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/ subscribe. So without further delay, here's today's sneak peek of the ask me. Anything episode. Welcome to ask me anything AMA episode number 69. In today's episode, we cover supplements as this is a very complex topic. We want to approach it first by proposing. A framework that you can use to evaluate supplements that we can't make blanket recommendations on since everyone has their own individual.
Circumstances to me, the framework is very important here because if I were to just dive into this podcast and give you my point of view on a random collection of supplements, it would be akin to giving you a bunch of fish. When in reality what I want to do is make sure you of course know how to fish but not just giving you the framework. We also want to give you a few fish and so we want to use the framework to cover a handful of studies for some popular supplements we covered creatine fish oil, vitamin D.
Vitamin B or many of the vitamin B's and ashwagandha. We also talked about how to look at supplement quality and we hope that this episode gives you an ability to take said framework and apply it to any supplement you encounter in the future. If you're a subscriber and you want to watch the full video this podcast, you can find it on the show notes page. If you're not a subscriber, you can watch this sneak peek on our YouTube page. So without further delay, I hope you'll enjoy am a 69
Bitter. Welcome to another am a how you
doing? Great. Thank you for having me
again, always always, welcome. I know, sometimes it's tough to get you to clear your schedule, but we're always happy you show up, haven't missed one yet so that's always a good thing. So today we're hitting a topic which is one we get asked about a lot which is supplements and this can vary greatly depending on the person depending on the supplements. And the hard part was supplements is that while everyone is interested in
knit, it's so variable person-to-person and not even all your patients are taking the same supplements or the same amount and all of that. And so it's really hard to talk about it in a way that makes it applicable to everyone without being like, take this, don't take this, which is something that you've never really done because of how you look at this topic. What we decided to do today was instead look at a framework for how you think about supplements and then go through case, studies of a variety of supplements, to talk through it too.
Hopefully a while the person listening or watching to, then be able to apply it in their own life. So they can just get a better understanding be smarter when it comes to this topic. So we tried to pick ones that we get asked about a lot for the case studies which is creatine fish oil, vitamin D, B vitamins and ashwagandha. So the hope is after this not only will people understand those specific supplements better that we're going to do the case studies on, but also how they can apply this framework to their own life. With all that said,
Ed, when patients come into the practice, what percent of the supplements are they taking that? You recommend, they continue to take,
obviously, any patients coming into the practice? We're trying to gather as much information about them as we can through their medical history. And a important component of that is understanding all medications supplements hormones. Anything they take, I call this the bucket of exogenously molecules. So generally, we know this on the way in and there's a ton of variety. There's people who come in who are taking nothing, they don't take any medicine.
Prescription. They don't take any supplements. Conversely, there are patients, who come in on no medications, but list of supplements that might be two pages long and everything in between our view is generally to approach this the way the kidney approaches the filtration of glucose, sodium and potassium, which is you dump everything out. And then ask the question, what should be added back in? And I don't mean, we literally stopped everything but I'm saying that's kind of that mental model for how we go about thinking.
About it because a lot of times when we ask patients, why are you taking this or? Why are you taking that? They don't know. They just say oh you know I started this a couple of years ago because I saw somebody on Instagram talking about it or you know I saw this doctor a few years ago who told me to take this but I have no idea why. So there's just a couple of things worth acknowledging before we jump into this and it comes from discussions that I've had many times which goes something like this. Hey, I don't believe in taking any
I'm just so, you know, only natural supplements. Now, my response to that is tell me the difference. There is a difference, but I just want to make sure you as the consumer of this, understand the difference. And it's really a question of Regulation. So, supplements are not regulated by definition, the FDA has tacitly referred to them as generally regarded as safe, but the process by which that's determined is not entirely.
