketones from a ketogenic diet what are you calling low 0.5 to 1 like less than one um the so when I use this diet for people with serious mental disorders I usually tell them I want blood ketones greater than 1.5 ideally I'm looking for 1.5 to like 4.5 can they get there without caloric restriction I have found to get north of one I'm going to be restricting my calories so the two strategies that you're going to use to get there are either caloric restriction and or well or three strategies and or carbohydrate restriction so the more carbs you restrict the more likely you'll be in ketosis and or higher fat so you are a thin person if you wanted to get ketones of 3.0 blood ketones of 3.0 you would have to consume a very high fat diet whereas somebody who's obese does not need a lot of fat in their diet interesting so part of it is that when people first start a ketogenic diet they can get sky-high ketones usually within weeks or months they will come down is that because they get more efficient at using the Ketone so it's not as readily available in the blood I'm gonna say this my answer is speculative I don't know that anybody really knows for sure the real answer to that and I don't know that we have research studies that clearly go from A to B to C to D to clearly establish what is causing it I do think one one possibility is that the body does just get more efficient at using ketones the much more likely possibility in my mind is that insulin resistance is dramatically improved when people have high levels of insulin resistance um it means that a lot of the cells in their body are metabolically compromised and would qualify as having glucose hypomatabolism so if we actually looked at the amount of ATP in their cells it would be reduced compared to a healthy cell and uh and we call it glucose hypomatabolism because they're the primary fuel source is glucose so those cells are actually all sending out distress signals saying feed me send some more fuel send more glucose we're dying here what are you doing liver liver get on the job send up some glucose when you first start the ketogenic diet this is where a keto adaptation can be problematic those cells is like pulling the rug out from under them they're struggling already and now you're plummeting your glucose levels and your insulin levels and so those cells are really going to struggle after that and that is the keto adaptation phase that a lot of people will say oh it's kind of bad for weight loss when I use it in people with mental health conditions I can see symptoms get worse before they get better and it's all the way it's depression can get worse anxiety can get worse psychosis can get worse I know that now I'm not going to be afraid of it it's got to be managed safely so that means with a clinician like I know how to do that I'm educating the patient I'm talking with the patient we're coming up with a safety plan we're doing all of the things that we need to do but I'm not going to freak out if on day two they're saying my psychotic symptoms are getting worse Dr Palmer I'm going to say yeah we talked about that remember a million times then this is part of the plan and how are we get let's implement the plan now um but uh insulin resistance will be improved over time and his insulin resistance is improved and you're feeding these cells ketones the cells are going to kind of establish normality or metabolic health and at that point they're not going to be sending out distress signals of send more food send more nutrients and those signals are not only stimulating glucose or fat mobilization from fat stores those signals are also stimulating ketosis they're stimulating the mitochondria in your liver to produce ketones because your brain cells in particular are calling for ketones and um and so as those cells become healthier they're not going to send out their signals and Ketone levels may go down for that reason and I don't consider that a problem because at that point the symptoms are probably going to be better and the person is going to say I feel great and that's when even some of my patients now especially after a year or two if if their symptoms are in full remission they start to dabble and what can I get away with can I eat some fruit can I have a little can I have some carrots which are higher in carbs than other vegetables and I know it can I can I can I get away with a potato and what will happen and um and it's always just a work in progress I mean sometimes they can get away with it and we're like that's great and I see that as a huge celebration it's like wow you're maintaining you're achieving more metabolic health your brain and body are able to tolerate even more carbohydrates you're not getting symptomatic this is wonderful and if their symptoms start coming back it's like well it's too soon lifestyle makes such a difference man where can people follow you to fine-tune their own lifestyle so the easiest place is brain energy.com um you can follow me on social media from there you can sign up for a newsletter all sorts of things click here now to learn the foods you need to avoid at all costs shall we drop acid or we already did right we'll see where it takes us I love the title of the new book not quite as much as I actually love the book itself though but the title sets us up it really makes a subject