Early that rigorous and pharmaceutical products, while far from perfect, do have more in the way of Regulation and oversight. There are places where these overlap, I'll encounter a patient. Who says, listen, I will never take a Statin to lower my apob, but I will definitely happily take red rice yeast. At which point, you have to sort of explain to them that a very high dose of red, rice. Yeast is effectively a modest dose of pravastatin, so I think it's just
For patients not to get ideologically wrapped up in the idea of over-the-counter supplement versus pharmaceutical agent. And instead to just analyze any molecule, you put in your body through the framework, we're going to talk about today. Today, we're going to limit it to over-the-counter supplements because these are the things we get asked the most questions about. And frankly, it's the area in which it's harder to do the type of analysis we're doing today. So the type of analysis we're doing today is so much easier to do in the
space because of the regulatory hurdles that must be cleared by a drug to be approved. So it's almost like shooting fish in a barrel, still a great exercise to do. But doing it the way we're going to do it today is really how you develop the muscle for doing this type of work.
I think with that said, do you just want to run over real quick? The questions you asked to determine whether or not a supplement is worthwhile and I think just giving this overview will be helpful because as we said in the beginning, when we go through the case studies,
Stick to these questions and answer them along the way. And so to kick it off, you just want to run through what those questions
are I think is the single most important thing I'm hopefully transmitting throughout this episode. I mean the heavy lifting is actually showing you how we go through this but this is the punchline. Anytime you're considering taking a supplement or someone is suggesting a supplement you should ask the following questions or something that approximates him. So the first question I'm asking is, are you taking this to correct a deficiency or you trying to
To achieve Supra, normal levels of fill in the blank. Second question, are you taking this molecule because you believe that it's going to improve your life span or your health span or potentially? Both third, question is if it is lifespan, is it because this molecule is targeting a specific disease and presumably, reducing your risk of heart disease or do. We believe it's more, broadly gyro protective in the supplement.
That's pretty rare to find. But obviously, you can see examples in the Pharma space, where we might see certain drugs that we think have gyro protective benefits versus those that have lifespan benefits, but only on one disease. Of course, the other question that is the corollary of that is, if you're taking it for health span, can you speak to which apparatus of healthspan? Do you think this is something that is improving physical performance, cognitive performance, or emotional health? The fourth question is, is there a biomarker that you can track?
Back to suggest that you are getting the appropriate amount of the supplement or that you might be in the therapeutic window. The fifth question is, do you understand the mechanism of action? Now again, I want to be clear, you don't have to answer every one of these questions in the affirmative for it to make sense. For example, there are countless things that we use for which we might not fully understand the mechanism of action, but we might feel confident enough on some of these other dimensions to move forward. The
Question is, what is the balance of risk to reward? Including potential side effects, the magnitude of the effect, the confidence, we have in the data that speak to its safety and the quality of the supplement itself. In this last point is especially important here, we know from previous podcast that I've done including the one with Catherine, Eben. That even in the Pharma world, the quality of the drug is not to be taken as a given that episode, which is
Several years old and will link to it really called into question the quality of some of the pharmacologic agents out there especially generic brands but whatever amount of Nefarious Behavior exists over there. I think you're safe multiplying that by 10 or 100 to understand the magnitude by which that's happening in the supplement space. So I guess before we jump into this Nick I just want to make sure we've pulled together, a lot of information on the six supplements. You mentioned for the sake of time flow,
Making this conversational. I'm not going to go deep into each study that we talked about rather. I'm going to try to cover the important details but we will heavily site link to and explain the details of this studies in the show notes. So if you're listening to this because you just want to see how the framework works great. But if you're like actually for those supplements I want to go deeper the show notes is where to go.
Perfect. So I think, let's get started with the first one. Creatine. Going through, the questions in the framework. Are you using creatine to correct for deficiency or trying to achieve, super maximal levels with creatine? It's clearly
the latter. I'm sure there's somebody walking around out there with a creatine deficiency, but that's not really the use case. So, when people like myself and I do take creatine, it's because we believe that Supra physiologic levels.
Our preferential, we take this primarily to improve athletic performance, potentially increasing, lean mass slightly. There are some emerging studies that suggest that it may also ameliorate cognitive decline. And basically research shows that once muscle stores are fully maximized, which can be achieved with 325 grams per day, you flattened out that curve. In other words, you don't need to go much beyond that, although, as we've
About in this podcast, there is a day. For those of us that are old enough to remember when the Zeitgeist was to do a period of loading at much, much higher doses in the neighborhood of 20 grams per day before falling to a maintenance dose of five. But today people that are taking it are usually just taking 325 grams per
day. As far as taking it for lifespan Health span, which one are people usually take a nap for?
Well, we certainly see no direct evidence on life span. I think most people who would take this
if being confronted with the granularity of this question, in this way would say, look, I'm taking this for healthspan, I'm maximizing. The benefits of my exercise, especially with respect to resistance training and maybe potentially warding off cognitive impairment, of course, indirectly, I would say that those are also benefits on lifespan, but I would say that that's probably the way to think about
this and you kind of talked about this earlier on. But is there a specific biomarker that people can use to track to see if the
Commence quote unquote working or
not? No, there is not a biomarker for this. And again what do I mean by a biomarker? Well if you're taking a medication to lower your blood pressure measuring your blood pressure actually becomes a biomarker for the thing you're taking am I taking enough or too much if you're taking a drug that lowers your apob the apob itself serves as the biomarker, we don't have a way outside of a lab commercially to measure tissue creatine levels.
Those. So we do not have a biomarker for this and that's why people who take it or just sort of adhering to a
protocol on the mechanism of action. Do we have any understanding of the mechanism of action for creatine, whether it relates to the physical or the cognitive side
on the physical side, meaning on the muscle performance side, it's certainly pretty clear. People will recall how energy currency is delivered. So, ATP adenosine,
Phosphate is the richest form of energy currency, and it liberates energy. So it's spent by liberating, a phosphate. So a teepee becomes adenosine diphosphate ADP. Of course that process works in Reverse so as we want to build up and replenish our ATP stores, we need a phosphate donor and this is where phosphocreatine comes in. So we do naturally have phosphocreatine in fact, when you start to think about the various
Energy Systems. If I asked you Nick to do something that was an all-out effort for 10 seconds. That would not require oxygen. You're not tapping into your VO2 max or your oxygen delivery system. It's frankly, not even an anaerobic activity. Meaning, you're not actually turning glucose into pyruvate into lactate etcetera. If you're doing something that is such, a short burst of activity, you are really relying on the phosphocreatine system to generate the ATP for that activity. So, if
Doing a 40-yard dash, you're relying on phosphocreatine but of course, phosphocreatine itself is a phosphate donor. And therefore, anything that boosts the supply of phosphocreatine boosts the supply of ATP. And it's our belief that that's effectively what it is doing and therefore that it's helpful with anything that requires bursts of activity, but even Beyond just the super short extending into the anaerobic. I don't know that there are really any proven benefits that this augments
aerobic performance. So once you get into the purely, oxidative phosphorylation pathway, I mean maybe someone will correct us but I'm not really aware that. There are benefits of creatine. In that regard. I think it's more in the first two Energy Systems. The phosphocreatine system in the anaerobic system on the cognitive side. We know that a small amount of creatine is synthesized in the brain and the creatine can cross the blood-brain barrier, but the brain certainly does not take up creatine to the same extent as the muscles do so while
We have again, some evidence to suggest that creatine is efficacious for cognitive function. It might turn out to be the case that you need higher doses of it. I think that's still an open question as far as I'm
concerned. You mentioned earlier that will put a lot of more detailed information on the data in the show notes but looking at a high level, what is the data around creatine say about efficacy of it?
This is a supplement that has been quite readily studied, there's reasonable evidence to suggest and again, we'll link to lots of it.
It that creatine does help improve various parameters of muscle performance and it's not that subtle. I mean it's typically in the range of 5 10, maybe even 15 percent, so these include things like power and hypertrophy. Again, the power shouldn't be that surprising. When you understand the mechanism of action of hypertrophy seems to be due to the not, just the increase in the myofibril thickness, but also in the retention of water within the muscle, and of course, that's still considered lean mass as I alluded to kind of physical performance in short intense bursts
Cities and potentially some benefits in slowing down the Aging phenotype of muscle mass. Again, like I said, it's really probably best suited for high intensity and an aerobic activities, but the one meta-analysis will cite two found. That creatine did not really improve endurance events in trained athletes. Again, you always could argue, well, maybe it's because they were really well, trained and their mitochondria or were well-honed but it's
Well that there's a study where you took completely untrained athletes had them do an aerobic task with him without creatine and you might indeed see a benefit there. So again I think we're still kind of in early days on some of this stuff there was a 2017 review that got quite a bit of attention that will link to the concluded that creatine may help with the prevention and recovery from injury. And there have been a number of meta analyses looking at cognition, the most recent one, which was this year, looked at 16 rcts and found that creatine had a positive effect.
On memory, I would say long and short of it is a lot of this stuff looks very promising. There's also some evidence that women in particular might benefit more than even men women have lower stores because muscle mass is the predominant store. Women have less muscle, therefore less doors. But there might also be less consumption through diet. So it again, at least leads to the hypothesis, that women May benefit even disproportionately to men. There's some I think,
Rather weak data that suggests that it may help reduce depression in women and there's some evidence to suggest that it may be helpful during periods of Rapid hormonal change. And that could be within the monthly period of a menstrual cycle, pregnancy perimenopause and menopause. So you might ask why is that the case? Well, the creatine and phosphocreatine pathways are impacted by hormonal changes. And of course, during all of those periods that I just mentioned you're seeing rapid hormonal
Changes. So it's not really that surprising that supplementing to Super normal levels of creatine could offset some of those impacts pregnancy is a question I get asked about a lot Nick. I would say, I remain a little bit unclear and would probably suggest that it's probably safe during pregnancy, but we just don't have enough human data to form a strong point of view. So in my mind, the wise thing to do is to avoid anything that is not absolutely necessary during pregnancy. So just
give an example when we have women in our practice that are preparing for pregnancy or pregnant themselves. I mean, no matter what they're taking, if they're taking medication for something that they can live without for nine months, we would absolutely stop it. So yeah I would say women should probably do sit at about the same doses as men but of course they'll get more bang for that buck because there are on average
smaller rounding out. Everything we talked about with creatine. What is the balance of risk reward to how you see? It seems like a lot of stuff we talked about was a lot of reward.
But how do you think about this to summarize it?
I would put this in the low-risk modest reward category. We do have, I think really robust safety data here and it looks good. If the muscle stores are already full delivers, probably going to metabolize the Delta the kidneys will clear, the excess, there is one thing to keep in mind, if you're a person who doesn't have perfect kidney function, you do probably want to talk with your doctor before you take it. And this is very important.
Oughtn't. You want to make sure that they know you're taking it before they do, any blood tests to measure your creatinine because high doses of creatine can impact serum doses of creatinine, which we would use as one of the metrics to determine kidney function. So in our patients that have anything but perfect kidney function. If they're taking creatine, we typically have them stop for a couple of weeks before we do a blood test creatine.
Monohydrate really is the version to take. I don't even know if they sell anything else. They used to sell a creatine phosphate a long time ago. I don't think that there's anybody selling that anymore. I don't think it matters, but there's just no evidence that you need to be taking anything other than creatine monohydrate. It's wildly inexpensive, and you should be looking for the purest product. Only, that has nothing in it. The only ingredient should be creatine monohydrate, no fillers, no extra ingredients. Unless there's some flavoring agent that you want, but
I just mix this in with an electrolyte drink, so I want nothing other than the creatine monohydrate in the
sample. Anything else you want to say on Creatine before we move to the next one? Which is fish oil. Nope, perfect, fish oil. Another supplement that we get asked about a ton, we've done some podcasts on it, a lot of questions on it seems like a lot of people take it. And so, going through the questions with fish oil. First one is, are you correcting for deficiency? Or are you trying to achieve
For maximal levels. When it comes to fish oil,
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